Posted on 4 Comments

While 1200 showed up for Hillary Clinton others in town were not so convinced

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taken by Michael Karas of The Record, not by Dom Nizza.photo by Dom

While 1200 showed up for Hillary Clinton others in town were not so convinced

Reader says … 1200 people who are clueless. They spend too much time on social media and watching msnbc.
Hillary Clinton has not accomplished anything in her public life for the public good.
She has only enriched herself and her posse at the expense of the American Taxpayer.
Wake up!
American is in serious decline.
We need a serious person as candidate for the next President.
Not a Social Organizer or Political Operative.

Readers says …Do you know who DOESN’T think she’s so great? Ambassador Stevens, Glen Doherty, Ty Woods and Sean Smith. Also unavailable for comment were Vince Foster, and chairman of the Watergate Commission. The woman is a fraud, a phony and represents everything vile and despicable about the state of politics in this country. Congrats Mr Mayor, you idolize a woman who LIED to the families of 4 dead Americans while standing in front of their caskets.


Rita says …Hillary:

*1% elitist complains about the 1% making too much money
*vilified women who complained about the sexual abuse from Bill (which in time all turned out to be true) – great helper of women’s rights..instead she blamed the victims
*defended a rapist who she believed to be guilty and laughed about it
*moved into NY for the progressive vote to go to Congress – accomplished little to nothing
*settled for secy of state from Obama – accomplished nothing except the death of embassy personnel and covered up and lied to the families over the coffins as they came home
*Watergate – fraudulent brief filed; committee general counsel FIRED her
*Whitewater – land deal went wrong; other people’s accounts used to pay off her and Bill’s debts; Vince Foster suicide??
*Lied that she was being fired upon in Bosnia; video came out and showed she was leisurely walking and never in danger
*said Chelsea was near the WTC when it was bombed; Chelsea later refuted that
*took furniture out of the WH after Bill’s term was up;had to return the furniture
*claims and complains they were dead broke due to legal fees…..(defending BIll’s purjury) so they had a hard time getting HO– USES (plural) but gets multi thousands for speaking engagements

And this behavior is to be valued??? Why do you glorify people who lie and steal from you – don’t enable them! Wake up people, wake up!

Bill says …Um….. she married Bill Clinton? wrote a book about her hard choices like what to do after he cheated on her? She had a baby girl? She couldn’t decide how to spin an al-Qaeda terrorist attack in Benghazi so that it would not hurt Obama’s chances of reelection (oh wait that is not an accomplishment, but she did do it).

Reader says …Hillary Clinton accepted the consolation prize of Secretary of State from Obama.
She then commence a world tour on the taxpayer’s dime.
She traveled over 1 million miles in 4 years with her entourage, security etc. and accomplished NOTHING.
How much did that fiasco cost?
She is useless.

Posted on 7 Comments

Ridgewood housing splits planners

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Ridgewood housing splits planners

JULY 17, 2014    LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY, JULY 17, 2014, 1:21 AM
BY CHRIS HARRIS
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD


RIDGEWOOD — A member of the Planning Board spoke out this week against a proposed master plan amendment that would permit multifamily, high-density housing complexes downtown — calling for a moratorium on development in the village.

But she received mixed reviews from other board members, who were divided about the process or feared the village would face litigation.

“I don’t believe what is happening here is really in the best interest of the village as a whole,” said Michele Peters, after nearly three hours of testimony Tuesday night on three proposed developments.

Those developments — the Enclave, a 52-unit project on East Ridgewood Avenue; The Dayton, a 106-unit apartment building for South Broad Street; and the 52-unit Chestnut Village on Chestnut Street — are currently prohibited under the village code. And the amendment has been under consideration for nearly two years.

Peters urged the others members to “take time to stop, so we can talk about this.”

She added that she thinks the board is “dealing with a fire as it comes to us” and questioned the entire process that members are embroiled in.

Peters was also critical of the ordinance that enabled the developers’ requests for a master plan amendment, saying the village was “putting the cart before the horse.”

Urging more of an exchange with the public throughout the hearing process, Peters said, “These are major issues having to do with the way our community is planned and it should be freely discussed.”

