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>Stile: Republican primaries? Perish the thought

>thttps://www.northjersey.com/news/bergenpolitics/Republican.html

Republicans pound their chests with pride, and even tear up on occasion, when preaching the virtues of free market competition — except when it comes to intraparty politics.

Mere mention of a primary this year in the governor’s race or in the North Jersey contests for the state Assembly and the free-marketers suddenly shudder in fear and disgust. It means forcing calcified incumbents to get off their cash hoards and defend themselves. It means forcing the party operatives to take sides.

It means — God forbid — giving voters choices.

Joseph Caruso, a Lyndhurst businessman and party operative chafing at conventional party wisdom, says he’s startled by all the fuss he has caused by pursuing a challenge against the incumbents in the Assembly’s 40th Legislative District.

“Should insiders hand-pick who is best, or should the voters make the decision? I don’t know what the problem is,” said Caruso, who lives in Wayne.

Caruso has rankled party regulars who believe his candidacy is part of a complicated two-county strategy to knock Assemblyman Scott Rumana out of his other political job, the Passaic County Republican Party chairmanship.

Critics say Caruso is being propped up by a cabal of Passaic County hardliners aligned with Peter Murphy, the former GOP party boss and determined Rumana foe. Caruso strenuously denies the charge.

Party officials also fear that a 40th District primary could force Rumana and running mate David Russo of Ridgewood to needlessly spend money that would better be spent waging war on Democrats in November. Caruso served as the Bergen County Republican Organization’s finance chairman last year, helping it stockpile cash. Now he threatens to indirectly drain the very fund he helped build.

“They create dissension,” said BCRO Chairman Bob Yudin, who has tried, unsuccessfully, to dissuade Caruso from running. The district includes parts of Essex, Passaic and Bergen counties.

Yudin says primaries only “make sense” when there is a

vacancy or if an incumbent “does something egregious,” like get indicted. Challenging “popular incumbents &hellip is not conducive to party building.”

The Internal Party Argument sounds sensible, at first. Yudin and other chairmen are cobbling together campaigns on shoestring budgets in a Democrat-dominated state. State party coffers are nearly empty. And past party squabbles, particularly in Bergen, have left the party in disarray. And why should the Bergen organization waste its resources on what is essentially a Passaic County turf battle?

All this might be true, but why should Republican Party voters be denied choices because the insurgent’s motives are suspect or because he doesn’t fit nicely into the statewide strategy? Legislative primaries in New Jersey are lame, low-turnout rituals. Incumbents generally yawn their way through them, flecking off the occasional gadfly with little effort. Voters stay home because they generate little interest.

Caruso is a member of the conservative wing of the party who believes the New Jersey GOP has become too liberal, too amorphous, too much like generic Trenton pols. “Where, for instance, are the Republican rallies to overturn the socialist edicts of the Council on Affordable Housing that even many Democrats think is a disastrous idea?” Caruso railed in a recent release.

Personally, I don’t think this kind of rhetoric will sway too many voters in the 40th, but who really knows unless it’s tested on the trail? If Rumana and the laundry list of party officials who endorsed them believe they represent the GOP base, then, in theory, they have nothing to worry about. The cost will be minimal. Will they really waste that much money? And what better way to test Caruso’s claim to independence than a vigorous Jersey campaign fight?

A similar impulse to minimize the competition in the governor’s race surfaced at a recent meeting of county chairmen in Princeton.

GOP officials asked the four Republican candidates not to run slates of local candidates in counties where they failed to win the party’s endorsement. Former U.S. Attorney Christopher Christie agreed to the idea and so did Brian Levine, the mayor of Franklin Township in Somerset County. But former Bogota Mayor Steve Lonegan and Assemblyman Rick Merkt refused.

“I’m not going to unilaterally disarm,” Lonegan said. “If the establishment Republicans are trying to rig the system against me, then I intend to beat them.”

What Lonegan didn’t say is that he probably won’t get many of the counties to support him anyway. But he remains a curiosity in this race, a wily self-promoter who can deliver a sound bite and raise money.

