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Small Business Owner Says Enough Already!

>I own a small retail business in Ridgewood. My daily water usage amounts to one toilet flush and one use of the sink to wash my hands. The sewage tax bill I received amounts to about $1.50 per day – this on top of a water bill that adds up to about $1 per day. You’d think that my plumbing fixtures were made of gold and that sparkling Pellegrino is being pumped through the lines at those prices!

This tax is the last straw that is driving me out of business. Even though business has dropped off significantly in the last few months (once-twice a week I don’t even get any customers through the door, sometimes even on Saturdays!) I’ve been subjected to ever increasing tax bills like this sewage tax. I’m now paying thousands of dollars out of my pocket each month just to pay taxes and bills, and I’m stuck in a lease that may take me years to get out of and could potentially bankrupt me.

It’s no wonder there are so many empty retail spaces on Ridgewood Ave., Broad St., etc. It’s simply too expensive to do business in Ridgewood. Even worse, the residents of this village don’t support local businesses. For all of you complaining about the abundance of banks, when was the last time you purchased something from a local, independently owned store in Ridgewood (and I don’t mean Dunkin Donuts, the Gap or Rite Aid)? Remember, you reap what you sow.

Match.com

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>Deputy Mayor Keith Killion Demands Policy For Loan of Village Equipment

>On September 2, 2006, an electric generator owned by the Village of Ridgewood, and provided by Ridgewood Emergency Services, was used to power all operations of business located in Midland Park for up to 24 hours. This business lost
their primary electric service during the intense storm that ripped through northwest Bergen that day.

Immediately following word of this incident, several Ridgewood residents asked questions about the use of taxpayer purchased equipment outside of Village limits. One key question never answered publicly was: “Who authorized the use of Village owned equipment at a commercial establishment outside of Ridgewood?”

Coincident with Village Council member’s tentative authorization for the purchase of additional generator related equipment, recently elected Deputy Mayor Keith Killion insisted tonight that an official policy be drafted to ensure similar incidents do not occur in the future.

3balls Golfshow?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=55539

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>Village Council Conditionally Approves Beer Consumption At Employee Picnic

>The 2008 Village of Ridgewood Annual Employee Picnic will be held on Saturday, September 6 at Graydon Pool.

By an informal 4-1 vote taken during their Wednesday evening Public Work Session, Council members conditionally approved the consumption of beer during this year’s event. Mayor David T. Pfund was the only objector.

Beer will be available on the conditions that 1) the proper State of NJ license is obtained, and 2) if appropriate liability insurance is available at a reasonable price.

The fly is disappointed he didn’t get an invitation!

1-800-FLOWERS.COMshow?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=100462

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>Charitable Giving, the Tax-Smart Way

>By Shankar P.
7/7/2008

The largest single donation to a hospital in New Jersey won’t benefit just sick people, but also the donor’s estate because of his careful tax planning.
The strategy of real estate developer David F. Bolger, who two weeks ago pledged $30 million to Valley Hospital in Ridgewood, can be applied to smaller donors, too.

Bolger, 75, used a tax-exempt estate planning tool called a charitable lead annuity trust, in which The Bolger Foundation had accumulated cash and stock totaling about $30 million, according to Thomas Wells, Bolger’s attorney and a senior partner in the law firm of Wells, Jaworski & Liebman LLP of Paramus.

In a smart move, the stock Bolger deposited in the trust are shares of an unnamed bank that he believes are undervalued and will appreciate significantly over time, says Wells. In fact, that stock accounts for the majority of what Bolger has put in the trust, while the rest is cash, according to the attorney.

Wells says many donors tend to place in charitable lead annuity trusts securities bought at a low price that have since appreciated significantly. “In this case, we believe [the bank stock in the trust] is undervalued; it is at a historic low,” he adds.

Wells explains how the trust could help save on inheritance taxes for Bolger’s estate. He says if the share price of the bank stock appreciates enough to increase the trust’s size beyond the $30 million set aside for Valley Hospital, the surplus would pass tax-free to Bolger’s estate. If the stock was held outside the trust, such appreciation would be taxed by as much as 50 percent under normal circumstances, he adds.

Wells is the trustee in charge of ensuring Bolger’s pledged payments reach Valley Hospital at the end of each calendar year. Wells says the trust would pay out accumulated cash initially and then sell the bank stock as necessary to pay out $6 million annually over five years.

Robert Wahlers, president of the New Jersey chapter of the Association of Fundraising Professionals, agrees that Bolger’s use of the trust is “a wonderful tool” for estate tax planning.

“If he makes the gift and the remainder of the money doesn’t come back to him, he could take the appreciation [in the bank stock] and pass it on to his children,” says Wahlers, also senior director of major and planned gifts at the American Cancer Society in East Brunswick.

Wahlers notes charitable lead annuity trusts can also work well for smaller donors, those who give $1 million or more.

But “it takes a sophisticated donor who has a trusted adviser” to consider using such a trust, adds Wahlers. “It’s often discussed and it’s the type of thing where all the stars need to align,” he says. “It’s one of the lesser-used trusts because it takes longer to understand.”