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/ridgewood-housing-splits-planners-1.1052852#sthash.OgZCTwzw.dpuf

Posted on 4 Comments

Ridgewood experts weigh in on housing proposals

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Ridgewood experts weigh in on housing proposals

JULY 17, 2014    LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY, JULY 17, 2014, 3:11 PM
BY JODI WEINBERGER
STAFF WRITER

Ridgewood Water would not be impacted by the proposal to amend the village’s master plan to allow high-density housing, but the village’s need for open space would be exacerbated, experts told the Planning Board at a meeting July 15.

Three developers are petitioning the Planning Board to amend the master plan to allow multifamily housing in zones where the use is not currently permitted. A master plan amendment would be the first step in larger processes for the developers, who would then need to seek further approval for their sites.

David Scheibner, Ridgewood Water’s business director, said the developments, proposed for the Central Business District (CBD) would not strain the village’s water supply.

His conclusion assumed that the apartments would have “conversation-oriented appliances” and that the individual residents would not use a significant amount of water for lawns or other irrigation. A single meter would be installed for each of the developments, which Ridgewood Water would maintain.

As for impact, The Enclave (52 units, 106 residents, plus the possibility of commercial use) would collectively consume 5,300 gallons per day; Chestnut Village (52 units, 91 residents) would collectively consume 4,500 gallons per day; and The Dayton (106 units, 208 residents) would collectively consume 10,400 gallons per day.

Fire suppression flows would not be an issue for Chestnut Village, Scheibner said, but there would need to be a flow test conducted by Ridgewood Water for both The Dayton and Enclave due to the size of the existing water mains and limited reinforcing supply from the west due to the railroad tracks.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/ridgewood-experts-weigh-in-on-housing-proposals-1.1053299#sthash.O0UD2lya.dpuf

Posted on 3 Comments

Reader asks Will there be quid pro quo? between developers and council members ?

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file photo Boyd Loving

Reader asks Will there be quid pro quo? between developers and council members ?

It will be interesting to see how the Mayor, his Deputy and Mrs. Hauck respond to the 2 current plans before the Village. Both require Master Plan amendments and both developers have courted our Council majority heavily.

The Council majority have been caught meeting secretly with these developers and have been caught accepting inappropriate gifts from at least one of them. Will there be quid pro quo? Stay tuned – if any of these 3 come out in favor of either of the 2 projects before the Village it would be appropriate to involve the prosecutors.

Why are those of us that favor an upgrade to the CBD but are against projects that require a Master Plan amendment labeled by our Mayor and his Council majority as naysayers? Why does our Deputy Mayor shout down his detractors in public meetings then demand a level of decorum?

Stay tuned.

Posted on 1 Comment

Ridgewood housing splits planners

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Ridgewood housing splits planners

JULY 17, 2014    LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY, JULY 17, 2014, 1:21 AM
BY CHRIS HARRIS
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

RIDGEWOOD — A member of the Planning Board spoke out this week against a proposed master plan amendment that would permit multifamily, high-density housing complexes downtown — calling for a moratorium on development in the village.

But she received mixed reviews from other board members, who were divided about the process or feared the village would face litigation.

“I don’t believe what is happening here is really in the best interest of the village as a whole,” said Michele Peters, after nearly three hours of testimony Tuesday night on three proposed developments.

Those developments — the Enclave, a 52-unit project on East Ridgewood Avenue; The Dayton, a 106-unit apartment building for South Broad Street; and the 52-unit Chestnut Village on Chestnut Street — are currently prohibited under the village code. And the amendment has been under consideration for nearly two years.

Peters urged the others members to “take time to stop, so we can talk about this.”

She added that she thinks the board is “dealing with a fire as it comes to us” and questioned the entire process that members are embroiled in.

Peters was also critical of the ordinance that enabled the developers’ requests for a master plan amendment, saying the village was “putting the cart before the horse.”

Urging more of an exchange with the public throughout the hearing process, Peters said, “These are major issues having to do with the way our community is planned and it should be freely discussed.”

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/ridgewood-housing-splits-planners-1.1052852#sthash.eHwUcaSM.dpuf

Posted on 4 Comments

So what is ordinance 3066?

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So what is ordinance 3066?

