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>Judge backs N.J. on imposing limits on pay for school chiefs

>Wednesday, December 03, 2008
BY JOHN MOONEY
Star-Ledger Staff

https://www.nj.com/news/ledger/jersey/index.ssf?/base/news-12/1228282631220180.xml&coll=1

A federal judge has dismissed a lawsuit filed by New Jersey’s school administrators that sought to block new state limits on their employment contracts, ruling that the regulations are in the state’s “perfectly legitimate” interests.

But the decision by U.S. District Judge Joel Pisano appeared to leave at least some of the limits open to challenge in state court, and a lawyer representing administrators said a challenge likely would be filed within the week.

In August, the New Jersey Association of School Administrators filed suit against state Education Commissioner Lucille Davy and others to stop new regulations that gave the state unprecedented powers to review and prohibit pay and other compensation that it found excessive.

The regulations were based on a law enacted earlier in the year after public outcry over some administrators’ contracts that included six-digit severance and other payments. The most extreme was a $740,000 package last summer to outgoing Keansburg schools chief Barbara Trzeszkowski.

Executive county superintendents have since been busy reviewing the contracts, with some saying they have sent back a majority of them with at least small fixes.
But the administrators’ group contended the new regulations arbitrarily singled out superintendents, assistant superintendents and business administrators, and they in turn could lose compensation under the new system without their constitutional right to due process.
Pisano initially asked the parties to negotiate a settlement, but, failing that, he largely appeared to support the state’s position in his 18-page ruling filed Nov. 25.

“Injunctive relief would have a dramatic, negative effect on the state,” Pisano wrote in the ruling. “Any further delay in reviewing new contracts according to the regulations would interfere with the state’s legitimate legislative goal of property tax and public school funding reform.”
The ruling drew praise from Gov. Jon Corzine and legislative leaders.

“New Jersey property taxpayers are long tired of learning after-the-fact their tax dollars meant for helping children in the classroom are instead padding administrative contracts and lavish retirement payouts,” read a statement from state Assembly Speaker Joseph Roberts (D-Camden).

Still, Pisano only ruled on the injunction and abstained on the merits of the case itself, leaving it to state courts. And the opening was immediately seized upon by the lawyer for the administrators association, Stephen Edelstein.

Edelstein cited a footnote in the decision that found the specific statutes limiting accumulated sick and vacation time could not apply to the administrators, with no further explanation.
“That was a very important point to us,” Edelstein said of the footnote. “A regulation cannot derive from an inapplicable statute, and we will next go to state court.”

In the meantime, county superintendents have proceeded with their reviews. Passaic County Superintendent Robert Gilmartin said he has completed reviews of top administrators in his 20 districts and found almost all needed small adjustments, including in mileage and other rates being paid.

In one case, Gilmartin said, he rejected a contract that called for lifetime health benefits for both the superintendent and his or her spouse. In three contracts, he said, he sent back provisions that called for separate life insurance policies.

Overall, he said, the process has been worthwhile, at least so far.
“It has accomplished some consistency across the board and probably slowed down some of the extravagance,” said Gilmartin, himself a former superintendent in West Milford. “Still, time will tell.”

John Mooney may be reached at [email protected] or (973) 392-1548.

https://www.nj.com/news/ledger/jersey/index.ssf?/base/news-12/1228282631220180.xml&coll=1

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>Gannett eliminates positions at New Jersey newspapers

>https://www.dailyrecord.com/article/20081203/BUSINESS/812030380/1003

Gannett Co. Inc. has eliminated 206 positions at its six newspapers in New Jersey due to declining advertising revenues and the severe economic downturn afflicting the state and the nation.

The company began notifying the affected employees Tuesday at the Daily Record, the Asbury Park Press in Neptune, the Courier-Post in Cherry Hill, the Home News Tribune in East Brunswick, the Courier News in Bridgewater and the Daily Journal in Vineland.

“The economic downturn we are facing is severe and is expected to last throughout next year,” said Thomas M. Donovan, president and publisher of the Asbury Park Press and vice president of Gannett’s East Newspaper Group. “We have reduced expenses significantly throughout this year. But, unfortunately, as we looked ahead to economic forecasts for 2009, it became clear that we needed to make further reductions.”

Employees who were laid off received severance benefits commensurate with their years of service.

