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Storm Related Pickups – Random Collection through Sept. 20th 2011

> Storm Related Pickups – Random Collection through Sept. 20th 2011

Yardwaste – Storm Damage

Branches which have fallen as a result of the recent storm can be placed on house side of sidewalk…NOT at curb or street. Please do not block sidewalks or place in the street. We will randomly be going around town to collect storm debris. Do not call for at least 2 weeks for a missed pick up. Collection will be for branches only, not tree stumps.

Water Damage

If you have bulk garbage as a result of flooding, please place at the curb and it will be collected. Wednesday, August 31st is a scheduled bulk pick up for the West side. For the East side just place at the curb and it will be collected. PLEASE only debris as a result of flooding.

Pickup anticipated completed by Sept 20th. All yardwaste must be placed house side of sidewalk. Not on sidewalk or road area.

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>Irene: could have been so much worse had it hit as a category one hurricane!

>Irene: could have been so much worse had it hit as a category one hurricane! 
Mary Ann Copp


The headquarters firehouse property flooded considerably
during Irene, including the area where the proposed cell tower was to
sited. While the tower theoretically could be built on stilts so large
equipment cabinets would not be flooded, one wonders how stable that
arrangement would be. Further, there are no federal standards for wind
speeds cell towers must be constructed to withstand.  A communications
industry committee recommends somewhere around 85 mph, far less
than sustained wind speeds that Irene hit in the south and were
predicted to hit here. That said, cell towers are not appropriate for
virtually all of Ridgewood because of the hazards they pose to the
public and property in this largely residential and very populated area.
Seventeen cell towers fell during the Joplin, MO, tornadoes this
year. Cell towers have fallen even in 55 mph winds. All this risk is
unnecessary because Distributed Antenna Systems, or DAS, provide the
same, if not better, cell coverage through tiny antennas mounted on
telephone poles and connected by fiber optic wires.


Getting back
to our flooded headquarters firehouse–despite the relocation of fire
trucks and other equipment, our firefighters provided outstanding
service in our neighborhood, which was inundated. Firefighters surveyed
our neighborhood for flooded basements–there were a few–by early
afternoon, and by 4 p.m. returned to pump water from basements.  They
did so between providing assistance to neighboring towns. We are
fortunate to have such an outstanding fire department. We were unable to
travel very far from our neighborhood due to roads being closed due to
flooding, but roads were very quickly blocked to prevent motorists from
going into flooded areas or areas where trees and power lines were down.
So village workers were out in full force and helping protect the
public.

My husband did a survey early Sunday morning of the
HoHoKus Brook to determine why so much flood water was coming
down nearby George Street and into our street. He found that water was
backing up behind an old cement bridge, much of which had fallen into
the brook. The bridge used to serve as a driveway from North Maple
Avenue into a house located on the western corner of Burnside Place.
Later, water was observed pooling around the area of this fallen bridge
and moving toward the firehouse, recycling center and water company
properties.  Burnside Place residents told my husband that they have
asked the village to remove the dilapidated bridge many times. Now that
we have learned the hard way that this old bridge and its
debris contributes to flooding of residences and village property, the
village should take immediate action to remove it.   As this constitutes
illegal fill in a floodway, the NJ DEP would agree. Village residents
and village property should not be subject to unnecessary additional
flooding risk, nor should our headquarters firehouse have further
impediments thrown in the way of its vital emergency services.


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Did United Water inadvertently cause power outage ?

>Did United Water inadvertently cause power outage ?

Rumors continue to fly that a major cause of  the blackout that has hit Washington Twp, Paramus, Oradell, River Edge and several other towns in Bergen County was the release of water from the Oradell reservoir by United Water Resources that in turn inadvertently flooded the  PSE&G New Milford substation .

United Water began lowering the level of the Oradell Reservoir in an attempt to minimize flooding in the New Milford and River Dell areas.

PSE&G after the first denial than is now admitting that if your power is out because of a flooded substation it could take up to 7 days to restore you power .

