Posted on Leave a comment

>Happy Hanukkah from the Ridgewood Blog

>menorah titus mncr

https://www.history.com/minisite.do?content_type=Minisite_Generic&content_type_id=732&display_order=2&mini_id=1061

The History of Hanukkah

Hanukkah is celebrated for eight days and nights, starting on the 25th of Kislev on the Hebrew calendar (which is November-December on the Gregorian calendar). In Hebrew, the word “Hanukkah” means “dedication.”

The holiday commemorates the rededication of the holy Temple in Jerusalem after the Jews’ 165 B.C.E. victory over the Hellenist Syrians. Antiochus, the Greek King of Syria, outlawed Jewish rituals and ordered the Jews to worship Greek gods.

In 168 B.C.E. the Jews’ holy Temple was seized and dedicated to the worship of Zeus.

Some Jews were afraid of the Greek soldiers and obeyed them, but most were angry and decided to fight back.

The fighting began in Modiin, a village not far from Jerusalem. A Greek officer and soldiers assembled the villagers, asking them to bow to an idol and eat the flesh of a pig, activities forbidden to Jews. The officer asked Mattathias, a Jewish High Priest, to take part in the ceremony. He refused, and another villager stepped forward and offered to do it instead. Mattathias became outraged, took out his sword and killed the man, then killed the officer. His five sons and the other villagers then attacked and killed the soldiers. Mattathias’ family went into hiding in the nearby mountains, where many other Jews who wanted to fight the Greeks joined them. They attacked the Greek soldiers whenever possible.

Judah Maccabee and his soldiers went to the holy Temple, and were saddened that many things were missing or broken, including the golden menorah. They cleaned and repaired the Temple, and when they were finished, they decided to have a big dedication ceremony. For the celebration, the Maccabees wanted to light the menorah. They looked everywhere for oil, and found a small flask that contained only enough oil to light the menorah for one day. Miraculously, the oil lasted for eight days. This gave them enough time to obtain new oil to keep the menorah lit. Today Jews celebrate Hanukkah for eight days by lighting candles in a menorah every night, thus commemorating the eight-day miracle.
The Menorah

On each night of Hanukkah, the menorah is lit to commemorate a miracle which occurred after the Jews proclaimed victory over the Syrian armies in 165 B.C.E. When Jews came to rededicate the Temple-which had been defiled by the Syrians-they found only one small flask of oil with which to light the menorah. This flask contained only enough oil for one day, yet the lamp burned for eight days (by which time a fresh supply of oil was obtained).

– In Israel, the Hanukkah menorah is called the Hanukiyah
Menorahs come in all shapes and sizes. The only requirement is that the flames are separated enough so that they will not look too big and resemble a pagan bonfire.
– Ancient menorahs were made of clay. They consisted of small, pearl shaped vessels, each with its own wick, which were arranged side-by-side.
– Today’s menorah, which stands on a base from which the branches sprout, resembles the holy Temple’s menorah and started to appear towards the end of the Middle Ages.

Posted on Leave a comment

>Readers want to know………

>”anne zusy said…

Hi James. Once again (ad infinitum; ad nauseum), you have got it wrong. If it’s your intention to Drill Baby Drill then you go. But by the way: You’ve got it wrong, and I’m too incensed to bother trying to correct. Happy holidays to those who still have a soul amid your otherness nastiness. Annie”

An absolutely pathetic attempt at damage control on Ms. Zusy’s part.

Councilwoman Zusy: Yes or no; is the Planning Board, of which you are a member, recommending that the Village’s ENTIRE affordable housing obligation be satisfied by constructing a multiple story housing facility on South Broad Street, at the former site of Brogan Cadillac? Will the Village Council be voting on this plan tonight? Yes or no Ann, please.

Thank you.

Posted on Leave a comment

>How about if us sped parents stop getting offended when non-sped parents express legitimate concern? Geesh.

>have a mix of special needs and non-special needs in my family. The truth is that it’s more expensive to send sped kids out of district than to keep them in district.

