Posted on Leave a comment

>Celebrate Earth Day with The Travel Center / American Express and Smithsonian Journeys

>

Smithsonian+ +Scarlet+MacawTravel+Center+Logo+BnW

Journey to Costa Rica, a land of rich natural wonders and friendly people. Travel beyond San Jose, Costa Rica’s colorful capital city, to explore the outstanding variety of flora and fauna in three important nature reserves: Braulio Carrillo National Park, Tortuguero National Park, and Cano Negro Wildlife Refuge. Learn about the many pristine natural wonders of Costa Rica during exclusive excursions and special presentations and enjoy unscheduled time for personal discovery.

Costa Rica – Nature’s Museum

*Venture off the beaten path with an expert Costa Rican naturalist to discover the nation’s spectacular flora and fauna, geological wonders, and tropical forest ecology.

*Learn about the unique flavors and processing techniques of Costa Rican coffee production at a coffee plantation.

*Enjoy a discussion on the geology of Costa Rica’s active and dormant volcanoes and their environmental and economic impact on the nation.

*Learn about the differences between Costa Rica’s varied forest environments.

*This tour is a value-priced, Smithsonian Journeys Travel Adventure. The educational portion of this tour will be provided by specially selected local guest speakers, rather than a study leader. These guest speakers have been chosen by Smithsonian to enhance your tour with insights, enabling you to more fully understand and appreciate your destination. The maximum size of your group for this destination is 40.

*Complimentary door-to-door sedan service on this air-inclusive tour; available within a 50 mile radius of Newark, JFK and LaGuardia.

From $1,499 per person, based on double occupancy

Book now for departures through April 8, 2011

Visit The Travel Center AE on Facebook to see staff photos of Costa Rica.

For complete details on this 9-day tour, stop in or call:

The Travel Center / American Express:

50 E. Ridgewood Ave.

in the Village of Ridgewood

(201) 447-3311 or

[email protected]

Complete information also available on our NEW website:

https://www.thetravelcenterae.com/

Bookmark and Share

Posted on Leave a comment

>Dr.Fishbein suggests that Village Council members might actually vote to INCREASE!

>Letter From Dr. Fishbein to Parents and Guardians – What Chutzpah!

The Fly believes that Dr.Fishbein is delusional to suggest that Village Council members might actually vote to INCREASE the Board of Education’s 2010-2011 budget.

Not even the best comedy writers for Saturday Night Live in its early years could have come up with such an outlandish suggestion.

You’ve got to read this to believe it . . .

https://ridgewood.schoolfusion.us/modules/groups/homepagefiles/cms/923620/File/Public%20Information%20Officer/Superintendent’s%20Messages/Budget%20Letter%204.22.10.pdf?sessionid=f9c8fedb4091d6205cc31dc00608ee32

Bookmark and Share

Posted on Leave a comment

>BOOKENDS: Sean Hannity,Saturday, April 24th @ 9:00am

>

hannity1

Only event in the Tri-State!

Sean Hannity

Just Announced***Saturday, April 24th @ 9:00am

will be signing his new book Conservative Victory.

Can’t make the signing? We are taking phone orders for signed copies until Thursday(4/22) @ 8:00pm.

Bookends, 232 E. Ridgewood Avenue, Ridgewood, NJ 07450 201-445-0726

Bookmark and Share

Posted on Leave a comment

>SCHOOL ELECTION RESULTS, : The most generous taxpayers in America said "stop!" in rejecting a majority of school budgets in yesterday’s elections

>Claiming victory in school budgets’ defeat, Christie urges governing bodies to seek wage freezes from teachers

The most generous taxpayers in America said “stop!” in rejecting a majority of school budgets in yesterday’s elections, and public officials who fail to hear the human cry do so at their own peril, said Gov. Chris Christie. “I would urge and encourage municipal governments to heed the words of the voters who voted yesterday,” the governor said at a noon press conference, a day after voters rejected nearly 59 percent of the 537 school budgets presented statewide. (Pizarro, PolitickerNJ)
https://www.politickernj.com/max/38560/claiming-victory-school-budgets-defeat-christie-urges-governing-bodies-seek-wage-freezes-t

Bookmark and Share

Posted on Leave a comment

$48 million dollar Referendum : BOE should not have rammed the $48m bond thru in December.