Contrary to the predictions that PSE&G was prepared for the storm ,the most obvious danger for a hurricane in the North East is flooding .

According to  Kathleen A. Donovan’s Bergen County Executive’s Office, United Water has reported that on Monday, over a foot of water is  expected to spill over the Oradell dam with significant flooding expected to occur south of the dam. The flooding will effect Oradell and River Edge residents.

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Bernie Walsh : Kudos to OEM, EMS, Police and fire for job well done

>Bernie Walsh :  Kudos to OEM, EMS, Police and fire for job well done


“Just walked the east side of brook with councilman Wellinghorst. Met
with neighbors along the way offering assistance if needed. Everyone
seemed to have weathered the storm ok. Some basement and backyard
flooding. Was notified early this morning that water was breaching
village hall.  Excellent preparation minimized damage and disruption.
River is impassable and we told residents we saw to stay out of the
water.

Kudos to OEM, EMS, Police and fire for job well done.”

Bernie Walsh Village Council 

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Hurricane Irene : it’s Bush’s fault!

>Hurricane Irene : it’s Bush’s fault!
Ron

I scratched my head, searched my brain, even prayed, trying to find a way to blame hurricane Irene on the White House. After all, the blame for just about everything else can be placed somewhere in the proximity of the Rose Garden. Certainly, the White House has no trouble blaming the ills of the Nation on the previous occupant, even the earthquake – Bush’s Fault. Alas, Obama had nothing to do with Irene, although he missed his chance to blame it on the Tea Party.

I spent two days in preparation for the big event. I had food, water, batteries, candles, dog food (no snickering, I really have two dogs), and even did all the laundry, in case the power was out for more than a month. I jammed the outdoor furniture between the back fence and the back of the garage, except for the heavy, tiled tables, which I turned over so only the wrought-iron legs would be brushed by the wind. I took all the hanging chimes inside, that my wife insists on hanging around outside, carried the multitude of potted and hanging plants to safety in the garage and basement and, last but not least, on Saturday evening, put both cars in the garage. I was ready.

I stayed up until 3 am, waiting for the storm to challenge my wiley preparations. Only a moderate wind and a hammering rain were playing taps, when I drifted off. I awoke Sunday morning to the insistent tugging of Quinn, the yellow lab, as he removed my covers. Satchmo, the black lab, was excitedly egging him on. They followed me downstairs, as I shed remnants of sleep. They followed me with their eyes, standing where their bowls would soon be, as I scooped their holistic, organic cereal and added a splash of water. Dogs occupied, for about 90 seconds, I almost had enough time to finish in the bathroom, before opening the back door and letting them into the fenced area, so they could do what I just finished. Now for my coffee. I don’t function before coffee;  the only reason the dogs get fed first is pure reflex, tattooed in my nerve network over countless years of dog ownership. The first couple of sips, and I complete my escape from the arms of Morpheus, and head out the front door to get the newspapers.

Until this point, I hadn’t thought about the hurricane; I was running on autopilot. Now, as I surveyed the streets of Bogota, I was awestruck – because all I saw was thousands of leaves, ripped from trees and covering everything. And branches, small branches, here and there. No trees down, no large branches blocking sidewalks and streets, nothing, and damn it, no newspapers. That meant no comics, no jumble, no word game, and no crossword puzzles. I mean, what else is a newspaper for?  I haven’t used them to learn the news for years. I walked out to the street and looked up and down, but could still see no damage from the storm. I went to the back, saw leaves and small branches, a duplicate of the front, and realized how lucky I was.

I turned on the TV news. My wife came down, looked out the front door, and asked me to get the newspapers, I said they weren’t delivered because of the storm – our only casualty. She told me they were lying on the path. Sure enough, our paperman was late, but he came through. I happily retrieved them. The news told of lots of flooding, not lots of trees down, and unfortunately a number of deaths. Power was out in places, even in the next town, but except for a couple of hick-ups that only lasted seconds, our power stayed on – all that laundry for nothing. Now, a friend has asked me to write something about hurricane Irene, but his blog is somewhat political. What am I supposed to say, that where I live it was a non-event? I guess I could tell him that it was terrible because I did all that preparation for nothing, and now I have to put everything back. Maybe I’ll tell him that when things don’t turn out as badly as you expect – it’s Bush’s fault!