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https://www.dailyrecord.com/article/20081203/BUSINESS/812030380/1003

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>Lonegan announces bid for N.J. governor

>https://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2008/12/lonegan_to_announce_bid_for_go.html

“We need to get back to basics,” Lonegan said, promising to “lead by example” by encouraging other Republican candidates to campaign on issues like taxes, school funding and affordable housing. He vowed to cut the size of state government by no less than 20 percent, ordering layoffs and shuttering departments.

“Jon Corzine thinks government has all the answers,” Lonegan said. “We stand on opposite sides of the spectrum. …It is time to take back New Jersey and put taxpayers first.”

Lonegan joins Assemblyman Richard Merkt (R-Morris) as declared contenders for the Republican nomination in 2009. Other possible GOP candidates who have yet to announce their intentions are Christie, whose last day in office is today, and Princeton biotech executive John Crowley.

Lonegan said his conservative credentials will give the party the best chance to beat Corzine, who he said has “failed” New Jersey. He praised the conviction record amassed by Christie — the likely favorite among party leaders should he choose to run — but said his background as an attorney makes him less equipped to handle the state’s economic needs.

Corzine brushed off Lonegan’s criticism and defended his record.

“I think we’ve done an outstanding job given the difficulties sweeping across this country,” the Democratic governor said following an event in Sayreville this morning.

He said he “will let the Republicans have their fight” until the primary is over, “and we’ll go from there.”

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>SUPPORT OUR TROOPS THIS HOLIDAY SEASON

>from Scott Garrett

In December 2007, with the support of Pitney-Bowes, the Red Cross’s Service to the Armed Forces staff and volunteers screened, transported, and delivered over 600,000 pieces of mail to our service men and women. Due to the overwhelmingly success of the program, the American Red Cross and Pitney–Bowes are partnering again this year with the goal of collecting and distributing one million holiday greeting cards from the American public. This year, cards will not only go to wounded warriors but to all service members, their families, and veterans, in communities around the world.

If you would like to share your words of support, you can send holiday greeting cards to our service members through the Holiday Mail for Heroes program. More information can be found at www.redcross.org/holidaymail.

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>I have long been a vocal advocate for religious freedom and protection of human rights around on the world.

>Dear Friends,

This week, I have the distinct honor of addressing a gathering of United Nations Ambassadors on human rights and religious freedom during the Interfaith Cooperation and the Protection of Human Rights and Dignity Conference.

As many of you know,I have long been a vocal advocate for religious freedom and protection of human rights around on the world. Simply talking about human rights is not enough; I believe the U.N. must show a stronger commitment to promoting basic human rights around the world. I have called for U.N. reform on many occasions, taking the following actions during the 110th Congress:

• Cosponsored H.R. 225, legislation to withhold United States funding from the U.N. Human Rights Council
• Cosponsored H.Res. 557, condemning the U.N. Human Rights Council
• Introduced H.R. 937, withholding funds from the U.N. Development Program
• Wrote a letter to U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon regarding support for U.N. reform
• Signed a letter to Secretary Rice regarding interface with the Taiwan U.N. referendum
• Cosponsored H.Res. 939, condemning Anti-Israel sentiment at the U.N.
• Introduced H.R. 5847, the Durban II Conference Funding Prohibition Act
• Cosponsored H.R. 2712, the U.N. Transparency, Accountability, and Reform Act

Today, President-Elect Obama announced his choice of Sen. Hillary Clinton and Susan Rice for the positions of Secretary of State and U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations. I hope that as the new U.S. administration assumes power in January that U.N. reform will be at the top of the agenda.

Sincerely,

Scott Garrett
Member of Congress

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voters as being potentially dangerous?

>We couldn’t help but notice that he refers to voters as “strangers” and later, anyone entering the schools as “visitors.” Is there something here that betrays a view of voters as being potentially dangerous?

THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS
Superintendent’s Corner
November 2008
by
Daniel Fishbein, Ed.D.

The Superintendent’s Thanksgiving Proclamation
Garlic potatoes! Those two words sum up Thanksgiving for me. Year after year this one concern defines the holiday in our household: Who’s making the garlic potatoes this year? Who makes them the best? Who really makes them the best?
Thanksgiving! There’s nothing better than spending time at home with family and friends, or visiting others to share good cheer and food. The pressures associated with gifts and other holiday trappings are absent, leaving only simple worries, such as whether the garlic potatoes make it to the table. Thanksgiving is a holiday that is casual in dress, yet rich in conversation and spirituality. My Thanksgiving Day always begins with a traditional Turkey Day run with former high school track teammates. We may all be getting older, but we would never dare complain to each other about our aches and pains (that’s what families are for). Later we enjoy the three standard Thanksgiving football games: the Ridgewood High School game in the morning, our family game on the front lawn, and finally, the Dallas Cowboys on TV later in the day. (Yes, I did write the Dallas Cowboys!) This wonderful, long holiday weekend is an ongoing celebration of family, friends, food, and home — all the things that make us feel safe.

