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>Dom looks for Volunteers to join the “Geese Police “

>geese+police
BikerGeese1
It was brought to my attention that the Ridgewood NJ School District
has begun a “herding geese with dogs” program to help clear the Sports
Fields of the ever present Geese visits. After checking “geese herding”
out I found out there are many … Communities, already doing this for
local swimming pools, Golf Courses and other locations. It looks like this:

Kids looking for summer fun?

This is one dog in action… but where do the Geese go next? Or are they just playing
musical chairs… is it really a profitable business? Anyone see this in action?

Anyone interested in learning more about this project and hopefully volunteering themselves and their dogs can contact me Jim Borghoff
at [email protected]

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From another blog….14-year old boy, a non-swimmer, drowned at a swimming lake in New Jersey. It’s a terrible tragedy. But this astounded me…

>Monday, July 28, 2008
A 14-year old boy, a non-swimmer, drowned at a swimming lake in New Jersey. It’s a terrible tragedy. But this astounded me: Staff at the pool underwent crisis counseling, said police officer Brian Pullman and Village Manager James Ten Hoeve.

Crisis counseling? For lifeguards? Did they ask for this nonsense, or were they forced to endure it? Must every adversity in one’s life be guided by counselors? Is nobody able to navigate life without “expert“ assistance?

For the record, I was in the middle of a failed rescue at the very same facility 30 years ago. We performed CPR on the body for 15-20 minutes, not knowing how long it had been underwater. Additionally, in my youth I had friends or acquintances die of the following causes: drunk driving, suicide, leukemia, rock climbing accident, and drug overdose. Not once were “crisis counselors” sent in, nor were they required.

I imagine these counselors did more to accomodate the politicians need to “do something” than it helped the lifeguards, who knew a tragic drowning is always an eyeblink away.

Meanwhile, while Ridgewood, NJ was sending in counselors over its third drowning in 30 years, New York lifeguards were dealing with four deaths and three disappearances in two days, and 10 people were struck by lightning in the region. The New York area crisis counselors are going to have their hands full.
posted by Kurt at 10:57 PM

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>Reader says :Valley Hospital is strictly a TAKE ALL, and GIVE NONE business

>PJ – After the incident 2 years ago when a Ridgewood Emergency Services operated and Village owned Generator was sent to that Deli in Midland Park, how will the Valley Hospital reimburse the Village for its use of this equipment, in addition to the Communications vehicle, communications equipment, and nearly a dozen paid and volunteer personnel. Although Ridgewood Emergency Services, the RPD, and RFD do a great job in responding to all calls and handling all responses professionally… the Valley Hospital is strictly a TAKE ALL, and GIVE NONE business. Valley Hospital pays $0 in Taxes and Donates $0 to the RPD, RFD, and Emergency Services, or any other Ridgewoon Entity that would benefit its residents, and Village Residents recieve the same bills as non-residents from the hospital and its services. I strongly believe the Valley Hospital should be send a bill for the use of Village equipment and services today. The RFD responds on several calls a month to the Valley Hospital, and receives $0 compensation for the Tax Payer expenses to send them there. Ridgewood Emergency Services spend approximately 50 Man-hours on-site today to assist in the Power Failure – When Valley’s equipment failed after a transformer explosion on Linwood Ave. Valley is spending millions on their expansion, you think they could afford a few hundred thousand to install and maintain proper generators and communications equipment, or at least Donate to Ridgewood to compensate the use of Village equipment, services, and personnel? Somone on the counsil needs to stand up to these bullies!

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>PSE&G expects to raise prices about 20 percent this Fall

>July 25, 2008

To residents of Ridgewood:

As you may have heard, PSE&G expects to raise prices about 20 percent this Fall, and may in fact raise prices even beyond that – in two 5 percent increments – in later months.

This is being done in spite of the fact that there is no shortage of natural gas but that rates have been bid up by speculators. The rate increase doesn’t give us any credit for the possibility that prices of natural gas might indeed come down.