Charitable lead annuity trusts could potentially get more popular with those approaching retirement these days, says Wahlers. “This is the perfect economy for such trusts,” he says. Retirees could gain more from the tax benefits such trusts offer compared to other investment options given the current, low interest rates, Wahlers explains.

Bolger, the son of Dutch immigrants John and Coby Bolger, says he made his way through modest beginnings as a steel worker to eventually build a real estate fortune. His firm, Ridgewood-based Bolger & Co. Inc., owns about 100 industrial properties nationwide including about 15 in New Jersey. Bolger declined to estimate his real estate portfolio’s current market value.

Bolger has been a liberal donor over the years, and says he prefers to support causes primarily in and around Ridgewood, health care institutions and preservation efforts. Last weekend, the “Barn,” a community center in neighboring Midland Park, reopened after a $700,000 renovation financed by The Bolger Foundation, according to Bolger’s youngest son, James Theodore “JT” Bolger.

Causes like fighting AIDS or the December 2004 tsunami that struck the Asia Pacific region “are too big for me,” says the senior Bolger. “I like to contribute to causes that have an impact,” he adds.

His son adds about his father, “He picks causes with a start and an end.” Also, some donations are not outright gifts but come “with strings attached,” according to the son. “He challenges the [beneficiary] organization so that other people get on board and donate as well. Part of the thrill of donating is to see the process your gift starts,” says JT Bolger, 37.

The son says he and his siblings John Bolger, 42, and Betsy Mott, 54, do not covet the riches their father donates. “It’s his money and his right to donate it,” JT Bolger says. “There are certain places you don’t pry into, and one of them is his estate planning.”

JT Bolger says his father instilled in his children the value of earning their own keep. The son recalls having to do chores around the house as a child if he wanted a new

toy, and says he ran his own landscaping business for 15 years before joining the family business.

The father, of course, isn’t one to overlook his children as he writes his donation checks. The way he designed his Valley Hospital pledge is just one example of that.

E-mail to [email protected]

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>The Unanimous Declaration of the Thirteen United States of America

>ridgewood+4th+parade+034

When, in the course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bonds which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the laws of nature and of nature’s God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. That to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. That whenever any form of government becomes destructive to these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shown that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such government, and to provide new guards for their future security. –Such has been the patient sufferance of these colonies; and such is now the necessity which constrains them to alter their former systems of government. The history of the present King of Great Britain is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations, all having in direct object the establishment of an absolute tyranny over these states. To prove this, let facts be submitted to a candid world.

He has refused his assent to laws, the most wholesome and necessary for the public good.

He has forbidden his governors to pass laws of immediate and pressing importance, unless suspended in their operation till his assent should be obtained; and when so suspended, he has utterly neglected to attend to them.

He has refused to pass other laws for the accommodation of large districts of people, unless those people would relinquish the right of representation in the legislature, a right inestimable to them and formidable to tyrants only.

He has called together legislative bodies at places unusual, uncomfortable, and distant from the depository of their public records, for the sole purpose of fatiguing them into compliance with his measures.

He has dissolved representative houses repeatedly, for opposing with manly firmness his invasions on the rights of the people.

He has refused for a long time, after such dissolutions, to cause others to be elected; whereby the legislative powers, incapable of annihilation, have returned to the people at large for their exercise; the state remaining in the meantime exposed to all the dangers of invasion from without, and convulsions within.

He has endeavored to prevent the population of these states; for that purpose obstructing the laws for naturalization of foreigners; refusing to pass others to encourage their migration hither, and raising the conditions of new appropriations of lands.

He has obstructed the administration of justice, by refusing his assent to laws for establishing judiciary powers.

He has made judges dependent on his will alone, for the tenure of their offices, and the amount and payment of their salaries.

He has erected a multitude of new offices, and sent hither swarms of officers to harass our people, and eat out their substance.

He has kept among us, in times of peace, standing armies without the consent of our legislature.

He has affected to render the military independent of and superior to civil power.

He has combined with others to subject us to a jurisdiction foreign to our constitution, and unacknowledged by our laws; giving his assent to their acts of pretended legislation:

For quartering large bodies of armed troops among us:

For protecting them, by mock trial, from punishment for any murders which they should commit on the inhabitants of these states:

For cutting off our trade with all parts of the world:

For imposing taxes on us without our consent:

For depriving us in many cases, of the benefits of trial by jury:

For transporting us beyond seas to be tried for pretended offenses:

For abolishing the free system of English laws in a neighboring province, establishing therein an arbitrary government, and enlarging its boundaries so as to render it at once an example and fit instrument for introducing the same absolute rule in these colonies:

For taking away our charters, abolishing our most valuable laws, and altering fundamentally the forms of our governments:

For suspending our own legislatures, and declaring themselves invested with power to legislate for us in all cases whatsoever.

He has abdicated government here, by declaring us out of his protection and waging war against us.

