>All but two N.J. towns vote to reject raising property taxes over Gov. Christie’s 2 percent cap Published: Thursday, April 28, 2011, 12:14 AM By Megan DeMarco/Statehouse Bureau
Voters rejected property-tax increases in 12 municipalities today, while two towns approved special ballots to exceed the new 2 percent municipal property-tax cap.
At the polling site at the Ridgewood High School gym, Sara Johnson said she was “very grateful for the schools and what they have done for my children.” As the wife of the high school football coach, she said, she votes yes “to offset the malcontents.”
“We’re all being taxed out of our homes,” she added, “but I don’t think people realize the state gives us so little, and we’re so dependent on local property taxes.” Ridgewood expects to get $1.9 million in state aid for its proposed $86.8 million budget for fiscal 2012.
Unbiased viewpoints…this is the only person they could get a comment from at the polls?
>Ridgewood Co-op’s Scholastic Book Fair revised times for the book fair
There has been a change to the schedule for this event. Below are the revised times for the book fair.
Step right up and join the Co-op for their Scholastic Book Fair on May 4th & 5th. This year’s theme is Book Fair Carnival. There will be raffles, crafts and a souvenir “carnival” picture. Bring the kids to this fun-filled event and encourage an early love of reading. It’s a great oppportunity to stock up on summer reading for the kids. The fair will run from 9:00am-3:00pm & 6:00pm-9:00pm on May 4th and 9:00am-3:00pm on May 5th. The event will take place in the East Room of the Ridgewood United Methodist Church at 100 Dayton Street in Ridgewood.
A nonsectarian school, The Co-op also offers morning and afternoon classes for 2, 3 and 4-year-olds, as well as Mommy & Me classes and Kindergarten Enrichment. Setting the school apart from other nursery schools, The Co-op is organized and run by the parents. This enables parents to actively participate in their child’s early learning experience. Music, physical education, field trips, indoor and outdoor play time and an in-house library are just a few of the experiences to which the children are exposed as supplements to the daily education plans.
For more information on the school or to set up an appointment to visit, please call (201) 447-6232 or email the school at [email protected].
>CHRIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH CONCERT SERIES cellist Richard Locker and pianist Hiroko Sasaki
CHRIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH CONCERT SERIES On Sunday, May 1 at 4 p.m. The Christ Church Ridgewood Concert Series will present its final program of the season with a recital by cellist Richard Locker and pianist Hiroko Sasaki.
The concert will feature works by Beethoven, Brahms, Debussy, and American composer Randall Svane. Tickets are $20 at the door. Advance Tickets are $15. Christ Church Ridgewood is located at 105 Cottage Place (corner of Franklin Ave. and Cottage Place), Ridgewood. Cellist Richard Locker is well known for his stylish and expressive performances. Winner of such prizes as the American Bach Foundation and the National Arts Club, he made his New York recital debut in 1979 to high critical acclaim, and subsequently toured the world as soloist and chamber musician. He has served as principal cellist with the Lincoln Center Mostly Mozart Festival, the New York City Ballet Orchestra, the American Symphony Orchestra, the Orchestra of St. Luke’s, and the Brooklyn Philharmonic. He has recorded countless CDs with artists ranging from Leonard Bernstein and Pinchas Zuckerman to Wynton Marsalis, McCoy Tyner, and Elvis Costello. Mr. Locker’s first CD, Jewish Cello Masterpieces, has been a top seller among independent releases in its genre. Mr. Locker has also recorded the complete cello works of American composer Randall Svane and will feature one of Mr. Svane’s cello suites in this concert.
Pianist Hiroko Sasaki performs extensively as recitalist and chamber musician in Europe and Asia. She has also performed at the Yehudi Menuhin Festival, Tanglewood Taos, Banff, and the Budapest Spring Festival. She gives annual recitals in Carnegie Hall and makes frequent tours of Japan. A graduate of the Curtis Institute, she studied with Leon Fleischer, graduating in 1994. She later earned a Master of Music degree at the Peabody Conservatory, and an Artist Diploma at the Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto. She is currently on the faculty of the Bard College Conservatory of Music. Visit our website @ www.christchurchridgewood.org.