There is a public hearing to discuss this matter before the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities takes final action on whether or not to approve.

The public hearing is Aug. 18 at 7 pm. It will be held in Hackensack in the Bergen County Administration Building, Room 540, at 1 Bergen County Plaza.

It’s my hope that a group of Ridgewood citizens will be willing to attend this meeting to protest. Or at least contribute to a stack of Go Green emails that I may present to show them your views when I attend this meeting on your behalf.

I learned of this moments ago in reading papers in the weekly packet I get each Friday as a Council member. For the record please note that PSE&G took steps to minimalize the news by minimalizing the type – it’s about one quarter the size of lettering in other documents.

Anyway, I’m passing this on to you for your edification and, hopefully, your help.

Please join me in letting PSE&G know that how we in Ridgewood feel about this. Please pass this on to others whom you know will be concerned.

If it becomes necessary to pass along cost increases, PSE&G shouldn’t be given carte blanche to do that. Such actions should be scrutinized each time since such actions inflict real pain on everybody.

Best,

Annie

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Flash Flood Watch remains in effect through this afternoon…

>Flash Flood Watch remains in effect through this afternoon…

The Flash Flood Watch continues for

* portions of northeast New Jersey and southeast New York…
including the following areas… in northeast New Jersey…
Bergen… eastern Passaic… Essex… Hudson… Union and western
Passaic. In southeast New York… Bronx… Kings (brooklyn)…
New York (manhattan)… northern Westchester… Orange…
Putnam… Queens… Richmond (staten island)… Rockland and
southern Westchester.

* Through this afternoon

* a slow moving cold front approaching the area will provide a
focus for the development of numerous showers and
thunderstorms… some of which could repeatedly move over the
same areas. These storms also could produce torrential
rainfall… with rainfall rates of 1 to 2 inches per hour.

* An additional 1 to 2 inches of rainfall is expected today… with
locally higher amounts. This rainfall… on top of the rain which fell
Wednesday and Wednesday night will likely cause flash flooding
of small streams… urban areas and poor drainage spots within
the watch area… as well as sharp rises on larger streams and
rivers. Flooding of flood prone basements is also likely.

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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>Mickelson applauds Ridgewood

>Tuesday, July 22, 2008

BY BRENDAN PRUNTY
Star-Ledger Staff

After playing Ridgewood Country Club a number of times in preparation for The Barclays next month, Phil Mickelson believes the FedEx Cup will be getting off to a great start.

“I’ve done a couple of outings out there, so I’ve had a chance to see the golf course and play it,” Mickelson said yesterday while making an appearance in Jersey City. “With it being our first FedEx Cup event, it’s important to get off to a good start.”

Tiger Woods is out for the rest of this year after having surgery on his left knee last month, meaning Mickelson will be the top draw when the first event of the PGA Tour’s four-tournament playoff comes to New Jersey next month. With The Barclays moving from its longtime home at Westchester (N.Y.) Country Club to Ridgewood in Paramus last winter, players have expressed their enthusiasm for the classic course.

“It’s interesting. They’re both wonderful, historic sights,” Mickelson said. “But I think Ridgewood has a little bit more with the Ryder Cup (held there in 1935), as well as (other) championships. I think it will be a cool site.”

It’s a site Mickelson will be more familiar with because of his practice rounds at the course. With its tricky greens, thick rough and oak tree-lined fairways, Ridgewood will be a unique test for the field.

“I’m familiar with how the course will be set up, how the rough and the greens will be set up,” Mickelson said. “I did that because I hadn’t really played the course before.”

The Barclays, which will be played Aug. 21-24, will be the first professional tournament Mickelson will play in the Garden State since he won the 2005 PGA Championship at Baltusrol. He said he’s enthused to get back to playing in front of the crowds that supported him during that major win three summers ago.

“I can’t wait,” he said. “This is going to be a key tournament for the end of the year.”

