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>Cost to build parking garages soars

>From The Record

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

BY ANDREW TANGEL
STAFF WRITER

When Mountain Development Corp. moved into its Clifton headquarters in early 2002, the company estimated it would pay about $12,000 for each space in a new parking garage. A new garage could have added as many as 300 spots.

Since then, Mountain Development has brought more tenants into its seven-story building at 100 Delawanna Ave. So when the company again considered building a garage late last year, executives were shocked at the new estimates: costs would range from $22,000 to $28,000 a space, said Michael Seeve, the firm’s president.

“The cost has gotten totally out of control,” Seeve said. Mountain Development decided to stick with surface parking for now and attract tenants that require fewer spaces.

The costs of steel and concrete – the main materials of parking garages – have soared in recent years, fueled by rising demand in rapidly developing countries such as China and India. Prices for products made at steel mills, meanwhile, shot up 34 percent in 2004 alone. Following further annual increases, the cost has risen more than 20 percent so far this year, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The gains are reflected in estimates provided by Walker Parking Associates, an industry consulting firm. A parking space in a garage in New York City, which most closely approximates the New Jersey market, cost about $14,600 to build in 2000, according to Walker’s estimates. This year, an average parking space in New York City runs about $20,100. The price includes costs for financing and engineering, but not land.

The expenses are posing challenges to developers. For builders of office properties, particularly those in suburban areas such as Bergen County, the soaring costs of constructing parking garages pose a dilemma, Seeve said. Developers have treated parking garages as sunk costs, meaning they didn’t intend to pass them on to tenants, he said.

“When you rent space, and tenants compare buildings, they don’t really pay you more because you’ve spent the money on structured parking,” Seeve said. “But if you don’t spend the money on structured parking and you don’t have the requisite parking to lease office space, people just aren’t going to take the space.”

And, he added: “If your employees can’t park when they have to be there, then the building doesn’t work for you.”

The costs also pose problems for developers in urban areas, where space is scarcer and more expensive, and where many tenants often rely on cars even if mass transportation is more available.

“It’s nearly impossible to look at urban development without having a parking deck of some size,” said Russell Tepper, vice president of development at Matrix Development Group in Cranbury.

With pollution remediation and features such as retail space built into the decks, parking garages can wind up costing as much as $35,000 a space in urban areas or more, said Richard Johnson, a senior vice president at Matrix.

For developers to break even on a project, with traditional financing arrangements – for example, an 8.5 percent interest rate for a mix of a bank loan and equity over seven to 10 years – each space would need to generate revenue of nearly $300 a month, Johnson said. That’s generally too expensive for markets in New Jersey.

Parking garage authorities, which can issue bonds that have a lower interest rate over a longer period of time, need to generate roughly $140 a space per month, said Leonard Bier, executive director of the New Jersey Parking Institute, an agency whose primary members are the cities and parking authorities that run garages.

As construction costs for parking garages increase, so too do the prices drivers pay to park. Five years ago, parking authorities needed to generate about $125 a space per month, Bier said.

“There’s an obvious cause and effect” between higher construction costs and more expensive parking, Bier said.

Garage operators must service the debt they incurred when issuing bonds, as well as pay for operating costs and set aside some funds for future improvements, he said.

As garage costs climb, developers have sought tax credits to offset the rising expenses. Johnson said Matrix has sought to reclassify the garages as infrastructure and not real estate, which underwriters expect to pay for itself in relatively few years.

Also, developers have struck public-private partnerships with parking authorities, Bier said. Developers may provide the land, for example, but parking authorities may seek the financing because they typically can issue bonds at lower rates.

On the construction side, engineers have sought to minimize the use of steel in parking garages. One technique involves stretching steel strands, pouring concrete over the steel and then releasing the stress, making the concrete very stiff.

“Almost nobody will build a parking garage unless they have to,” said Greg Neiderer, director of operations in Walker Parking’s mid-Atlantic office in Wayne, Pa. Garages often cost 25 percent of a development, he added.

“The deal might make sense or might not make sense based on the garage,” Neiderer said. “For developers, parking can kill a deal. I see it somewhat often. We have some developers who come to us over and over again to try to salvage a project.”

