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Ridgewood Planning Board details process, payment for hearings

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Ridgewood Planning Board details process, payment for hearings

SEPTEMBER 8, 2014    LAST UPDATED: MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2014, 6:00 PM
BY LAURA HERZOG
STAFF WRITER

“Rights” related to money spent by amendment applicants on hearings before the Ridgewood Planning Board – including the payment of village professionals, as detailed in Ordinance 3066 – were among the topics discussed during a review on Tuesday of proper board behavior.

The idea that Ridgewood’s applicants are afforded additional rights – beyond those afforded to applicants in other communities, who may not foot the bill for municipal experts during the hearing process – was ultimately rejected by the board attorneys.

But one key point was revealed: Ridgewood has the right to foot the bill for a master plan amendment application hearing, with or without Ordinance 3066 on the books, and thereby bring only its own experts in for a hearing, rather than also including an applicants’ experts.

During the discussion, Planning Board Attorney Gail Price also presented a legal overview regarding Open Public Meetings Act requirements and board obligations related to the Municipal Land Use Law (MLUL).

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/ridgewood-planning-board-details-process-payment-for-hearings-1.1083491#sthash.uZY7zkt6.dpuf

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The streets of Ridgewood are in full bloom

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The streets of Ridgewood are in full bloom

SEPTEMBER 5, 2014    LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2014, 12:31 AM
BY BETTY WIEST
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All I can say is, “Wow!” Surely by now you have seen the amazing amount of bountiful blooms in Ridgewood’s Central Business District (CBD). The planters are overflowing with color; the reds, the yellows, the pinks, the greens. They are plentiful and they are beautiful. The CBD has never looked so amazing! The numerous gigantic planters, overflowing with colorful cannas and countless other plants, are striking indeed.

Project Pride, The Women Gardeners of Ridgewood, The Ridgewood Conservancy for Public Lands, Ridgewood’s Department of Parks, seven local landscape contractors and many individual businesses contributed to make our streets and vest pocket areas in Ridgewood really come alive. We should all extend a hearty “Thank you!” to all who contributed to make our village gorgeous!

It is all a matter of presence and we want our residents, visitors and those who work in the village to be proud of our appearance. This is a “feel good” story. How can you not smile at all the beautiful planters as you walk around the streets in Ridgewood this summer, not to mention many of the tree wells, the planters provided by local businesses and the tremendous efforts by volunteer groups.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/community-news/recreation/the-streets-of-ridgewood-are-in-full-bloom-1.1081499#sthash.u9YqJZr3.dpuf

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Ridgewood soliciting ideas for redevelopment area

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Ridgewood soliciting ideas for redevelopment area

SEPTEMBER 4, 2014    LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2014, 3:38 PM
BY BY JODI WEINBERGER
STAFF WRITER

The future of North Walnut Street is in the hands of a developer, but don’t count on getting any clues from a fortune teller about what’s to be built.

“Carnival enterprises, such as palmistry, phrenology, astrology and the like” are just some of the businesses banned from the Central Business District, according to the Request for Proposals and Qualifications (RFP) for the redevelopment of the North Walnut Street area published last month.

Drive-through windows, car sales lots and auto repair shops are also on the “prohibited” list in the 42-page document that will guide the look and substance of the 2.07 acres to be redeveloped.

On Oct. 8, the village will hold a meeting where RFP responders can ask questions or make comments about the document. Plans must be submitted by Dec. 1. By Feb. 4, concepts will be presented to the Village Council, which will choose one, if any, of the firms in March.

The rest of the timeline, like acquiring vacant property and beginning construction, is “to be determined.”

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/ridgewood-soliciting-ideas-for-redevelopment-area-1.1081324#sthash.4v7nIX36.dpuf

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Village to conduct physical review of all sidewalk cafe layouts

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Photo credit: Boyd A. Loving

Village to conduct physical review of all sidewalk cafe layouts
September 4,2014
Boyd A. Loving
12:49 PM

Ridgewood Nj, Are many sidewalks in the Central Business District (CBD) impassable to those with disabilities, particularly those confined to wheelchairs, walkers, and mobility scooters, because of sidewalk cafes, or is the problem limited to one or two locations?

During Wednesday evening’s Village Council Work Session, Village Manager Roberta Sonenfeld promised that Village officials would soon conduct a walking tour of the CBD to assess the situation, and then recommend/suggest changes if and where they are appropriate.

This taxpayer wonders why no immediate action, in the form of summonses or written warnings, is being taken if a complaint has been filed about a specific location, and non-compliance with the sidewalk cafe ordinance has been verified?