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Hurricane Irene’s projected track similar to path of destructive Floyd in 1999

>Hurricane Irene’s projected track similar to path of destructive Floyd in 1999

By Emily Nipps, Times Staff Writer
Posted: Aug 26, 2011 04:14 PM

Hurricane Irene’s projected path bears an uncanny resemblance to 1999’s Hurricane Floyd, which passed by Florida before hitting North Carolina and skimming the Eastern seaboard.

That could mean serious trouble for those in Irene’s path.

Floyd was responsible for 57 deaths, $4.5 billion in damages and widespread flooding that kept entire communities underwater for weeks. Like Irene’s forecasted track, Floyd passed over the Bahamas and was originally predicted to hit Florida before shifting east.

https://www.tampabay.com/news/weather/hurricanes/hurricane-irenes-projected-track-similar-to-path-of-destructive-floyd-in/1188213

New Jersey Reduces Damage from Hurricane Floyd


https://www.nj.gov/njoem/pdf/dr-1295-nj%20full.pdf

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Waldwick officials to expand scope of Ho-Ho-Kus Brook fix

>Waldwick officials to expand scope of Ho-Ho-Kus Brook fix

THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 2011  
BY JODI WEINBERGER
OF SUBURBAN NEWS
WALDWICK SUBURBAN NEWS

Waldwick – Borough officials have decided to expand plans to shore up the Ho-Ho-Kus Brook embankment by including the removal of rocks and sediment that has built up under a bridge on Wyckoff Avenue.

John Delia became the second homeowner this summer to seek the Borough Council’s help in containing water in the brook, the flow of which he said is being constricted by debris.

“This is a hazard to the people in the area because if we get nailed with another hurricane even close to Floyd, we’re going to get hit pretty badly,” Delia told the council at a meeting Aug. 9. “This is something serious. It’s getting worse year by year.”

https://www.northjersey.com/news/128368163_Flooding_remedy_may_be_expanded.html

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FLOOD WATCH…LOCALLY HEAVY RAINFALL POSSIBLE ACROSS MOST OF THE TRI-STATE THROUGH THIS EVENING.

>FLOOD WATCH…LOCALLY HEAVY RAINFALL POSSIBLE ACROSS MOST OF THE TRI-STATE THROUGH THIS EVENING.


FLOOD WATCH…CORRECTED
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE NEW YORK NY
459 AM EDT MON AUG 15 2011

…LOCALLY HEAVY RAINFALL POSSIBLE ACROSS MOST OF THE TRI-STATE
THROUGH THIS EVENING…

.AS A SLOW MOVING STORM TRACKS SOUTH OF LONG ISLAND THROUGH
THIS EVENING…IT WILL CONTINUE TO USHER AN ABUNDANT AMOUNT OF
MOISTURE INTO THE TRI-STATE REGION. THIS MOISTURE IS BEING ACTED
ON BY THE STORM…CREATING THE POTENTIAL FOR LOCALIZED FLASH
FLOODING ACROSS MOST OF THE TRI-STATE INTO THIS EVENING.

NORTHERN FAIRFIELD-NORTHERN NEW HAVEN-SOUTHERN FAIRFIELD-
SOUTHERN NEW HAVEN-EASTERN PASSAIC-HUDSON-WESTERN BERGEN-
EASTERN BERGEN-WESTERN ESSEX-EASTERN ESSEX-WESTERN UNION-
EASTERN UNION-PUTNAM-ROCKLAND-NORTHERN WESTCHESTER-
SOUTHERN WESTCHESTER-NEW YORK (MANHATTAN)-BRONX-
RICHMOND (STATEN ISLAND)-KINGS (BROOKLYN)-NORTHWESTERN SUFFOLK-
SOUTHWESTERN SUFFOLK-NORTHERN QUEENS-NORTHERN NASSAU-
SOUTHERN QUEENS-SOUTHERN NASSAU-
459 AM EDT MON AUG 15 2011