Mickelson, on his way home from the British Open, where he finished tied for 19th at 14 over par, was at the Liberty Science Center with his wife Amy for the fourth annual Mickelson/ExxonMobil Teachers Academy. The program was developed to give teachers the opportunity to expand math and science skills.

It’s been a whirlwind 36 hours for Mickelson, who flew to New York after his final round at the British Open and then arrived in Jersey City. This morning, he and Amy will be in Washington testifying before the House Education and Labor Committee about the importance of math and science education.

Brendan Prunty may be reached at [email protected].

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>Ask not, "for whom the bell tolls, it tolls for thee."

>Monday, July 21, 2008
Editorial
The Star-Ledger

A testing standard that says getting 33 percent of the questions right is a passing grade teaches all the wrong lessons to the kids — and to those who are supposed to be educating them.

Yet New Jersey has been setting the mark as low as that for the tests that are used to judge student proficiency and school performance under the federal No Child Left Behind program.

Fortunately, that is about to change.

Last week, the state Department of Education took a step toward setting the bar higher. We hope the move sends a signal that the focus of educational testing is not about the rank of a school or a district or the state.

The focus must be on finding all the students who need help, not “dumbing down” the tests in order to hide the numbers who are floundering. Mississippi and some other states have been accused of doing that. Who knew New Jersey was in that company?

For students in grades 5 through 8, getting 33 to 46 percent of the questions right has been enough to earn the label “proficient” in math or language arts in New Jersey.

Now students must get 50 to 56 percent right — which is still not much to ask. The state plans to gradually enact higher standards for all grades. Why should any be lower than 50 percent?

The change may cost some schools their bragging rights about student performance, because the overall pass rates are expected to go down. Currently 76 percent of kids statewide pass the sixth-grade language arts examination. That is expected to drop to 54 percent. That will be a shocker.

The standards were approved last week, but will be used to grade tests that were taken in the spring. There will be howls from schools that say the retroactive application is unfair. In fact it is the best way to get an objective comparison of the old and the new.

The state Department of Education must to do a good job of explaining its changes and reinforcing the idea that true learning, not hollow test scores, is the only acceptable goal. If parents are not well prepared, they will be angry and confused as their children slide out of what was assumed to be the educational safety zone, even if the grading system made it a false assumption. Educators will be angry and frustrated, particularly those who have confused keeping up appearances with the obligation to teach children what they need to know.

Could this change put more schools in line for No Child Left Behind sanctions, from mandatory tutoring to a forced reorganization of some schools? That is a possibility, although expectations of harsh sanctions have so far proven more myth than reality.

If the ultimate goal is learning, as it must be, test scores should be used as a tool to help the students by identifying individual strengths and weaknesses and addressing them before those students enter the harsh reality of the world beyond 12th grade.

Schools should fear failing that mission more than they fear test scores or No Child Left Behind.

©2008 Star Ledger
© 2008 NJ.com All Rights Reserved.

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Drowning spurs look at pool procedures

>Friday, July 18, 2008

Last updated: Friday July 18, 2008, EDT 6:14 AMBY EVONNE COUTROSSTAFF

WRITERRIDGEWOOD – Village officials are questioning how to improve procedures at Graydon Pool after learning that a teenager who drowned in 12 feet of water did not take a test required for swimming in the deep end.

“I’m going to challenge my staff to make every use of any technology available that can assist us in our efforts to improve our procedures, our signage and our lifesaving efforts,” said Village Manager James Ten Hoeve.

After entering the pool from the shallow section, the 14-year-old swam under a rope to the deeper waters, officials said.

There are signs posted throughout the 3-acre pool area that specify swimming rules. The pool office staff is also available to answer questions, officials said.

“He entered at the shallow end of the pool where the swim test is not required … and swam towards the deep end … where the lifeguard would never see that he did not have the proper sticker or wristband,” Ten Hoeve said.