He has plundered our seas, ravaged our coasts, burned our towns, and destroyed the lives of our people.

He is at this time transporting large armies of foreign mercenaries to complete the works of death, desolation and tyranny, already begun with circumstances of cruelty and perfidy scarcely paralleled in the most barbarous ages, and totally unworthy the head of a civilized nation.

He has constrained our fellow citizens taken captive on the high seas to bear arms against their country, to become the executioners of their friends and brethren, or to fall themselves by their hands.

He has excited domestic insurrections amongst us, and has endeavored to bring on the inhabitants of our frontiers, the merciless Indian savages, whose known rule of warfare, is undistinguished destruction of all ages, sexes and conditions.

In every stage of these oppressions we have petitioned for redress in the most humble terms: our repeated petitions have been answered only by repeated injury. A prince, whose character is thus marked by every act which may define a tyrant, is unfit to be the ruler of a free people.

Nor have we been wanting in attention to our British brethren. We have warned them from time to time of attempts by their legislature to extend an unwarrantable jurisdiction over us. We have reminded them of the circumstances of our emigration and settlement here. We have appealed to their native justice and magnanimity, and we have conjured them by the ties of our common kindred to disavow these usurpations, which, would inevitably interrupt our connections and correspondence. We must, therefore, acquiesce in the necessity, which denounces our separation, and hold them, as we hold the rest of mankind, enemies in war, in peace friends.

We, therefore, the representatives of the United States of America, in General Congress, assembled, appealing to the Supreme Judge of the world for the rectitude of our intentions, do, in the name, and by the authority of the good people of these colonies, solemnly publish and declare, that these united colonies are, and of right ought to be free and independent states; that they are absolved from all allegiance to the British Crown, and that all political connection between them and the state of Great Britain, is and ought to be totally dissolved; and that as free and independent states, they have full power to levy war, conclude peace, contract alliances, establish commerce, and to do all other acts and things which independent states may of right do. And for the support of this declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of Divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our lives, our fortunes and our sacred honor.

New Hampshire: Josiah Bartlett, William Whipple, Matthew Thornton

Massachusetts: John Hancock, Samual Adams, John Adams, Robert Treat Paine, Elbridge Gerry

Rhode Island: Stephen Hopkins, William Ellery

Connecticut: Roger Sherman, Samuel Huntington, William Williams, Oliver Wolcott

New York: William Floyd, Philip Livingston, Francis Lewis, Lewis Morris

New Jersey: Richard Stockton, John Witherspoon, Francis Hopkinson, John Hart, Abraham Clark

Pennsylvania: Robert Morris, Benjamin Rush, Benjamin Franklin, John Morton, George Clymer, James Smith, George Taylor, James Wilson, George Ross

Delaware: Caesar Rodney, George Read, Thomas McKean

Maryland: Samuel Chase, William Paca, Thomas Stone, Charles Carroll of Carrollton

Virginia: George Wythe, Richard Henry Lee, Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Harrison, Thomas Nelson, Jr., Francis Lightfoot Lee, Carter Braxton

North Carolina: William Hooper, Joseph Hewes, John Penn

South Carolina: Edward Rutledge, Thomas Heyward, Jr., Thomas Lynch, Jr., Arthur Middleton

Georgia: Button Gwinnett, Lyman Hall, George Walton.

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>Rules target school dollars

>By GREGORY J. VOLPE
Gannett State Bureau

TRENTON — School districts shall not award administrators bonuses without measurable objectives. Or use glossy colored mailers when cheaper printing options are available. They can give superintendents use of a taxpayer-funded car — but not a luxury model.

Those are examples of how New Jersey thinks its 615 school districts need to operate most efficiently for taxpayers. Proposed months ago, they’re no longer suggestions; now they’re mandatory rules for school districts.

Some in education think the state has gone beyond helpful suggestions and is imposing its will over local districts’ rights to govern themselves.

“We’ve also objected to what we saw as a punitive tone,” said Frank Belluscio, a spokesman for the New Jersey School Boards Association, referring to several clauses that say state aid may be withheld from a district that doesn’t follow the regulations and wastes money.

“It’s not meant to be a threat. It’s meant to be ‘We’re going to do that,'” Education Commissioner Lucille Davy said. “It’s intended to spell out clearly what we believe is and isn’t efficient.”

Lawmakers, who ordered the Department of Education to draft these regulations as part of several funding and accountability measures passed in recent years, say taxpayers demand accountability, especially in education — the largest portion of the state’s budget and only major segment not touched by Gov. Jon S. Corzine’s budget ax this year.

“It absolutely is Trenton imposing the will of the people that school districts have to have some cost containment,” said Assembly Education Committee Chairman Joseph Cryan, D-Union. “Not only do we talk in regulations, we talk in dollars by putting in this $600 million extra in school aid.”

The regulations range from broad, such as reviews the newly created executive county superintendents must do over districts’ budgets and other expenditures, to the narrow, such as limiting the number of janitors a school can hire to one per 17,500 square feet of building space.

