>Concentrated power has always been the enemy of liberty.
Ronald Reagan
Read more: https://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/r/ronald_reagan.html#ixzz1Jo8Vw6PT
>Concentrated power has always been the enemy of liberty.
Ronald Reagan
Read more: https://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/r/ronald_reagan.html#ixzz1Jo8Vw6PT
>
HICKORY SPRINGS NAMES RIDGEWOOD, NJ SCHOOL WINNER OF NATIONAL COMPETITION CELEBRATING ENVIRONMENTAL LEARNING
EARTHCARE CHALLENGE II GRAND PRIZE GOES TO SARA’S PRE-SCHOOL
HICKORY, N.C. – After 31 days of contest updates, photos and videos and over 1,200 fan votes on Facebook, Hickory Springs today announced Sara’s Pre-school in Ridgewood, NJ, as grand prize winner of its national social media competition, The EarthCare Challenge II.
Proving that it’s never too early to encourage a lifetime of earth-friendly learning, the contest followed five school groups from around the country as they embarked on green initiatives in their communities.
To win, the preschool developed a month-long curriculum to introduce Kindergarten Enrichment students to the concept of environmental awareness. The class carried out a wide array of projects which included identifying creative ways to repurpose materials, such as planting seeds in used yogurt cups, and holding Recycling Relay races to learn how to sort recyclable goods. In an effort to continue a tradition of eco-education, the students created books filled with their newfound knowledge, which they presented to the younger class.
“We congratulate each of our finalists who have made tremendous achievements with their students, making it very difficult to pick a winner,” said Hickory Springs Executive Vice President Dwayne Welch. “Sara Bauer, the team leader at Sara’s Preschool, really stood out for her tireless efforts combining a multi-pronged approach to her ‘March Green Up’ theme, along with updates which showed consistent creativity and progress through the page.”
In the lead-up to Earth Day on April 22, Hickory Springs will present the school with $1,000 to help fund future environmental learning initiatives, along with a sofa set manufactured
>Unfortunately, one or both of the incumbents responsible for this education crime perpetrated upon the parents and children of Ridgewood will get re-elected.
It is really too bad that they don’t fire Regina and scrap these terrible math programs. But that is never going to happen because our BOE is intellectually lazy and dishonest. They will never do the due diligence required to find out the truth themselves. Instead they rely on the information given them by Regina.
And you want to know the real kick in the ass, Singapore and Saxon math programs cost far less to use. In a time of fiscal austerity they went for the most expensive program they could find. Only in Ridgewood, only in Ridgewood kids.
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> Math Wars : Pre-high school curriculum isn’t teaching about real math
People teaching middle and high school math do understand math. When I went to college, taking a math major, about half the students in my major classes were students majoring in education, with a specialization in math.
The problem here in Ridgewood is not that teachers couldn’t derive the quadratic equation (simple algebra steps) for a class – it is that the pre-high school curriculum isn’t teaching about real math, it is having students discover and think about concepts. That is all well and good if the BOE doubled the amount of math instruction time, but they didn”t.
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>State signs on to help develop tomorrow’s tests
As testing drives state education policy more and more, New Jersey has formally signed on with a national group developing the next generation of standardized tests, ones that take place over the course of the school year and could have computers asking the questions. (Mooney, NJ Spotlight)
>State Workers to pay more in health care plan
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie has long called for state workers to pay more of their health care costs, and now proposes a phased-in plan over three years that would require employees to pay about a third of those costs by mid-2014. (DeFalco, The Associated Press)
https://www.thedailyjournal.com/article/20110419/NEWS01/104190312
>Detroit sending layoff notices to all of the district’s 5,466 unionized employees
Detroit to send layoff notices to all its public teachers
(Reuters) – The emergency manager appointed to put Detroit’s troubled public school system on a firmer financial footing said on Thursday he was sending layoff notices to all of the district’s 5,466 unionized employees.
In a statement posted on the website of Detroit Public Schools, Robert Bobb, the district’s temporary head, said notices were being sent to every member of the Detroit Federation of Teachers “in anticipation of a workforce reduction to match the district’s declining student enrollment.”
Bobb said nearly 250 administrators were receiving the notices, too.
The district is unlikely to eliminate all the teachers. Last year, it sent out 2,000 notices and only a fraction of employees were actually laid off. But the notices are required by the union’s current contract with the district. Any layoffs under this latest action won’t take effect until late July.
In the meantime, Bobb said that he planned to exercise his power as emergency manager to unilaterally modify the district’s collective bargaining agreement with the Federation of Teachers starting May 17, 2011.
https://www.reuters.com/article/2011/04/15/us-detroit-layoffs-idUSTRE73E7ID20110415
>S&P sounds alarm on US debt
By Robin Harding and James Politi in Washington and Michael Mackenzie in New York
Published: April 18 2011 15:19 | Last updated: April 18 2011 22:48
Standard & Poor’s issued a stark warning to Washington on Monday, cutting its outlook on US sovereign debt for the first time and throwing more fuel on the raging debate over America’s swollen deficits.
The agency kept America’s credit rating at triple A but for the first time since it started rating US debt 70 years ago, cut its outlook from “stable” to “negative”. A negative outlook means there is a one-third chance of a downgrade in the next two years.
https://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/d6c97342-69bd-11e0-826b-00144feab49a.html#ixzz1JvCRXEuR
>Floods :Another way to look at it: If the BOE kept the grass fields but spent BIG $$$ on landscaping along North Irving and along the PSE&G Right-of-Way, would you now complain
Relax people. I wish we could tell which comments were real and which were set a bait to entice more negative commentary. I am sure that the 9:07 post was either that or a foolish attempt at humor.
Those who oppose these fields, at least be direct: If you are a neighbor and you’re worried about your back yard? I don’t blame you. But then also let us know if your property flooded LESS because the turf drained better than a grass field would. Honesty is a two way street.
If its worse? Say so. I’d imagine you could then bring suit agst the BOE. Funny that we havent had that analysis, but now you’re worried about “the kids.”
If this is costing the BOE money and us all money? I get it, believe me. But lets drop the B/S of old vs new residents, which has ntg to do with the conversation. That was bait, and I wouldnt put it past a smart neighbor to set the trap for everyone else.
Lets also drop the card about the dangerous conditions and how you saw kids splashing around in the waste. Save it. You arent worried about my kids. You are playing every card in the deck you can, b/c you are thinking about your own backyard.
I do feel for the neighbors. But stop with the lies.
Here is another way to look at it: If the BOE kept the grass fields but spent BIG $$$ on landscaping along North Irving and along the PSE&G Right-of-Way, would you now complain that the beautiful work was being damaged by these floods? If you and your home directly benefitted from it (like all of those with kids in the community hope to benefit from the improved fields), would you be beating such a drum about BOE waste?
Be honest. You wouldnt say a word. You’d expect the BOE to pay to re-plant your privacy buffers, and you’d complain when they didnt spend our tax dollars to do so.

