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>Chris Christie : Join Me ,Thursday, June 11 for a rally with my good friend, Governor Mitt Romney, to kick-off our general election campaign!

>Jon Corzine has created an absolute mess in Trenton. We’re going to change Trenton and we’re going to start by changing Governors. I’m so proud to be leading our party and excited to have such a great team of Assembly, Freeholder and local candidates all over New Jersey who are ready to cut taxes, lower spending, restore pride and make New Jersey an affordable place to live again.

We can’t win this fight alone, though. We need to rebuild the state party to help me defeat Governor Corzine. I hope you’ll join me next Thursday, June 11 for a rally with my good friend, Governor Mitt Romney, to kick-off our general election campaign to Take Back New Jersey. The rally is from 5 pm to 7 pm in the Robert Meyner Reception Center at PNC Bank Arts Center right off the Parkway in Holmdel.

This is our first chance to send a loud and clear message to Governor Corzine and make it clear that we’re ready for a change. We can turn our state into a job leader again. We can put the taxpayers first. We can reign in a government that has grown too big and too expensive. But I need your help. Join our campaign to Take Back New Jersey and join Gov. Mitt Romney and me next Thursday.

Chris Christie

Paid for by The New Jersey Republican State Committee, John Bennett Treasurer

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>It will look beautiful!

>After+Phase1

Valley Phase1. A gleaming modern structure that will stand proudly above the tree lined streets of Ridgewood, overlooking BF Middle School and surrounding homes. A monument to the latest medical technology that money can buy.

Unfortunately, those who attended the Public Hearing on Tuesday June 2 also discovered that Phase 1 will take 6 years to build and it is expected that 20 trucks and 40 buses PER HOUR will be rumbling through Village streets during the long construction process.

The hearing continues on June 8th in the BF Auditorium 7:30pm.

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>the Village of Ridgewood :Uninspired Turnout Marks Primary

>Primary Election Results – Ridgewood polls

Republican

Governor
Rick Merkt = 21
Chris Christie = 679
Steven M Lonegan = 512

Members of the General Assebly (2)
David C. Russo = 632
Scott T. Rumana = 585
Anthony W. Rottino = 444
Joseph A Caruso = 468

Members of the Board of Chosen Freeholders (2)
John Driscoll Jr. = 620
Robert Hermansen = 669
Arthur E. Lavis = 410
James W. Feeney = 477
State Comittee (Male)
Benedict A Focarino = 668

State Committee (Female)
Eleanor S. Nisley = 614
Pearl Spector = 403

Democratic

Governor
Roger Bacon = 15
Jeff Boss = 7
Carl A bergmanson = 22
Jon S Corzine = 272

Members of the General Assembly
John Agostinelli = 241
Mark Bombase = 256

Members of the Board of Chosen Freeholders
Julie O’Brien = 249
Vernon C Wlaton = 236

State Committee (Male)
Kevin O’Connor = 239
Daniel Ortega = 233
John Susino = 230
Omar Rodriguez = 236
Jack Drakeford = 226

State Committee (Female)
Lorrain Joewono = 232
Violet DeVries Etler = 236
June Montag = 232
Eileen DeBari = 236
Lynne B. Hurwitz = 237

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>the Village of Ridgewood : Man about town …

>Graydon Pool Opening Day
Free Admission to All Ridgewood Residents

Opening Day Celebration – Pool patrons can welcome in the new summer swim season with an opening day celebration on Saturday, June 6th, beginning at noon (rain date will be Sunday, June 7th). It’s sure to be magical with children’s entertainment and gifts. This opening celebration offers free admission to all Ridgewood residents. Don’t miss out on the fun!

Farmer’s Market Opens 6/28
Chamber of Commerce
9am to 3pm at the Train Station – every Sunday through October

send us your event [email protected]

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>Ridgewood’s David Russo along with Scott Rumana win GOP 40th Legislative District

>GOP incumbents David Russo and Scott Rumana easily won the Republican Assembly nominations in the 40th Legislative District.

The challengers Anthony Rottino and Joseph A. Caruso, who were backed by former Passaic County GOP Chairman Peter Murphy. That post is now held by Rumana, and the primary race became heated, with numerous legal claims being filed , but not much in the way of issues were discussed.

The winners will face Democrats John Agostinelli and Mark Bombace also of Ridgewood, who were unopposed in their party’s primary.

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>Christie wins GOP primary for NJ governor

>By ANGELA DELLI SANTI – 1 hour ago

TRENTON, N.J. (AP) — Former U.S. Attorney Chris Christie (KRIS’-tee) has won the Republican nomination for New Jersey governor and will face incumbent Democrat Jon Corzine (KOR’-zyn) in November.

