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Enact a moratorium on affordable litigation through December 31, 2017

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Support A-4666/S-3080 and A-4667/S-3081, Affordable Housing
11 Tuesday Apr 2017

Update:  Click here to ask your State Legislators to support these bills.

The League supports both A-4666/S-3080 and A-4667/S-3081.   Both bills are a response to the current affordable housing impasses in the State and lack of a statewide housing policy and guidance for municipalities.

Because the Council on Affordable Housing (COAH) has been unable to adopt valid regulations since 1999, the New Jersey Supreme Court transferred jurisdiction over municipal compliance to the Courts.   As a result, in July 2015 over 300 municipalities sought to voluntarily comply by seeking declaratory judgement from the Court.     To date approximately 100 municipalities have reached settlements and some other municipalities are no longer under the Court’s jurisdiction.  We estimate that approximately 150 municipalities are either in or awaiting trial to determine their respective affordable housing obligation.     Each Court vicinage is proceeding independently, with different judges and different appointed experts making independent determinations.    The result has been a costly and disjointed process, which does not serve the interests of taxpayers or low income families.

Specifically A-4666 and S-3080 enact a moratorium on affordable litigation through December 31, 2017.   The bill would not impact any judgement or settlement issued or agreed to before the effective date of the Act.   Current litigation would be stayed until the moratorium expires.

A-4667 and S-3081 establishes the Affordable housing Obligation Study Commission.   This Commission would consist of 7 members, including:

  • the Executive Director of the Housing Mortgage Finance Agency (HMFA), ex officio;
  • an appointee of the Senate President;
  • an appointee of the Senate Minority Leader;
  • an appointee of the Speaker of the Assembly;
  • an appointee of the Assembly Minority Leader;
  • an appointee of the Governor, from a list submitted by the League of Municipalities; and,
  • an appointee of the Governor, from a list submitted by the Fair Share Housing Center.

The Commission will do the following:

(1)   Examine and study the history of affordable housing in New Jersey and how past practices at the State and local level have resulted in the State’s current legal framework.

(2)   Analyze past guidance from State agencies and advocacy groups to municipalities with respect to methods of satisfying existing and future affordable housing obligations to determine whether such guidance has been effective.

(3)   Analyze the actual and projected population increases in the State, the number of affordable housing units actually needed to serve the needs of residents.

(4)   Hold such public hearings and other activities as may be desirable, at the discretion of the commission, to ensure adequate public input into the preparation of a report.

(5)   Gather and disseminate such information on housing needs and strategies as may be useful for the work of the commission and informative to the public.

(6)   Prepare, adopt, and publish a report, not later than the 365th day next following the organization of the commission, that provides recommendations to municipalities regarding strategies which could be utilized to meet affordable housing obligations, and to State agencies on how best to assist municipalities in meeting affordable housing obligations.

Considering the extensive and ongoing expenditures of public financial resources in the Courts, passage of these common sense bills is critical.     The Legislature needs to step in and establish a reasonable and rational path forward for local governments, for taxpayers and for families in need of affordable housing.    These bills create the opportunity to do so in a timely fashion.

A-4666 and A-4667 are referenced to the Assembly Housing and Community Development Committee.   S-3080 and S-3081 are referenced to the Senate Community and Urban Affairs Committee.

Click here to ask your State Legislators to support these bills.

Contact:

Michael F. Cerra, Assistant Executive Director,  [email protected], 609-695-3481 x120.

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Ridgewood Chamber of Commerce presents “Easter in Ridgewood”

Happy_Easter_artchich__theridgewoodblog

file photo by ArtChick

Easter In The Park
Sat, April 15, 2017
Time: 11:00 AM – 2:00 PM
Location: Memorial Park at Van Neste Square, E Ridgewood Ave and Oak St

Ridgewood Chamber of Commerce presents
“Easter in Ridgewood”
Saturday, April 15, 2017 – 11am-2pm
at Memorial Park at Van Neste Square
and get a map to visit at the stores and restaurants that will be participating in the fun.

Sponsored by:

Ben & Jerry’s Easter Egg Hunt -4-7years
and DJ Music so you can hippidy-hop in the Park

ConnectOne Bank and Precision Orthodontics
“Meet the Easter Bunny”. Bring your camera to take pictures

Pinot’s Palette will have
Art and Painting in the Park.

Bethlehem Evangelical Lutheran Church will
have games and treats for the children.