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>Donna MacPhee ’89CC Named University Vice President of Alumni Relations

>CUFFOXCOKYRBYKB 20080922170945Photo Credit: Columbia University Athletics/Mike McLaughlinDonna MacPhee ’89CC received the 2008 Varsity C Athletics Alumni Award from Chris Young ’90CC.

Donna MacPhee ’89CC Named University Vice President of Alumni Relations
Written by: Columbia University Athletics
Release: 09/22/2008

NEW YORK – Donna MacPhee, a 1989 alumna of Columbia College, former women’s tennis student-athlete, former Varsity C Club president and one of the founders of the Columbia Athletics Women’s Leadership Council, has been named vice president for alumni relations and president of the Columbia Alumni Association, University President Lee C. Bollinger announced today.

A member of the Varsity tennis team as an undergraduate, MacPhee has remained involved in Columbia Athletics over the years as an alumna, serving on numerous committees and co-founding the Women’s Leadership Council. This year MacPhee was chosen as one of Columbia’s 25 most influential athletic alumnae.

After earning her Bachelor’s degree from Columbia College as one of the College’s first female graduates, MacPhee went on to earn an MBA from NYU’s Stern School of Business and then dedicated her career to companies related to professional athletics, including managing finances for various departments of the National Hockey League.

For the past 10 years she served as co-founder and manager of Event Management Associates, a company that provided event and meeting planning services to a broad range of both not-for-profit and corporate clients.

MacPhee joins the Columbia Alumni Association at a promising time. Now in its fourth year, the Association continues to develop as an organization representing alumni from all of Columbia’s schools worldwide. The University also is poised to welcome alumni to a brand new Columbia Alumni Center opening in early 2009.

MacPhee lives in Ridgewood, N.J., and is married to men’s basketball alumnus John MacPhee ‘89CC. They have two daughters, Larissa, 12, and Alexa, 10.

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>’Star-Ledger’ Publisher Threatens January 2009 Shutdown

>By Joe Strupp

Published: September 16, 2008 1:55 PM ET

NEW YORK Publisher George Arwady of The Star-Ledger in Newark, N.J., has told employees that the paper will close on Jan. 5, 2009, if 200 buyouts and several union concessions are not met, or if the paper cannot be sold.

The e-mail, obtained by E&P, sent to workers today is posted below. It comes about a month and a half after the paper announced it would need 200 employees to take buyouts — and the drivers and mailers unions to renegotiate contracts — or the newspaper could be sold. In recent weeks, Arwady has indicated to staffers in other e-mails that the number of newsroom buyout takers has fallen short.

Editor Jim Willse and Arwady have not commented on how many staffers have applied for the buyouts first offered July 31. Calls to them were not returned today. Buyout applications are due Oct. 1.

Several staffers have said the overall 200-person buyout number may have been met, but the unofficial call for about 100 newsroom staffers is not being reached.

“At this time I have no update to give you on our buyouts thus far, except to tell you that the newsroom has a long way to go to reach the goal that Jim announced,” Arwady wrote to a reporter in an e-mail earlier this month.
*
*

To: All Star-Ledger Employees
From: George Arwady
Date: September 16, 2008
Re: Update

As I have previously told you, there are three conditions that must be met in order for The Star-Ledger to remain in business under its current ownership. Although we are making progress toward meeting two of our three conditions (the Mailers have a ratification vote scheduled for September 22), we still are far from an agreement with the Drivers’ union.

Accordingly, since it is doubtful that the Drivers will ratify an agreement by October 8, 2008, we will be sending formal notices to all employees this week, as required by both federal and New Jersey law, advising you that the Company will be sold, or, failing that, that it will close operations on January 5, 2009.

It is most unfortunate that we have to send out this notice, but the Drivers have left us with no choice.

George Arwady, Publisher

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>Ridgewood Blog Poll : Despite the Recent Security Issues Readers believe Soccer Moms driving on Cell Phones Pose the Greatest Risk to their Children

>
School Stalkers 7 (4%)

Turf Toe 1 (0%)

Dumb Dumb Math 36 (25%)

Geese Crap 6 (4%)

Soccer Moms driving while on cell phones 92 (64%)

Votes so far: 142
Poll closed

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>The most persuasive person in Ridgewood is:

>Mr. Arthur Wrubel, Chairman of Ridgewood’s Historic Preservation Commission.