Christie defeated former Bogota (ba-GOH’-tah) Mayor Steve Lonegan (LON’-eh-gan) and Assemblyman Richard Merkt (merkt) in Tuesday’s primary. The Associated Press called the race based on an analysis of partial election results.

Christie is trying to become the first Republican elected in a New Jersey statewide race since 1997.

The 46-year-old Mendham resident built a reputation as a corruption fighter during the seven years he spent as the state’s top federal law enforcement official under President George W. Bush.

Corzine faced token opposition in the Democratic primary. Vice President Joe Biden appeared with the 62-year-old former U.S. senator to formally launch his re-election bid after polls closed Tuesday night.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.

TRENTON, N.J. (AP) — Incumbent New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine (KOR’-zyn) has won the state’s Democratic gubernatorial nomination and will seek his second term in November.

Corzine easily defeated three little-known competitors Tuesday in a low-key primary election. The Associated Press called the race based on an analysis of partial election results.

The 62-year-old will have a tougher challenge in November. Former U.S. Attorney Chris Christie (KRIS’-tee) and former Bogota (ba-GOH’-tah) Mayor Steve Lonegan (LON’-eh-gan) are battling for the Republican nomination.

Corzine is a former U.S. senator and ex-CEO at Wall Street investment firm Goldman Sachs. The wealthy Illinois native spent $40 million on his first gubernatorial campaign in 2005.

He kicked off his campaign in West Orange on Tuesday night with Vice President Joe Biden. Another rally is planned Thursday with rocker Jon Bon Jovi.

Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

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>the Ridgewood Blog Speaks to Filmmaker Bob Bowdon on the Cartel

>

We spoke with Bob Bowdon a bit on Tuesday and he was amazed with the response he had gotten so far. Seemed to him that this issue was like and accident waiting to happen. the feed back has been very positive he said. The movie seems to have galvanised all the people that sense that there is something a miss in our vast public education bureaucracy ,that the focus has long since shifted from the education children to indoctrination and vast make work projects and schemes . Its not about learning its about spending.

PJ Blogger

https://www.thecartelmovie.com/

Microsoft Store

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>Polls open for NJ primary

>The Associated Press

https://www.philly.com/philly/wires/ap/news/state/new_jersey/20090602_ap_pollsopenfornjprimary.html

TRENTON, N.J. – Polls opened Tuesday for New Jersey’s primary election where a crime-busting former U.S. Attorney and a conservative former North Jersey mayor are seeking the Republican nomination for governor.

Chris Christie has voted in Mendham Township. His opponent, Steve Lonegan, plans to vote later in the day.

GOP Assemblyman Rick Merkt has trailed both in polls.

Gov. Jon S. Corzine faces token opposition in the Democratic primary. Vice President Joe Biden plans to join Corzine to formally launch his re-election bid after the polls close at 8 p.m.

There are also mayoral primaries in Camden, Atlantic City and Edison and several contested state Assembly races.

https://www.philly.com/philly/wires/ap/news/state/new_jersey/20090602_ap_pollsopenfornjprimary.html

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>Steve Lonegan : Reprint of our Exclusive Interview

>large LoneganTues
Thursday, March 05, 2009

The Ridgewood Blog presents an Exclusive Interview with Gubernatorial Candidate Steve Lonegan

So after a little phone tag I finally had an opportunity to sit down with Steve Lonegan and talk the campaign ,Chris Christie ,Governor Corzine and the New Jersey Supreme Court .What stuck me the most is that behind the visions of a tough veteran campaigner is a very passionate man that cares a lot about people .Our interview in the midst of a long day on the campaign trail was only interrupted by a call from his mom.

So I started with something that always bugs me How can a guy running against government subsidies ,take matching funds to run a political campaign ? You see ,he said and i paraphrase ,Corzine can reach into his pocket and take out $60 million bucks but my own mother can only give me around $3400 so either you have to lift the limits or I would be at a huge disadvantage in not taking the matching funds.

I pressed him on why he thought he could really cut state spending and he assured me that cutting down and consolidating the number of departments in the state was very doable . He also reminded me that Pennsylvania one of the states New Jersey residents have been fleeing to ,has a flat tax so there was no reason we couldn’t do it here. He pointed me to his record running Bogota and how he enacted similar cuts .The difference being on a state level you had to add more zeros .

This moved our conversation to Bogota and that it had only 8000 residents and I wondered if he thought that was a fair comparison to Trenton ? Again he reminded me and I know this to be true from running this blog ,that in Trenton you have a lot of room to hide but at a local level you are looking people in the eye everyday who you might be dramatically effecting their lives.