All photos accompanying this post were taken on 9/4/2014, the day following Ms. Sonenfeld’s announcement.

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Photo credit: Boyd A. Loving

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The Name-Dropper: Van Neste Square

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The Name-Dropper: Van Neste Square

SEPTEMBER 4, 2014    LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2014, 1:21 AM
BY JEFFREY PAGE
SPECIAL TO THE RECORD
THE RECORD

Who was Lee of Fort Lee, Votee of Votee Park and Merritt of Camp Merritt? The Name-Dropper gives you the lowdown on some of the people whose names you see on public statues, memorial plaques, park signs, highways and even some local streets around North Jersey. Have suggestions? Email them to features@northjersey. com and put Name-Dropper in the subject field.

In the legendary first intercollegiate football game, when Rutgers beat Princeton, 6-4, John Alfred Van Neste of the Rutgers team may have kicked the ball, may have helped score a point, may have blocked a Princeton player.

Then again, maybe not.

Accounts of that game played in New Brunswick in 1869 report the score, but provide little about how individual players performed.

It seems easy, 145 years later, to assume Van Neste got a chance to play since the rules of that time dictated large lineups, 25 players per side.

But in one respect, how Van Neste played doesn’t matter since it was not his exploits on the gridiron that caused the Village of Ridgewood to name a sweet little downtown park in his memory. Rather it was for the remembrance of Van Neste as an adored minister in mid-19th to early-20th-century Ridgewood. He was the Reformed Church pastor who helped people of other denominations establish and build their own places of worship, and in the meantime allowed them to use his church.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/education/ridgewood-park-ministers-to-all-as-did-its-namesake-1.1081013#sthash.y4WRDtCp.dpuf

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“Parking Authority” vs. “Parking Utility”

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“Parking Authority” vs. “Parking Utility”
September 3rd 2014 

Boyd A. Loving
11:46 PM

What are the differences between Parking Authorities and Parking Utilities in the State of NJ, and why does Ridgewood choose to retain a Parking Utility?

Parking Authority

The Legislature of the State of New Jersey in 1948 adopted N.J.S.A. 40:11A et seq., commonly known as the “Parking Authority Law,” which authorized municipal governments to create an independent parking authority. A parking authority has the same geographic boundaries as the city that created it but is “a public body corporate and politic and a political subdivision of the State (of New Jersey).” ANew Jersey parking authority has five commissioners who are appointed by the governing body of the municipality (city council or city commissioners) for staggered five-year terms, or seven commissioners with two mayoral appointments and five governing body appointments. A parking authority may employ an executive director, attorney, engineer, accountant, and any other professionals and staff necessary to manage and deliver parking services to the city’s residents and the general public.

As noted elsewhere in this report, New Jersey parking authorities have extraordinary statutory authority. N.J.S.A. 40:11A-6 grants parking authorities the powers necessary to carry out and effectuate essential government purposes. Furthermore, parking authorities may buy, sell and/or lease property as a lessee or lessor; construct multiuse projects and parking facilities; borrow money; issue bonds; mortgage or otherwise encumber its assets; enter into contracts; and retain earnings.

Because parking authorities fund their operations from revenue derived from parking user fees rather than through real estate taxation, and board members traditionally are appointed from the business community, parking authorities tend to be operated like a business. Parking authorities are conscious of the fact that annual expenses should not exceed parking revenue. Surplus annual revenue is retained to pay for renewal and replacement repairs at existing parking facilities and to purchase real estate or build new facilities.

The strength of a parking authority is its independence. The parking authority’s commissioners are appointed, not elected, public officials. Consequently, a parking authority board of commissioners can make difficult planning decisions such as raising parking rates, installing parking meters, increasing parking enforcement, acquiring property by eminent domain, or selecting a location to construct a parking facility without regard to its immediate political consequence. A parking authority provides elected officials with a measure of political cover in that the authority’s decisions are the result of the actions of the authority’s board rather than the city’s governing council/commission.

Among the other advantages of a parking authority:

• Its debt is outside the municipalities bonding limit (Cap)

• Its sole purpose and function is to construct, maintain, and operate public parking

• It can retain earnings and accumulate surplus revenue for capital projects

• It can develop income-producing mixed-use projects exempt from real estate taxes, which are intended to subsidize the cost of providing public parking.

The negatives of a parking authority are the reverse side of its strengths. Parking authorities are independent and, on occasion, choose to raise parking fees or pursue goals, objectives, or projects that are not supported by a majority of the municipal governing body. Parking authorities are not directly controlled by the local governing body, which has the power only to appoint or reappoint one authority commissioner per year to the authority’s member board. Parking authorities traditionally have generated revenue surpluses at year end or have accumulated significant financial reserves through retained earnings that local municipal governments prefer be utilized for taxpayer relief or be transferred to the municipality’s general fund to offset the city’s operating budget expenses.