No change to any building facade, lighting, signage, sidewalk, street, curb, roof, gutter, chimney, window, door, etc. within Ridgewood’s Central Business District may be made unless Mr. Wrubel and his Commission approve it.

The Fly asks: is this too much power placed in the hands of one person?

§ 29-10. Responsibilities.

The Historic Preservation Commission shall have the following duties and responsibilities:

A.
To identify, record and maintain a system for survey and inventory of all buildings, sites, places, landmarks and structures of historical or architectural significance based on the Secretary of the Interior’s Standards and Guidelines for Archaeology and Historic Preservation (Standards and Guidelines for Identification) and to aid the public in understanding their worth, methods of preservation, techniques of gathering documentation and related matters.

B.
To advise the Planning Board on the relationship of the Historic Preservation Plan Element of the Master Plan to other Master Plan elements.

C.
To advise the Planning Board on the inclusion of historic sites and landmarks in the recommended Capital Improvement Program.

D.
To advise the Planning Board and Zoning Board of Adjustment on applications for development pursuant to N.J.S.A. 40:55D-110.

E.
To provide written reports pursuant to N.J.S.A. 40:55D-111 on the application of the Zoning Ordinance provisions concerning historic preservation.

F.
To carry out such other advisory, educational and informational functions as will promote historic preservation in the municipality.

G.
The Commission shall have all of the responsibilities detailed in N.J.S.A. 40:55D-109 and as the same may hereafter be amended and supplemented.

§ 29-11. Report.

A.
A report of the Historic Preservation Commission issued by the Historic Preservation Commission shall be required before a preservation permit is issued for any of the following or before work can commence on any of the following within a historic district or on a historic site:

(1)
Demolition of all or part of any building, improvement, site, place or structure.

(2)
Relocation of any building, improvement, site, place or structure.

(3)
Change in the exterior appearance of any building, improvement, site, place or structure by addition, reconstruction, alteration, partial demolition or dismantling or repair, which change is visible from a public street. Exterior change for all primary and accessory structures shall include but is not limited to removal, repair or replacement of windows, doors, surfaces, facades, attachments, stairs, steps, porches, signs, walls, fences, antennas, solar panels, lighting and sidewalks, including sidewalks located within the public right-of-way, where work is being performed by a private property owner.

(4)
Any addition to or new construction of a principal or accessory building or structure.

B.
A report of the Historic Preservation Commission shall not be required before a preservation permit is issued by the Administrative Officer for the following:

(1)
Changes to the interior of structures.

(2)
Repair or exact replacement to any existing improvement, provided that the work does not alter the exterior appearance of the structure. In the event, however, that repair work is being undertaken on a building with previously installed noncontributing or disharmonious features, the provisions of this subsection shall not apply. The following are the types of activities permitted under this exemption:

(a)
Identical replacement of existing windows and doors.

(b)
Repairs of existing windows and doors and the installation of storm doors and windows that do not change their design, scale or appearance.

(c)
Maintenance and repair of existing roofing materials involving no change in the design, scale or appearance of the structure.

(d)
Structural repairs which do not alter the exterior appearance of the structure.

(e)
Maintenance, repair or replacement of existing clapboards, shingles or other siding with identical material.

(f)
Exterior or interior painting.

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>For the record, I wasn’t barefoot, just wearing gold sandals.

>
Hi Everyone. It’s Annie here. For the record, I wasn’t barefoot, just wearing gold sandals. Amused by the hillbilly remark. For the record, a hillbilly wearing Diane von Furstenburg and Marc Jacobs. And when someone says it’s time to get to work I get to work. Especially if it involves digging in soil (I’m a gardener). Bestest …

J&R Computer/Music World

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>Breaking Ground on the Pease Renovation

>weddingad
pease

Mr. Boldger and Village Council with Shovels In Hand
For the Pease Library Renovation and Improvement
Project is being completed with $750,000 grant from Mr. Bolger. An additional $1,000,000 is expected over the next 10 years. The proceeds from office space will go to the Library.