This moved us to an other issue it seems Steve has his work cut out for him not only does he have to compete against the deep pockets of Jon Corzine and the Democratic machine but he also has to fight the “chosen one” every Republicans favorite son Chris Christie and the extremely liberal Republican party in this state .

Abbott and COAH were next on the table for discussion and changing the extremely redistributive almost socialistic NJ Supreme Court (my words ). Steve once again reminded me that as Governor he will have the opportunity to appoint 4 new justices and he assured me that the there is a pool of traditional constitutional defending judges.

Finally he stated that he is far more optimistic in the future than I and that the chief threat to New Jersey’s economy are the policies of Jon Corzine and in particular the very destructive policies of Barack Obama .

PJ Blogger

contact : [email protected]

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>BLEND IS NOW OPEN FOR BUSINESS!

>BLEND IS NOW OPEN FOR BUSINESS! The restaurant, bar, and night club are open and looking forward to seeing everyone at our new beautifully renovated facility…

Here is the upcoming schedule.

Tonight and tomorrow(Fri and Sat May 29th and 30th) DJ Dance Party. Then as follows:

Thur June 4th – DJ Dance Party

Fri June 5th – Slap Andy – www.myspace.com/SlapAndy

Sat June 6th – DJ Dance Party

Thur June 11th – DJ Dance Party

Fri June 12th – Soul Finger – www.myspace.com/SoulFingerLive

Sat June 13th – DJ Dance Party

Sun June 14th – Benefit

Monday June 15th – GRAND OPENING (Invitation ONLY)

Tue June 16th – DJ Bryan Sean 70’s & 80’s Night

Wed June 17th – DJ Rich Rez Dance Party

Thur June 18th – Gypsy Trap – www.myspace.com/GypsyTrap

Fri June 19th – Trippin Carla – www.myspace.com/TrippinCarla

Sat June 20th – Lip Service – www.LipServiceMusic.com

Tue June 23rd – DJ Bryan Sean 70’s & 80’s Night

Wed June 24th – DJ Rich Rez Dance Party

Thur June 25th – Monte & The All Stars – www.MonteAndTheAllStars.com

Fri June 26th – The Rythm Shop – www.TheRythmShopBand.com

Fri June 27th – Total Eclipse – ww w.TheTotalEclipse.com

Tue June 30th – DJ Bryan Sean 70’s & 80’s Night

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>So You Think Public Schools Use your Taxes Well? So You Think Teachers are Underpaid? Think Again!

>The Cartel, a new feature-length documentary about the waste, fraud and mismanagement within New Jersey public schools, will premiere in Teaneck, NJ, on Saturday, May 30th. The screening is part of the Hoboken International Film Festival, New Jersey’s most prestigious platform for original, new cinema.

In The Cartel, first-time filmmaker and New Jersey resident Bob Bowdon begins with the financial side of the education issue — showing how the belief that teachers are underpaid has produced an endless march toward higher education budgets — while billions of dollars quietly disappear, whistle-blowers are threatened or demoted, and over 80% of the money often never reaches the classroom.

Loaded with specific examples, the film shows:
Cases of NJ public school janitors receiving six figure salaries
A NJ public school district that pays six-figure salaries to over 400 administrators
NJ public school board members indicted for taking bribes from contractors
NJ public school superintendents getting over $400,000 dollars in compensation
A NJ public high school spending $30 million on a football field despite the fact that 85% of its students are failing state proficiency tests
A State Senator confirming that one billion dollars disappeared in NJ school construction funding without a single conviction, indictment or even arrest
A former NJ teacher of the year who examined her school’s budget and uncovered phony salaries for people who did not exist. When she reported the fraudulent accounting, she was brought up on formal charges of insubordination.

The Cartel reveals how teachers’ unions make it virtually impossible to get rid of a bad teacher. The point is hard to dispute when entire counties, like Bergen County, can go ten years without firing a single tenured teacher, and some urban districts, like Newark, let go tenured teachers at a rate of less than one in 3,000. The film also shows how even those very few “worst of the worst” teachers who finally do get fired can often just move over to a neighboring town and start teaching again. That’s because the dismissal records are typically sealed as part of the union-negotiated termination settlements.