>Ridgewood turf field’s ‘wrinkle release’ costs $21,00 Tuesday, April 26, 2011 BY KELLY EBBELS THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS Staff Writer
The final repair of the wrinkles left on new turf installed on Ridgewood High School’s (RHS) Stadium Field after flooding this month cost the school district about $21,000, Superintendent Daniel Fishbein disclosed at a Board of Education (BOE) meeting Monday night.
Answering an initial question from BOE member Laurie Goodman, who asked for a cost estimate of the cleanup of the fields following heavy rains on April 16, Fishbein responded that the cleanup was being conducted by the district’s contracted custodial company, “so there’s no additional costs.”
However, when The Ridgewood News questioned Fishbein during the public comment portion of the meeting about the cost of hiring an outside company, LandTek, to repair the turf wrinkles, the superintendent reported that the field repair in fact cost about $21,000.
“I’m sorry. There was a cost for LandTek. I neglected to say that,” he said, adding that he considered the repair of the wrinkles a “correction” and not a “clean-up” cost.
>At this time the Ridgewood blog would like to endorse Christina Krauss for school board and urge voters to Vote NO on the proposed school budget .
It is long overdue to have to have some differing voices and receptive ears on the BOE. Competing voices and competing ideas breed better solutions as opposed to the current one size fits all ,”the BOE knows better than you” attitude.
A NO vote for the School Budget carries little or no risk given last years minuscule cut by the Village Council. New economic realities demand new solutions and a greater focus on academic discipline as well as fiscal discipline are now mandatory .
The BOE works for the Taxpayers and not the other way around. Schools are about students and we need to focus on education and learning . Teachers , NJEA reps ,administrators, turf fields and high priced education consultants are all secondary.
Missteps by the current BOE have been well documented , whether its “dumb dumb math” , turf fields in a flood zone, light gate or teacher giveaways .This BOE has for many years been perceived as arrogant , uncaring and beholden to special interests while standards have been lowered ,making it difficult to view the so called “tradition of excellence” as any thing more than mere empty words .
>April showers leave wrinkles on Ridgewood fields Monday, April 25, 2011 BY KELLY EBBELS THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS Staff Writer
Another weekend of heavy rains and flooding from the Ho-Ho-Kus Brook damaged the artificial turf fields at Ridgewood High School, and prompted a new flurry of concern from neighboring residents.
A district worker cleans Stevens Field. The district hired a company to clean the fields after they were flooded in March, but decided this month to do the cleanup in-house. Consecutive days of rain in March also left the fields flooded, and a cleanup effort following those storms was still under way when recent rainfall dropped on the village.
The cleanup last week was proceeding differently at village and school fields than in March. After paying a private contractor to clean the fields last month ($21,000 for the RHS fields and $9,500 for Maple Park Field), both the village and school district chose to use in-house employees last week. The village and school district rented a sweeper to clean the fields.
>State Senate President Stephen M. Sweeney Bill forces shared services
Municipalities may soon have no choice but to share services. Under a bill proposed recently by State Senate President Stephen M. Sweeney, towns and counties would face a monetary penalty if voters reject shared services proved by a state commission to save money. (Mathur Desai, Gannett)
Bob Hutton, I remember you well. I’ve attended many BOE meetings, but the one that stands out most to me was an evening where many residents, both adults and students, had comments to make about certain budget proposals and where the cuts should be.
After the public comments were done, many people left, but not me Mr. Hutton. I stuck around long enough to hear you state to your fellow board members that now that the public comment was done, it was time to move on because it would not change the board’s decisions in any way. I remember the way you said that was so dismissive, so disrespectful, that it left an impression on me and several others that were still there. We all left the meeting talking about how rude you were and how the board couldn’t care less about the countless parents and students who took the time and courage to speak that evening.
Of all the board members, you Mr. Hutton are the most guilty of this. So for those who did not have the displeasure of witnessing your arrogant display, please consider where this plea is coming from. And if that’s not enough, last year, when we showed our disagreement with how the BOE proposed to spend our tax dollars by voting down the tax levy/budget, this arrogant board changed NOTHING about it and submitted the same defeated budget to the Village Council for approval.