Some sped kids really do need a special program, but just because they’re getting shipped a half hour away doesn’t mean we’re not still paying for it. Sped is paid for by the sending district, not the receiving district.

That’s true for all districts, not just Ridgewood. Special ed is simply a fact of life. There’s no getting away from it. Let’s remember that all the sped kids we DO see–because they’re in-district–are saving us money.

We do need to be realistic, however, about sped expenditures. Just like everyone else, I don’t want my regular kids to miss out because too much is going to special ed.

How about if us sped parents stop getting offended when non-sped parents express legitimate concern? Geesh.

Monterey Bay Clothing Company (shop the bay.com)

Posted on Leave a comment

>Freeholders back hospital plan

>Thursday, December 18, 2008
Last updated: Thursday December 18, 2008, 7:34 AM

BY MICHAEL GARTLAND

STAFF WRITER

The Bergen County Freeholder Board lent their support Wednesday night to Hackensack University Medical Center’s proposal to reopen the former Pascack Valley Hospital.

The decision took place before a crowd in Hackensack that numbered more than 150, who came out to voice both support and criticism of the plan. The resolution to back HUMC passed 6-0, with one abstention.

Thom Misciagna, the president of the Bergen County Building and Construction Trades Council, said the plan would be a boon for laborers facing a tough economy in the coming year.

“We want the hospital to go ahead for a number of reasons — certainly jobs,” he said, then gestured toward the crowd. “That’s why these guys are here. … They’re frightened.”

Misciagna estimated that proceeding with the proposal would create about 200 construction jobs, as well as permanent positions for nurses, doctors, technicians and maintenance people.

But not everyone in attendance was there to support HUMC’s plan to reopen the Westwood hospital. Representatives from The Valley Hospital in Ridgewood and Englewood Hospital and Medical Center said that the proposal would add more hospital beds to an area that already has an excess.

Jeff Lieto, the vice president for The Valley Hospital, said that the issue is not about “the health-care industry against organized labor. The issue is about the regulation of the health-care industry through a fair process.”

Lieto cited state-commissioned reports that said there were too many beds in Pascack Valley Hospital when it was in operation.

“The beds that it held were not necessary,” he said.

Tony Orlando, the CFO of Englewood Hospital, said that an excess of beds makes it more difficult for a health-care facility to cover costs. A new hospital would add even more beds to a region that has an abundance, he said.

“Taking away patients makes us inefficient,” he said.

Leaders from the communities around the now-shuttered Pascack Valley Hospital offered support for the Hackensack Medical Center extension as well.

Westwood Mayor John Birkner Jr. described HUMC’s plan as a “vision.” He noted that businesses around the facility have closed and jobs have been lost as a result.

“This particular hospital can survive, and Hackensack has presented the plan to make it happen,” he said.

E-mail: [email protected]

Posted on Leave a comment

>Winter Storm Warning for Bergen County

>

Issued by The National Weather Service
New York City, NY
5:24 am EST, Fri., Dec. 19, 2008

… WINTER STORM WARNING REMAINS IN EFFECT FROM 8 AM THIS MORNING TO MIDNIGHT EST TONIGHT…

A WINTER STORM WARNING REMAINS IN EFFECT FROM 8 AM THIS MORNING TO MIDNIGHT EST TONIGHT.

SNOW IS EXPECTED TO OVERSPREAD THE REGION THIS MORNING… AND WILL BECOME HEAVY AT TIMES IN THE AFTERNOON. THE SNOW WILL MIX WITH SLEET… ESPECIALLY NEAR THE COAST. TOTAL SNOW ACCUMULATION OF 5 TO 8 INCHES CAN BE EXPECTED BY THE TIME THE SNOW ENDS LATER TONIGHT… WITH THE HIGHEST AMOUNTS FURTHEST FROM THE COAST.

THERE MAY BE A VERY SHARP DIFFERENCE IN SNOWFALL AMOUNTS OVER A SHORT DISTANCE..ESPECIALLY WHERE SLEET MIXES WITH SNOW.