The Ridgewood Public Schools are our children’s “home away from home” each day of the school year, and this reassuring sense of place is sustained by district policies and procedures designed to make our buildings and facilities as secure and safe as possible. This fall our district has dealt with trespassers in two of our buildings, two precautionary evacuations due to the smell of gas at another, and concerns about strangers entering our schools to vote on Election Day. In each of these situations, good decisions were made in accordance with the high value we place on the safety of each and every child and employee. These instances also presented opportunities to test and fine-tune our district’s safety procedures. Election Day, in particular, provided a unique living history lesson for our students as they observed our neighbors at the voting booths. Every child had the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to witness both democracy in action and history being made as the country elected our first African-American president.
We want our buildings to be a welcoming place for our children and visitors alike. It is especially important that visitors – including parents and guardians – can enter our buildings and see the enormity of the education process and the excitement and wonder in learning that happens inside. Every day, dozens of times, we welcome visitors as part of the valuable partnership we have with the Ridgewood community.
To safeguard this partnership, parents, guardians, residents and all others are asked to respect and follow the district’s simple but safety-minded procedures when visiting our schools.

Everyone, except our students and school staff members, must be buzzed into the school buildings and report to the respective main offices to sign in and obtain visitors’ badges. We cannot achieve our safety goals without the assistance and support of everyone working in the district, as well as the community at large.
Our district has three important communication avenues in place to contact family members, guardians and caretakers in the unlikely event of a weather-related, or other safety-related, emergency during school hours. The first is our Swift911 system, which was established last year to facilitate rapid contact with parents and guardians about emergency situations, school closings, early dismissals or other important issues affecting our students. This system allows us to send personalized messages to a home phone, cell phone, work phone or e-mail, and to reach the entire Ridgewood Public Schools family within minutes. Parents and guardians should take time to make sure that emergency contact information is up to date. The Community Pass system is the venue for reviewing that data.

In addition to Swift911, any urgent communications will be posted on the home page of the district’s website, where links to the pages on Emergency Closings and the Emergency Response Plan can also be found. Finally, for those who haven’t already done so, please sign up for the free rps.eNews service, which provides up-to-date district news via e-mail. In the event of an emergency closing or other urgent situation, an e-mail bulletin will be sent to all subscribers. Links for subscribing to rps.eNews, editing emergency contact information using Community Pass, and reviewing the District Emergency Information pages can all be found on the home page of the RPS website at www.ridgdewood.k12.nj.us.

Finally, if you are a parent and hear rumors that concern you, please reach out to your child’s Principal. Borrowing from a post-9/11 radio ad: If you see something, say something.

As you celebrate Thanksgiving this year, I hope you find time to relax and enjoy the simple pleasures with family and friends. Whether it is garlic potatoes or some other favorite recipe, may it be sweet and delicious. I hope this Thanksgiving brings you all the hope and happiness that it brings me each and every year.

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>The result has been an absolute financial catastrophe for New Jersey.

>Just over five years ago, the New Jersey Supreme Court decided on two of the most important cases in the state’s fiscal history– Lonegan vs. State I 174 NJ 435 (2002) and Lonegan vs. State II 176 NJ 2 (2003).

A disappointing loss in Lonegan I allowed Republican Governor Whitman’s plan to borrow $8.6 billion without voter approval to construct schools in 28 urban districts as ordered by the Supreme Court in Abbot vs. Burke. The Supreme Court would not allow voters to reject something it had mandated, no matter how costly or destructive.

But the court claimed it was troubled by the method used to borrow money without voter approval as required by Article VIII of the NJ Constitution. A “shell entity,” also known as a straw man, the NJ Economic Development Authority, issued bonds to borrow the money—even though it had no income. Then the state made contracts to pay all obligations on those bonds with tax revenues for the next 30 years. The problem is that there is no guarantee that future payments will be made. These annual payments are subject to approval by the legislature and conceivably can be voted down. Most purchasers of this contract debt are not aware of this risk, but investment firms continue to sell these bonds as if they are risk free.