…FLASH FLOOD WATCH REMAINS IN EFFECT THROUGH THIS EVENING…

THE FLASH FLOOD WATCH CONTINUES FOR

* PORTIONS OF SOUTHERN CONNECTICUT…NORTHEAST NEW JERSEY AND
  SOUTHEAST NEW YORK…INCLUDING THE FOLLOWING AREAS…IN
  SOUTHERN CONNECTICUT…NORTHERN FAIRFIELD…NORTHERN NEW
  HAVEN…SOUTHERN FAIRFIELD AND SOUTHERN NEW HAVEN. IN
  NORTHEAST NEW JERSEY…EASTERN BERGEN…EASTERN ESSEX…
  EASTERN PASSAIC…EASTERN UNION…HUDSON…WESTERN BERGEN…
  WESTERN ESSEX AND WESTERN UNION. IN SOUTHEAST NEW YORK…
  BRONX…KINGS (BROOKLYN)…NEW YORK (MANHATTAN)…NORTHERN
  NASSAU…NORTHERN QUEENS…NORTHERN WESTCHESTER…NORTHWESTERN
  SUFFOLK…PUTNAM…RICHMOND (STATEN ISLAND)…ROCKLAND…
  SOUTHERN NASSAU…SOUTHERN QUEENS…SOUTHERN WESTCHESTER AND
  SOUTHWESTERN SUFFOLK.

* THROUGH THIS EVENING

* AN ADDITIONAL 1 TO 1.5 INCHES OF RAINFALL…WITH LOCALLY HIGHER
  AMOUNTS POSSIBLE…IS FORECAST TO FALL IN THE WATCH AREA…ON
  TOP OF THE 2 TO 11 INCHES OF RAINFALL THAT HAS ALREADY FALLEN.
  THIS COULD RESULT IN THE FLASH FLOODING OF URBAN AREAS AND FAST
  RESPONDING SMALL STREAMS AND CREEKS LOCATED ACROSS MOST OF
  NORTHEAST NEW JERSEY…SOUTHEAST NEW YORK…AND SOUTHWESTERN
  CONNECTICUT.

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS…

A FLASH FLOOD WATCH MEANS THAT CONDITIONS MAY DEVELOP THAT LEAD
TO FLASH FLOODING. FLASH FLOODING IS A VERY DANGEROUS SITUATION.
YOU SHOULD MONITOR LATER FORECASTS AND BE PREPARED TO TAKE ACTION
SHOULD FLASH FLOOD WARNINGS BE ISSUED.

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The question is do we want to remain a Village or do we want to become more city like?

>The question is do we want to remain a Village or do we want to become more city like?

First, to address the commentary, the train station is beautiful. No doubt about it. But why so big? That’s what the old mayor and council failed to address when it was being built and something about which the current council appears to be clueless. Why would NJ Transit pour that much money into Ridgewood? Call me cynical, but the answer has to lie with broader expansion plans to make Ridgewood a transit hub.

To get to the broader issue raised by this post, call us semi urban, urban, urbane, suburban or whatever you like. We are a densely populated town, like many in the NorthEast. But at the moment, we can still call ourselves a Village. The question is do we want to remain a Village or do we want to become more city like?

Every issue we face has to be addressed in that light: Do we accept a larger, improved train station — and more bus connections and parking as we become a transit hub? Do we tear down the center of town to put up a hundred one room apartments — and then deal with the need for more parking for the working couples that move in and the need for a larger school budget for the children that will undoubtedly follow? Do we double the size of the hospital — and devalue a large portion of the Village’s housing stock and take away the front yards of those on Linwood so there is enough room for the construction vehicles and patients that the Hospital hopes to attract from across the NorthEast? Do we continue to supply water to our well heeled neighbors in Wyckoff and elsewhere — and then have them sue us? Do we turf and light our fields and shut off the lights by 8 or 10 — and create a carnival atmosphere if we choose the latter? Do we emphasize sports over academics and the arts — and lose the competitive edge our students had in all these areas?