Based upon a review of Who’s Who in Parking 2005, published by the International Parking Institute (IPI), there are seven states—Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, New Jersey, Ohio, and Pennsylvania—that have parking authorities. However, it should be noted that Miami is the only parking authority in the state of Florida that was created by a special act of the legislature. The state of New Jersey has approximately thirty parking authorities, more than any other state in the nation.

Parking Utility

A municipality, as an alternative to a parking authority, may create a parking utility. A parking utility has a number of the strengths of a parking authority: executive director; operating budget and debt service separate from the municipality; ability to generate annual surplus revenue and retain earnings; ability to set its own rates and fees; and a function strictly limited to providing public parking.

Among the negatives associated with a parking utility: limited independence; the executive director usually reports through the city administrator/manager or CFO; the local governing body retains jurisdiction over rates, fees, capital projects, operating budget, and personnel; and parking revenues in excess of annual operating expenses generally are turned over to the city’s general fund.

The good news/bad news aspects of a parking utility are that the municipal governing body maintains virtual control of the parking entity. However, the hands-on control exercised by the municipal governing body places parking planning and decision making within the political process.

In municipal environments where control of the mayor’s office and governing body are continually contested, parking can become a political rather than a planning issue, which may affect a parking utility’s ability to aggressively pursue public parking improvements and objectives.

There are at least four parking utilities within the state of New Jersey: East Brunswick, Hoboken, Princeton, and Trenton.

The Answer:

Parking Utility revenues in excess of annual operating expenses are moved over to the Village’s general fund. If Ridgewood had a Parking Authority all these years, all revenues collected (and not stolen) would have been used exclusively to maintain and/or improve parking. There would be no parking problem now, because there would have been plenty of money to resolve it.

Proving once again ladies and gentlemen that you can’t have your cake and eat it too!

(Special thanks go to James Ten Hoeve, who revealed the answer publicly several years ago.)

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NEW FREINDSHIP HAS EMERGED

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NEW FREINDSHIP HAS EMERGED

Paul Vagianos President of the Chamber of Commerce spoke at tonight Council meeting Ad nauseam on how he believes that this Council will build a parking garage and that he and the Chamber are 100 % behind the Council plans. He went on to say that he and Amy Bourque, President Citizens for a Better Ridgewood have struck up a new friendship.
Well I was wondering why Citizens for a Better Ridgewood has been low key. Maybe they need a new President. The parking garage is a prelude to the massive expansion in the CBD. The garage will be sited by the developers as as a place to put overflow parking for the tenements. Its should also be noted that if a parking garage is built on the Hudson St the site it will also be very close to Mr Vagianos eatery along with the old Bank of America building and we all know who owns that.
Our Deputy Mayor the narcissist  that he is could not help himself and said that he will not be one of  past Council Members who pictures are on the wall that did not build a garage. Well Al I guess you have more wisdom then all the Council member that have come before you.

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Reader says 12 pm and still no agenda posted on the website. Transparency !

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Reader says 12 pm and still no agenda posted on the website. Transparency !

The agenda was just posted 12:18pm . why so late? Maybe because of what is going to be discussed in closed sessions ?

 Legal
1.         RIC Development  ( Big Al’s attorney friend trying to get the right of way at the sewage plant to help him build hosing)
           Dave Rutford  
            c.         Contract negotiations               
1.         Employee Parking
2.         Lot 12 – The Gap Parking Lot
3.         Fire Contract Negotiations

09/02/147:30PMPlanning Board Public 
09/03/147:30PMVillage Council Special Public Meeting 
09/03/147:30PMVillage Council Public Work Session 
09/09/147:30PMBoard of Adjustment Regular Public Meeting
09/10/148:00PMVillage Council Public Meeting
09/16/147:30PMPlanning Board Public Meeting
09/17/147:30PMVillage Council Public Work Session
09/23/147:30PMBoard of Adjustment Regular Public Meeting
10/01/147:30PMVillage Council Public Work Session
10/07/147:30PMPlanning Board Public Meeting

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Development of the North Walnut Street Redevelopment Area

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Bid Notice-RFP for N. Walnut St. Redevelopment Area

REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS

Proposals will be received by the Village of Ridgewood, in the Level 4 Courtroom, at the Village Hall, 131 North Maple Avenue, Ridgewood, New Jersey, and will be opened on Monday, December 1, 2014 at 10:00 a.m. prevailing time for: 

“Request for Proposals and Qualifications

for the 

Development of the North Walnut Street Redevelopment Area

Village of Ridgewood Bergen County, New Jersey”

The Village of Ridgewood is seeking proposals from qualified firms to redevelop certain parcels in the North Walnut Street Redevelopment Area in conformance with the Village’s adopted Redevelopment Plan. 