His attacks on the New Jersey Chamber of Commerce train to Washington as the “tax and spend” express (and a similar salvo from Merkt), led Christie to snub — and criticize — the same trip. It became Christie’s first position of the campaign, brought about by old-fashioned competition.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/bergenpolitics/Republican.html

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>Happy NO Pants Day!

>the Ridgewood Blog wishes everyone a Happy NO Pants day

https://www.lalawag.com/zomg-no-pants-day/

Some of you may not have heard, but yes it is in fact global No Pants Day. People from all ages and professions are being encouraged to dress like they would each day but leave off their pants. Ladies if you were planning on wearing a dress or a skirt that means you leave them off too.

The organizers behind No Pants Day say that you should also carry on in public as if nothing is different. Embrace the fact that your ass is showing to the world. Let them know that you don’t care, pants are wrong, and for one day you’re going to celebrate it!

lalawag crew will be out and about in LA today, celebrating properly, and looking for you. @reply us on Twitter and leave your location so we can come party with you in our panties. Fair warning we will be armed with our flips and if you’re in public it’s fair game.

Get some inspiration from the participants of last year’s LA No Pants Day. Acceptable no pants day attire: thick, appropriately modest boxer shorts, bloomers, slips, briefs, and boxer-briefs

https://www.lalawag.com/zomg-no-pants-day/

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>Mark Bombace for the 40th District Assembley seat

>I hope The Fly and other TRB will join me in supporting Mark Bombace for the 40th District Assembley seat.

Let us review the reasons Mr Bombace is eminently qualified for this position:

“John Agostinelli and Mark Bombace will bring real representation to the residents of the 40th District. They have a record of getting things done in their communities, and once elected, will bring a fresh perspective to Trenton. Scott Rumana and David Russo have not been accountable to their constituents, and are more interested in political partisanship than solving the problems facing our families and residents. In these tough economic times we need Assembly Members who are more interested in getting things done then fighting political wars.”

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>Mayor David T. Pfund – Sour Grapes over Death of Parking Garage?

>At the conclusion of last night’s Village Council Work Session, Mayor David T. Pfund directed that the resolution which will cancel a $3 million bond intended to partially fund construction of the now defunct parking garage project be removed from the list of resolutions scheduled to be approved by a “single vote – consent agenda” process during next week’s Village Council Public Meeting. By doing this, the Mayor has signaled his intention to vote “no” on the resolution.

What’s the matter Dave? Pissed off that you didn’t get your way? You requested a unanimous “yes” vote to approve the project; why can’t you suck it up and show a unified Council front now that the project is officially dead?

Give it a rest Mr. Mayor. Despite the last minute public plea made by your pal Mr. Jacques Harlow, the garage is now history! It’s over Dave; let it go. Be a man about it.

The Fly

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>BOE Cancels Building and Grounds Maintenance Contract with Village – Layoffs of Village Employees Likely

>From BOE May 4, 2009 Meeting Agenda:

Approval: Award of Bid for Grounds Management,
Landscaping and Snow Plowing Services Contract

Whereas, the Ridgewood Board of Education advertised a bid for Grounds Management, Landscaping and Snow Plowing Services on March 23, 2009, Whereas, one bid was received and opened at 11:00 a.m. on April 2, 2009; now therefore, Be it Resolved, that the Ridgewood Board of Education award a contract to GCA Services, Pennsburg, PA, in the amount of $173,785.

Approval: Award of Bid for Landscaping and Snow
Removal Services Contract

Whereas, the Ridgewood Board of Education advertised a bid for Landscaping and Snow Removal Services on March 23, 2009, Whereas, five bids were received and opened at 11:00 a.m. on April 16, 2009; now therefore, Be it Resolved, that the Ridgewood Board of Education award a contract to Jacobsen Landscaping, Design and Construction, Inc., Midland Park, New Jersey, in the amount of $105,806. The hourly rates for snow removal are as follows: One Dump Truck $125 per hour One Front End Loader $130 per hour

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>Village Council Poised to Spend $500K on Ridgewood Avenue "Streetscape" Enhancements