The New Jersey Education Association is concerned some of the restrictions on travel, including meal expenses, may hinder teachers’ ability to learn at multi-day conventions or seminars. “It’s going to have a chilling effect on people to pursue their ability of professional development,” NJEA spokesman Steve Baker said.

He also said some regulations may override provisions that were negotiated at the bargaining table.

Some were struck by the level of minutiae to which state officials have delved.

“There does appear to be elements of micromanaging,” Belluscio said. “There’s a need for fiscal accountability, and guidance is appreciated, but there’s an unusual degree of specificity.”

That speaks to dissatisfaction taxpayers have with the way their districts operate, Senate Education Committee chairwoman Shirley Turner, D-Mercer, said.

“They desperately want accountability, and they are not satisfied that their voices are being heard at the local level, and they’re not satisfied with the accountability on the local level,” Turner said. “Particularly as it relates to so many of these extravagant expenses that we’ve read about in the newspapers.”

The regulations don’t assume that a well-backed proposal to move school board elections from April to November to boost voter participation will become law. One sticking point for some in that measure — which was approved by the Assembly but not taken up in the Senate — is that it would take away the public’s vote on school tax levies in districts that stay within taxing and spending caps.

Proponents say little is cut from defeated budgets. Back in April, voters rejected levies in 143 districts that proposed raising a collective $2.91 billion from local property taxpayers. Ultimately, those levies were trimmed by $33 million, or 1.1 percent. One district trimmed $50. Twenty-seven others, including Vineland, cut nothing.

Turner, the Senate sponsor of the proposal to move school elections, said she intends to push the legislation this fall.

“That would be incentive to keep them within the cap. … If we had everything in November, that’s eliminating an election which costs taxpayer dollars,” Turner said.

More regulations are expected from the Department of Education once Corzine signs a bill expanding the education commissioner’s ability to enact rules on an emergency basis. These will expand upon what was approved last week, as well as touch on transportation, special education and consolidation.

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Trying Everything Against Geese

>By MARY JO PATTERSON

FRANK DeBLASIO lifted his gaze from the turtle his young son had just plucked from the edge of Clark’s Pond in Bloomfield to the Canada geese floating on the water’s surface. Then he gestured toward the weird terrain underfoot: denuded earth, scattered with goose feces and feathers.

“It’s nice when there are a few geese, but this whole place is disgusting,” said Mr. DeBlasio, 52, an amateur nature photographer and frequent visitor to the pond, situated behind a middle school and playing fields. “The other day I counted 70.”

When you live in the New York metropolitan area, it’s easy to believe that there are too many geese, or that they hang out in the wrong places. Since the 1980s, geese have made such a spectacular comeback here that goose-control companies have become nearly as numerous as yoga studios. Two decades of eradication efforts by towns, golf courses, airports, public water authorities and others have succeeded in ridding specific sites of the birds. But wildlife biologists say the killings and relocations have barely made a dent, and “human-goose conflicts” still blanket the region.

In a few cases, they turn fatal. For the goose.

Last month a Princeton orthopedist with a summer home at the Jersey Shore was arrested on animal cruelty charges after the police said he killed a gosling with a rake. The orthopedist, Dr. Michael P. Coyle, 62, told the police in Mantoloking that he intended only to disperse the geese and used the rake in self-defense after being attacked by an adult goose.

This spring also produced reports of a goose in Stamford, Conn., walking around with an arrow through its body; of a former state senator accused of killing goslings in his barbecue grill in Jackson, Miss.; and of a golfer who charged a goose with his golf cart in Omaha, Neb.

Yet hundreds of people are using more peaceable means to combat geese, coating their eggs with corn oil to prevent embryos from developing. The strategy, aggressively promoted by a Virginia-based nonprofit group called GeesePeace, has become popular. For example, officials and volunteers this spring reported the oiling of more than 200 eggs in Greenwich, Conn.; 94 in parks in Morris County; and 85 in Ridgewood.

In Huntington, on the North Shore of Long Island, officials have also decided egg oiling is the way to go. The town has counterattacked with border collies, noisemakers, fake wolves and a hawk kite flown five feet above a golf cart, but geese remain a nuisance.

“Next year, we’ll try to oil eggs,” said Donald McKay, director of the Huntington Parks and Recreation Department.

Many people admire Canada geese. They are intelligent, tough-minded, monogamous, family-oriented and not easily fooled. The downside is their droppings — a pound or more a day, per bird.

“They are just machines at passing grass through their systems,” said Bryan L. Swift, waterfowl specialist with the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation. The state has about a quarter-million resident geese, with the highest densities in the lower Hudson Valley and on Long Island. Though their waste is not considered a public health threat, “one hundred geese depositing fecal matter on lawns and sidewalks is an aesthetic nightmare,” he said.

Mr. Swift once studied a goose program in Rockland County to determine where the resident geese went after being chased by dogs. The answer was athletic fields within a couple of miles’ flight.

“When geese are pushed out of one community with a good budget for goose control, they might end up in a community that can’t bear the brunt of the cost,” he said.

