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>All Seasons Chamber Players perform concert, Dec. 11

>All Seasons Chamber Players perform concert, Dec. 11

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2011
TEANECK SUBURBANITE

The All Seasons Chamber Players will return to the Ridgewood Public Library Sunday afternoon, Dec. 11 for a 3 p.m. concert. The popular classical ensemble has been performing at the Ridgewood Library annually for many years. This concert is part of the Sunday Afternoon Performance Series of the Friends of the Ridgewood Public Library.

The library, located at 125 North Maple Ave. in Ridgewood, provides excellent concert facilities and is handicapped accessible. There is a $3 suggested donation at the door. Refreshments may be purchased at the snack shop at intermission. For more information or directions, call the library at 201-670-5600.

The program, entitled Vive la France! will offer three centuries of chamber music by famous French composers from the baroque era to the 20th century. The featured work will be a musical tour de force – Maurice Ravel’s great Piano Trio in A Minor (1914). The program will also include a baroque Trio Sonata in D by Jean-Marie Leclair; the tuneful and playful Dolly Suite for Piano Duet by Gabriel Faure; and the ever-popular Sonata for Flute and Piano by Francis Poulenc. Robert Lawrence, co-director for programs, will introduce each piece to the audience with personal spoken program notes.

https://www.northjersey.com/community/events/134807113_Chamber_Players_to_perform_.html

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>Incident on November 26

>Incident on November 26
the staff of the Ridgewood blog

In an interesting turn of events the Superintend of Schools Daniel Fishbein has sen out an email blast to parents on an incident unrelated to a student in the Ridgewood school system.

The Ridgewood Police Department has received  a report ,that on Saturday November 26th  a women jogging on North Pleasant Avenue near Wyndemere  Avenue around 9:30 am  , was stooped by a white male approximately 45-55 years old asking for directions to Route 17. The women said the male then made inappropriate comments to her of a sexual nature and drove off.

The Ridgewood Police Department investigation of the incident is still ongoing If you have any information on this incident plaese call the Ridgewood police department at (201) 652-3900.

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Vincent Loncto is sworn in as Ridgewood schools trustee

BOE_theridgewoodblog

Vincent Loncto is sworn in as Ridgewood schools trustee

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2011
BY EVONNE COUTROS
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

RIDGEWOOD – A former chief financial officer for major corporations was sworn in Monday night as the school district’s newest trustee.

Vincent Loncto took his seat as a trustee at Monday’s school board meeting at the district’s Education Center on Cottage Place.

The certified public accountant was one of six candidates interviewed for the trustee post after Charles Reilly resigned earlier this year.

“The school budget is in the process of being developed, so I’m coming in at the right time,” said Loncto, who retired earlier this year from a 40-year career in financial management.

“It has to be done collaboratively,” he said. “What we are talking about here is enhancing the quality of the school system under budgetary constraints. It is detail-intensive work.”

https://www.northjersey.com/news/Ridgewood_school_board_to_swear_in_new_member_tonight.html

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>RHS athletics: Money and Sports

>RHS athletics: Money and Sports 

I have asked about this before, but it would be great to see the budget for extracurricular activities. How much is spent on football and the DECA club? What do the various programs cost? Do sports cost more than academic, arts and leadership clubs?

Football has the biggest roster that I have ever seen. Everyone gets to suit up and stand on the sidelines. It is not a matter of how many scholarships students receive or even how well the teams do. Why does our BOE (and most schools) value sports over other achievements? This culture of sports gets us nowhere. We need to focus on programs that are open to all students; taxes are paid by all residents. A lot of money was spent creating a stadium – and repairing it – for whose benefit? The PE classes did just fine with the old field. Let’s not pretend that we have created some award-winning PE program. The money was spent for sports. RHS is a college prep high school and some residents and BOE members seem to have lost sight of that. We have limited funds and we need to remember that it is Ridgewood High School, not the Ridgewood Sports Bubble.

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I don’t see how this pertains to Ridgewood : "Friday Night Lights Prove To Be Budget Busters":

>I don’t see how this pertains to Ridgewood : “Friday Night Lights Prove To Be Budget Busters”: 

I don’t see how this pertains to Ridgewood. I also wonder whether the original poster actually read the article. It is not a discussion about youth sports, which are self-funded in Ridgewood, turf, lights or even that high school football programs in Dallas, Texas are cost prohibitive. It was about how ALL high school football teams in Dallas, Texas generate hundreds of thousands of dollars in revenue to defray the costs of their programs and, in a few rare cases, highly successful programs can EASE school budget constraints. The essence of the article is summed up in this line, “as schools are forced to cut back, football teams can offer a rare revenue generator to a district’s general fund — if they are winning football teams.” It concluded that winning football records directly impact whether the school districts studied in Dallas make a profit or not. Interestingly, it very clearly went on to say that “Nothing costs a district more than coaching stipends and salaries.” Sound familiar?? Of 31 schools, the median school’s total net football expenses were less than 3% of the school’s total annual expenses and the head football coach’s salary (alone) was approximately 2% of the school’s total annual expenses. Perhaps that is the message to take away from the article.