Weather permitting
************************************************************
There will be lots of fun things to do around the park along with stores that will be offering
art & crafts, games, sales, surprises all through the business district. Fun for the entire family.

Details: [email protected]
201-445-2600
See you soon!

In the Park with fun thing to do-
weather permitting

Brainstorm Tutoring
Sweet & Sassy
Goldfish Swim School
Distinct Vacations
Huntington Learning Center
Ridgewood YMCA
YWCA of Bergen County
Taekwondo all in – demo
SHARE
Ridgewood Bootery
Boiling Springs
Racefaster
HoffmaniousLife
Corefire
CHASE BANK

In-the-store activities-more fun…
get your map and walk Ridgewood’s business district – weather permitting

Art of Motion-fun classes
Yoga 9am-10am, Ballet 10am-11:30am

Arthur Groom-find the gem stones
Learning Express-Bunny Buffet Tattoo’s
Femmebot Clothing – tattoo’s
ConnectOne Bank-activities
Lucky Brand-fun and a sale
Beauty Plus Salon – sale on products
The Ridgewood Man salon-a surprise with candy.
Red Velvet-Peeps
DPARZ Shoes-Easter Goodie or Gag 12-4pm
LaPiccolo Bistro-fresh cookies
Pink Bungalow
Loft 41
Alex and Ani
Shoe Inn-Coloring
Ridgewood Bootery-Egg Hunt-Coupons
Kilwins Ridgewood-samplings of treats
Eat Your Spinach-$20 Sale rack
Hocus Pocus Gift Shop-special treats-sales
Racefaster-Easter treats
CHASE BANK

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Demand for housing in New Jersey on the rise — It’s a seller’s market

ridgewood real-estate

By David Matthau April 11, 2017 3:53 AM

The New Jersey housing market, which has been depressed since the Great Recession, is showing signs of firing up.

According to Rob Dekanski, a Realtor with RE/MAX 1st Advantage, inventory levels in the Garden State are now lower than they’ve been in the past 18 years, which is very good news for people selling their homes.

“There’s less to choose from and buyers are fighting over less inventory, enabling the sellers to ask for a little bit more money,” he said.

He estimated that depending on the specific town and the quality of the school district, homes are selling for 2 to 10 percent more than they were a year ago at this time

Read More: Demand for housing in New Jersey on the rise — It’s a seller’s market | https://nj1015.com/demand-for-housing-in-new-jersey-on-the-rise-its-a-sellers-market/?trackback=tsmclip

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Reader says home security systems signs violate Village sign ordinances

adt

A clear violation of Village Code 190-122. Read it and weep .

Required permits and approvals. No sign shall be constructed or displayed unless a sign permit shall have been issued in accordance with the provisions of § 190-97C. No permanent freestanding sign shall be permitted until a site plan for the sign is approved by the Planning Board. Notwithstanding the above, the following signs are exempt from the requirement to obtain permits or site plan approval, but such signs shall comply with the regulations in Subsection H below:

(1) Signs for residential uses permitted by § 190-122C(1).

C. Signs in the residential zone districts. In all residential zones, the following signs shall be permitted, except as may be provided otherwise by this chapter: [Amended 4-13-2005 by Ord. No. 2933; 2-8-2012 by Ord. No. 3327; 3-23-2016 by Ord. No. 3493]
(1) On premises used for residential purposes, a sign or signs identifying the residence, the resident or residents or the street address, or any combination there of. No such sign shall have an area of more than two square feet, nor shall the aggregate square footage of such signs, if there is more than one, exceed three square feet in area.
(2) (Reserved)
(3) On premises used for a permitted institutional use, a sign or signs identifying the use and activities conducted on the premises, which shall comply with the following:
(a) One freestanding sign and one sign affixed to each principal or accessory building shall be permitted.
(b) The maximum area of any sign shall be 30 square feet.
(c) Freestanding signs shall be located at least five feet from any property line and shall be located so as to not interfere with safe sight distance at intersections of roadways and driveways.
(d) Freestanding signs shall not exceed a height of 10 feet.

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Reader mostly agree The settlement isn’t designed to address low income housing availability. It is designed as a club developers can hold over the heads of affluent communities

Paul_Aronsohn_dunking_theridgewoodblog

Seven low income housing units are planned for the Chestnut Avenue development that was just approved. How the heck does Ridgewood make any sort of real dent in its preposterous court-imposed low income housing deficit, seven units at a time?