Keeping geese on the move is expensive. It costs Larchmont $700 a week year-round, according to Mayor Elizabeth N. Feld.

The birds’ overabundance is not their fault. Migratory Canada geese nest in subarctic Canada and fly south each October, but resident geese have not gone anywhere in years. They are descendants of Canada geese whose wings were clipped in the early 1900s by hunters using them as decoys, and of geese farmed by state wildlife agencies that stocked rural areas with them during the 1950s. Since then the region has suburbanized and developed perfect geese habitat: open stretches of fertilized and manicured grass, near water.

“We have beautiful lawns, and we keep cutting them; every time we do, it’s like a new spring salad for them,” said Denise Savageau, director of the Conservation Commission in Greenwich, Conn.

Like hundreds of other bird species, Canada geese are protected by the Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1916. But in 2006, citing booming numbers of geese and widespread damage to property and natural resources, the United States Fish and Wildlife Service eased the rules. It also allowed states to extend goose hunting seasons. Permits for egg oiling, once a complicated business, can now be obtained online.

Few towns kill live geese, and fewer still admit it. In 2006, only 7,700 of the 1.3 million Canada geese residing within the Atlantic Flyway, from Maine to Florida, were killed, according to the United States Department of Agriculture.

In Bloomfield, Steve Jenkins, athletic director for the schools, deplores the mess by Clark’s Pond. “I have no moral compunction with someone killing them,” he said. “It’s equivalent in our opinion to rats scurrying around on the field.” But others are unlikely to agree with him, Mr. Jenkins said.

One of the few jurisdictions that owned up to killing geese is the Union County Department of Parks and Community Renewal. The county originally had geese quietly gassed, but officials faced protests after The Star-Ledger in Newark reported the fact in 2003.

This year the county will use a contractor who captures the birds and transports them live to a poultry processor supplying a food bank, said Daniel J. Bernier, director of the Division of Park Planning and Maintenance. July is the time for roundups; the geese molt and lose their flying feathers, making them easy targets.

David Feld, the founder of GeesePeace, started wondering what to do about geese while president of his homeowners association in Lake Barcroft, Va. A dispute over the neighborhood’s goose problem was tearing the association apart: Some homeowners wanted the geese killed; others did not.

Mr. Feld, an engineer, developed a multistep “recipe” for eliminating nuisance geese through egg oiling, followed by various measures to keep them at bay. Oiling is considered humane because it is applied only to eggs in early stages of development. The method keeps air from passing through the shell, preventing the embryo from developing.

“The geese aren’t here by choice; they’re trapped,” Mr. Feld said. “We help them break the cycle so they can leave.” Adults without goslings will fly to Canada to molt and not return until early fall. “What you’ve done is freed the spring and summer and part of the fall of goose issues,” he said.

GeesePeace trains volunteers, who treat eggs in receptive communities.

One volunteer is Jim Borghoff, 46, of Ridgewood. Mr. Borghoff, a jogger, his wife, Doreen, and their two children had all encountered goose waste in Ridgewood’s parks. Last year he trained as a GeesePeace volunteer and braved brush, thorns and poison ivy to search for nests along the Saddle River.

“Finding the nests was surprisingly easy,” he said. “The next part was kind of terrifying. Some of the geese are more aggressive than others and harder to get off the nests. You walk very slowly at them with an open umbrella. They hiss and flap their wings, but ultimately they hop off.”

This April Mr. Borghoff went on the hunt again, detailing his activities in a lively blog (nopoop07450.blogspot.com). He also began working on a plan, which would include a volunteer dog patrol, for dispersing geese on school property.

Sometimes, all it takes to win the goose war is a fresh approach.

In 1998 Jim Strauch was a stay-at-home dad with an infant daughter in Allendale. He enjoyed taking the baby to the borough park, which has a lake, but found himself stepping over mounds of goose droppings. Overhead, a loudspeaker blared bird calls from known goose predators.

“It was funny for the first few minutes, but then it became a form of torture,” he said. It was also ineffective.

Mr. Strauch, 48, sought permission to have his dog, a female shepherd-greyhound mix, try herding the geese away. She succeeded. Soon other residents volunteered their dogs, and the Allendale Volunteer Goose Patrol was born. Today it has nearly 20 volunteers, including Mr. Strauch, now a councilman. His original dog is no longer alive, but two new dogs succeeded her.

Other times, people are just lucky in the fight against geese. Or blessed.

In 2006, the Queen of the Rosary convent in Amityville had a terrible goose problem. Their droppings ruined the fish pond, devastated the vegetable garden and slimed the walkways. The convent carpenter made 16 plywood wolf cutouts and set them out on the grounds. The geese took off at first sight and never returned, Sister Margaret Briody said.

“We have been blessed with having them leave without our having to hurt them in any way,” she said recently. “The fellows fixed them on a spring, so they bounce a little and turn in the wind. They also move them around periodically.”

