>3 Charged With Dealing Crack; Occupy Boston ‘Deteriorating’ November 4, 2011 11:42 PM
BOSTON (CBS) – Three people arrested Thursday night inside the Occupy Boston camp have been charged with dealing crack cocaine.
WBZ NewsRadio 1030’s Carl Stevens, who spent the night at the camp a few weeks ago, talked to a man who spends most nights at Occupy Boston. He said things have gone downhill.
“Things have changed drastically. It seems to be deteriorating,” the man told Carl. “A lot of drug use, alcohol use, people getting into fights… It’s deteriorating pretty quick.”
>Ridgewood school board interviews six candidates for open seat
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2011
BY JOSEPH CRAMER
STAFF WRITER
THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS
The Board of Education (BOE) interviewed six candidates this week for the seat left vacant by trustee Charles Reilly’s departure last month.
Six candidates applied and were each questioned by board members on Monday night regarding their professional backgrounds, reasons for applying for the position, and goals as a potential BOE trustee. The decision on Reilly’s replacement will be announced at a public meeting on Nov. 7.
Among the candidates – James Morgan, Gwen Sullivan, B. Vincent Loncto, Janice Willet, Rei Shinozuka and Eric Gross – several themes were consistent across the six interviews. All expressed a desire to contribute to the reputation of the Ridgewood school district, which was a primary reason behind moving to the village for many of the candidates.
Issues of communication, whether relating to complex technical matters such as yearly budgets or simple instances of parent feedback, were also paramount in candidates’ responses.
>“Occupy” protests degenerate into chaos in California Nov 3, 7:21 AM (ET)
By TERENCE CHEA, LISA LEFF and TERRY COLLINS
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) – A day of demonstrations in Oakland that began as a significant step toward expanding the political and economic influence of the Occupy Wall Street movement, ended with police in riot gear arresting dozens of protesters who had marched through downtown to break into a vacant building, shattering windows, spraying graffiti and setting fires along the way.
“We go from having a peaceful movement to now just chaos,” said protester Monique Agnew, 40.
>11.02.11 STORM NEWS: WILLARD WILL OPEN ON THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3
WILLARD SCHOOL WILL BE OPEN TOMORROW, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3: Please help to spread the word that power has been restored and Willard School will be open on Thursday, November 3. Please continue to exercise caution when walking or driving to and from all schools
As a parent with a child in school, I got the ‘nanny state’ call from Dr. Fishbein saying not to let my children out to trick-or-treat yesterday because of down power lines and branches. So, if there is a windstorm that takes down a line or branch and Dr. Fishbein fails to send out an email or warning call, is he and/or the school district liable should my child get injured on the way to school (or any other destination)? After 20 years in Ridgewood, I know when and when not to venture out following a storm. I wonder if the BOE is happy with his new job description?
>139th Annual Harvest Fair :Old Paramus Reformed Church
10am to 4pm – Free Admission – Come early for holiday shopping, have lunch and bring friends. 660 East Glen Avenue at Rt. 17. Garage Sale – Gift Basket Raffle – Attic Treasures & Collectibles – Furniture – Jewelry – linens – books – toys – Homemade Baked Goods – & soup – Farm Stand Country Kitchen Refreshments & Lunch!
Halloween (or Hallowe’en), a contraction of All-Hallows-Eve (“evening”), is an annual holiday observed on October 31, and common activities include guising/trick-or-treating, attending costume parties, carving jack-o’-lanterns, lighting bonfires, apple bobbing, visiting haunted attractions, playing pranks, telling scary stories, and watching horror films.
Straddling the line between fall and winter, plenty and paucity, life and death, Halloween is a time of celebration and superstition. It is thought to have originated with the ancient Celtic festival of Samhain, when people would light bonfires and wear costumes to ward off roaming ghosts. In the eighth century, Pope Gregory III designated November 1 as a time to honor all saints and martyrs; the holiday, All Saints’ Day, incorporated some of the traditions of Samhain. The evening before was known as All Hallows’ Eve and later Halloween. Over time, Halloween evolved into a secular, community-based event characterized by child-friendly activities such as trick-or-treating. In a number of countries around the world, as the days grow shorter and the nights get colder, people continue to usher in the winter season with gatherings, costumes and sweet treats.
Sunday October 30, 2011 5:00 PM- Due to storm cleanup and continuing power outages throughout the Village of Ridgewood, the Ridgewood Public Schools will be closed Monday October 31. Updates will be posted as we are able. Please help to spread the word that the Ridgewood Public Schools will be closed Monday October 31st
>Great Quality Dress-up Items Now at Harding Pharmacy
Harding Pharmacy located at 305 E Ridgewood Ave in Ridgewood, NJ, invites you to shop for great quality dress up items that can be used for Halloween or pretend play all year long. We have fairy costumes, wings, princess capes, musical chicken dance skirts, wands, tiaras, spiderman cape and knight costumes! Also, our cards are ALWAYS just 99 cents! Please, stop by! Parking is conveniently located in our own lot next to the store.