The RFP package may be obtained from the Office of the Village Manager, Level 5, Village Hall, 131 North Maple Avenue, Ridgewood, New Jersey 07450, (201) 670-5500, extension No. 203. Proposal packages may be examined or picked up in person between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m., at 131 North Maple Avenue, Ridgewood, New Jersey 07450, Monday through Friday. Prospective respondents requesting that proposal documents be mailed to them shall be responsible for providing their own postage/delivery service remuneration. No proposal forms shall be given out after 4:00 p.m. on Wednesday, November 26, 2014. 

Proposals may be submitted in person or by mail prior to the proposal opening, addressed to the Office of the Village Clerk. The Village assumes no responsibility for loss or non-delivery of any proposal sent to it prior to the date and time stated for receipt of proposals. 

Each proposal must be enclosed in a sealed envelope with the name of the respondent thereon and endorsed, “Request for Proposals and Qualifications for the Development of the North Walnut Street Redevelopment Area, Village of Ridgewood, Bergen County, New Jersey”. 

All respondents shall present satisfactory evidence of being authorized to do business in the State of New Jersey. All respondents shall also provide a copy of their New Jersey Business Registration Certificate with their proposal. Additional requirements for submittal are presented in the RFP. All respondents shall adhere to the requirements presented in the “Request for Proposals”. The Village of Ridgewood reserves the right to reject any or all proposals, to waive any informality or to accept a proposal, which in its judgment best serves the interest of the Village.

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Ridgewood Chamber of Commerce presents” Annual Fall Car Show!!

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Annual Car Show
Friday , September 05, 2014
6:00 PM – 9:00 PM
Location: Memorial Park at Van Neste Square, Ridgewood NJ

Ridgewood Chamber of Commerce presents”
Annual Fall Car Show!!

FREE to the public.

For Cars:
Pre-Registration fee by August 15th is $17.00
August 18th-September 5th Registration fee is $20.00

The Car Show will be held around Memorial Park at Van Neste Square
and along E. Ridgewood Avenue.
Non Pre-Registered cars will begin registration at 5:00pm. Parking will be on a first come, first served basis. Registration fees are not refundable.

Music will keep the evening lively and there will be trophies for many categories.

1. The Ridgewood Police Department wishes to remind all participants there is no consumption of alcohol allowed at this event. Summons will be issued to violators.
2. Due to pedestrain safety, cars will not be allowed to leave the event until the
Police Depart. opens up the road.

Please print out the attached registration form
and make your reservation early.
We will fax or email your Window Registration Certificate.
Make checks payable and send to:
Ridgewood Chamber of Commerce
27 Chestnut Street
Ridgewood, NJ 07450
[email protected]
www.experienceridgewood.com
MC, Visa, AmExp accepted.

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Proposed apartments on Broad Street will benefit Ridgewood

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Proposed apartments on Broad Street will benefit Ridgewood

AUGUST 29, 2014    LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, AUGUST 29, 2014, 12:31 AM

Proposed apartments on Broad Street will benefit village
Robert Jenkins

to the Editor:

As a lifelong resident of the village, and a person who has spent the past 36 years working in downtown Ridgewood, I have seen many changes to the business district. Businesses come and go, but luckily the downtown area continues to be charming and seemingly well attended.

However, in light of the struggling economy, I believe that the village would benefit from a shot in the arm, such as would be provided by the luxury apartment complex proposed at the former Brogan Cadillac site on South Broad Street.

It’s easy to see the benefits of such a complex. Many of my contemporaries have moved, or are planning to move, out of the village at some point — to downsize and/or simply find a place to live without the rigors of upkeep that owning a house entails. Luxury apartments in the downtown area would offer an attractive alternative to moving away and in the process would provide not only increased tax revenues to the town, but also a boost to the local businesses that would ensure the continuation of the downtown district.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/opinion/opinion-letters-to-the-editor/letter-proposed-apartments-on-broad-street-will-benefit-ridgewood-1.1077870#sthash.175ibqUT.dpuf

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Reader says the Village needs to seize the agenda from the developers

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Reader says the Village needs to seize the agenda from the developers

Answer – we need parking AND common sense. Unfortunately with the team we have running the show, we’re unlikely to get either.