The last time I checked, high school sports are not intended or expected to be profit-making enterprises. They are an operating expense for school districts around the country. In Texas, however, the unique culture around high school football creates an opportunity for some winning programs to generate more money for the school than they cost. Those profits then go to the general revenue fund to support non-football programs. That is a nice benefit. But, it is not the objective of any high school sports programs in the United States.

Contrary to the misleading headline of the commentary that was posted on the Ridgewood Blog, the point of the article is NOT to suggest that high school football programs in Dallas are “busting” their school district budgets. It did not blame elaborate facilities or special considerations that are not integral to all sports programs for adversely impacting school budgets. Although as noted above, it did point out that the average head coach’s salary is 40% of he average school expenditure on football. This did not include benefits or the salary and benefits for assistant coaches.

The full article and survey results can be viewed at this address:

https://www.dallasnews.com/sports/high-schools/football-news/headlines/20111117-texas-high-school-football-playoffs-can-pay-off-for-winning-teams-districts.ece

The bottom line is that I am not aware of any Ridgewood high school sports program that generates revenue even close to that of high school football programs in Dallas. I am not sure how the expenses compare. My guess is that RHS football is the most expensive athletic program in the school. But, I doubt that Chuck Johnson’s salary is 2% of the total school budget. So, I don’t see the relevance of this article to Ridgewood. More to the point, it has nothing to do with youth sports, college scholarships, the rationale for high school athletics, turf fields or lights.

So, I think the original question, which has gone unanswered, is a fair one. Why was this posted on the Ridgewood Blog?

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>’Company Policy: We are not hiring until Obama is gone’

>‘Company Policy: We are not hiring until Obama is gone’

WACO, Ga. — A west Georgia business owner is stirring up controversy with signs he posted on his company’s trucks, for all to see as the trucks roll up and down roads, highways and interstates:

“New Company Policy: We are not hiring until Obama is gone.”

“Can’t afford it,” explained the employer, Bill Looman, Tuesday evening. “I’ve got people that I want to hire now, but I just can’t afford it. And I don’t foresee that I’ll be able to afford it unless some things change in D.C.”

https://www.11alive.com/news/article/214228/3/Company-Policy-We-are-not-hiring-until-Obama-is-gone

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>5K WALK/RUN BENEFIT TO SEND KIDS TO BROADWAY

>5K WALK/RUN BENEFIT TO SEND KIDS TO BROADWAY

The RHS chapter of DECA, an association of marketing students, has created a campaign called “Sharing the Arts Goes Broadway” to benefit students involved with Sharing the Arts, a non-profit performing arts conservatory for individuals with special needs. Specifically, the RHS DECA group is holding a Winter Wonderland Walk on Sunday, December 11 to raise funds to send Sharing the Arts students to see a production of “The Lion King” on Broadway. The walk/run will be held at RHS rain, snow, or shine.The walk begins at 9:30 a.m. and will be held on the track at RHS, weather permitting, or the 2nd floor, which is handicap accessible. Participants should report to the Athletic Entrance between 8:45 and 9:15 a.m. for check in/registration.  Registration is $20 per person; groups of 5 or more participants are $15 per person. Children in elementary school or younger are free. Advanced registration is preferred. One gift basket raffle ticket will be given to every registrant. Additional raffle tickets may be purchased on the day of the event. If you have questions, please contact DECA Advisor Mrs. Karen Mendez at [email protected] or 201-670-2800 ext. 20672. For more information on Sharing the Arts please visit https://www.sharingthearts.com/.

Click here for the Registration Form : https://tinyurl.com/7hz74qy

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>83% Have A Lot To Be Thankful For This Thanksgiving

>83% Have A Lot To Be Thankful For This Thanksgiving
Thursday, November 24, 2011

America is going through tough economic times, but its citizens still say overwhelmingly that they have a lot to be thankful for this Thanksgiving Day. In fact, more Americans than ever view this holiday as one of the nation’s most important ones.

The latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey of American Adults shows that 58% regard Thanksgiving as one of the nation’s most important holidays.

https://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/lifestyle/holidays/november_2011/83_have_a_lot_to_be_thankful_for_this_thanksgiving

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At Little Ivy Learning Center Preschoolers: Lessons in Caring: It’s “In the Bag”

>At Little Ivy Learning Center Preschoolers: Lessons in Caring: It’s “In the Bag”

At Little Ivy Learning Center Preschoolers, Kindergarteners Drive Thanksgiving Food Donations
Sometimes it’s the simplest thing that inspires acts of caring and sharing. . . even something as simple as an empty, brown paper shopping bag.

While meeting to discuss their Thanksgiving season lesson plans earlier this month, teachers at Ridgewood’s Little Ivy Learning Center began brainstorming how they could provide each of their students with a unique, personal experience in caring for others through sharing with others.

Amidst talk of Pilgrims and Native Americans, hands-on lessons about the fall harvest, plans for the annual, school-wide Thanksgiving feast and the parent-led food drive, Miss Dee, the Senior Nursery program head teacher had an idea.

“Instead of asking our parents to contribute to the annual food drive, what if we give each of our students an empty, brown paper shopping bag to decorate, bring home, and take responsibility for working with their parents to fill with food for neighbors in need,” Miss Dee said.
“It will be their (each student’s) bag, so they’ll have real ownership for it and getting it filled,” she said.

Miss Dee’s idea immediately sparked several other lesson possibilities. Junior Nursery II teacher Miss Heather thought the “Fill Your Bag” lesson could also provide her older two-year-old students with a lesson in the food groups and nutrition. She would have her students decorate their bags, donated by the Whole Foods supermarket in Ridgewood, with photo cutouts of various foods.

Miss Stephanie, one of Little Ivy’s AM & PM Kindergarten Enrichment teachers volunteered her students for sorting the contents of the food bags and making signs for the boxes used to transport the food to the Social Service Agency of Ridgewood & Vicinity (SSA).

“Not only is ‘Fill Your Bag’ a great lesson in caring through sharing, but the sorting will provide a hands-on opportunity for my students to practice pattern recognition, and a meaningful opportunity to practice spelling and penmanship by making the signs for the boxes,” Miss Stephanie said.
Miss Rachel & Miss Mary Kate, Pre-Kindergarten and PM Kindergarten Enrichment teacher at the school agreed, and their students joined in with sorting and sign-making.

The overwhelming success of the “Fill Your Bag” lesson quickly became obvious as overstuffed bags began filling the office and long, central hallway at Little Ivy, overflowing into several classrooms.

Several students in Miss Kristen and Miss Melissa’s Pre-Kindergarten class included their favorite cereals and snacks in their bags. Overfilled bags rolled in from Miss Laura’s Beginnings Toddler Nursery class and Miss Dawn’s Junior Nursery I class, as well.

In a typical story, often repeated, one mom told Little Ivy’s director, Stephanie Bassler, that after partially filling her daughter’s bag, her daughter dragged it to the pantry and insisted on filling it to the brim. It was simple, her daughter told her. . .this was her homework, people really needed the food, and her bag had to be filled to the top.

“We’ve always been thankful for the annual contributions our families make during the Thanksgiving Food Drive for SSA, but this year with our children driving the effort, they really put it over-the top” Ms. Bassler said. “More than 100 bags of food and related items were donated. Awesome.”
Additional Information:

The Social Service Association of Ridgewood & Vicinity, provides a full range of services throughout the year for local individuals and families in need, including its food pantry, clothing and food vouchers, housing assistance, various scholarships and senior citizen case management. To learn more, visit www.ssa6.org.

Little Ivy Learning Center and its experienced teachers provide thoughtfully crafted childcare, pre-school and kindergarten programs for children ages 12-months through 6 with an emphasis on personalized learning and small classes in bright, cozy classrooms. Little Ivy provides its students and their parents with a range of flexible, full-day, AM or PM programs, including PreschoolPlus and KindergartenPlus (12-month childcare, plus academic pre-school/kindergarten and summer camp); Preschool (toddler/junior/senior nursery school and academic pre-K); AM & PM Kindergarten Enrichment (with transportation from select local schools); Transitional Kindergarten; Kindergarten and Summer Camp.