Posted by Dom Nizza

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>Maybe there is something to this new math afterall

>NATALIE ANGIER Basics SEP. 16, 2008

Gut Instinct’s Surprising Role in Math

You are shopping in a busy supermarket and you’re ready to pay up and go home. You perform a quick visual sweep of the checkout options and immediately start ramming your cart through traffic toward an appealingly unpeopled line halfway across the store. As you wait in line and start reading nutrition labels, you can’t help but calculate that the 529 calories contained in a single slice of your Key lime cheesecake amounts to one-fourth of your recommended daily caloric allowance and will take you 90 minutes on the elliptical to burn off and you’d better just stick the thing behind this stack of Soap Opera Digests and hope a clerk finds it before it melts.

One shopping spree, two distinct number systems in play. Whenever we choose a shorter grocery line over a longer one, or a bustling restaurant over an unpopular one, we rally our approximate number system, an ancient and intuitive sense that we are born with and that we share with many other animals. Rats, pigeons, monkeys, babies — all can tell more from fewer, abundant from stingy. An approximate number sense is essential to brute survival: how else can a bird find the best patch of berries, or two baboons know better than to pick a fight with a gang of six?

When it comes to genuine computation, however, to seeing a self-important number like 529 and panicking when you divide it into 2,200, or realizing that, hey, it’s the square of 23! well, that calls for a very different number system, one that is specific, symbolic and highly abstract. By all evidence, scientists say, the capacity to do mathematics, to manipulate representations of numbers and explore the quantitative texture of our world is a uniquely human and very recent skill. People have been at it only for the last few millennia, it’s not universal to all cultures, and it takes years of education to master. Math-making seems the opposite of automatic, which is why scientists long thought it had nothing to do with our ancient, pre-verbal size-em-up ways.

Yet a host of new studies suggests that the two number systems, the bestial and celestial, may be profoundly related, an insight with potentially broad implications for math education.

One research team has found that how readily people rally their approximate number sense is linked over time to success in even the most advanced and abstruse mathematics courses. Other scientists have shown that preschool children are remarkably good at approximating the impact of adding to or subtracting from large groups of items but are poor at translating the approximate into the specific. Taken together, the new research suggests that math teachers might do well to emphasize the power of the ballpark figure, to focus less on arithmetic precision and more on general reckoning.

“When mathematicians and physicists are left alone in a room, one of the games they’ll play is called a Fermi problem, in which they try to figure out the approximate answer to an arbitrary problem,” said Rebecca Saxe, a cognitive neuroscientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who is married to a physicist. “They’ll ask, how many piano tuners are there in Chicago, or what contribution to the ocean’s temperature do fish make, and they’ll try to come up with a plausible answer.”

“What this suggests to me,” she added, “is that the people whom we think of as being the most involved in the symbolic part of math intuitively know that they have to practice those other, nonsymbolic, approximating skills.”

This month in the journal Nature, Justin Halberda and Lisa Feigenson of Johns Hopkins University and Michele Mazzocco of the Kennedy Krieger Institute in Baltimore described their study of 64 14-year-olds who were tested at length on the discriminating power of their approximate number sense. The teenagers sat at a computer as a series of slides with varying numbers of yellow and blue dots flashed on a screen for 200 milliseconds each — barely as long as an eye blink. After each slide, the students pressed a button indicating whether they thought there had been more yellow dots or blue. (Take a version of the test.)

Given the antiquity and ubiquity of the nonverbal number sense, the researchers were impressed by how widely it varied in acuity. There were kids with fine powers of discrimination, able to distinguish ratios on the order of 9 blue dots for every 10 yellows, Dr. Feigenson said. “Others performed at a level comparable to a 9-month-old,” barely able to tell if five yellows outgunned three blues. Comparing the acuity scores with other test results that Dr. Mazzocco had collected from the students over the past 10 years, the researchers found a robust correlation between dot-spotting prowess at age 14 and strong performance on a raft of standardized math tests from kindergarten onward. “We can’t draw causal arrows one way or another,” Dr. Feigenson said, “but your evolutionarily endowed sense of approximation is related to how good you are at formal math.”