>The tools at the BOE should not have rammed the $48m bond thru in December. What a scam that was…

There was so many things wrong with the way they went about it:

1. should have put in on the general ballot in november instead of its own ballot in december OR put it at the same time as the budget vote. they only did this because they knew less people would come out in december to vote against it AND that the NJ budget cuts were coming. additionaly, it costs money to hold a special election so yet again they wasted money.

2. they put a package deal together so they people with leaky roofs would vote yes even if they were not in favor of a dozen new classrooms, new bleachers, and new turf fields (which were, by the way, voted down by the general public when specifically asked whether they wanted to pay for them on the ballot two years ago).

3. there is no logic to the fact that they are claiming to need a dozen new classrooms while school populations are hundreds less than in the 1970s. why would we possibly need these things? if certain schools are too crowded, rebalance the boundaries like they did with somerville a few years ago. it’s not like you’d be sending your kid to inner city schools if they had to go to a different elementary school in Ridgewood.

4. as mentioned in point 2 above, the put deferred maintenance items in the bond. ok, fine, fix the roofs, wiring, etc. that was neglected in prior years that should have been handled in the operating budget BUT AGAIN, do not add new infrastructure (classrooms etc.) that we will not be able to maintain because obviously we can afford to maintain what we have already (hence the deferred maintenace in bond).

We need somebody on the board who will say NO to the teachers’ union, who has kids who will feel the impact of any cuts/reductions to keep them honest, and will not empire-build. We have to get back to basics and for once stabilize the taxes and let incomes catch up. 4% increases to the budget are not stable when there is essentially zero inflation.

Bookmark and Share

Posted on Leave a comment

>SCHOOL ELECTION RESULTS, : I suggest Laurie and her mates lick their wounds and open their ears

>Blogger Laurie Goodman openly laments the budget loss, she can’t help but call out a fellow citizen for being under-informed and angry lunkhead in true Alinsky style.

If this guy was underinformed, whose fault was it? LG will probably say that he should have one to the budget meetings and open houses (for indoctrination purposes) to get the ‘facts’. Truth be told is that the whole reason for a representative democracy is that no one can know all the facts.

I’m sure the guy has read a blog, the Ridgewood News or approached by the HSA moms who troll Ridgewood like it’s Stepford.

Laurie has a cure to her problem (as do the seemingly clueless BOE members): the mirror. If she was listening to her constituents, she would know that the economic lag in education is about 24 months. Instead of waking to the alarm, the BOE keeps hitting the snooze, expecting things will turn around and Trenton will honor its $10 million dollar coupon for a huge referendum.

We in the private sector face a daily onslaught. Government has been a sacred cow, but when you have endured all you can in the private sector, the knife must turn to BOE & VC budgets.

I suggest Laurie and her mates lick their wounds and open their ears. A small dose of humility goes a long way in mending fences.

Bookmark and Share

Posted on Leave a comment

>State privatization task force meets in Summit; union members present their case

>By Liz Keill
April 20, 2010, 9:00AM

https://www.nj.com/independentpress/index.ssf/2010/04/state_privatization_task_force.html

SUMMIT — Saving taxpayer dollars, as most residents know, has become a major theme in Governor Chris Christie’s administration. And one of those tools would be to privatize some products or services.

About 80 people, many of them state union members, gathered at Summit High School on Wednesday, April 14, to testify before a state Privatization Task Force appointed by Gov. Christie.

The task force has been charged with finding $50 million in savings in the 2011 budget and $100 million in savings for the year.

“We’re looking for ways to outsource or turn over to the private sector whatever services we can,” said task force member P. Kelly Hatfield of Summit.

“We hope to give elected officials the tools that they need to make local government more cost effective,” said Hatfield, who is a former member of the Summit Common Council and Board of Education. The task force was asked to apply the “yellow pages test,” she said, to determine if there was a duplication of services being offered by the private sector or by non-profit organizations. “How can we eliminate impediments? New Jersey has made some mistakes,” she said. A few years ago an effort to privatize motor vehicle inspections led to long lines and a cumbersome process.

The task force has been meeting since March 11 and has interacted with the four major unions in New Jersey, including the New Jersey Education Association and the Communication Workers of America.