A WINTER STORM WARNING MEANS SIGNIFICANT AMOUNTS OF SNOW… SLEET… AND ICE ARE EXPECTED OR OCCURRING. STRONG WINDS ARE ALSO POSSIBLE. THIS WILL MAKE TRAVEL VERY HAZARDOUS OR IMPOSSIBLE.

More Information

… WINTER STORM TO IMPACT THE TRI-STATE AREA TODAY…

.LOW PRESSURE OVER THE MIDWEST THIS MORNING WILL RACE EASTWARD… TAKING A TRACK ACROSS THE OHIO VALLEY EARLY THIS AFTERNOON AND THEN PASSING JUST SOUTH OF LONG ISLAND THIS EVENING. AT THE SAME TIME… POLAR HIGH PRESSURE OVER THE NORTHEAST WILL GRADUALLY LIFT TO THE NORTH AND EAST TODAY. THIS TRACK COMBINED WITH THE COLD AIR IN PLACE WILL BRING SIGNIFICANT AMOUNTS OF SNOW TO PORTIONS OF THE TRI-STATE ARea

https://www.weather.com/weather/alerts/localalerts/USNJ0442?phenomena=WS&significance=W&areaid=NJZ003&office=KOKX&etn=0004&from=36hr_winterWarn_golf

if (typeof(mx_hash) != ‘undefined’) {mx_hash[“severewxticker”] = “severewxticker”;}

Posted on Leave a comment

>REMINDER: Village Council Will Vote Friday on Plan for 90 New Affordable Housing Units in Orchard School District

>REMINDER: Village Council Will Vote Friday on Plan for 90 New Affordable Housing Units in Orchard School District

Date: December 19th

Day: Friday

Time: 5:00 PM (closed session followed by Open Public Meeting)

Location: Village Hall, 131 North Maple Avenue, Sydney V. Stoldt, Jr. Courtroom

Match.com

Posted on Leave a comment

The name calling of those who criticize Spec. Ed. is typical and why we can never have a serious discussion about the expenditures.

>If you say one word that is critical, you are accused of “picking on the children.” We have a problem here in Ridgewood and it needs to be addressed without demonizing those who believe that it spending has gotten out of control.

The howls from parents are deafening when one suggests that maybe we should have alternatives to placing children in the mainstream of schools.

3balls Golfshow?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=149749

Posted on Leave a comment

>Department of Community Affairs refuses extension of deadline for Low Income Housing plans

>Department of Community Affairs (DCA) Director Joe Dorea has refused a request from hundreds of New Jersey small town mayors to extend the deadline to submit their plans to build over 100,000 Low Income Housing Units, due January first. Governor Corzine’s Council on Affordable Housing has mandated an additional 100,000 units be added to the already massive mandate. With almost 90,000 units mandated still not built, the new total of Low income Housing Units that towns across New Jersey will be required to build to meet the Central Planners demands is almost One Hundred and Ninety Thousand (190,000).

Elected Mayors and councils across the state are requesting an extension from the unelected bureaucrats in Trenton of the January 1 deadline for having their plans submitted. Joe Dorea, the DCA Director, has refused to grant the request, which even Democrat State Senator Ray Lesniak has called reasonable. The decision to override Dorea’s heavy handed bureaucratic response now lands on the Governor’s desk. Only Jon Corzine or immediate action by the legislature can stop this train wreck.

Please email Governor Corzine and your legislators NOW and tell them to end the COAH threat.

Who’s This Housing Really For?

Proponents of the Council on Affordable Housing (COAH) mandates state this housing claim it will provide for police and teachers who want to live in their communities. They claim it is for our young people who want to stay in the state. This sounds nice, if you want your child graduating college and moving into a government housing unit, alongside those described on page 15 of the 2006 Housing Report.

A careful examination of this Report reveals that police and teachers are never mentioned except in a paragraph that tells about below market mortgages available through the Police and Firefighters Retirement System (PFRS), mainly because police and teachers earn well above the median average for their communities. No where does this report call for providing such housing. The report does, however, outline who the housing is for. Page 15 is clear.