The researchers caution that they have no idea yet how the two number systems interact. Brain imaging studies have traced the approximate number sense to a specific neural structure called the intraparietal sulcus, which also helps assess features like an object’s magnitude and distance. Symbolic math, by contrast, operates along a more widely distributed circuitry, activating many of the prefrontal regions of the brain that we associate with being human. Somewhere, local and global must be hooked up to a party line.

Other open questions include how malleable our inborn number sense may be, whether it can be improved with training, and whether those improvements would pay off in a greater appetite and aptitude for math. If children start training with the flashing dot game at age 4, will they be supernumerate by middle school?

Dr. Halberda, who happens to be Dr. Feigenson’s spouse, relishes the work’s philosophical implications. “What’s interesting and surprising in our results is that the same system we spend years trying to acquire in school, and that we use to send a man to the moon, and that has inspired the likes of Plato, Einstein and Stephen Hawking, has something in common with what a rat is doing when it’s out hunting for food,” he said. “I find that deeply moving.”

Behind every great leap of our computational mind lies the pitter-patter of rats’ feet, the little squeak of rodent kind.■

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>periods of widespread pessimism have historically turned out to be windows of opportunity for long-term investors.

>Dear Investor,

Each day it seems the stock market faces a new threat – but periods of widespread pessimism have historically turned out to be windows of opportunity for long-term investors. As a successful investor, you may be wondering whether your investments will be properly positioned when the market reaches its bottom and starts upward.

As an experienced Investment Representative and a Ridgewood resident I can offer you local professional guidance with a global perspective in these uncertain times.

This may be an ideal time to ensure that your portfolio holdings are correctly diversified and on track toward meeting your investment objectives. As a way to introduce myself and the broad range of financial services I can offer, I’d like to offer you a comprehensive portfolio review- free and without obligation.

The portfolio review is a value-added service designed to help you achieve optimal results, and I would welcome the opportunity to meet with you at your earliest convenience. Please call my office at (201)301-2780or toll free 1(866)492-3959 to schedule your appointment.

Sincerely,

James J Foytlin
54 Washington Place
Ridgewood NJ 07450
toll free 1(866)492-3959
phone 1(201)301-2780
cell 1(201)966-7788

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>BOE Website and BOE eNews Errata

>BOE Website and BOE eNews Errata

Regardless of what you might read on the BOE’s website, or in their latest eNewsletter, Demarest Street is NOT being renamed “Barbara Schineller Way.” Village Council members agreed to dedicate Demarest Street to the former Orchard School teacher, who retired last year, but the street will still officially be known as Demarest Street.

A brown & white “Barbara Schineller Way” sign will be erected above the existing Demarest Street sign to commemorate the honor granted to Ms. Schineller. However, to avoid Demarest Street residents from being burdened by expenses associated with changing numerous legal documents, Village Council members wisely chose to retain the street’s existing name.

The Varian Fry Way/North Monroe Street dedication was handled in the exact same fashion.

This is the BOE’s press release:

Village Street to be Named For Retired Teacher

Come Wednesday, September 17, one of Ridgewood’s streets will have a new name. Demarest Street, outside Orchard School, will be renamed “Barbara Schineller Way” in honor of the beloved teacher who taught at Orchard School for over 40 years. Ms. Schineller retired at the end of the past school year. The sign’s public unveiling will be held on Wednesday at 3:15 p.m. The public is invited, and former Orchard School family members are particularly encouraged to attend.

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>School adds security because of intruder

>Sunday, September 14, 2008

BY EVONNE COUTROS
Staff Writer

RIDGEWOOD — Security has been upgraded at Benjamin Franklin Middle School after an early-morning incident last week in which a man entered the building and was subsequently charged by police with making terroristic threats.
A full-time security guard has been hired to stand at the front entrance of the school, beginning today. monday

The security measures were detailed in a letter to parents from Principal Anthony Orsini.