Judicial fiat in any area of life over a time span measured in decades is utter lunacy. In this case it constitutes a naked denial to New Jersey citizens of their right under the U.S. Constitution to a republican (small ‘r’) form of government. The Municipal Law course at Rutgers Newark offered at the turn of the millenium featured a hands-upturned, shoulders-shrugged admission of all of the above by the part-time prof and active municipal law practitioner (who, of course, supported the system despite its unconstitutionality, but why? Because the prof was a reliablly progressive statist drone who agreed with the POLICY!).

The issue of affordable housing is based on a NJ Supreme Court decision over 10 years ago that requires EVERY municipality in the state to provide affordable housing in their community. The towns then essentially passed that burden along to developers who wished to build new housing units in their community by requiring that a percentage of the new units be dedicated to affordable housing. Nonetheless the legal obligation to provide affordable housing ultimately rests with the municipality and not developers..

It doesn’t. The way the ‘settlement’ has been structured, it never will.The settlement isn’t designed to address low income housing availability. It is designed as a club developers can hold over the heads of affluent communities. No prizes for guessing who the driving force behind the settlement was.

If they REALLY cared about affordable housing, they would insist that developers build 100% affordable housing, instead of giving ‘credit’ for a few units in a giant multifamily building. But there the $$$$$ are just not there for developing pure affordable housing, you see!

The part I can’t understand is that to get the seven we have to get a lot more of the “non-low-income” kind, thereby increasing the proportion of those. At that rate, the more affordable units we build, the farther behind we’ll get. By the way, Aronsohn promised the disabled community that he would make sure appropriate housing became available. Why isn’t his name invoked when complaints are made that Ridgewood needs this? No–instead, he’s thanked.

That was the fallacy and lunacy of the Mayor Arohnson approach – – the last council approved close to 400 new family units downtown with only a small percentage addressing our coah requirements. But, the new council does not seem any more intent on doing what we need to do in a rationale manner. Now we have these new units going forward, our schools and other village services will be innundated with new people and we still have the problem we had before — where do we put hundreds of new coah units??

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Reader says If only seniors lived in Ridgewood , that would be best

old-hippies

The CBD is small with narrow roads.  Put added parking in my living room.

Some people will just have to move out of Ridgewood if they are unhappy, that is only solution.  Tax base may be smaller; but will be doable.  Too much unnecessary stuff anyway.

If only seniors lived here that would be best.  Walkable streets , supermarkets close by.  Ridgewood could be a wonderful town for majority of residents being seniors. A big school budget wouldn’t be necessary then.  Taxes wouldn’t be so high; parking wouldn’t be a problem.

How about that for the future, thinking futuristic.

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Here are 14 of the most-read library books in N.J.

Bike_Ridgewood_Public_Library_theridgewoodblog

Updated April 09, 2017
Posted April 09, 2017

Looking for a page-turner to read on the treadmill or on vacation this year? Now’s the time to head to your local library to find one. This week marks National Library Week.

Last year, 73 percent of Americans read at least one book, and believe it or not, print books are still the most common ones picked up, according to the Pew Research Center. Of those who read a book in 2016, 65 percent said it was a print version and 28 percent said they read at least one digital book, the Pew Research Center reported.

And in New Jersey, more than 55 million books were circulated in 2015, according to data from the state library.

We asked the county libraries throughout New Jersey what the most-popular books were last year, and here are the results.

https://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2017/04/here_was_the_most_read_library_books_in_nj_in_2016.html#incart_river_home

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Ridgewood Bus Station Move is Lunacy

Ridgewood Bus Station Move is Lunacy

April 10,2017

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, Chris’ idea to move the bus station to the train station is lunacy.

300 NJT buses every weekday at the tiny and already overcrowded Garber Square intersection.
Up to 20 NJT buses an hour in rush hours.
900 new pedestrians in the morning rush and 900 new pedestrians in the afternoon rush.
Buses acting as 40 foot long walls obstructing line of sight for drivers and hundreds of pedestrians alike.
Each bus = 3 car lengths so traffic that already backs up Franklin and down to Monroe will back up more. Fewer cars will get through each light cycle.
Listen here to the ill-advised and not thought out plan: https://youtu.be/z5AdA2XVZoU#t=01h05m55s
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Reader asks How does Ridgewood make any sort of real dent in its preposterous court-imposed low income housing deficit?

oliver-twist-007

Seven low income housing units are planned for the Chestnut Avenue development that was just approved. How the heck does Ridgewood make any sort of real dent in its preposterous court-imposed low income housing deficit, seven units at a time?