The Hoboken International Film Festival’s world premiere of The Cartel will be at the Cedar Lane Cinemas in Teaneck, NJ, Saturday, May 30th, at 2pm. Tickets can be obtained online via the film’s website:www.thecartelmovie.com

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>How Singapore Math stacks up

>How Singapore Math stacks up. Unlike our BOE, which doesn’t need any empirical evidence to support its decision for a new, untested math program, the Maryland BOE does. This link provides the powerpoint presentation given to the MD, BOE by Alan Ginsburg, from the US DOE. Shame on us for requiring so little from our Reginas and Illarias. If only we had a Board like this one, our children would be so much better served.

https://d.yimg.com/kq/groups/4797293/953580106/name/MD%20State%20ED%20Board%20-%2004%2021%2009%20final.ppt

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>Lost amid 40th District election battle – the issues

>

Lost amid 40th District election battle – the issues
Thursday, May 28, 2009
BY RICHARD COWEN
NorthJersey.com

https://www.northjersey.com/politics/Lost_amid_40th_District_election_battle__the_issues.html

The bitter primary campaign by Republicans in the 40th District Assembly race has produced a lawsuit, three election complaints and a lots of angry rhetoric — but not a lot of discussion of the issues.

Incumbents Scott Rumana, R-Wayne, and David C. Russo, R-Ridgewood, face a stiff challenge from two businessmen, Joseph A. Caruso of Wayne and Anthony Rottino of Franklin Lakes, both making their first run for the state Legislature.

Gaining a GOP primary nomination in the heavily Republican 40th District makes a candidate a heavy favorite to win the general election in November.

Challenger Joseph Caruso says he’s bringing fresh blood to the Republican Party, which he says has lost its voice even as the state budget has become a huge problem for ruling Democrats. Like the other Republicans in the race, Caruso blames the Democrats for a state budget that has spiraled from $21 billion to $33 billion in seven years.

“The Republican Party is broken in New Jersey,” Caruso said. “We’re a party in need of a major overhaul. We raise money, but our party has no message. Our party has no unique ideas anymore.”

Both incumbents and challengers agree that the state must make deep cuts in its spending to help New Jersey struggle past the economic doldrums. Rottino and Caruso are calling for abolishing the state’s business tax, now pegged at 9 percent, as well as a 20 percent reduction in state spending, which is favored by gubernatorial candidate Steve Lonegan.

“Every time you turn around, it’s getting harder and harder to do business in New Jersey,” said Rottino, a developer who also owns two Harley-Davidson dealerships and a health club in Teterboro.

Rumana and Russo agree that state spending must be drastically reduced, but they say massive layoffs of the state workforce are not politically feasible. They favor steady reductions in state staffing through attrition and consolidation of positions.

“You can’t just shoot from the hip on these issues,” Rumana said. “The difference between Caruso and Rottino and myself is that they’ve never spent a day in office, and I have. I’ve been a freeholder, mayor and assemblyman.”

Caruso and Rottino say eliminating the state business tax would free millions of dollars to be poured instead into new business investment. Russo agrees with the idea in concept but says the lost tax revenue would somehow have to be replaced or it would open yet another gap in the state budget.

“I agree that business taxes are too high,” Russo said. “Eliminating the business tax might work, but only if you can find revenue elsewhere.”

Caruso, 35, is the finance chairman of the Bergen County Republican Organization and owns a financial services company in Lyndhurst. One of his more radical ideas is to close the state Department of Environmental Protection, which he claims is strangling business with overregulation. He says the federal government could pick up the responsibilities for protecting the environment.

Rumana, 45, and Russo, 55, don’t agree with getting rid of the DEP but favor abolishing the state Council on Affordable Housing (COAH), which is responsible for imposing low-income housing quotas on municipalities. The quotas stem from Supreme Court decisions that communities have an obligation to promote housing for people of modest means.

As assemblyman, Rumana has sponsored several bills that would limit COAH’s powers. Rumana also has sponsored a bill to create a constitutional amendment to eliminate COAH altogether.

Caruso and the 43-year-old Rottino say they, too, would work to abolish COAH. They also favor abolition of the state’s Green Acres program, which buys up land from developers and preserves it as open space.

Rottino said it should be up to municipalities, not the state, to pay for open space preservation. Both Rumana and Russo favor continuation of the Green Acres program, which has exhausted its funding and will need to be replenished through a bond referendum. But because the state is so deeply in debt, Rumana said, it appears unlikely that the Green Acres bond issue will make it onto the ballot this year.

The political stakes are highest for Rumana, the freshman assemblyman who also is chairman of the Republican Party in Passaic County. Rumana took over the leadership three years ago, in the wake of a corruption scandal in which then-Chairman Peter Murphy went to prison for wire fraud.

Caruso and Rottino both have the backing of a political action committee, GOP Strong, started by Murphy.

Throughout the campaign, Rumana has sought to paint Caruso and Rottino as puppets of Murphy. But Caruso and Rottino say they are in the race to advance their own ideas and agendas.