Supreme Court Justice Stein, writing in 2002, was alarmed that this gimmick had been used to borrow $10.8 billion, 75 percent of the state’s bonded debt, without voter approval. He urged the Court to agree with my assertion and end the practice.

But the Supreme Court delayed that part of the decision until after Justice Stein, clearly sympathetic to my case, had reached the mandatory retirement age, and was replaced by Justice Albin, appointed by Governor McGreevey.

In Lonegan II, the Supreme Court in a heart breaking 4-3 decision approved all state borrowing for any purpose without voter approval—as long as a shell entity did the borrowing without pledging the full faith and credit of the state. In essence, the State Supreme Court is complicit in what could be the largest consumer fraud scheme by any state in the country-selling bonds as if they have been approved by voters.

The result has been an absolute financial catastrophe for New Jersey. In his 2008 State of the State Address, Corzine blamed Supreme Court decisions for “the sharp deterioration of our State’s finances,” which included $32 billion in bonded debt, only $3 billion of which was approved by voters. I agree with the Governor’s statements. But Governor Corzine’s actions do not follow his words. Six months after criticizing New Jersey’s “credit card culture” that ignored our Constitution, Governor Corzine approved using the old gimmicks to borrow $3.9 billion more without voter approval.

There are other reasons to reconsider and overrule the previous Lonegan decisions. First, Lonegan II relied on bad history. It claimed that New Jersey’s 1844 Constitution, which first required voter approval of new state debt, was framed to prevent states from defaulting on debts backed by the “full faith and credit” of taxpayers.

However, many scholars today, like University of Maryland Professor of Economic History John Joseph Wallis, take a different view. They suggest that the 1844 framers wanted to end “systematic corruption” where politicians had too many opportunities to get bribes and political support by favoring some businesses at the expense of others. The framers of 1844 reduced those opportunities by requiring voter approval of new state debt. Other reforms in that 1844 Constitution time included uniform laws that took the politics out of forming new corporations and local governments.

Second, Lonegan II put way too much faith in Wall Street.

“(T)he state has responded to changes in the financial markets that reflect modern economic realities. .
yesterday’s speculation has become ‘sound and economical current business practice. . . “ Lonegan,
supra, 176 NJ at 14.

In his October 23, 2008 testimony to Congress, Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan showed the framers of New Jersey’s Constitution to be far more reliable than today’s Wall Street “geniuses.”

“In recent decades, a vast risk management and pricing system has evolved, combining the best
insights of mathematicians and finance experts. . . The whole intellectual edifice, however, collapsed
in the summer of last year because the data inputted into the risk management models generally
covered only the past two decades, a period of euphoria. . .”

Finally, last November 4, 2008, New Jersey voters approved amendments to Article VIII of New Jersey’s Constitution which prohibits this type of borrowing without voter approval. But this case is far from moot. The Amendment only applies to future borrowing.

Also, the new Amendment has this troublesome language, which did not appear in the ballot question:

“No voter approval shall be required for. . . refinancing of all or a portion of any outstanding debts or
liabilities of. . . an autonomous public corporate entity…”

Does that mean the state can refinance NJ’s $29 billion of old “contract debt” with new debt backed by the full faith and credit of the state—without voter approval? Future litigation may be needed to decide that issue. But in the meantime, there are many reasons to reconsider and reverse Lonegan I and Lonegan II, and the future fiscal health of New Jersey will rest on this decision.

Steve Lonegan
State Director
Americans For Prosperity

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>At Bookends in December

>Rocco Dispirito
Saturday, December 6th – 4:00pm
Just in time for the Holidays, please welcome back Rocco Dispirito (from TV’s The Restaurant and most recently Dancing With The Stars) and “Mama” as they discuss and sign his latest Cookbook: Rocco Gets Real… perfect gift for the Chef in the family!

SPECIAL CHILDRENS EVENT!
Bernadette Peters
Saturday, December 13th – 2pm-4pm
Broadway Star Bernadette Peters will discuss and sign: Broadway Barks. This wonderfully illustrated Childrens Book includes a CD and offers the story of a scraggly, gray dog living in Central park who is befriended by a lady (Peters) who makes it to the Stage to sing and dance… bring the kids!