Little Ivy Learning Center is an independent, private school located in the Education Building on the historic campus of the Old Paramus Reformed Church, 660 East Glen Avenue, Ridgewood, NJ. For more information contact us at [email protected], visit our website at www.mylittleivy.com, or our Facebook page at www.facebook.com/mylittleivy.

https://www.mylittleivy.com/lessonsincaring.html

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>11 states seek relief from ‘No Child’ provisions, in return for raising standards

>11 states seek relief from ‘No Child’ provisions, in return for raising standards


Eleven states applied for waivers exempting them from key provisions of the No Child Left Behind law by the federal government’s first deadline, promising in return to adopt higher standards and carry out other elements of the Obama administration’s school improvement agenda, the Department of Education said on Tuesday.
Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Tennessee asked the department for relief from some No Child provisions, including the requirement that all students be proficient in English and math by 2014. In their applications, the states outlined plans to develop their own locally designed school accountability systems, create new educator-evaluation systems and overhaul their lowest-performing schools, the department said.  (Dillon, The New York Times)

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>Courts Gone Wild: New Jersey has almost forgotten what it was like to live in a state governed by laws, rather than men.

>Courts Gone Wild: New Jersey has almost forgotten what it was like to live in a state governed by laws, rather than men.

Senator Doherty has really been taking his Fair School Funding show on the road in a big way. Last night, I learned that Ridgewood is about the fiftieth municipality he’s visited so far in an effort explain his fair school funding plan.

Most residents, voters, and taxpayers not steeped in the fine points of municipal law in New Jersey are probably not aware of the extent to which the Supreme Court has been blatantly legislating from the bench. In fact, the Supreme Court has been usurping the power of the New Jersey legislature for so long, and with so little effective criticism, that almost the whole body of lawyers in this state can be considered complicit.

New Jersey’s two law schools, Rutgers School of Law|Newark and Seton Hall Law School are not immune from criticism either. The professors in these schools know that the Supreme Court has overstepped its authority. Nevertheless, because they agree politically with the policies, they refuse to say what they know.

Really–politically (if not economically) speaking, it’s as if we live in North Korea. The populace of New Jersey has almost forgotten over the course of two generations what it was like to live in a state governed by laws, rather than men. The New Jersey Supreme Court has no right to mangle or reinvent our state constitution for its political purposes!

Don’t forget that the Supreme Court’s “Mount Laurel Doctrine” is based on its having found in the New Jersey state constitution a right to affordable housing. The fact that no such right exists in the Constitution was no impediment to the Supreme Court inventing and enforcing it.

The current school funding problem is the child of similar misbehavior on the part of the New Jersey Supreme Court, dating back at least to 1985, when the NJ Supreme Court issued its first ‘Abbott’ decision. In that decision, the court ruled that to satisfy the New Jersey Constitution, the State must assure urban children an education enabling them to compete with their suburban peers. The weak-kneed response by the New Jersey legislature to this Abbott decision, and to the some twenty further Abbott decisions that the Supreme Court has issued since, has been to simply raise state-backed per-pupil spending on urban children through the roof while allowing state-backed per-pupil spending on suburban children to dwindle almost to nothing in school districts like Ridgewood.

Not that the New Jersey Supreme Court would ever agree, because it is so full of itself it can’t bear to be criticized, but the school funding formula that is used now is clearly unconstitutional. It mandates hugely unequal spending.

By contrast, Doherty’s plan to equalize state-backed per-pupil spending is clearly constitutional. It is also easy to explain. Best of all, it is eminently fair. Ridgewood’s VC and Board of Ed should both pass resolutions in support of it

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>2010 Uniform Crime Report finds N.J. murders spiked 16 percent, increased in all corners of the state

>2010 Uniform Crime Report finds N.J. murders spiked 16 percent, increased in all corners of the state


Murders in New Jersey were up 16 percent last year, and they increased in all corners of the state, from rural towns to the largest the cities, according to statistics released today by the State Police.

The number of killings increased 10 percent in cities with more than 50,000 people. But they also increased 8 percent in the suburbs and 21 percent in rural areas, the State Police’s Uniform Crime report shows.  (Baxter, The Star-Ledger)
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>A Gold Rush of Subsidies in Clean Energy Search

>A Gold Rush of Subsidies in Clean Energy Search
By ERIC LIPTON and CLIFFORD KRAUSS
Published: November 11, 2011

WASHINGTON — Halfway between Los Angeles and San Francisco, on a former cattle ranch and gypsum mine, NRG Energy is building an engineering marvel: a compound of nearly a million solar panels that will produce enough electricity to power about 100,000 homes.

The project is also a marvel in another, less obvious way: Taxpayers and ratepayers are providing subsidies worth almost as much as the entire $1.6 billion cost of the project. Similar subsidy packages have been given to 15 other solar- and wind-power electric plants since 2009.