E-mail: [email protected]

https://www.northjersey.com/politics/Lost_amid_40th_District_election_battle__the_issues.html

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>School funding upheld by state Supreme Court

>https://www.nj.com/gloucester/index.ssf?/base/news-0/1243575606177680.xml&coll=8&thispage=2

TRENTON The New Jersey Supreme Court on Thursday found Gov. Jon S. Corzine’s new school funding formula to be a “constitutionally adequate scheme,” signaling an end to the long-running case which for years required extra money for the state’s poorest districts.

In a unanimous ruling, the justices said the state no longer has to provide supplemental funding to the 31 so-called Abbott districts Ð which include Salem, Camden, Gloucester City and Bridgeton.

The state, however, must continue to fund schools to the level required by the new formula, which seeks to treat all districts the same. The formula will also be subject to review after three years, Justice Jaynee LaVecchia wrote in the 138-page ruling for the five participating justices.

The decision is a victory for the Corzine administration, which has held that school funding should be “based on children’s needs, not children’s ZIP codes.”

It also has an impact statewide, since funding for the so-called Abbotts has been largely subsidized by the state. Additionally, after years of flat funding, the new formula implemented this school year provided many suburban and other districts with additional money, since it bases funding partially on the number of poor students in a district, nearly half of whom attend non-Abbotts.

Corzine called the ruling “historic” and said it brings to a conclusion decades of conflict and litigation that many thought would never end.

“By agreeing that the new funding formula is constitutional and that the prior Abbott remedies are no longer necessary, the court has allowed us to focus in a unified and predictable way on meeting our obligation to all of our children while in no way prejudicing those who have benefited from the Abbott rulings in the past,” Corzine said.

The ruling is the 20th decision in the Abbott v. Burke case, filed in 1981, although the original school funding case Ð Robinson v. Cahill, which alleged the state’s funding method discriminated against urban districts Ð began in 1970.

In the Abbott rulings issued over the years, the court ordered that poor districts be funded to the same level as wealthy ones, in order to provide children in impoverished areas the same opportunity for a “thorough and efficient” education as guaranteed by the New Jersey Constitution. That funding method, long considered controversial since a significant portion of residents’ tax bills go toward funding local schools, was expected to stand until the state came up with a constitutional formula.

Corzine proposed the School Funding Reform Act (SFRA), which has been in place since July 2008, seeking to fund all districts in the same manner. The formula based funding on enrollment and then added money for each low-income student, or those receiving free or reduced lunch, each student with limited English proficiency and each student receiving special education.

Advocates for Abbott students have argued that the districts will be unable to maintain important programs under the new formula, which for the 2009-2010 school year would allocate $8 billion in direct aid to kindergarten-through-12th-grade districts statewide.

David Sciarra, who argued in court on behalf of the Abbott children, said the formula has already caused significant cutbacks in staff and programs.

“We are deeply concerned that the SFRA formula will quickly return New Jersey to the unequal school system we had in the past, and undo a decade of measurable educational improvements for our poorest children,” Sciarra, executive director of the Newark-based Education Law Center, said following the ruling.

Sciarra had hoped that the state would continue the supplemental funding without a time limit. There was also a chance that the court would accept a suggestion by a court-appointed special master, who found that the formula was constitutional, but said the state should continue extra funding three years.

But the justices rejected both, saying that Abbotts are expected to get $603 million in extra federal funding over the next two years and that the state has also budgeted emergency aid that is available for districts in need.

“The state has constructed a fair and equitable means designed to fund the costs of a thorough and efficient education,” Justice LaVecchia wrote. “The Legislature and Executive have made considerable efforts to confront the difficult questions of how to address the education needs of at-risk pupils, no matter where those children attend school.”

Senate Majority Leader Stephen Sweeney, who represents both Abbott and non-Abbott districts in Salem, Gloucester and Cumberland counties, hailed the decision, saying it was an enormous step forward for the state.

“The funding formula works and it’s fair,” said Sweeney, D-3, of West Deptford, who helped rally Senate votes for passage of the school funding legislation last year. “The money’s supposed to follow the child.”

The court said the constitutionality of the funding formula is based on the condition that the state continues providing the necessary amount of money required under the law.

Sciarra, of the Education Law Center, said he was “heartened” by that stipulation. He said his group “will take every action possible to hold the governor and Legislature accountable.”

Chief Justice Stuart Rabner, the state’s former attorney general, and Justice Virginia Long did not participate in the case.

https://www.nj.com/gloucester/index.ssf?/base/news-0/1243575606177680.xml&coll=8&thispage=2