>By a 4-1 vote (Councilwoman Anne Zusy cast the lone “no” vote), Village Council Members agreed last night to enhance the Central Business District portion of Ridgewood Avenue by spending an estimated $500k on the following “streetscape” enhancements:

1.) Design and installation of traffic calming bump outs at selected intersections
2.) Purchase and installation of pedestrian activated LED warning lamps for selected crosswalks and installation of decorative/brick print crosswalks
3.) Installation of electrical outlets in tree wells (to facilitate decorative lighting of all trees)
4.) Purchase and installation of light pole brackets (for kissing balls and banners)
5.) Removal of overgrown trees and replacement with new “decorative” trees
6.) Repairs to concrete sidewalks, brick bands, and tree wells
7.) Decorative sleeves and bases for parking meters

The $500K will be raised through the sale of bond notes.

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>Closed NJ bank was cited for ‘unsafe’ practices

>https://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5iZnHCegwMlJVSyJag5fH-4CipmTgD980BQH01
By ELI SEGALL – 1 day ago

TRENTON, N.J. (AP) — A small bank in northern New Jersey has been shut down by state banking regulators, and an industry advocate says he cannot rule out future failures.

Citizens Community Bank was shuttered Friday night. Banking regulators had ordered the Bergen County bank to stop a range of “unsafe or unsound” business practices, saying it had violated several state and federal regulations.

Among other problems, the 4 1/2-year-old bank had deficient management, an “unrealistic” budget plan and poor lending policies, officials say.

All of Citizens’ deposits were transferred to North Jersey Community Bank. Officials with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. are working out of Citizens’ former office in Ridgewood to sell off its assets. The office is now a branch of North Jersey Community.

Dennis Trimper, the federal official leading the liquidation, said the main reason for Citizens’ closure was its failing loan portfolio. Many customers, he noted, weren’t making their payments.

It was the first time since 1992 that a state-chartered bank had been shuttered, said Ed Rogan, a spokesman for the New Jersey Department of Banking and Insurance. He said the closure was “an isolated situation,” as banks in the state are generally healthy.

At least one industry advocate says future bank failures are always possible.

“When you’ve got a deep recession, that affects banks that otherwise would be fine,” said James Silkensen, co-chief of the New Jersey Bankers Association.

Silkensen said he was not aware of any banks that could soon be shuttered, but said closures can happen in good and bad economic times.

The banking industry has been taking a beating. Layoffs have swept the industry, and several once powerful firms have been toppled, in part, by risky investments that soured, such as mortgage-backed securities. More than 30 banks nationwide have been shuttered this year.

Meanwhile, New Jersey’s community banks largely avoided those risky ventures, making simple, traditional loans to their customers, state and private sector officials have said.

At a state Assembly hearing in February, bankers association co-chief John McWeeney said some of New Jersey’s community banks faced a grim future of loan defaults and thinned profits, despite performing well during the economic crisis.

Closing Citizens did not mean officials came to padlock the bank. Trimper and eight state and federal officials walked into its only branch, on East Ridgewood Avenue, around 4:15 p.m. Friday to say the bank had lost its charter.

Trimper said the bank was given no advance warning of the closure, which is normal procedure. However, state and federal officials had been openly monitoring the bank since September, when they issued Citizens a 39-page “cease and desist” order for a host of allegedly bad banking practices.

“They have this suspicion, all right, and they see us all walking in around 4:15 on Friday, they can draw their conclusions,” Trimper said.

https://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5iZnHCegwMlJVSyJag5fH-4CipmTgD980BQH01

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>BOE supporter attacks Travell Parents and belittles there concern for their Children

>You should not address the Principal as “Margy”.

Is 100 families the same as 100 signatures? Isn’t it just 100.

Travel is the laughing stock because they have a group of parents who think that they run the school. A petition is meaningless against a school contract. Maybe one of the parents should run for the board of ed – O wait, they tried that already. We don’t want them running any of our schools.