To go into the deep water at the spring-fed pond, children and teenagers must pass a swim test, Ten Hoeve said.

“They are then given a sticker which goes on their badge, and if they are on a day pass, the date of the swim test is written on the wristlet that they receive,” Ten Hoeve said.

The teen – in the United States from South Korea for only two days and staying with family in Ridgewood – did not take a test, Ten Hoeve said.

If a lifeguard sees a swimmer in the deep-water section of the pool without that sticker or marked wristband, he or she is sent to the pool office to take the test before returning to the deep water, Ten Hoeve said.

“I don’t know what should have been done,” Ten Hoeve said.

“We are going to hold a staff meeting to look at our procedures and, based on the occurrences in this situation, see if they can be improved in any way. Our policy is that if you are a non-adult, you need a swim test.”

The teen swam to the deep end of the pool and was trying to reach a diving platform.

“I can’t breathe,” he yelled in Korean on Tuesday afternoon to his 12- and 14-year-old swimming partners, already on the platform.

The 12-year-old jumped into the water to save his friend but lost sight of him after he dived in.

The teen’s 10-year-old sister was swimming in shallow water nearby and raced to shore to alert her parents that she could not find her brother.

Lifeguards were summoned, a 911 call was made, and a sweeping search of the pool, its facilities, and nearby buildings was conducted.

The 14-year-old’s body was recovered in 12 feet of water about 40 minutes after he went missing by divers from the Ridgewood Fire Department.

Emergency workers conducted resuscitative procedures on the shoreline of the pool before transporting the teen to The Valley Hospital, where he was pronounced dead 68 minutes after the initial 911 call.

The death has been ruled an accidental drowning. Officials have declined to release the name of the 14-year-old.

E-mail: [email protected]

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UPDATE: Drowned teen shouldn’t have been in deep end, authorities say

>Thursday, July 17, 2008

Last updated: Thursday July 17, 2008, EDT 10:26 PMBY EVONNE COUTROSSTAFF WRITER

Ridgewood officials are questioning how to improve procedures at Graydon Pool after learning that a teenager who drowned in 12 feet of water did not take a test required for swimming in the deep end.

“I’m going to challenge my staff to make every use of any technology available that can assist us in our efforts to improve our procedures, our signage and our lifesaving efforts,” said Village Manager James Ten Hoeve.

After entering the pool from the shallow section, the 14-year-old swam under a rope to the deeper waters, official said.

There are signs posted throughout the 3-acre pool area that specify swimming rules. The pool office staff is also available to answer questions, officials said.

“He entered at the shallow end of the pool where the swim test is not required &hellip and swam towards the deep end &hellip where the lifeguard would never see that he did not have the proper sticker or wristband,” Ten Hoeve said.

To go into the deep water at the spring-fed pond, children and teenagers must pass a swim test, Ten Hoeve said.

“They are then given a sticker which goes on their badge, and if they are on a day pass, the date of the swim test is written on the wristlet that they receive,” Ten Hoeve said.

The teen – in the United States from South Korea for only two days and staying with family in Ridgewood – did not take a test, Ten Hoeve said.

If a lifeguard sees a swimmer in the deep-water section of the pool without that sticker or marked wristband, he or she is sent told to go and take the test before returning to the deep water, Ten Hoeve said.

“I don’t know what should have been done,” Ten Hoeve said. “We are going to hold a staff meeting to look at our procedures and, based on the occurrences in this situation, see if they can be improved in any way. Our policy is that if you are a non-adult, you need a swim test.”

The teen swam to the deep end of the pool and was trying to reach a diving platform.

“I can’t breathe,” he yelled in Korean on Tuesday afternoon to his 12- and 14-year-old swimming partners, already on the platform.

The 12-year-old jumped into the water to save his friend but lost sight of him after he dove dived in.

The teen’s 10-year-old sister was swimming in shallow water nearby and raced to shore to alert her parents that she could not find her brother.