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>”The Ridgewood Environmental Advisory Committee (REAC)”
Do these guys get ANY funding?
Exactly how much influence do they have on Village Policy?
Exactly what are their qualifications (do any of them have anything more than “an interest in environmental issues”?
“The Ridgewood Environmental Advisory Committee (REAC) is an independent volunteer committee,
appointed by the Village Council, with experience and/or interest in environmental issues. REAC advises
the Village Council on environmental, health and human safety issues in Ridgewood. It also seeks to
assist the residents of Ridgewood in addressing environmental concerns by advocating “best practices”,
which protect the environment, respect the ecosystem and promote sustainability.”

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>Project Pride Day May 21 – New Members Welcome
Project Pride’s purpose is to beautify the Village community with plantings and holiday decorations throughout the central business district. The committee, sponsored by Ridgewood Parks and Recreation, is seeking new members and is calling on civic groups, donors, and families to participate. Volunteer time is flexible and very rewarding.
New volunteers are asked to contact Chairman Gary Cirillo at 201-310-4208.
The annual Project Pride Day will be held on Saturday, May 21st. All volunteers are asked to meet at the clock tower (corner of Ridgewood Avenue and Oak Street) at 9 am for assignments.

>Check out the Tax Day Video
https://onesmallvoice.blogspot.com/2007/04/why-is-april-15th-tax-day.html
>School boards confront great uncertainty
Last year at this time — in the weeks leading up to school elections — rhetoric about public schools had reached a crescendo. (Rothschild, Gannett)
>Christie estimates changes in employee benefits will save $870M a year
Gov. Chris Christie estimates his plan to overhaul the state’s public employee health benefits system will save more than $870 million a year by 2014 by shifting significant percentage of the costs to employees and future retirees, according to the Treasury Department. (Renshaw, The Star-Ledger)
https://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2011/04/christie_estimates_changes_in.html
>Evaluating New Jersey’s teachers: A mosaic of practices and processes
At one school in Bergen County, the teacher evaluation is left entirely to the principal, using a hybrid system for grading his 35 staffers, a steady stream of classroom observations and a lot of weekends reading lesson plans. (Mooney, NJ Spotlight)