Ex-offenders leaving Northern State Prison will be “mainstreamed” into your neighborhood. Youth aging out of juvenile detention are another targeted market. But the most disturbing are persons called “hard to house”.

A reality check. The state places sex offenders and pedophiles in housing units. Visit the State police website at https://www.njsp.org/ and find out how many of these individuals are in your community. Under this mandate, there are lots more to come. Tom’s River, for example, currently is home to 102 known sex offenders. Hoboken, the home of Governor Jon Corzine and one of New Jersey’s largest cities, is home to 5. Tom’s River is mandated to build 4,386 Low Income Units. The number of convicted sex offenders moving into Tom’s River and other suburban communities can be expected to rise significantly.

The Trenton planners will be experimenting with our neighborhoods to find out if their social engineering schemes work. You and I will suffer the consequences, but they don’t care. We are just guinea pigs.

In 1911, when “Trenton Makes-the World Takes” was adopted as Trenton’s official slogan and the famous sign built on the approach to Trenton, 10% of America’s population lived within 75 miles of Trenton. The free market met the demands of a growing and diverse population with innovations like Sears’s homes, row housing, mansions and Cape Cod homes and more. Now, with New Jersey experiencing increased outward migration, the Trenton planners want to step in and second guess our needs and wants, replacing the success than made New Jersey an economic powerhouse with massive entitlement housing projects.

Please call your legislator. Tell them to stop threatening our neighborhoods with Trenton’s radical experiments.

Posted on Leave a comment

>Athletic Groups Not Paying For Field Use As Required

>From the latest rps.eNews:

During Monday evening’s BOE meeting, BOE member Laurie Goodman reported from the Fields Committee that athletic groups are supposed to be paying a fee of 20% of gross revenue to use the fields and most are not. That policy will be reviewed to see if it should stay the same or change.

1-800-FLOWERS.COMshow?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=100462

Posted on Leave a comment

>Village Council Special Public Meeting – Friday, 12/19/2008, 5:30 PM

>The Ridgewood Village Council will hold a Special Public Meeting on Friday, December 19, 2008 beginning at 5:30 PM in the Sydney V. Stoldt, Jr. Courtroom of Village Hall.

There is neither a meeting notice nor agenda posted on the Village’s official web site for this meeting.

https://www.ridgewoodnj.net/agenda.cfm

Reportedly, the main topic of discussion will be options for the construction of affordable housing to meet COAH requirements.

Posted on Leave a comment

>N.J. OKs medical marijuana bill

>Associated Press

https://www.courierpostonline.com/article/20081216/NEWS01/812160348/1006/news01

New Jersey moved closer to allowing chronically ill patients to smoke marijuana to relieve symptoms of pain and nausea by advancing a medical marijuana bill Monday.

The bill was approved 6-1 by the Senate Health Committee following a lengthy and sometimes passionate hearing that attracted scores of supporters and detractors including a doctor, multiple sclerosis patients, and a marijuana grower from Canada.

New Jersey would become the 14th state with a medical marijuana law on its books.

Those who favor the bill, including its Senate sponsor, Sen. Nicholas Scutari of Linden, said the “Compassionate Use Medical Marijuana Act” would allow a “new route of treatment” for patients with AIDS, cancer, MS, and other serious illnesses for whom other drugs fail.

“Society is able to distinguish between the lawful use of a substance” and recreational use or drug abuse,” said Scutari, a Democrat.

The measure allows chronically ill patients to petition Human Services to allow them to use marijuana medicinally. Physician certification of their condition would be required.

If approved, the patient would be issued an identification card allowing them to grow six marijuana plants or access the drug at an alternative medicine center without fear of being arrested or prosecuted.

Responding to critics who say medicinal marijuana amounts to tacit approval of an illegal drug, Scutari said safeguards have been built in to the proposal.

Patients would not be able to smoke and drive, for example, and would be barred from smoking in public places. They’d be permitted to possess only a small amount of the drug, he said.

“This is not legalizing marijuana for recreational use,” he said.