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>Ridgewood 4th of July Parade

>ridgewood+4th+parade+214


The Ridgewood blog would like to thank all the volunteers and participants that made this years 4th of July parade a big success. The parade staff handled the few late shows and a call on the midland park fire department with ease . Even the odd weather could not keep the the crowds away. Great job everyone!!!

lots of pictures are coming !!!!

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>Music teacher traveling to China

>Julie Bill will play saxophone on top of The Great Wall

Julie Bill has been teaching music at Goodman Middle School in Gig Harbor for 24 years, but now it’s her turn to be the performer.

Bill will travel to China this month to play her saxophone with a New Jersey concert band.

“I just thought that this is an opportunity of a lifetime,” Bill said. “I’m just really interested to see what the (Chinese) culture is like.”

Bill traveled to southern France last summer with the Tacoma Concert Band. This year she will make the trip across the world with the Ridgewood Concert Band from New Jersey.

“There are people from all over the country who are going,” Bill said. “I’ve met a lot of people. It reaffirms for me why I’m a music teacher.”

Bill will leave Sunday and return July 20. She will be back right before the 2008 Olympic Games begin.

In China, the entire trip will be led by tour guides. Bill will see sites such as the Terracotta Warriors, the Great Wall of China, and the rural country side, where farmers will make the band breakfast and dinner.

“They’re actually going to teach us how to make traditional Chinese food,” Bill said.

The New Jersey band will be performing in major cities, like Shanghai and Beijing. They will also perform on top of The Great Wall.

“We have like one or two rehearsals in China, and then we play,” Bill said. “I just got the band music, and I need to practice before I go.”

Aside from learning about the culture and playing music, Bill said she is also excited to see different parts of China.

“I hear that the Shanghai skyline is supposed to be better than New York City. I also heard the shopping was to die for,” Bill said. “One of the most stunning things is the shear number of people there.”

Bill’s daughter, Lydia Bill, was studying China in a one of her classes while her mother was planning her trip. Lydia helped research places where Bill would be performing.

“We looked on the Internet together,” Bill said. “(Lydia) is excited that we’re going to see the Terracotta Warriors.”

Bill’s departure date is approaching, but she still has more hoops through which to jump.

“What is pretty interesting is that they’re pretty strict about visas,” Bill said.

Bill just received shots and she already had to produce a letter from the principal of Goodman Middle School as well as a bank statement, among other things.

The trip has been in the works since February. She said she is excited for the change in pace, from teaching to playing her saxophone.

“I didn’t play very much for a really long time, and I’ve just recently been really excited about playing my instrument,” Bill said. “Hopefully, my students will grow up and have the same kind of experiences.”

Reach intern Ashley Coats at 253-853-9224 or by e-mail at [email protected].

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>VC REORGANIZATION MEETING

>VILLAGE OF RIDGEWOOD

VILLAGE COUNCIL

REORGANIZATION MEETING

JULY 1, 2008

12:00 NOON

VILLAGE HALL COURT ROOM

1. Call to Order – Mayor

2. Statement of Compliance with the Open Public Meetings Act

3. Roll Call of Current Village Council – Village Clerk

4. Flag Salute

5. Musical Presentation

Name of Performer: Barbara Carlton, harpist

Musical Selections: “In the Good Old Summertime”, music by George Evans and lyrics by Ren Shields; “Try to Remember”, music by Harvey Schmidt and lyrics by Tom Jones; “God Bless America”, music and lyrics by Irving Berlin

6. Invocation – Reverend Thomas Johnson – Mount Bethel Baptist Church

7. Comments from the Public

8. Approval of Minutes

9. Resolution

08-148 Approve Annual Renewal of Liquor License – Ridgewood Lodge No. 1455 BPOE

10. Remarks by Councilman Jacques Harlow (as he leave the dais)

11. Remarks by Deputy Mayor Betty Wiest (as she leaves the dais)

12. Reading of Certificate of Election of Paul S. Aronsohn – Village Clerk

13. Oath of Office Administered to Paul S. Aronsohn by Jesse D. Stovin, Esq.

14. Remarks by Councilman Aronsohn

15. Reading of Certificate of Election of Keith D. Killion – Village Clerk

16. Oath of Office Administered to Keith D. Killion by Village Clerk Heather A. Mailander

17. Remarks by Councilman Killion

18. Reading of Certificate of Election of Anne Zusy – Village Clerk

19. Oath of Office Administered to Anne Zusy by Michael Rosen, Esq.

20. Remarks by Councilwoman Zusy

21. Roll Call of New Village Council – Village Clerk

22. Call for Nomination for Office of Mayor by Village Clerk

23. Administering of Oath of Office to Mayor – Gina Pfund, Senior Assistant Prosecutor, Passaic County Prosecutor’s Office