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Reader says Hudson Street Garage will be a Major FUBAR

Ridgewood Police quickly apprehended alleged shoplifter

the garage will slum anyway put the bus station there add add more noise fumes centralized homeless and drug dealing shedded alcove . Bid out the rental car franchise that will come soon anyway Major FUBAR folks and we are all on the
Hook when it fails. Time to Sell

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Reader says the Village is a textbook example of what NOT to do in an Emergency Situation

harvard_business_review

No contact from VC until 5:00 yesterday. Horrible communication. The schools found out about it Wed night. I learned about it from Channel 2 news. It was newsworthy enough for network news but not important enough for the VC to contact residents. They only find you when they need you to do something for them like move your garbage cans or leaves.

The Village could make a ton of money selling the details of their communications plan to Harvard’s Business School as a textbook example of what NOT to do when confronted with a situation like this. A classic screw up of municipal government.

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Reader says Ridgewood is better served by having the bus and train stations physically separated

Ridgewood -bus-station-theridgewoodblog

A centralized “transit hub” might work for Hoboken, but Ridgewood is better served by having the bus and train stations physically separated because it helps distribute the traffic better.

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Maundy (Holy) Thursday at Emmanuel

Emmanuel Baptist Church

Thursday, April 06, 2017

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, A “Simple Soup Supper” will be offered on Thursday, April 13th at 6:30pm followed by an ecumenical service at 7:30pm for Maundy (Holy) Thursday at Emmanuel Baptist Church in Ridgewood, NJ.
The three congregations in Ridgewood that will participate in the ecumenical service are First Methodist Church, Christ Episcopal Church, and Emmanuel Baptist Church. The service will feature a joint choir, communion, and foot washing.
Emmanuel is located at 14 Hope Street, at the corner of Hope Street and East Ridgewood Avenue, Ridgewood, NJ. The building is ADA accessible and all are invited to attend.

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Reader asks , Do lawn signs warning of home security systems violate Village sign ordinances?

adt

“Just wondering why these signs seem to be okay, but those promoting other products and services result in summonses being issued.” Anyone know?

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The Schoolhouse Museum Ridgewood’s Best Kept Secret

schoolhouse museum

April 9,2017
the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, the new exhibit at the Schoolhouse Museum curated by Joy Simmen Hamburger with Candace Latham and Vicky Herbert features a very impressive collection assembled through various local collections and donations.

“From the Revolutionary War to the 1960’s Revolution. The “Events and People That Shaped Our American History”. Told through objects, artifacts and costumes from the collections of Ridgewood’s Historical Society and Public Library.”

IMG 0549

Since it was near the 100th anniversary of the American military entering World War 1 Trustee Bob Borders gave the Ridgewood blog an in depth tour detailing many of the artifacts and their donors . The stories of the discovery of the artifacts often rivaling the artifact itself.  For local history buffs its very insightful to see history though the lens of local actors.

If you are unfamiliar ,the mission of the Ridgewood Historical Society, which operates the historic Schoolhouse Museum building, formerly one of the first public schools in Ridgewood, is to preserve the building, as well as maintain, interpret, and exhibit the collection of artifacts representing the history, culture, and lives of ordinary people from the Ridgewood area from the period of Native America.

The Ridgewood Historical Society is the parent organization of the Schoolhouse Museum which annually presents a themed exhibit featuring artifacts from the collection, and presents educational programs featuring local people with knowledge and/or skills that pertain to the collection.

The Ridgewood Historical Society also offers opportunities for people of all ages to experience, share, maintain, organize and preserve our local artifacts.

They are a volunteer based and welcome your involvement.  You can become a member and join us in our quest to preserve local history and put the Schoolhouse Museum on the agenda of every  student, family, social club and history buff in the area.

Schoolhouse Museum
650 E. Glen Avenue
Ridgewood, NJ 07450
201-447-3242

Thursday and Saturdays 1PM – 3PM
Sundays 2PM – 4PM

GROUP TOURS AVAILABLE
UPON REQUEST
https://ridgewoodhistoricalsociety.org/ 

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