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>At the BOE Reorganization Meeting:

>· Mr. Robert Hutton was sworn in as the new Board member.
· The Board re-elected Mr. Joseph Vallerini as President.
· The Board re-elected Mr. Robert Hutton as Vice President.
· The Board approved the continuation of the position of Student Representative to the Board.
· The Board approved various adoptions or appointments, including:
o the current Board of Education Policy Manual, the NJSBA Code of Ethics.
o The Record and The Ridgewood News as official newspapers for all legal advertisement and notices for the 2009-2010 school year.
o the firm of LAN Associates, Midland Park, as Board of Education Architect for the period July 1, 2009 through June 30, 2010, at fees negotiated for each individual project.
o the firm of McKinley, White & Co., L.L.P., Paramus, to serve as Board of Education Auditor and provide accounting services to the School Board for the period July 1, 2009 through June 30, 2010, to conduct the 2008-2009 audit of the Ridgewood Board of Education for an estimated fee of $37,200 to $38,800.
o Anthony Sciarrillo, Esq. of Lindabury, McCormick, Estabrook &
Cooper, P.C., Westfield as Board Counsel for the period July 1, 2009 through June 30, 2010, at the rate of $160 per hour.
o McManimon and Scotland, Newark, as Bond Counsel for the period July 1, 2009 through June 30, 2010, at the rate of $160 per hour.
o David B. Rubin, Esq., P.C., Metuchen, as Special Education Counsel for the period July 1, 2009 through June 30, 2010, at the rate of $170 per hour.
o Adams Stern Gutierrez & Lattiboudere, LLC., Newark, as Special Counsel to continue handling a certain Board legal issue to its conclusion, at the rate of $150 per hour, for the period July 1, 2009 through June 30, 2010.
o Willis HRH, Morristown, as health insurance broker of record for the 2009-2010 school year.
o continuation of participation in the Northeast Bergen County Insurance Group (NESBIG) for Workers’ Compensation Insurance for the 2009-2010 school year. NESBIG is a shared services cooperative purchasing arrangement whereby member school districts acquire lower rates for insurance through joint purchasing. This is the second year of a previously approved two-year agreement.
o continuation of The Burton Agency, Westwood, as insurance broker of record for property/casualty insurance and risk manager for the 2009-2010 school year. This is the second year of a previously approved two-year appointment.
o student activity fee of $75 at the middle schools and $100 at the high school for those students who participate in any co-curricular activity for the 2009-2010 school year.o tuition rates for the 2009-2010 for out-of-district-students and staff members’ children, as listed below:Kindergarten $ 9,517 $ 500
Grades 1-5 $ 12,730 $ 1,000
Grades 6-8 $ 13,824 $ 1,000
Grades 9-12 $ 13,159 $ 1,000
LLD $ 26,613 N/A
Autism $ 63,432 N/A
o substitute rates of pay for the 2009-2010 as listed below:
Teachers (first five days of one consecutive assignment): $ 90 per diemDaily/Permanent(6th day of consecutive assignment in system): $125 per diem
Long-term Determined by administration after evaluation of educational
background and experience
Nurse $130 per diem
Secretaries $ 12.50 per hour
Former RAES members $ 13.25 per hour

Microsoft Store

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>Was Vallerini’s rant about public speaking an attempt to silence dissent?

>”The facts speak for themselves… over 100 families signed the petition regarding Margy, with a marginal percentage for approving her tenure. Vallerini’s rant about public speaking before moving into public comment kept people from saying anything negative at the mic. View the webcast for yourself. Vallerini ranted about “after consulting with our attorneys…”. These scare and bully tactics happen all of the time from Cottage Pl. Do you think it is coincidental that RPS server went down right before a BOE meeting that brought in many, many concerned parents?”

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>Because this comes up over and over….

>”things to consider. Mayor Pfund was a personal donor to Valley Hospital until 2006, his law firm (Reiseman, Rosenberg & Pfund, LLP) listed Valley hospital as one of its clients on their website until the listing mysteriously disappeared, Pfund’s father has willed part of his estate to Valley after he dies! Yet Pfund has not rescued himself from the considering the H-Zone issue? Others on the Planning Board have for less association.”

Can we put this to rest once and for all ?….or not?