Opponents argued that allowing patients to smoke marijuana is akin to approving drug use.

They said the pill Marinol, made from a synthetic form of THC, the active ingredient in marijuana, has FDA approval and is as effective as smoking the drug.

David Evans, executive director of the national Drug Free Schools Coalition, cited the lack of scientific studies on marijuana use.

“You have to make sure it is safe,” he said. “There are no proper studies about dose, how many times do you take it. Once this bill is approved, you can smoke your head off all day long.”

Patients, however, disagreed.

They said they didn’t get high, but were able to function with the drug. Marinol did not work as well, if at all, they said.

Sen. Bill Baroni, a Hamilton Township Republican who voted for the bill, said he spent the weekend reading literature on both sides of the argument.

“The people who are asking us to do this today, these are people who can’t play piggyback with their 3-year-old. These are people who get up every day and battle HIV/AIDS. They are people who wonder if their chemotherapy is going to work,” said Baroni. “I can’t look at those folks and let them be perhaps the only ones who don’t have the ability to have less pain.”

A hearing two years ago brought celebrity Montel Williams to the New Jersey Statehouse. A longtime multiple sclerosis sufferer, Williams said he uses marijuana regularly.

The bill next heads to the full Senate for possible consideration. The Assembly held an informational hearing on the proposal last year, but has not scheduled it for a hearing. Similar proposals did not advance during the prior legislative session.

Most of the other states that began allowing medical marijuana have done so through ballot referendums. In New Jersey, the law must be changed by the Legislature.

States where medical marijuana is legal are: Alaska, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Michigan, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont and Washington.

https://www.courierpostonline.com/article/20081216/NEWS01/812160348/1006/news01

Posted on Leave a comment

>Moonachie Students Use Discarded Items to Decorate Christmas Tree

>Recycled items deck the halls in this school

THE RECORD
Monday, December 15, 2008

BY JOHN A. GAVIN

MOONACHIE — The theme this year at the Robert L. Craig School has been recycling — reusing old items that otherwise would be discarded.

There are trash receptacles made of soda cans, Styrofoam food containers that now store paint, and a collection bin for used batteries.

But perhaps the most innovative idea is a 6-foot tall Christmas tree. It is a work of art designed by students using a secondhand ladder as its base; outfitted with cardboard tubing as a dowel; and decorated with bottle caps, string, old CDs and green transparent bags once used to hold The Record newspaper.

In fact, all the holiday décor at the Craig School has taken on a recycling theme, with wreaths, mini trees and menorahs ornamented with bottle caps, buttons, worn pipe cleaners and those green bags.

“I want them to have an appreciation for art,” said Lee Ten Hoeve, an art teacher, who came up with the theme: “Reduce, Re-Use, Recycle.”

“I know that everyone doesn’t have a talent for drawing, but they can be creative and become a problem solver,” she said.

At the 285-student school, youngsters used junk mail to design collages and created an American flag using bottle caps as the stars and scrap paper for the stripes. They wore hand-me-down hospital scrubs as smocks while painting and pasting.

“It’s good for the environment.” said James Pichardo, 12, a seventh-grader. “We need to recycle a lot of things.”

That theme will also be relayed in the school’s Christmas musical, “Have a Green Holiday,” an original script about the environment that students will perform Dec. 23.

Jillian Mazzo, 12, has persuaded her mom to make homemade Christmas wreaths and said she has already learned an invaluable lesson.

“Not only should we recycle, but it’s good for the economy, too,” Jillian said. “We need to help go green and use [the green] plastic bags as much as we can.”

At school, secretaries and support staff have also caught on, making double-sided photocopies and using small note pads instead of full sheets of paper to write memos.

“It brings an awareness to all the school,” said Mark Solimo, the school’s superintendent and principal.

Alejandra Torres, 12, was philosophical about the importance of saving the environment.
“If we don’t recycle soon, the trash in the landfills will overflow,” she said. “It would be bad for all living creatures. &hellip It’s really going to affect our generation and our kids.’ “