Hatfield said other states have been doing this reduction in state government successfully, citing Texas, West Virginia and Virginia as examples. In Texas, she said, highway work and infrastructure projects are being handled by the private sector.

https://www.nj.com/independentpress/index.ssf/2010/04/state_privatization_task_force.html

Bookmark and Share

Posted on Leave a comment

>Defeated School Budget Now Faces Scrutiny By Village Council

>One of the roles assumed by New Jersey’s municipal governing bodies is as referee when a school budget is defeated. Having been defeated by 102 votes, the proposed $78.8 million Ridgewood Budget now heads for review by elected members of Ridgewood’s Village Council.

The last time The Fly can recall this happening in Ridgewood was 2004, when the Village Council, led by former Mayor Jane Reilly, passed the voter defeated budget with cuts totalling only two-tenths of one percent. Ms. Reilly was offered a paid position with the Ridgewood Board of Education following her departure from public office in the summer of 2004.
 By New Jersey state law, if a school budget is defeated, the budget is sent to the municipal government for their recommendations. A municipality is under no obligation to cut the school budget, but the reality is that if the voters defeated the budget, then the taxpayers are demanding some relief. That message is not lost on municipal officials, and they are often forced to find a middle ground between the wants of a school board and the decision of the voters.

Generally, the budget will be sent to the finance committee of each municipality and out of respect to the school board, a meeting is held between the two bodies to discuss what budget cuts are possible. After the municipality makes its recommendations, taxpayers can expect to hear how draconian the cuts are from both school officials and representatives of the teachers union. The public will then hear that the school may not be able to function with such tight restrictions and how the children will be deprived of the finest education.

Some of this is true, but most of it is rhetoric. With few exceptions, most of the recommendations made by municipal officials are modest in size and rarely cut deeply into a schools budget. Whenever you read about significant cuts to a school budget, you can bet that the school district will automatically appeal to the county education commissioner. At this point, the commissioner has the power to reinstate many, if not all, of the proposed budget cuts and the school district winds up winning in the end.

By restoring many of the recommended cuts, the voting result is circumvented and the taxpayer winds up footing the bill. The entire process is out of whack and there has got to be a better way of making the vote count. However, until the electorate of our state has the stomach and political will to reform our school funding formulas, we are stuck with the charade of voting on school budgets.

Bookmark and Share

EMAIL+LOGO

Posted on Leave a comment

>Today was the LAST DAY on which anyone who wishes to vote in the May 11 Council election

>Besides being School Board/budget election day, today is three weeks before our Council election and therefore the LAST DAY on which anyone who wishes to vote in the May 11 Council election, but has never registered to vote, may do so.

According to today’s square on the Village Calendar, the lobby of Village Hall will be open tonight from 4:30 to 9 PM for that purpose. It doesn’t get more convenient than that.

Any 17-year-old resident who will be 18 on or before May 11 may do this. Teens should be encouraged to become politically active and protect their own interests. They must show I.D. proving age and address.

Have a teenage neighbor who qualifies? Consider offering to take him or her to sign up to become a proud voting American. And of course any adult who has never registered before might consider doing so as well.

Questions: Village Clerk’s office, 201-670-5500, extension 201, before 4:30 PM.

Marcia Ringel

Co-Chair, The Preserve Graydon CoalitionBookmark and Share

Posted on Leave a comment

>THE RIDGEWOOD ELKS invites all to our annual Beefsteak Dinner.

>All proceeds go to the Special Needs Children and Camp Moore Sunshine.
These organizations are geared towards these special needs children
and appreciate ours and your support.
Saturday April 24th 7 PM to Midnight
All you can eat dinner includes beefsteak, beer, wine, soda and
great DJ music. Our cash bar is open for other drinks.
Cost $35.00 in advance or $40.00 at the door.

Ridgewood Elks -111 N. Maple Ave 201-652-1100

Thanks
Chris & Liz

Bookmark and Share

Posted on Leave a comment

>Gabbert Now Village CFO Too!

>Village manager appointed as CFO in Ridgewood

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

BY MICHAEL SEDON
The Ridgewood News
STAFF WRITER

Village Manager Ken Gabbert will now play a dual role in Ridgewood’s administration — the Village Council approved his appointment as chief financial officer (CFO) by a 3-1 vote at a special public meeting on Tuesday morning.