>The Whitestone Associates report is critical as to why the scale of the expansion of the hospital should not go ahead
The Whitestone Associates report is critical as to why the scale of the expansion of the hospital should not go ahead – 12 trucks an hour for 8 hours a day and the foundations of local homes been damaged, these are just some of the real issues that the village as a whole will face. Together with the noise, the increased level of traffic and the general dangers posed by such an undertaking, the Village needs to look carefully as to why this project is something that we must not undertake. A legal remedy that the hospital will seek, should its plans be quashed, will amount to nothing based on the findings of this report.
We must be mindful that the Village has a duty to care for its tax-paying citizens and most importantly, for the children that will be caught in the crosshairs of this massive project – regardless of what side of town they live on and regardless of their numbers. Endangering the welfare or life of just one child is something that can not be tolerated.
Another important factor that needs to be touched on is the companies that will be potentially hired by Valley for this supposedly massive project – will the Village get an opportunity to review the track records of these companies as those records relate to health and safety history, employment history (most construction companies that undertake these sized projects have in the past been found guilty of hiring illegal immigrants and paying them below average wages off their books). What recourse will the Village have against Valley and the companies should anything untoward happen?
It’s important to remember that the issue of the expansion plan comes with numerous sub-issues that all need to be addressed and I am of the opinion that that most of those sub-issues have not been addressed or even placed on the radar.
>Valley Expansion: You can have a better hospital without this plan. Valley’s entire history from its beginnings proves that
You can have a better hospital without this plan. Valley’s entire history from its beginnings proves that. There was never an expansion done anywhere near the size of the current proposal. Yet plenty of expansion and modernization was surely done over the years. Many more specialty areas were added over the years since Valley began,too.
Remember, Valley started as the entire hospital’s footprint being what’s now the doctor parking lot on Linwood. Phillips- now the oldest building– greatly expanded the hospital when it was built. Then Bergen followed, then Cheel.
Also bear in mind as to Ridgewood, the host community, our population really has not changed greatly in size throughout most of Valley’s existence.
What you probably can NOT have without this plan though is a big regional medical center that attracts patients and their doctors from all over. That’s not a reasonable definition of “serving the community” to me, unless you define “community” as basically the entire tri-state area and perhaps beyond that.
This area has a lot of facilities to choose from.. and in fact many providers who practice at Valley offer their patients other choices for procedures than only Valley.
For one very specialized procedure, a local close friend was recently offered a choice of either Clara Maas or Valley. The specialist surgeon who performed the procedure has offices in both Ridgewood and the Clara Maas area.
The patient chose Valley, but the doctor also commented that Clara Maas was every bit as good as Valley in terms of services for the procedure needed, and that actually more such procedures are done there than at Valley, not just by that provider, but overall in NJ.
When Pascack was open, even more choices were available and many docs practicing at Valley were also listed as having privileges at Pascack.
If you do lookups of Valley physicians at the Valley site and then go look up that provider individually, you’ll find that many (and likely most) have privileges at multiple hospitals. Some doctors on the Valley site have a feature you can directly click for more info about their practice, too – and among those, you’ll also find most have multiple hospital affiliations — in fact quite a few continue to list “Pascack” as an affiliation.
So, just like many docs have multiple offices, they also have multiple affiliations with hospitals. Quite a few on the Valley directory also practice from Hackensack too.
Thus, with a plan that provided for some modernization but not the “regional med center” model, you could have the advantage of a “renewed” Valley while still having something sensible in terms of its fit with the site and within the Village as its host community.
It’s hard for me to understand how patients or overall care will suffer if the proposed plan is not built, when so many doctors who practice at Valley also practice elsewhere, and will likely continue to also practice at Valley.
If the current Valley is so “behind the times” as the “experts” seem to testify, why are so many of those same leading area doctors practicing there at all, given that so many of them have other area hospital privileges?
I’m all for them tearing down the old Phillips building and doing some modernizing.. but you don’t need this plan for that. Something more modest would clearly satisfy that need – just as Valley’s previous updates have been able to do.
>Interviews will be held on Monday, October 24, 2011 for Vacant Board Seat
APPLICATIONS RECEIVED FOR VACANT BOARD MEMBER POSITION
As of Friday, October 21, 2011, 4:00 p.m., the district has received applications for the vacant Board Member position from the following people:
Eric Gross
B. Vincent Loncto
James Morgan
Rei Shinozuka
Gwen Sullivan
Janice Willett
Interviews will be held starting at 7:00 p.m. on Monday, October 24, 2011, at the Regular Public Meeting, in the Board Room on the third floor of the Education Center.