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>Who Woulda Thunk it : New Jerseyans aren’t sold on the proposed state budget

>New Jersey has doubts about state budget plan, poll finds

Posted by pcox May 04, 2009 06:23AM

A poll found many New Jerseyans aren’t sold on the proposed state budget.

The Monmouth University/Gannett New Jersey Poll released Sunday found more than 80 percent of respondents have heard about the spending plan. Nearly half of them say it does too little to cut spending, while 17 percent say it cuts too much.

Patti Sapone/The Star-LedgerHundreds of New Jerseyans protest April 23 at the State House to keep our public lands open, including at least nine parks that have been slated for closure due to the Governors proposed budget cuts.

However, respondents overall differed on how to address the state’s fiscal woes.

Seventy-five percent support plans to boost income taxes on those earning more than $500,000 and 69 percent back higher taxes on cigarettes and liquor. But 68 percent don’t want state aid cut to municipalities and 63 percent oppose cutting arts funding.

The poll also found 53 percent oppose ending property tax rebates for those earning more than $75,000, while 45 percent support it.

The telephone poll was conducted April 23-27 with 803 New Jersey adults and has a sampling error margin of plus or minus 3.5 percentage points.

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>New Jersey GOP gubernatorial candidate Christie backs school vouchers

>Posted on Sat, May. 2, 2009

tp://www.philly.com/philly/news/new_jersey/20090502_New_Jersey_GOP_gubernatorial_candidate_Christie_backs_school_vouchers.html
New Jersey GOP gubernatorial candidate Christie backs school vouchers

By Cynthia Burton

Inquirer Staff Writer

New Jersey Republican gubernatorial candidate Christopher J. Christie pledged yesterday to create a school voucher program that allows students from failing districts to attend schools in districts that accept them.

In a conference call about the state’s fiscal crisis, Christie decried the high costs of education in 31 mostly poor districts where the state is under a court order to spend additional money. About 55 percent of state education aid goes to those districts – known as the Abbott districts – which educate about 23 percent of New Jersey’s students.

Christie would address the cost problems, in part, by giving parents vouchers for schools outside of those failing school districts. That means, for example, a student in Camden could attend school in Cherry Hill, as long as Cherry Hill agreed to accept the voucher.

Speaking of poor educational outcomes in some of the state’s Abbott districts, he said, “In those districts, we need to increase competition to make sure we get a better educational product.”

Though long-discussed, New Jersey does not have a school voucher system. It does have charter schools, which Christie said he would expand.

“You have to bring more charters and more competition to those Abbott districts,” he said. “If you do that, you will bring costs down because charter schools are spending less and producing better results.”

Christie’s voucher plan differs from a plan by his Republican primary opponent Steve Lonegan, which would not allow students to attend schools outside their district.

“Steve has a fake voucher program – I have a real one,” Christie said.

Lonegan said he wanted “to drive competition within a school district. One of the critical elements to economic growth is to reopen closed schools.”

Allowing students to take their vouchers and attend school outside their towns and cities “would siphon students off to other cities and leave behind empty schools and empty neighborhoods,” Lonegan said.

In the news conference, Christie also chided Gov. Corzine, a Democrat, for revenue projection shortfalls. The governor announced Thursday that the state’s projected revenue between now and June 2010 would be as much as $2 billion less than expected.

Christie said revenue projections should have given more weight to rising unemployment levels, which, in turn, have lowered the state’s income tax collection.

Contact Cynthia Burton
at 856-779-3858
or [email protected].

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>How did the newspaper know the village of Ridgewood denied a permit

>A story in the Sunday Record contains this pgh:

The marchers originally intended to continue into Ridgewood and protest in front of The Valley Hospital, but they turned back at the Ridgewood line, because the village denied Birkner parade and public assembly permits for the march. A lawyer hired by the village warned him in writing that if he proceeded into Ridgewood, the marchers would be subject to “appropriate legal action, damages and any other enforcement costs incurred by the Village of Ridgewood.”

1)How did the newspaper know the village of Ridgewood denied a permit (The article contains no attribution for this statement.)
2)What was the reason for the denial
3)What is the name of the lawyer
4)Who in the village government hired this lawyer
5)Was the lawyer hired for this specific purpose

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