Councilman Paul Aronsohn cast the dissenting vote. Councilwoman Anne Zusy was absent from the vote. Gabbert was sworn in as CFO immediately following the vote.

“Everyone in village government is being asked to work harder and longer,” Aronsohn said in an e-mail. “It therefore seems wrong to give a few people extra salary, while everyone else works harder for the same salary. A good example is the fire department. The village manager is proposing the elimination of the deputy chief position, but is not proposing an increase in anyone’s salary to compensate them for doing the extra work.”

By serving in both capacities, Gabbert’s salary will increase by $25,000 annually, but the taxpayers will save about $135,000 the first year and about $150,000 the second year of his four-year appointment, officials said. The savings will be realized by not having to hire an additional person to fill the opening left when former CFO Dorothy Stikna retired in January.

“The big picture is restructuring the finance department,” Gabbert said Tuesday morning at Village Hall.

The resolution, read by Village Clerk Heather Mailander, said that the state requires every municipality to have a CFO appointed, and that Gabbert is qualified to hold such a position because he has the proper state certification.

Bookmark and Share

Posted on Leave a comment

>$89 million school budget : Reader says ," YOU have to pay up to live here"

>Reader says ,” YOU have to pay up to live here”


,”comparing schools to private enterprise is not an intelligent comparison. the two are in different realm – its like comparing baseball stats with golf handicaps – the two have nothing to do with each other.


you see, part living in the greatest nation on earth means that YOU have to pay up to live here. you live in one of the wealthiest towns in the nation – nobody is crying for you when you’re paying taxes. YOU CAN AFFORD IT – YOU LIVE IN RIDGEWOOD.


if you can’t afford the taxes, move elsewhere. there is plenty of affordable housing in alabama.”

Bookmark and Share

Microsoft Store

Posted on Leave a comment

>VILLAGE OF RIDGEWOOD 2010 BUDGET MESSAGE

>VILLAGE OF RIDGEWOOD

2010 BUDGET MESSAGE

The Village of Ridgewood in 2009 felt the continued effects of the worst recession, since the great depression. The Village sustained a significant downfall in anticipated revenues of $455,955. ,which negatively effects fund balance. The 2010 reduction in State Aid revenues of $572,072. only imposes additional constraints on the Village to minimize property tax increases while maintaining the same level of services. Proceeds from the sale of a Liquor license for $450,000. will be anticipated as revenue in this years budget. Contractual salaries, health insurance and pension costs remain to hamper efforts to control budgeted expenses.

The 2010 introduced municipal budget has a estimated tax rate increase of 8.8 percent, or a $302.00 increase for the average residential property assessed at $800,000.

The 2010 budget must meet both State imposed budget (expense) and levy (tax) caps. On the budget side the Village has met its spending cap of $1,106,000. This was obtained by implementing an aggressive expense reduction plan. Total expense reductions to be realized in 2010 total $966,327. The introduced budget however does not meet the levy cap. The Village will request a levy cap waiver in the amount of $1,100,000. The levy cap waiver if granted by the State will enable the Village to provide health and safety services to its resident. Also, the levy cap waiver will be an adjustment or pass on to the 2011 tax levy year. The Village will be in a more stable financial position to satisfy the levy cap, due to the second six month savings from the cost reduction plan which will be undertaken this year. It is anticipated that the expense reduction plan will provide several years of property tax relief. Continued efforts to expand inter-local services with surrounding communities and outsourcing of services will be explored and reexamined.

The 2010 Budget will only increase $243,773. over the 2009 Budget. Large expense items in the budget are:

Group Health Insurance increased 19.83% or $684,219. The Village solicited bids for alternative plans, but was unsuccessful in securing a cost effective solution.

Other Insurance Workers Compensation appropriation rose $62,629. Funds will replenish the insurance reserve fund for future claims which may arise.

Accumulated Absences increased 19.19% or $71,572. Village must provide funding for retirements in 2010.

Police & Fire Retirement pension bill, increased 8.60% or $161,176. Village must meet its financial obligation as mandated by the State.

Unemployment costs increased by $286,288. over 2009. The dramatic increase is the result of implementing staff reductions to comply with the States imposed budget and levy caps, and minimize property tax increases.