Santa
Saturday, December 20th – 12:00pm – 2:00pm
Come Meet Santa Claus and have him sign your favorite Holiday book.

if you are holding and event in Ridgewood this December please let us know …its FREE!

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>DOWNTOWN FOR THE HOLIDAYS – FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5

>NEW LOCATION FOR TREE LIGHTING is at Memorial Park at Van Neste Square.

6:45pm – Music: Band, Flag Salute, Harmony Chorus, Art of Motion Children, Official Greeting from Mayor

7:30pm – Tree Lighting

7:40pm – Musical Entertainment continues until 9pm

*** SANTA will be in his House in the Park on SATURDAY, Dec. 6th, 13th, 20th and Christmas Eve – 12/24 10am – 2pm

SPONSORED BY THE RIDGEWOOD CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

3balls Golfshow?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=149749

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>New Jersey hospitals struggle with economy

>Sunday, November 30, 2008
BY RYAN TRACY

https://www.nj.com/news/times/index.ssf?/base/news-5/12280215439560.xml&coll=5

Though health care may be a necessity even in trying times, local hospitals say they are not immune to the strains of the reeling economy.

In fact, Mercer County’s four major hospitals, which together account for more than 7,000 jobs, face worries similar to other businesses: As consumers tighten their wallets, they might spend less on elective surgeries or preventative medicine.

Meanwhile two health care organizations with ambitious plans for construction of new hospitals in Hopewell Township in Mercer County and Plainsboro in Middlesex County have expressed confidence that financial market upheavals will not disrupt those projects.

But as unemployment increases in New Jersey, hospitals also are facing another unique challenge: more and more people find themselves without health insurance while hospitals remain obligated to provide “charity care” to the uninsured.

Already, St. Francis Medical Center in Trenton is reporting a “small uptick” in charity care patients, according to president and CEO Gerard J. Jablonowski.

Meanwhile, Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital at Hamilton recently cut 22 positions from its staff of over 1,800, citing economic challenges shared by other health care providers.

“Fewer patients are seeking elective procedures (and) more people are uninsured because of the increased work force reductions nationally,” Diane Grillo, chief spokeswoman at Robert Wood, said in an e-mailed statement.

Grillo said the staff cuts included “a few nurses who did not have direct patient care assignments” and came through a combination of layoffs and attrition. She did not attribute the work force reduction to any particular economic cause.

“Hospitals in New Jersey are beginning to see the effects of the economic downturn,” she said. “We are confident that these changes will not compromise the care and service our community has come to expect.”

Robert Wood is not the only hospital in New Jersey that has made staff cuts, according to Kerry McKean Kelly, spokesperson for the New Jersey Hospital Association.

“Even in the last couple months, we have seen the elimination of jobs (and) the elimination of some services,” Kelly said. Statewide, hospitals have announced “200 or more” job cuts in the past two months, she said.

Five New Jersey hospitals have closed this year, in addition to three last year, Kelly said. Before those closures, 15 hospitals had shut down in New Jersey in about the last 15 years, she said.

At local hospitals, officials said finances are strong.

“The last three or four months … we have been near capacity, in terms of inpatients that we are treating,” said Barry Rabner, president and CEO of Princeton HealthCare System, though he cautioned that it is “often impossible” to explain trends in such numbers.

Jablonowski said patient numbers are also strong at St. Francis, but noticed another change.

“Over the last year, we have started noticing a small uptick in the number of (charity care) patients” on the order of “a few percentage points of our volume,” said Jablonowski.

“We take care of every patient who needs us, and that’s part of our mission, but the mounting pressure to be able to continue that is what really is the biggest concern of the organization.”

New Jersey has lost 27,200 jobs so far this year, including 6,000 in October alone. The statewide unemployment rate rose to 6 percent in October, its highest level in more than five years.

Rutgers University economist James W. Hughes said that trend is likely to continue over the next 12 months.

Hospital officials fear that will bring more residents without employer-provided health coverage.

The state government, which mandates “charity care” for the uninsured, reimburses hospitals slightly less than 50 percent of the cost of treating each uninsured patient, said Kelly of NJHA.

While local hospitals would like to see that reimbursement rise, some officials fear it might fall once again.

The state’s budget for the fiscal year that began July 1 cut “charity care” funding by 15 percent, according to the NJHA website.

Less state reimbursement “would be potentially tragic news for the state because we already have hospitals struggling, laying off folks, (and) reducing services,” Kelly said.