Ridgewood is at a semi-urban crossroad. It has been and remains a premier town in the New York Metropolitan area. The challenge is to keep it as Village like as possible. That is a tall order for the Village council and all of us. Myoptic visions must be set aside and folks need to see the broader picture. With every potentially wonderful advance put on the drawing board — hospital, train station, parking lots — come potential disadvantages. They need to be weighed carefully. We diminish the whole when we diminish any part of our collective backyard.

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A Coup d’état at the Zoning board of adjustment

>A Coup d’état at the Zoning board of adjustment
Pj Blogger and the Staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ – Fireworks were felt at the Zoning board of adjustment meeting when both Doug Cronk, a former council candidate, and Dean Vellis, a Fields Use Policy proponent, were not reappointed to the board.


It seems the Village is looking to clean house to avoid any impression of conflict of interest  before the controversial H-Zone ,Valley Renewal Village Council special meetings. The Village is looking to avoid a repeat of the  “I forgot to tell anybody my father was a Valley Trustee ”  death bed confession of a former Village Mayor.


Many viewed  the move as unexpected but is was rather difficult to not notice the impression that Doug  Cronk and his running mate Brian Dowd ran a very pro Valley campaign , perhaps accepting contributions and as many allege campaign support from Valley Hospital itself  , Doug also finds himself  involved with the “bogus” pro Valley Renewal group that has sprung up from the “artificial turf”. Cronk and Dowd were defeated by current members Deputy Mayor Tom Riche and Councilwoman Bernadette Walsh.


Dean Vellis who runs the junior football program in the Village, and is a big proponent of youth sports may have been targeted because of the continued anxiety over whether many of the ‘turf and field light projects have been alleged to have been misrepresented to the public.


The other elephant in the room was the mishandled  “Action Park” Graydon pool  project which was under the thumb of none other than Melinda Cronk the wife of Doug.


The house cleaning had already started with the “sudden departure” Planning Board Chairmen David Nicholson a Valley ally who was presiding over an extremely unpopular tenure at the Board.


While Cronk and Vellis claim the vote not to re-appoint was politically motivated the Village Council seems to have woken up to the fact that it is a new day in the Village and the last 15 years of “we can do what ever we want and your gonna pay for it” are now over.


A new professional atmosphere is reemerging  and perhaps the council is beginning to see both the liability and the folly of the all the incestuousness and parochial self interests that has so tarnished the image of the Village .

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The very fact that the fields are in the flood plain is why they should be turf.

>

RHSSTADIUM Flood theridgewoodblog



The very fact that the fields are in the flood plain is why they should be turf.

“Turf fields that need replacement and continuous maintenance (b/c they were idiotically built in a flood zone) does not represent wise spending. The return on investment does come close to breaking even as not nearly enough of the student population benefits.”

We had an unusually severe spring storm season this year. So, here is a question for you…how much would we have spent to maintain/repair the old grass fields after the floods this spring? Or, would we have just left the fields closed for 3-4 weeks until they were playable, like we did at Brookside Field this March/April? You need to compare what the costs would have been and what the impact of lost field access would have been.

No one said that the turf fields are maintenance free (particularly in the flood plain). However, the very fact that the fields are in the flood plain is why they should be turf. There are maintenance costs. But, they are different costs from grass field maintenance and are a lower expense to taxpayers

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The Ho-Ho-Kus Brook is in major need of dredging, deepening, and cleaning

>

RHSFfieldflood theridgewood+blog

photo by Boyd Loving 


The Ho-Ho-Kus Brook is in major need of dredging, deepening, and cleaning


No question about it: the turf field served to exacerbate the flooding conditions at RHS experienced yesterday. I can recall a graduation ceremony held at RHS in 2001 during which thunderstorms, of about the same severity and intensity as those we saw yesterday, rolled through the area before and during the ceremony. The grass was very wet, but the field did not flood. 