Police and Fire contractual Salaries increased on average of 4.3 percent, or $431,160.

The Capital Budget will provide funding for the following :

Rolling stock of Municipal Vehicles

Technology Infrastructure Upgrades

2010 Street Resurfacing & Reconstruction Program.

Stormwater Drainage System Upgrades

Building Improvements, Various Locations

SCADA System Upgrades, Water Pollution Control FacilityBookmark and Share

Posted on Leave a comment

>The Cartel

>

The Crisis | Only 35 percent of American high school seniors are proficient readers. Only 23 percent are proficient in math. Nationwide, only 74 percent of ninth graders graduate within four years—and that number drops to about 50 percent for black and Hispanic students. Twelve percent of American high schools are “dropout factories”—schools where less than 60 percent of freshmen even make it to their senior year. It comes as no surprise, then, that America lags far behind other developed countries when it comes to schooling: Among large industrialized countries, America ranks last in educational effectiveness—despite spending the most.

About The Cartel | Teachers punished for speaking out. Principals fired for trying to do the right thing. Union leaders defending the indefensible. Bureaucrats blocking new charter schools. These are just some of the people we meet in The Cartel. The film also introduces us to teens who can’t read, parents desperate for change, and teachers struggling to launch stable alternative schools for inner city kids who want to learn. We witness the tears of a little girl denied a coveted charter school spot, and we share the triumph of a Camden homeschool’s first graduating class.

https://www.thecartelmovie.com/cgi-local/content.cgi?g=27

Bookmark and Share

Posted on Leave a comment

>$89 million school budget : Vote Yes

>I am what some may call a “Ridgewood Newbie”. As newlyweds three years ago my husband and I went on a search to find the perfect home to begin our lives together in. We wanted a community that would allow us to be involved, raise our children and most of all grow old together in. Ridgewood immediately was narrowed down as the ONLY TOWN we would search in. We finally landed in the beautiful Wastena Park area and could not be happier.

Recently I have tried to gain awareness in regards to local issues including the vacancies in our downtown shopping district, the community divide about the beloved Graydon pool, the Valley expansion and most recently the Council Election. So many of these issues are tainted with personal attacks and agendas that it can be very difficult to learn the truth. I urge everyone to learn before choosing a side to support. And PLEASE lets keep this about the issues and not about supporters.

Last night as I sat and talked with some Ridgewoodians (as I like to call them) we began to discuss these current topics with passion. Someone at this meeting said “If we continue to strive for status quo we at least need to make some changes to maintain that balance. If we choose as a community to keep everything as is, we will only fall behind in society and this beautiful town and admired community will be gone as we know it”. This really struck a chord with me and I hope it does with you as well.

As we enter this critical time in Ridgewood’s history I urge you to Vote for growth. Vote for change. Vote for innovation.

Tomorrow we vote for the school budget. Voting YES will mean an increase in our taxes. Do I want this – NO! But how can we put a price on education? We live in this town for a reason and one of them is the opportunity it provides our children.
School budget questions? Visit – https://board-of-education.ridgewood.schoolfusion.us/modules/groups/group_pages.phtml?gid=944840&nid=116620&sessionid=664189c6cfbd6e1ac84f929ca2a0b3be

On May 11th we are voting for town council. Voting for candidates who support research and community growth may be scary – but it is also brave. We need to support the Cronk/Dowd ticket or we risk moving backward in terms of community evolution. https://www.cronk-dowdforcouncil.myevent.com/
Want to know more about the candidates for Ridgewood Council? Attend Candidates Night TONIGHT April 19th @ 7:30 in the Town Hall.

I hope that you read this message as a request for bravery and not as a personal agenda. We need to work together as a community or in the blink of an eye it will all be gone – and frankly that is NOT a risk I am willing to take.

Rachel S. Schulties
A Concerned Ridgewood Resident

James in the following thread from the Blog… Rachel S. Schulties calls herself “A Concerned Ridgewood Resident”

So as not to cause confusion, I was wondering if you might add a disclaimer at the bottom of the post:

Rachel S. Schulties is not member of the organization “Concerned Residents of Ridgewood”.

CRR will be announcing their recommendations for the candidates this week.

Thanks,
Paul

Bookmark and Share