“We’re also hearing from hospitals that they are delaying construction projects” due to high interest rates and difficulty borrowing, Kelly said.

Two major medical centers are under construction in central New Jersey — Princeton HealthCare System’s campus at Plainsboro and a new location for Capital Health System in Hopewell Township.

Rabner said Princeton HealthCare’s project has not been delayed, though the construction costs may rise.

“Fortunately we borrowed money to complete the project before the economy became so complicated,” Rabner said in an interview. “We do have money to do the work.”

Work toward demolishing existing buildings at the site off Route 1 is under way and “we’re in the process of bidding” other aspects of the project, Rabner said. “We’re just getting the bids back. (We) don’t know what impact the changes in the economy will have on the project budget.”

Capital Health spokesperson Jason Stacchini said the company had no comment for this report.

Last month, Capital Health spokesperson Jayne O’Connor expressed confidence in the financial condition of the company and its ability to finance its $530 million construction project.

O’Connor also said the company had not yet “even gotten to the stage where we’re going to market” for bonds that would fund the construction.

https://www.nj.com/news/times/index.ssf?/base/news-5/12280215439560.xml&coll=5

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>Homes In Ridgewood Retain Higher Values Due To Train Service

>A route to higher home values
Sunday, November 30, 2008
Jennifer V. Hughes
THE RECORD

And, yes, it is an oncoming train.

But in this real estate market — more than any other — that’s a good thing.

Homes in towns with rail stations at their heart or nearby fare much better than those in any other market, said real estate guru Jeffrey Otteau, who has been analyzing New Jersey real estate for 30 years.

“It’s not enough to have a rail station,” Otteau said. “But it’s a really good start.”

In an October report, Otteau found that nine of the top 10 New Jersey housing markets either have a train station or are less than a mile away from a rail stop. In Bergen County, Midland Park and Ridgewood made the list.

That top designation was determined by how long it would take to sell out the homes currently on the market, Otteau said. Statewide, the figure is 13 months; in rail-friendly towns it ranges from two to five months.

Homes near train stations are also worth more. In a 2005 survey of towns in Essex, Union, Somerset and Morris counties, Otteau found that homes within walking distance of a rail station sold for 5 percent more than those houses where residents would have to drive to the station.

Those increased values were even more evident in a slow market. This year Otteau revisited that survey, in central New Jersey, and found that homes within walking distance had values 10 percent higher than their counterparts’. Otteau said the findings would “certainly” hold true for Bergen County rail towns.

“This is true in the northern half of New Jersey,” he said. “The closer you get to Manhattan, the greater the effect.”
Martin Robins, senior fellow at the Alan M. Voorhees Transportation Center at Rutgers University, said if not for a shaky financial climate, transit-oriented development “would be a runaway market.”

One thing slowing things down is that people who might want to downsize into smaller homes or condos near transit can’t sell their current homes.

“People want to sell and move now but they can’t,” Robins said.

As for demand, Robins cited an example of a new condo development that opened up two years ago on the Raritan Valley line at Cranford. More than 1,300 applications were put in for 80 units.

The center also studied the Hudson-Bergen Light Rail Line, focusing on five stations in Hoboken, Jersey City and Bayonne. It found that the housing boom around those stations has added more than $5 billion in property value to the local tax base, said Jan Wells, an adjunct professor at the Rutgers center.

“For the most part, these were parking lots and brownfields,” said Wells. “You’re putting people there who will support your local businesses, buy new furniture, need groceries.”

There are also so-called Transit Villages, an official designation by the state Department of Transportation. There are 19 Transit Villages built or under construction statewide, including Rutherford, Morristown and Jersey City.

Transit Villages can apply for grants for landscaping, street lights, sidewalk projects and other improvements. In 2008 the DOT spent $1.2 million to fund a bikeway in Pleasantville and a river walk project in Belmar. The budget for 2009 is $2 million.

Transit hubs are thriving because of demographic changes, said Otteau. In the 1940s and 1950s, homebuyers moved westward from the city, creating suburbs bolstered by highway projects, cheap gas and an exodus of jobs from urban centers. Wealth and family size were on the rise, leading to a demand for larger homes.

Now, the two biggest demographic groups are baby boomers and Generation Y-ers — both of whom don’t have young children and crave walkable neighborhoods and transit into New York City.

In his surveys, Otteau has identified markets that have not hit yet, but could. These “investment” markets include several with rail stops, such as Hackensack and Glen Rock.