It was introduced by the Village Council under Mayor Pfund in 2007 (https://www.ridgewoodnj.net/minutes/07RPMJUN13.pdf ). Chapter § 190-143 of the amended Village Code is the kicker; it established procedures for interested persions (i.e. developers) to request amendments to the Village Master Plan or development regulations. Council members Mancuso, Ringler Shagin, Wiest, and Pfund all voted in favor of the ordinance. Chapter § 190-143 is here https://ecode360.com/6694062 and many residents argue that this should be repealed to ensure that we don’t see overdevelopment at Valley and in the CBD in terms of densities and building scale. It’s felt this will better protect our property values.

the text can be see at https://stopvalley.com/Minutes/2007-08-07%20Ordinance%203066.pdf if you cut and paste that into your browser you can see it all.

It is long, setting out the fees involved and procedures – the key part is

§ 190-143. Application to Village Council or Planning Board.
Any interested party may request that an amendment or amendments be made to the Village Master Plan or development regulations. The request(s) shall be made to the Village Council and/or the Village Planning Board

Posted on 6 Comments

Reader says Repeal ordinance 3066. Let redevelopment happen, within the current Master Plan

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Reader says Repeal ordinance 3066. Let redevelopment happen, within the current Master Plan

Repeal ordinance 3066. Let redevelopment happen, within the current Master Plan. The current CBD – as it stands – is a shadow of it’s vibrant, former self. Blog posters here are deluding themselves – or just don’t spend any time or money in the CBD – if they think values are enhanced by empty store fronts, gold pawn shops, decrepit old auto dealers and the old Town Garage, not to mention the horror of North Maple in to Ho-Ho-Kus. There is a lack of parking, parking meters need to be modernized to allow for credit card payment, flow is bad, and many retailers just don’t want to come here because our building department is legendary for sitting on permit approvals that kill the economics of their business.

show?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=339232

Posted on 6 Comments

Dear Mr. Deputy Mayor:What then is your vision for the CBD?

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Dear Mr. Deputy Mayor:What then is your vision for the CBD?

While you raise some good points I think it’s time for you and the Council to get specific. I understand that you are under pressure from two or more corporations that have a special interest in getting their projects approved. Each of these projects is now well documented and each one requests a Master Plan amendment, or in other words, is much too large to be approved with simple variances. What is your stance on each of these projects? Do you believe that as they are proposed they are good for our Village?

It is also public knowledge that you have met with these interests with your two running mates but without the rest of the Council and without providing notice to the public. You were even the guest of one company at a fundraiser for Governor Christie. Do you care now to share what was said at those meetings? Is what was discussed at those meetings part of your current plan?

I agree that it is time for the Village to take control of the agenda to improve the CBD. I am anxious to hear your vision and to know where you stand on the current projects before the Village.

(Editor’s note: A forum on the CBD will be held from 7:30-9 p.m. on Wednesday, July 23 in the Village Hall courtroom. A follow-up session will be announced at the July 23 forum).

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/opinion/opinion-letters-to-the-editor/letter-improving-our-central-business-district-1.1049965#sthash.IbU6Mp7c.dpuf

show?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=339232

Posted on 3 Comments

Restaurant review: The Park West Tavern

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Restaurant review:The Park West Tavern
July 11, 2014    Last updated: Friday, July 11, 2014, 1:12 PM
By Elisa Ung
The Record

Surprise! Some of Ridgewood’s most satisfying fine-dining fare can now be found in a place that calls itself a tavern.

The Park West Tavern is a place where you can expect more that just a bucket of Buffalo wings with your beer.

OK, maybe it’s not a total surprise. When Park West Tavern opened three years ago, serving up its flavorful burgers with house-made ketchup, it was clear that it was not your average bar. The owners, who are also behind the well-regarded Park Steakhouse in Park Ridge, thought Ridgewood needed a restaurant with an upscale but still laid-back atmosphere, a benchmark bar and a familiar American menu with chef touches: I rated it 2.5 stars.

Park West Tavern ***

30 Oak St., Ridgewood
201-445-5400
parkwesttavern.com

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/food-and-dining-news/restaurant-reviews/beer-with-a-haute-chaser-1.1049906#sthash.U4RKX3aT.dpuf

Posted on 17 Comments

New housing plans smart, responsible

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New housing plans smart, responsible
Mark Bombace

to the Editor:

Ridgewood is my past, present and future. Born and raised in the village, I went through its public schools, served as a firefighter and brought up my own family here.