24. Call for Nomination for Office of Deputy Mayor by Mayor

25. Administering of Oath of Office to Deputy Mayor – Village Clerk Heather A. Mailander

26. Remarks by Deputy Mayor

27. Remarks by Mayor

28. RESOLUTIONS

08-149 Appoint Village Attorney

08-150 Appoint Village Labor Attorney

08-151 Appoint Village Bond Attorney

08-152 Appoint Village Prosecutor and Assistant Prosecutor

08-153 Appoint Public Defender

08-154 Appoint Municipal Court Judge

08-155 Appoint Members to Planning Board

08-156 Appoint Members to Zoning Board of Adjustment

08-157 Appoint Community Development Representative

08-158 Appoint Ridgewood Community Center Advisory Board Members

08-159 Appoint Village Councilmembers as Liaisons to Various Boards and Committees

29. Adjournment

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>Man About Town

>Farmer’s Market at the Train Station
Jersey Fresh – Opens June 29th
Sundays, from June 29 to October 26, 2008, 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Ridgewood Train Station Parking Lot – A wide variety of fresh-for-your-table-produce, baked goods and speciality foods will be available at the out door market. Additional seasonal products are mozzarella, homemade james, flowers and huge selection of pickles and olives will be available. For more information call the Chamber at (201) 445-2600

Lou Gallo Imagination Workshop Band
Childrens Program
Enjoy Lou Gallo from the Imagination Workshop Band at the Kasschau Shell at 8:30pm on Tuesday, July 1. Bring a chair or blanket and enjoy this free concert under the stars! SPONSORS: Glenn Godart,DMD Warren Boardman,DMD Michael & Nicole Clemente, DMD & Village of Ridgewood. Rain info at 7pm 201/444-1776

Island Breeze, Calypso, Raggae, Latin Jazz
Kasschau Shell
Thursday, July 3 at 8:30pm bring your chairs or blanket and enjoy this free concert under the stars on Veteran’s Field! Sponsored by Citizen’s Community Bank

Ridgewood Concert Band
Concert before the Fireworks!
Ridgewood Concert Band will play patriotic music at the Kasschau Shell on Veteran’s Field on the Fourth of July starting at 6:30PM. Come here your favorites – Stars and Strips Forever, 76 Trombones, etc.

Independence Day – July 4th
Support our All Volunteer Celebration!
Schedule: 9AM Flag Raising 10AM Parade (rain or shine) 6:30PM Entertainment on Vet’s Field – ($5 in advance/$10 at the gate) Mayor’s Welcome; Music; Sky divers; Hot dogs/hamburgers/ice cream for sale. Fireworks at Dusk. Go to www.ridgewoodjuly4th.org further details. Or call 201/602-1922

Squeaky Clean, Vintage Rock n’ Roll
Kasschau Shell on Vets Field
Tuesday, July 8 at 8:30PM, bring your chair or blanket to enjoy this free concert under the stars! APONSORS: Hudson City Savings Bank; Kings Supermarket. After 7pm rain info available at 201/444-1776

Tony Dungy
Special Children’s Event!
Wednesday, July 9th – 6:00pm
Former NFL Player and Super Bowl Winning Coach with the Indianapolis Colts, Tony Dungy will sign his first Children’s Book (ages 4-7) titled: You Can Do It! Please welcome back Coach Dungy to Bookends… his Bestselling Book last Year was Quiet Strength and the Event was a sellout! Bring the kids!

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>Now here’s the rub.

>It is great to hear that “math was never a problem” wit your kids (sic).

My children never had a problem either, except for the fact that it was too easy.

So, one ended up accelerated and the other double accelerated in middle school.

Now here’s the rub. My double accelerated student is taking an algebra class over the summer to catch up to where he is supposed to be for high school algebra 2 in the fall.

You ask, how can that be, he was double accelerated and had algebra in 7th grade already. Why is he being tutored when he got an A for the class and just received an A for 8th grade Geometry?

Fortunately, his 8th grade geometry teacher recognized that his accelerated students lacked the adequate level of proficiency in algebra to go on to algebra 2 in high school. So, he took it upon himself to tutor them over the summer.

How did this happen? Didn’t these children have Ms. Debra Ives, former head of the math curriculum in Ridgewood, as their algebra teacher in 7th grade?

Why yes, they did. And Ms. Ives is no longer employed by the district. Her tenure was very brief, just over a year in Ridgewood.

This just proves that our administrators are very weak in teaching skills and judging curriculum.

Ms. Ives did not leave because of displeasure at Cottage Place. No, she left because she had alienated parents and principals alike. In fact, she was a product of the Montclair State Education cabal that rules our district and was hired by Regina Botsford.

So, my dear Miss 12:11pm, I am not “just the perpetually angry at Board of Ed” person. I am a real parent with real life experiences with the math education curriculum in this district. And you my dear may flack all you like for the BOE and their administrators but it doesn’t change the fact that things are out of whack here in Ridgewood’s education system. No amount of jaw boning or name calling is going to stop the parents, who know they are right, from demanding excellence and accountability. It is our civic responsibility.