Here is what is going wrong: the Ho-Ho-Kus Brook is in major need of dredging, deepening, and cleaning; too, rules governing the construction of structures and fences within the flood plain of the brook need to be enforced. These are a few of the reasons why we are seeing the HHK brook overflow its banks with increasing frequency. And, of course, the turf field: located within the flood plain, it does not absorb the water but rather it collects it. Hence an area of pooled water that is very much in evidence in the photos provided

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Ridgewood High School Athletic Stadium Floods – Graduation Ceremony Moved To RHS Front Lawn

>

RHSfieldflood2 theridgewood+blog



Ridgewood High School Athletic Stadium Floods – Graduation Ceremony Moved To RHS Front Lawn
Boyd Loving


The HoHoKus Brook overflowed its banks on Thursday afternoon flooding the RHS athletic stadium.
 
The graduation ceremony for the RHS class of 2011 was moved to the front lawn of RHS as a result.
 
Workers moved chairs from the athletic field to the front lawn following a heavy downpour in mid afternoon.


RHSFfieldflood theridgewood+blog

photos by Boyd Loving

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Ridgewood : Flash Flood Watch

>
FLOOD WATCH: NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE NEW YORK NY
349 AM EDT THU JUN 23 2011

…PERIODS OF TORRENTIAL RAIN POSSIBLE THROUGH TONIGHT ACROSS THE LOWER
HUDSON VALLEY…NORTHEAST NEW JERSEY…NEW YORK CITY AND NASSAU COUNTY…

.A WARM FRONT EXTENDING SOUTHEAST ACROSS THE LOCAL AREA FROM A LOW
PRESSURE SYSTEM OVER WISCONSIN WILL SERVE AS THE FOCUS FOR THE
CONVERGENCE OF MOISTURE AND DEVELOPMENT OF HEAVY SHOWERS AND
THUNDERSTORMS THROUGH TONIGHT. ANY THUNDERSTORMS THAT DEVELOP IN THIS
ENVIRONMENT WILL BE CAPABLE OF PRODUCING TORRENTIAL RAIN…RESULTING
IN AREAS OF FLASH FLOODING.

WESTERN PASSAIC-EASTERN PASSAIC-HUDSON-WESTERN BERGEN-
EASTERN BERGEN-WESTERN ESSEX-EASTERN ESSEX-WESTERN UNION-
EASTERN UNION-ORANGE-PUTNAM-ROCKLAND-NORTHERN WESTCHESTER-
SOUTHERN WESTCHESTER-NEW YORK (MANHATTAN)-BRONX-
RICHMOND (STATEN ISLAND)-KINGS (BROOKLYN)-NORTHERN QUEENS-
NORTHERN NASSAU-SOUTHERN QUEENS-SOUTHERN NASSAU-
349 AM EDT THU JUN 23 2011.

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Report: Pedestrian bridge at Ridgewood High School needs work

>
Report: Pedestrian bridge at Ridgewood High School needs work

FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 2011  
BY KELLY EBBELS
STAFF WRITER
THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS

A pedestrian bridge that connects the two athletic fields at Ridgewood High School (RHS) – crossed by hundreds of students each day – has structural deficiencies that have yet to be addressed by the school district, and vehicles have been seen using the bridge despite a weight limit, according to a village resident who lives near RHS.

The pedestrian bridge connecting Stadium and Stevens fields at Ridgewood High School was closed following flooding in April.
More than two years ago, the Ridgewood school district received an engineering report on the pedestrian bridge over the Ho-Ho-Kus Brook between athletics fields at Ridgewood High School (RHS), citing concerns with the bridge’s structural integrity.

The report, prepared by Mark Micucci of Micucci Engineering and delivered to the district in January 2009, notes that the exposed top side of the bridge is in “relatively good condition” and its underside in “fair condition,” but reveals problems with the structure of its abutments, particularly its southern abutment.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/123598184_Report__Pedestrian_bridge_needs_work.html

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