To encourage rail-friendly projects, towns need to rezone properties to welcome mixed-use development, Otteau said. Also, towns should reexamine whether it is a good idea to have ordinances that mandate a certain amount of parking in new developments. Today’s buyers in transit towns often have fewer cars and use them less often.

Additionally, Otteau said, planners need to realize children are not “toxic.” In the past, planners often shunned multi-unit developments because of a fear that they would attract families with children in numbers that would burden schools. But new demographics show families are having fewer children, or forgoing them altogether.
“What we need to understand is that all the old models don’t work in this new world,” he said.

In Wood-Ridge, construction is beginning on a $500 million project that will bring rental apartments, condos, shops, restaurants and an NJ Transit train station to the former site of Curtiss-Wright’s B-29 bomber factory.

The cost of the $37 million rail station on the Bergen County Line will be split by the developer, Somerset Development, and NJ Transit. It is expected to open in late 2010 or early 2011. The development, Westmont Station, is expected to have about 800 rental and condo units. Ralph Zucker, president of Somerset Development, said planning for the project began six years ago during a very different real estate market.

“We’ve definitely had some sleepless nights,” he said. Originally the company planned to open the project by offering condos. Now, rental apartments will come online first. Could the project have survived without the train station?

“I don’t think so,” Zucker said.

NJ Transit partnered with the developer to boost ridership, which is good for the agency and the state in the long run, said Jack Kanarek, NJ Transit’s senior director of project development.

Kanarek said a national study found that people who live in transit-oriented developments make 44 percent fewer car trips than in non-transit communities. That’s good for roadways and pocketbooks, he said.

Transit-oriented developments should also boom as the new trans-Hudson tunnel project progresses, said Kanarek.

Construction on the $8.7 billion project is expected to begin in 2009 and the tunnel will open in 2017. The rail tunnel is expected to double capacity from New Jersey to New York. It will also enable one-seat rides into Manhattan’s Penn Station on 10 of NJ Transit’s 11 commuter rail lines, including the Pascack Valley and Bergen County lines.

In addition, NJ Transit is considering providing passenger service on an existing freight rail line, offering nine stations from Hawthorne to Hackensack.

Towns with stations should act now to capitalize on demand for rail, Kanarek said.

“If towns plan for transit-oriented development, they can enhance their communities and bring not only a mix of uses but also more vibrancy to their community, because transit is such a permanent part,” he said.

So what does all of this mean for values and selling rates for homes that are not in transit-friendly towns? Otteau said prices there will rise more slowly in a good market and will fall faster in a bad one. His research found that the most expensive homes remained on the market the longest.

“It’s all about price,” said Rutgers’ Wells. “People may not get a price that reflects what they have in the house. You have to decide if you’re going to take the loss or sit there and make it more economic and efficient to get around in the suburban sprawl.”

Realtor Barry Colyer, of ReMax Traditions in Oakland said he thinks there will still always be some buyers who are not demanding homes near train stations. He estimates about 30 percent of his clients want transit as close as possible.

“Buyers who want train access will only look at places with train access,” he said. “If it’s on your list, it’s pretty high up there.”

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>Wildes: Ensuring stable health care for our region

>Wildes: Ensuring stable health care for our region
Friday, November 28, 2008
BY MICHAEL J. WILDES

https://www.northjersey.com/opinion/35207629.html

To build a new facility at the site of the former Pascack Valley Hospital would be a mistake, one that could end up providing worse – not better – care for local residents.

AS MAYOR of Englewood, I strive continuously to ensure that my constituents receive quality services and care in all areas of life here in Bergen County. There is no area where quality is more important than in health care, and for the people of Englewood, having a hospital in our city provides a valuable facility for everyone in our community.

However, as a mayor with a hospital in my community, I can’t limit my concern to what it means to the people of Englewood. I have to look at what it means to the people who come from other parts of Bergen County. Englewood Hospital and Medical Center serves people from all over Bergen County and the financial strength of the hospital is critical to people in our neighboring towns and to Bergen County as a whole.

According to the January 2008 Final Report of the New Jersey Commission on Rationalizing Health Care Resources (also known as the Reinhardt Commission), New Jersey faces an oversupply of hospital beds, a problem that is particularly concentrated in the Hackensack-Ridgewood-Paterson area.

In part because of this oversupply, Pascack Valley Hospital suffered from low occupancy rates, filed for bankruptcy and ultimately closed in November 2007.