Until the Village seizes the agenda from the developers, we will be in a state of continuous reaction. Developers want to build huge buildings because they make more money that way. Certain citizens are not in favor of huge buildings. Developers then say that if they can’t build a huge building then they won’t build anything. Then other citizens say that the town is is disrepair and we need to do something so let’s just build the huge buildings because what other choice do we have?

Come to think of it, I’d settle for some common sense and will drive around the block looking for a spot in the meantime.

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Luxury housing will keep people in village

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Ridgewood News letter: Luxury housing will keep people in village

AUGUST 22, 2014    LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 2014, 12:31 AM
Print

Luxury housing will keep people in village
James D. Vaughan III

to the Editor:

Luxury apartments along the Ridgewood train tracks are good for Ridgewood.

Once the children grow and leave home, a luxury apartment in town is a very attractive alternative to Ridgewood residents. We raised our children here and our friends still live here. We would prefer to stay in Ridgewood rather than a neighboring town. However, we cannot justify the expense of the large home. Most of the readers of The Ridgewood News know a friend who moved to a townhome or apartment in a neighboring town.

The residents of the luxury apartments would be mostly Ridgewood residents who have sold their home, or young couples moving to Ridgewood. Many of the young couples would be our children.

Currently, the properties are industrial locations. A luxury apartment complex would bring new residents and pedestrian life to downtown. Adding ongoing Ridgewood residents to the sites along the train tracks would be tremendously beneficial to our town, our downtown and our property tax revenue.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/opinion/opinion-letters-to-the-editor/ridgewood-news-letter-luxury-housing-will-keep-people-in-village-1.1071382#sthash.U89qbBbd.dpuf

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Resident unhappy with actions of attorneys

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Ridgewood News letter: Resident unhappy with actions of attorneys

AUGUST 22, 2014    LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 2014, 12:31 AM

Resident unhappy with actions of attorneys
Nancy Currey

to the editor:

Frankly I was stunned while attending the Aug. 19 Planning Board meeting with the tandem display of incivility by the Mr. Bruinooge and Mr. Wells toward Open Space Committee chair Ralph Currey.

Currently, the Planning Board is considering amending the master plan so that developments such as The Enclave, The Dayton and Chestnut Village can be built in Ridgewood. In order to assess the widespread impact the addition of a significant number of new citizens would impose, the Open Space Committee was requested by the Planning Board to prepare a report.

The Open Space Committee is a largely all-volunteer citizen committee without funding. The report was prepared in the context of these limitations and posed as an advisory paper. We are fortunate, due in large part to the considerable efforts of these dedicated volunteers, to have Habernickel Park and the Schedler property.

Compared to surrounding towns, the Village of Ridgewood has far less recreational space even with the addition of Habernickel Park and the potential of the Schedler property. The essence of the report prepared by the committee is that Ridgewood is already lacking the fields and open areas that would be suggested for its current population using several guidelines. The addition of a significant number of new residents utilizing those same recreational facilities would only worsen the numbers.

This really is a matter of common sense. One does not need formulas to realize our parks are overcrowded and the competition for field space is fierce. Just drive to a park in our area and try to find a parking space. That is more telling than any stack of paper. The attorneys representing the developers harped on the calculus of the report and congratulated themselves on trying to humiliate the witness. The truth speaks for itself.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/opinion/opinion-letters-to-the-editor/ridgewood-news-letter-resident-unhappy-with-actions-of-attorneys-1.1071392#sthash.ge5aSTly.dpuf

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Ridgewood sets guidelines for valet parking

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Ridgewood sets guidelines for valet parking

AUGUST 22, 2014    LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 2014, 12:31 AM
BY LAURA HERZOG
STAFF WRITER

The Village Council approved two ordinances last week that officials hope will have a positive impact on the Central Business District (CBD) and customer experience.

One ordinance establishes rules for restaurant valet parking. The other is an amendment to an existing ordinance on site plan procedural requirements, which the village manager hopes will speed up the process of building approval for business owners, as well as homeowners, who are doing minor work.

In the case of the valet parking ordinance, the village manager was pushing for a speedy approval; valet parking is already being done in the CBD by Roots Steakhouse. The new high-end eating establishment on Chestnut Street valet parks at some of its other area locations.

The new ordinance, which allows valet parking operators to “utilize the streets and public parking lots of the village… for performance of their services,” lists detailed operating requirements.

Among them, valet parking operators will need to buy an annual permit and show a valid insurance certificate.

Part of the push for the valet parking ordinance is related to the village’s parking woes. The village’s resolution notes that valet parking is being permitted to “help alleviate and minimize parking congestion.”

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/business/guidelines-set-for-valet-parking-1.1071314#sthash.sJAsixrK.dpuf