Lifeguards were summoned, a 911 call was made and a sweeping search of the pool, its facilities, and nearby buildings was conducted.

The 14-year-old’s body was recovered in 12 feet of water about 40 minutes after he went missing by divers from the Ridgewood Fire Department.

Emergency workers conducted resuscitative procedures on the shoreline of the pool before transporting the teen to The Valley Hospital, where he was pronounced dead 68 minutes after the initial 911 call.

The death has been ruled an accidental drowning. Officials have declined to release the name of the 14-year-old.

E-mail: [email protected]

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>N.J. raises bar for pupil test scores

>N.J. raises bar for pupil test scores

State Board of Education admits change could surprise parents

Thursday, July 17, 2008

BY JOHN MOONEY
Star-Ledger Staff
New Jersey made it harder yesterday for public school students to prove their proficiency on state exams — a change that could cause more schools to run afoul of the federal No Child Left Behind Act.

The action by the state Board of Education, which approved raising the scores for reading and math tests in grades 5 through 8, highlights how remarkably low the threshold for the scores had been. Students scoring as low as 33 percent correct had been deemed proficient.

The change raised the so-called “cut scores” for proficiency to at least 50 percent in the four affected grades, and also raised the requirements to be considered “advanced proficient.”

The new cut scores will be used to grade tests given last spring. Officials said similar moves are envisioned in the coming years for other grades’ tests, including the state’s high school exit exam. Some of those tests still have cut scores in the 30s.

“What we don’t want to do is mask our weaknesses,” said state Education Commissioner Lucille Davy. “The incentive may be to have the lowest standard we can, but that doesn’t serve the kids.”

Davy stressed that student performance still appeared to improve last spring in most of the tests. But with the changes, passing rates are likely to drop in a majority of tests, markedly in some cases, she said.

In sixth grade, for example, state estimates show the language arts passing rate would have risen from 76 percent to 80 percent this year using the old cut scores, but instead will drop to 54 percent.

For parents and teachers, it could be a jolt to see a child no longer deemed proficient or advanced, and officials acknowledged that the onus will be on the state and districts to explain the change in the coming months as final scores go out.

“Parents will need to understand we have raised the standards and their children may need more help,” said deputy commissioner Willa Spicer. “There are parents who will be surprised.”

In New Jersey and many other states, cut scores have been set notoriously low with the advent of increased testing, and especially No Child Left Behind, which requires schools to reach proficiency targets in reading and math or face possible sanctions.

To provide districts some short-term protection against the predicted drop in passage rates, state officials plan to reduce the proficiency requirements considered by No Child — but set by the state.

State board members yesterday were largely supportive of the change, but some voiced concern about how schools and teachers will react, noting it may further drive a “test prep” trend over which some educators are agonizing.

The detailed process of setting the cut scores had been quietly churning forward for almost a year with the advent of new, longer tests in grades 5 through 8.

“I know that when you start the year, you have a certain standard … and to change the standard at the very end is not the way to do it,” said member Kathleen Dietz, the lone dissenting vote. “There needs to be some warning.”

But all agreed the benchmark needed to be raised for students and schools, with one member citing his own fifth-grade child who took the tests last year.

“I realize this could impact where he’s placed,” said Arcelio Aponte, the board’s vice president. “But as a parent, I’d want to know if he’s not responding correctly.”

John Mooney may be reached at [email protected] or (973) 392-1548

The Fly wants to know what you think Mrs. Botsford (head of testing) will do now that NJ has “raised” its standards. Any suggestions for her?

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>The doors CAN be opened on both sides of the trains from Hoboken!

>When they put in ramps for the disabled at buildings, they don’t take away the doors. Not the ones nearest the ramp. Not the ones fartherest from the ramp.

Let’s be clear. There is nothing in any of the laws, regulations, or court decisions requiring that access be made harder for the abled in order to make it easier for the disabled.