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‘The Record’ of Hackensack to Vacate Main Offices, Head ‘West’

>By Joe Strupp

Published: June 30, 2008 10:50 AM ET

NEW YORK The Record of Hackensack, N.J. is planning to vacate its main headquarters and move staff to the site of its sister daily, The Herald News of West Paterson, according to a staff memo from Publisher Stephen A. Borg. The memo declared: “We must re-invent ourselves.”

The memo stated that the move could save about $2.4 million per year. Borg confirmed the memo and said that most of the news staff would actually become mobile journalists, working from the field, while others would also relocate to one of the paper’s eight weekly newspaper sites.

“The number one objective is more mobile journalism,” Borg, who said the paper has about 30 such “mojos,” who report from laptops and cell phones, told E&P. “And to take advantage of our other offices.”

Borg said the move has not been scheduled, but added, “I wouldn’t want it to occur any later than January ’09. Advertising has already moved. In the last six weeks.”

The memo refers to Record relocating to Garret Mountain Plaza, an office building in West Paterson that houses several operations for parent company North Jersey Media Group, including the Herald News. Borg said The Record would occupy some of that leased space. “We are working on the logistics,” he said. “But reporters I want out in the field, the vast majority of them.”

The memo, distributed last week, states: “We are in the midst of great change. Classified advertising revenues are falling fast. Some of it is due to the economy. But much of it is secular. Ads won’t return to the print newspapers even when the economy gets better.”

Later, the memo reveals, “Vacating Hackensack will save the company $2.4 million a year. This number is for electricity, cleaning crews, and other items that will go away upon vacancy. When we actually sell the land, additional money will be saved like, but not limited to, property taxes.

“So, we will be vacating Hackensack as soon as logistically possible. Some of Record editorial will be moving to Garret Mountain, but I really view this change as ‘moving out to the field.’ The move is not from one big office to another. The move is from one big office to the field. It is not that The Record has left Hackensack; we are now all over the market. (I am planning a marketing campaign to promote this. I envision the “MOJOS” like a swarm of bees landing in different towns.)”

Borg’s memo then goes on to describe the ongoing shift to mobile journalists, who can work full-time out of the office: “We have and will continue to have more mobile journalists. They will share desks as they are rarely in the office. The office/work concept is called ‘hoteling’. Employees actually reserve desk time to cut down on the number of desks and square footage needed.”

The full memo is posted below:

********************************

We are in the midst of great change. Classified advertising revenues are falling fast. Some of it is due to the economy. But much of it is
secular. Ads won’t return to the print newspapers even when the economy gets better.

Getting this revenue back on the web dollar for dollar won’t happen. We are competing against non-news site for eyeballs, hence, ad dollars. Our competition is not merely other newspaper sites. Even for the ads we get, the web rates are much lower than those of print ads.

We must reinvent ourselves.

One such way is to lower our overhead costs. These are expenses that don’t directly affect our products. Reporters directly affect the product; our building does not.

Vacating Hackensack will save the company $2.4 million a year. This number is for electricity, cleaning crews, and other items that will go away upon
vacancy. When we actually sell the land, additional money will be saved like, but not limited to, property taxes.

So, we will be vacating Hackensack as soon as logistically possible. Some of Record editorial will be moving to Garret Mountain, but I really view this change as “moving out to the field”. The move is not from one big office to another. The move is from one big office to the field. It is not that The Record has left Hackensack; we are now all over the market. (I am planning a marketing campaign to promote this. I envision the “MOJOS” like a swarm of bees landing in different towns.)

We have and will continue to have more mobile journalists. They will share desks as they are rarely in the office. The office/work concept is called “hoteling”. Employees actually reserve desk time to cut down on the number of desks and square footage needed.

Bob Klapisch and Ian O’Connor Æ and there may be others Æ don’t even have desks here so this effort need not be limited to “MOJOS”. We seek more and more of this. If you are interested in this idea even if you are not a “MOJO”, please let Doug Clancy know.

Second, we are going to look at shift work closely. If two people do not overlap, they might be able to share a desk. We have executives who share offices in Garret Mountain.

Third, we plan on using our community newspaper remote offices for any NJMG purpose. We have started this, but we will do more. We have offices in the following locations:

Ridgewood, Westwood, Cresskill, Rutherford, Clifton, Rockaway, Kinnelon, and Fair Lawn.

Also, we have offices out of The Record’s circulation area Æ Millburn, Montclair and Nutley but they may be near your home.

We are analyzing the capacity of these locations right now.

If you are interested in working in one of these offices (including the Essex locations), please let Doug Clancy know.

Finally, see [Assistant Managing Editor] Doug Clancy if you are interested in working from home, even just for some of the days of your schedule (he will need the specifics).

As for the timing, there are too many open items for me to give you a precise date. There are too many items still outstanding. I don’t want it
to be past January, 09.

I encourage you to talk to people in Advertising. Overall, they have seen the move to GMP as a positive change. The builder is newer. There is more natural light. Views are nice. The furniture is newer.

While we face many challenges, innovative ideas will lead us through it. Let’s abandon the traditional work/office environment model and innovate.

Thx.

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Joe Strupp ([email protected]) is a senior editor at E&P.