I’ve seen Ridgewood improve and adapt with the times over the past 50 years, and the village has the opportunity to do so once again, by bringing much needed high-end multifamily residences to downtown.

While Ridgewood has just about everything, what it lacks is the right housing mix to remain a healthy and vibrant place to live and do business. Ridgewood currently has only two housing options – single family, and 50- to 100-year-old apartments.

What is needed is new modern apartment options – the type of options sought out by today’s millennials, young professionals and empty nesters. As an empty nester myself, I like the option of living in downtown, and new apartments with modern amenities like a doorman and elevator would make that more likely.

New multifamily residences will allow seniors to downsize and stay in town, close to the Central Business District (CBD). They will attract singles and couples with no or few, very young children, who seek access to an easy commute into the city.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/opinion/opinion-letters-to-the-editor/letter-new-housing-plans-smart-responsible-1.1046346#sthash.vlgLpLLS.dpuf

Posted on 1 Comment

Author and Chef Christine Nunn to open Picnic on the Square in Ridgewood

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Author and Chef Christine Nunn to open Picnic on the Square in Ridgewood 
June 24,2014
the staff of the Ridgewood

Ridgewood NJ, According to Bergen food blog Boozy Burbs, Christine Nunn is bringing her new restaurant Picnic back to Bergen County. The new restaurant  called “Picnic on the Square,”  will be located at 26 Wilsey Square.

Nunn closed the restaurant’s Fair Lawn location in January of 2013 and has since written a cookbook called the The Preppy Cookbook and taken over as the executive chef at Grange in Westwood.

Nunn a sommelier will offer diners a French-inspired menu when the restaurant opens, likely later this summer.

Posted on 7 Comments

Reader makes suggestions for the Enclave Development

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The Enclave at 257 East Ridgewood Avenue. Photo credit: 257 East Ridgewood Avenue LLC
Reader makes suggestions for the Enclave Development

The Enclave invites the community to an open exchange of information, pros and cons and all views, on Thursday, June 26 at 7 p.m. at the Ridgewood Library Arts Studio. I’ll certainly be there, and would like to suggest that we review these websites in advance for more background: downtownridgewood.com and citizensforabetterridgewood.com

The website for the developments is interesting. But a few suggestions:

The site should have more continuity. Each development should have its drawing on the first page. Then they should list the number and size of the units, the maintenance and the anticipated taxes.

They claim that they will be self sufficient for parking, but based on what? How many spots per unit?

There is no way that the addition of that many families will not impact congestion in the downtown.

They talk about “1.5 million net tax” but where did they pull that number from? The rumor v Reality section is not very good.

As I mentioned above, if I am going to downsize from a 4+ bedroom house I do not just want a smaller residence. i expect the carrying expenses to be downsized too. Otherwise I can buy a house in Saddle River.

Posted on 5 Comments

Someone was listening besides the Planning Board :A place to downsize

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Someone was listening besides the Planning Board :A place to downsize

JUNE 20, 2014    LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, JUNE 20, 2014, 12:31 AM

A place to downsize
Tess Giuliani
to the editor:

Ridgewood reminds me of the village I grew up in, Garden City, N.Y., where my family still lives. Both are beautiful, historic towns.

I remember how the Garden City Hotel, a 1901 historic landmark designed by Stanford White, stood proudly in the middle of town. Sadly, this magnificent building came down in 1973. An ugly gaping hole remained on the site for 10 years, surrounded by a chain link fence. Finally, a new Garden City Hotel with Wyndham luxury condos was opened in 1983

Why did it take 10 years? Longtime residents tell me that 40 years ago, the idea of downtown condos in Garden City was unacceptable to many villagers. What changed? Over time the residents got tired of the eyesore, and their personal concerns also changed as they got older.

In 2001, I put my Ridgewood home on the market and found that the best housing for me was an apartment complex right here. I wanted to stay in town and stay involved. Though as it happened, I stayed in my house another 11 years, the apartment prospects had not changed. The best complex in 2001 was still the best in 2012 – so I moved in.