Police said the intruder – who is known to police – resisted arrest at about 8:30 a.m. last Monday after they were called by school staff who noticed he did not belong in the building on North Van Dien Avenue.
In addition to the terroristic threat charge, the man was charged with criminal trespass, resisting arrest and possession of a weapon for unlawful purpose. He was taken to Bergen Regional Medical Center for evaluation.
Orsini’s letter said the security measures, which include restricted entry into the building, are immediate. to the community,” the letter said. “We are also working with police to ensure that the individual will not be able to come near the building in the future.”

The security guard will wear a polo shirt with the word “security” on it and will be posted inside the school’s front entrance from 7:30 a.m. to 8:05 a.m., with a line of sight to the exterior of the building, the letter said.
The guard will patrol the grounds from 2:45 p.m. until the end of his shift and will be on the premises during recess and some physical education periods.
Key staff also will have “the ability to have radio communications at all times so that people can be diligent in all parts of the building,” the letter said.
Visitors should enter the building through entrances equipped with buzz-in capabilities, the letter said, and immediately report to the main office, or security will be called.

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>Question, why an "international" study?

>American medicine is tightly controlled by the American government. American pharma testing is generally stricter than any European or International medical boards. I’m sure if there was an international study out there the rallying cry would be “we need an American study, strict American standards”

This language the “internationally controlled safety study” sounds so reasonable, but it is intentionally misleading. They ask for international studies because they know each vaccine is rigorously studied in the US before being added to the vaccine regime. And they ask for a controlled study, knowing that a full controlled study on the specific vaccine (where it is tested singly for safety) would never happen, because it is medically irresponsible to keep vaccines (that have already been proven safe) from children.

Right now parents who keep their children unvaccinated are freeloading off the vaccinations of other children. The unvaccinated face a much lower risk of getting LIFE THREATENING DISEASES (lest we forget that measles mumps and rubella are not just the common cold or chicken pox) because vaccination rates remain high enough. But as vaccination rates drop the penumbra of protection fades, this year has already seen more measles cases in the US than anytime in the past decade. Parents talk about not risking their child’s safety by getting them vaccinated, but even if for argument’s sake we posit that there may be some connection between vaccines and the very serious neurological disorders on the Autism spectrum, getting life-threatening measles is still a much more probable result of being unvaccinated than developing a Autism spectrum disorder.

And before you attack me (and anyone else who disagrees with you) as a tool of the pharma industry or someone bent on suppressing the “real” information because of this issue. You should remember that the lead doctor in the initial study that made the GI-MMR-Autism link (a study that was of the same size and scope of the test in this article, not the international controlled study you claim to want to disprove it) is currently facing an inquiry for serious ethical and medical misconduct charges and the results of the study have been retracted. When he did his research he had accepted a large sum of his funding from a group suing the British government over the MMR vaccine, and some of the children in the study were recruited from these (biased) parties. (Additionally he took a number of medical risks with some of these children, risks that caused damage and required additional medical care to fix.)The medical journal in which the study was printed and 10 of the 12 co-authors of the paper issued a retraction of the findings of the study saying:

“We wish to make it clear that in this paper no causal link was established between (the) vaccine and autism, as the data were insufficient. However the possibility of such a link was raised, and consequent events have had major implications for public health. In view of this, we consider now is the appropriate time that we should together formally retract the interpretation placed upon these findings in the paper, according to precedent”

Look Autism spectrum disorders are a serious issue, we need to stop chasing ghosts and bad science and start coming together to provide much needed funding for services that help the children (and the growing population of adults) affected.

Sorry for the long post.

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>Property Taxes Would Increase $56 per Year for New Athletic Complex

>At the direction of Deputy Mayor Keith D. Killion, Village Manager James Ten Hoeve and Village CFO Dorothy Stikna recently performed a cost analysis related to the proposed construction of a new athletic field complex on West Saddle River Road.

During last night’s Village Council meeting, Ten Hoeve revealed that property taxes on an “average” home in Ridgewood would increase $56 per year in connection with the planned initiative. This assumes a property purchase price of approximately $4 million, with $2 million in grant money coming from Bergen County. Construction costs are now estimated in the $2 – $2.5 million range.

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