And just in case that is not enough of a reason to vote no, lets not forget all the cuts to the classroom we’ve endured over the past few years in the face of the extravagant new artificial turf and lighting we now have to support. Maintaining these items will now be a permanent drain on our school budget during these difficult financial times.
So, no thank you Mr. Hutton. Any one of these reasons would be enough to make me want to VOTE NO (for the second time in thirty years of tax levy/budget voting).
The Easter bunny has its origin in pre-Christian fertility lore. The Hare and the Rabbit were the most fertile animals known and they served as symbols of the new life during the Spring season.
The bunny as an Easter symbol seems to have it’s origins in Germany, where it was first mentioned in German writings in the 1500s. The first edible Easter bunnies were made in Germany during the early 1800s. These were made of pastry and sugar.
The Easter bunny was introduced to American folklore by the German settlers who arrived in the Pennsylvania Dutch country during the 1700s. The arrival of the “Oschter Haws” was considered “childhood’s greatest pleasure” next to a visit from Christ-Kindel on Christmas Eve. The children believed that if they were good the “Oschter Haws” would lay a nest of colored eggs.
The children would build their nest in a secluded place in the home, the barn or the garden. Boys would use their caps and girls their bonnets to make the nests . The use of elaborate Easter baskets would come later as the tradition of the Easter bunny spread through out the country.
>Modern-day Easter is derived from two ancient traditions: one Judeo-Christian and the other Pagan. Both Christians and Pagans have celebrated death and resurrection themes following the Spring Equinox for millennia. Most religious historians believe that many elements of the Christian observance of Easter were derived from earlier Pagan celebrations.
The equinox occurs each year on March 20, 21 or 22. Both Neopagans and Christians continue to celebrate religious rituals linked to the equinox. Wiccans and other Neopagans usually hold their celebrations on the day or eve of the equinox. Western Christians celebrate Easter on the Sunday on or after the full moon that follows the nominal date of the Equinox — MAR-21. The Eastern Orthodox churches follow a different calculation; their Easter celebration is often many weeks after the date selected by the Western churches.
>West Side Presbyterian Church • Varian Fry Way, 6 South Monroe Street • Ridgewood, NJ 07450 • 201-652-1966
Today 8:45 am EASTER SUNDAY FESTIVAL WORSHIP WITH HOLY COMMUNION Today 11:15 am EASTER SUNDAY FESTIVAL WORSHIP WITH HOLY COMMUNION May 1 8:45 am CHURCH SCHOOL FOR ELEMENTARY CHILDREN May 1 8:45 am WORSHIP May 1 11:15 am WORSHIP May 1 4:00 pm PATRON SERIES CONCERT: IMPERIAL BRASS May 2 6:30 pm Session-FOCUS Dinner May 6 8:00 pm PRO ARTE CHORALE CONCERT TICKET INFO: WEBSITE OR 201-497-8400
>Killer Combo of High Gas, Food Prices at Key Tipping Point Published: Thursday, 21 Apr 2011 | 2:22 PM ET By: Christina Cheddar Berk News Editor
The combination of rising gasoline prices and the steepest increase in the cost of food in a generation is threatening to push the US economy into a recession, according to Craig Johnson, president of Customer Growth Partners.
Johnson looks at the percentage of income consumers are spending on gasoline and food as a way of gauging how consumers will fare when energy prices spike.
With gas prices now standing at about $3.90 a gallon, energy costs have now passed 6 percent of spending—a level that Johnson says is a “tipping point” for consumers.
“Energy is not quite as essential as food and water, but is a necessity in today’s economy, and when gasoline costs more than bottled water—like now—then it takes a huge bite out of disposable spending,” he said, in a research note.
Of the six US recessions since 1970, all but the “9-11 year 2001 recession” have been linked to—of not triggered by—energy prices that crossed the 6 percent of personal consumption expenditures, he said. (During the shallow 2001 recession, energy prices had risen to about 5 percent of spending, which is higher than the long-term 4 percent share.)
What may make matters worse this time around, is there has been a steep increase in food prices that occurred as well. In other recent recessions food costs were benign, at between 7.5 percent and 7.8 percent of spending.
This year food prices have climbed 6.5 percent since the beginning of early January, according to Consumer Growth Partners.