To quote from the ADA Web site:

“Public entities do not necessarily have to make each of their existing facilities accessible. They may provide program accessibility by a number of methods including alteration of existing facilities, acquisition or construction of additional facilities, relocation of a service or program to an accessible facility, or provision of services at alternate accessible sites.”

You’ll notice that nowhere does it say the disabled and abled have to have the same access. So NJ Transit’s position is bogus when it comes to legal requirements.

The next claim, that opening doors on both sides would slow down operations, is equally suspect. Opening both doors clears the cars faster and, by allowing the abled to file out one side, actually leaves the disabled with better access on the other!

Ridgewood should not cave in on this issue.

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>Accused kidnappers caught

>Monday, July 14, 2008
Last updated: Monday July 14, 2008, EDT 5:03 PM
BY KIPP CLARK AND MIKE DALY
THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS

Local police arrested two Allendale men accused of kidnapping, robbing and assaulting an acquaintance from Ridgewood.
The 41-year-old man victim was found injured on the side of a road in Harriman State Park in Rockland County, N.Y. yesterday. New York State Park Police said he told them he’d been assaulted by acquaintances who broke into his apartment., said Ridgewood Detective William Hemmer.
The intruders got in through a window after climbing a fire escape, police said.
The man told police they pulled him from his bed, took cash and then led him down the stairs and out into the parking lot. They then forced him into a car, drove him a remote area of the park and led him to a wooded section where he was beaten and threatened, he said.
Several departments combined to investigate the case — among them, Ridgewood Police, New York State Park Police, the Bergen County Sheriff’s Department and Allendale Police.
After interviewing him, detectives obtained arrest warrants for Cullen Schlesiona, 31, and Matthew Staudt, 24, and then arrested them last night at an apartment they share.
Schlesiona and Staudt are being held on $500,000 cash bail each at the Bergen County Jail, charged with kidnapping, robbery, burglary, terroristic threats and criminal restraint.
The alleged victim was treated at a Rockland County hospital for minor injuries to his face and arms and released, police said.
An investigation is continuing and additional charges could follow, police said.

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>It is time for a change of leadership at the Stable.

>The lack of fields (if one choses to believe this line)or amount of use has no baring on whether one cleans up the debris from the fireworks or fills in holes on pitcher’s mounds or orders new benches does it?

This is really simple stuff here. Nothing complicated and nothing out of the ordinary.

It has nothing to do with man power, use of fields or any thing else other than laziness and incompetence on the part of Parks & Rec. from top down.

As for the budget you would have to ask each sports organization what they contribute in addition to the Parks Dept. budget for fields.

For instance, in the Spring, the RBSA spends more than 30k per year to ready the fields. And in past years as much as $52,000.00.

This amount from the RBSA is used for all of our fields, including the High School fields for Baseball and Softball, regardless of whether they are owned by the BOE or Village.

It is real simple, we pay high taxes and get poor results when it comes to the Parks & Rec. services.

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>We were there! Many people took photos of our 1975 white Buick, but we never got any!

>ridgewood+4th+parade+069
ridgewood+4th+parade+174
ridgewood+4th+parade+243
ridgewood+4th+parade+173
Thanks again to the Fourth of July Celebration Committee for coordinating a great parade. The Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) Post 192 of Ridgewood/Ho-Ho-Kus has reinitiated participation in the last several parades and we enjoy it very much. While this year my son, Major Erik Kober, an Apache/Longbow helicopter pilot, is back in Iraq for his second tour, this time for 15 months, after being in Bosnia and Afghanistan, and Iraq on 12 month tours, he was not able to participate with us. We did however, have veterans who were from WWII, Korea, and Vietnam. Our Ridgewood VFW Post looks forward to having more combat veterans and active duty members join us in the Post and in the future parades. Thank you!

May God continue to Bless America!

Stanley A. Kober
Commander,
Washington Elm VFW Post 192
TEL: 201-445-1121