As a designer I’ve worked with hundreds of clients in Ridgewood, developing creative spaces from the smallest full bathroom to the most stately, grand house dubbed The New American Classic by DesignNJ. Today’s clients among the “young seniors” ask me to “create uncluttered, beautiful spaces that reflect our tastes and make our lives easy.”

They hope to downsize from a big house to a nice apartment in Ridgewood, with covered parking, elevators, central air, large windows, nice kitchens and baths and ample closets. But where are they? I found only one.

The Enclave invites the community to an open exchange of information, pros and cons and all views, on Thursday, June 26 at 7 p.m. at the Ridgewood Library Arts Studio. I’ll certainly be there, and would like to suggest that we review these websites in advance for more background: downtownridgewood.com and citizensforabetterridgewood.com – See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/opinion/opinion-letters-to-the-editor/letter-a-place-to-downsize-1.1038600#sthash.PNUkkp9Q.dpuf

Posted on 1 Comment

Planning Board members have much to consider

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Planning Board members have much to consider

JUNE 12, 2014    LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014, 5:42 PM
Lisa Baney

To the Editor:

Let me start by saying I could never be a Planning Board member, but if I were, I would be so tired. Over the past 14 months, they have had to attend 26 sometimes very long hearings, and listen to and dissect thousands of pages of testimony focusing on details and information that any normal human could scarcely nail down. All in response to a prestigious applicant, Valley Hospital, and its application for a master plan amendment that would allow its near-doubling of size at its location at South Van Dien Avenue next to the Benjamin Franklin Middle School.

It has become evident through this process that there are many different ways to slice and dice the data. By that, I mean a litany of measurements such as square footage, lot coverage, floor area ratios, shadow lines, changes of buffers, heights and setbacks at various sections of the buildings and property. Moreover, the board members have needed to distinguish each of these measures according to the current 2014 expansion proposal, the former 2010 proposal and what exists today. Add differing testimony on hospital beds needed, numbers and types of trucks during specific years and stages of construction, possible impact on child safety and schools, and a magnitude of other information – most importantly village character.

If I were a Planning Board member, I would see three things through all these nights.

1. Land use is primary as the basis of a master plan change.

2. As a key burden of proof, the applicant for the master plan change has not substantiated why it is absolutely necessary to conduct this degree of expansion on its main hospital campus. Valley affirms that this scale of expansion, at its current location, is the only way to well serve both our village and region, and that it is cost-prohibitive to relocate additional services, re-think its bed counts here, or follow other paths to modernize – based on elements of a business plan that it chooses not to make clear.

3. There is more than enough reason to believe that the detriments of this permanent change to our village outweigh the positives, and that the hospital has not made a convincing case to the contrary.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/opinion/opinion-letters-to-the-editor/letter-planning-board-members-have-much-to-consider-1.1034646#sthash.6Qg61KBE.dpuf

Posted on 9 Comments

Reader says It does not take much to turn a real estate market and we are likely on the tipping point.

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Reader says It does not take much to turn a real estate market and we are likely on the tipping point.

Perhaps the most interesting indication of this is the No Valley and No Apartment signs that appear on the lawns of houses that have recently sold to young families moving into town. They came here for the schools and the neighborhood feel of the town. Then, they learn that what they just bought into is under the threat of the massive hospital and apartment complexes. Having just sunk their young fortunes into new homes, they are justifiably worried.

Think now of what happens if that worry becomes known to those currently looking. Through this blog, for instance, or newspaper coverage of the planning board hearings or letters to the editors. Real estate can very quickly take a nose dive in Ridgewood when towns in close proximity offer almost as much without the looming risk.

If you were 30-35 again, with two young children and enough money to buy a house in Ridgewood, and there was a chance Ridgewood was going to turn into something more along the lines of the hustle and bustle found in a small city sometime in the next 5 to 10 years, would you risk your hard earned down payment money on Ridgewood property? And for those of us in the 45 to 55 range, on the verge of being empty nesters, do we risk riding the property market to the bottom when we can cash out now?

No, make no mistake, Ridgewood is very much on a precipice formed by the intersection of a monolithic hospital concerned about its future revenue stream, developers who want to increase their profits and well meaning Villagers who are buying into false arguments and fears generated by the Hospital and developers.

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