The government support — which includes loan guarantees, cash grants and contracts that require electric customers to pay higher rates — largely eliminated the risk to the private investors and almost guaranteed them large profits for years to come. The beneficiaries include financial firms like Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, conglomerates like General Electric, utilities like Exelon and NRG — even Google.

https://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/12/business/energy-environment/a-cornucopia-of-help-for-renewable-energy.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all

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>Veterans Day ceremonies planned throughout Bergen County

>Veterans Day ceremonies planned throughout Bergen County

BERGENFIELD Ceremonies will begin Friday at 11 a.m. at borough hall, followed by rededication of the monument at Veterans Memorial Park on New Bridge Road. bergenfieldboro.com or (201) 387-4055.
CARLSTADT Services will be conducted at Memorial Park Friday at 11 a.m. (201) 939-2850.
CLIFFSIDE PARK A service with Father Willie Smith and Rabbi Engelmayer of Temple Israel will take place Friday at 11 a.m. at Trinity Episcopal Church, 555 Palisade Ave., followed by refreshments. (201) 941-0643.
DEMAREST An outdoor ceremony at the Northern Valley Regional High School flag pole will begin Friday at 11:15 a.m., followed by a 1 p.m. assembly at Tenakill Middle School. The American Legion will hold a ceremony Friday at 11 a.m. at Veterans Memorial Park. (201) 768-5386.
EDGEWATER The traditional ceremony will take place Friday at 11 a.m. at Memorial Park, Route 5 and River Road. 943-1700, ext. 3131.
FAIR LAWN Ceremonies at the municipal building, 8-01 Fair Lawn Ave., will be hosted by the Fair Lawn Veterans Council Friday at 11 a.m. fairlawn.org or (201) 794-5340.
GARFIELD The fourth annual Veterans Day Gala will be held Friday from 11:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at Royal Manor, 454 Midland Ave., with a four-course luncheon, happy hour, dancing to live band, show, boutique shopping and door prizes, Registration required. $50-$55. aceshows.com or (800) 831-9801.
HACKENSACK A brief ceremony honoring veterans will be followed by refreshments Friday at 11 a.m. at the Courthouse Green, Main and Court streets. hackensack.org or (201) 646-3980.
LEONIA American Legion Post No. 1, 399 Broad Ave., will host ceremonies Friday beginning at 11 a.m. (201) 592-1332.
LITTLE FERRY Ceremonies will be conducted in front of Memorial and Washington schools on Liberty Street Friday at 11 a.m.. Afterward, food and refreshments will be served at the VFW at 100 Main St. (201) 641-6186.
MAHWAH Mahwah’s ceremonies will take place Friday at 11 a.m. at Veterans Memorial Park on Franklin Turnpike. mahwahtwp.org or (201) 529-5757.
NEW MILFORD The annual ceremony will taker place Friday at 11 a.m. at the Veteran’s monument in front of borough hall, 930 River Road. newmilfordboro.com or (201) 967-5044.
NORTHVALE Northvale VFW Memorial Post 162 will conduct a ceremony Friday at 11 a.m. in front of the municipal building, 116 Paris Ave., with refreshments following at the American Legion Hall on Paris Avenue. boroughofnorthvale.com or (201) 767-3330.
OAKLAND Annual ceremonies will be held Friday at 11 a.m. at Veterans Park, 1 Veterans Drive. oakland-nj.org or (201) 337-8111.
PARK RIDGE The Wyckoff Midland Park VFW Post 7086 will hold ceremonies Friday at 11 a.m. at Midland Park Veterans Park. co.bergen.nj.us/parks or (201) 336-7267.
RIDGEFIELD PARK A traditional service will be held Friday at 11 a.m. at the Ridgefield Park Flagpole, Euclid Avenue and Mt. Vernon Street. ridgefieldpark.org or (201) 641-2612.
RIDGEWOOD Ceremonies will take place Friday at 11 a.m. at Graydon Park and include a rededication ceremony for a plaque being installed to honor the memory of the 14 Ridgewood casualties from World War I. (201) 670-5510.
RUTHERFORD A ceremony hosted by Rutherford Veterans Alliance will start Friday at 11 a.m. at the WWI monument on Park Avenue near the Rutherford Post Office and travel from monument to monument with different participants giving speeches about each war. rutherford-nj.com or (201) 939-9895.
TEANECK The Patriotic Observance Advisory Board will conduct ceremonies Friday at 11 a.m. on the Municipal Green. teanecknj.gov or (201) 488-6800.

https://www.nj.com/news/local/index.ssf/2011/11/veterans_day_ceremonies_planne.html