Upon Pascack Valley Hospital’s closing, all the hospitals in Bergen County experienced an increase in their respective occupancy rates. This increase confirmed that there had been too many acute care beds in Bergen County. But, more importantly, this change represents progress for the people in the region, as numerous studies, including one by Dr. Elliott Fisher at Dartmouth University, have shown that having an oversupply of acute care beds actually can have the effect of worsening health care.

A mistake

That’s why I believe that Hackensack University Medical Center and its for-profit Texas-based partner, Legacy Hospital Partners, should not be allowed to open a new acute care facility on the former Pascack Valley Hospital site in Westwood.

To open this facility would be a mistake, one that could end up providing worse – not better – care for local residents.

Make no mistake: Having more emergency facilities in the region is never harmful, and in this case would be a welcome addition to the region. It’s when you add the infrastructure of an acute care facility, complete with all of the administration, overhead and equipment required, that resources become redundant and health care quality can be compromised.

Recently, one of my colleagues asserted that the closing of Pascack Valley Hospital was a devastating financial loss to the town of Westwood, both in terms of commerce and jobs lost.

As a fellow mayor, I certainly understand the challenges that take place when a community faces a hospital closing. But I believe it is vital that we not exacerbate those negative effects by starting a new hospital. A new for-profit hospital in the region could destabilize the entire region’s health care system, and could cause additional hospitals to close. We’d be confronting the same issues that Westwood recently experienced, only in a different municipality.

With today’s economic conditions, we cannot afford instability; we must do everything to keep our hospitals, as well as our businesses, stable.

Additionally, the proposed facility is to be a for-profit hospital, and those types of institutions often do not have the interests of the community at heart. The non-profit hospitals in this region invest in the community and are not beholden to out-of-state investors.

Additionally, our local hospitals take all patients – including charity, Medicare and privately insured patients, which I feel is better for the community.

Replacing the old Pascack Valley Hospital with a similar institution runs counter to the Reinhardt report and could undo some of the benefits that the closing of Pascack Valley provided Bergen County’s residents.

Won’t benefit the people

The introduction of new hospital beds at a location where hospital beds were removed less than nine months ago does not seem to benefit the people of this region. There are seven full-service hospitals less than 15 miles from that site.

All the hospitals in Bergen County support the new emergency facility opened by Hackensack Medical Center at the Pascack Valley site. To add a full-service acute care hospital might be detrimental to the care of the region’s residents and could greatly diminish the continued operational effectiveness and quality of northern New Jersey’s hospitals.

The Reinhardt report should be given a chance to work, to show that the public policies in place are correct and that financially stable hospitals are good for all the people of Bergen County, not just Englewood.

Michael J. Wildes, mayor of Englewood, is an immigration attorney and has been an emergency medical technician for more than 15 years.

https://www.northjersey.com/opinion/35207629.html

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>Fight at Brooklyn Pizza

>I will post a detail article as soon as I get back from the holidays

An Elmwood Park man was charged with making terrorist threats to the pizzeria manager at Brooklyn Pizza.We also were very disappointed with the service and the food at Brooklyn Pizza but stopped short of terroristic threats and just told the manager the place sucks . It is not clear if Mr.Ruzhdi Aliu the man charged will be sent to Gitmo or not for crimes against Pizza .His companion must have thought he was in a Greek restaurant and threw a plate and threatened bodily harm to the same manager. Plates are traditionally thrown at Greek restaurants .Perhaps he’ll be sent to geography classes.

Again hope your having a very nice thanksgiving !
show?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=60066
PJ

Dispute at Brooklyn Pizza results in multiple arrests

Alleged restaurant row brings charge

THE RECORD
November 27, 2008
Evonne Coutros

RIDGEWOOD — An Elmwood Park man was charged with making terroristic threats to a pizzeria manager in the central business district after he was told that the food he ordered was not available, police said.
Ruzhdi Aliu, 30, was inside Brooklyn’s Brick Oven Pizza on Oak Street around 8:30 p.m. Tuesday when he threatened the restaurant manager with bodily harm, said Ridgewood Police Detective Douglas Williams. His companion, Stephanie Colon, 18, of Bayonne, threw a plate, Williams said.

The manager called police to report two unruly customers. When police caught up with the couple, they were walking down the street. Police charged Colon with giving them a fictitious identity.

Both parties were transported to police headquarters where criminal complaints were signed, police said.