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>9/11 Exhibit at Ridgewood Library offers residents a place to reflect

>9/11 Exhibit at Ridgewood Library offers residents a place to reflect

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2011
BY JOSEPH CRAMER
STAFF WRITER
THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS

Just to the right of the bustling lobby at the Ridgewood Public Library is the Belcher Auditorium, but for the month of September it is a quieter and more solemn version of itself. The chairs and stage are still there, but on the back wall hang 12 portraits, the presence of which changes the tone of the room drastically.

The auditorium is once again home to Ridgewood’s “Portraits” exhibit, which commemorates the 12 residents who were killed in the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001. The portraits each consist of a close-up picture of the victims, a picture of the victim with their family and a short anecdote about their life. Coordinated through the village manager’s office, the exhibit has been put up every year since 9/11.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/129509748_Exhibit_at_Ridgewood_Library_offers_residents_a_place_to_reflect.html

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>A healthy efficiency: Hospitals cut costs on their emergency usage

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A healthy efficiency: Hospitals cut costs on their emergency usage

The latest technology at a hospital here has nothing to do with medicine, yet administrators say it will help them deliver better healthcare.

Deborah Heart & Lung Center has completed an almost $2 million upgrade of its heating and cooling systems — a utility-funded project that’s expected to cut the hospital’s power bill by some $200,000 a year.

“That’s real dollars and cents to us,” Deborah executive Joseph Manni said of the savings. “That money now can be used for what’s really important, and that’s patient care.”

Deborah is one of three South Jersey hospital operators to boost energy efficiency through a $79 million program funded by PSE&G, the state’s largest utility. In Camden, Cooper University Hospital is making $3.9 million in improvements. Lourdes Health System earlier this year completed a $1.69 million upgrade at Our Lady of Lourdes Medical Center, Camden, and Lourdes Medical Center of Burlington County in Willingboro.  (Walsh, Gannett)

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Flood Warning

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FLOOD STATEMENT
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE NEW YORK NY
652 AM EDT THU SEP 8 2011

...THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN UPTON NY CONTINUES THE FLOOD WARNING FOR THE
RAMAPO RIVER AT MAHWAH...

HEAVY RAINFALL THROUGH THIS MORNING HAS RESULTED IN FLOODING OF THE RAMAPO RIVER.
MODERATE FLOODING IS OCCURRING AND WILL CONTINUE TO OCCUR. MODERATE TO HEAVY RAIN
WITH RAINFALL AMOUNTS BETWEEN AN INCH TO TWO INCHES ARE POSSIBLE INTO THIS
EVENING...KEEPING THE RIVER LEVEL ELEVATED.

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...
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>Back to School: why would the district need your “Key Pad” number when you buy something in cash?

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Back to School: why would the district need your “Key Pad” number when you buy something in cash?


Here’s my question: why would the district need your “Key Pad” number when you buy something in cash? I can understand POS for retail, even in an educational setting, to track inventory, sales of specific items for planning, etc. It just is weird that you even need an identifying number when it comes to cash purchases.

Am I insane? It reeks of Big Bro, Ridgewood style.

Hello Parents of Ridgewood Middle Schools and High School,

As you may know, we have implemented a Point-of-Sales system in the cafeterias at the Middle Schools and High School.  In order to make the lunch period run quickly and efficiently, we ask that you remind your students that they will require a Key Pad number for purchasing items from the cafeterias, either on account or in cash.  Your students key pad number can be found in Skyward Family or Student Access under Food Service.  If you need assistance, please email [email protected].

Thank you for your patience during this transition period.

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>A Jobless Labor Day

>A Jobless Labor Day
the Heritage Foundation


For 14 million unemployed Americans and their families, this Labor Day will not be a happy one. Instead of enjoying a day off of work, they’re suffering a disturbing trend under the Obama economy: Jobs are not being created, the unemployment rate has not improved, and the economy is at a near standstill. Even worse, the labor market’s stall might be turning into a decline.

And today, in Detroit—which in July had the highest unemployment rate of any metropolitan area in the country—President Obama is due to stand with labor presidents including the AFL-CIO’s Richard Trumka, Teamsters’ James P. Hoffa, and the UAW’s Bob King to tout his bailout of the auto industry and his yet-to-be-disclosed plan to turn the economy around.

The Big Labor backdrop is ironic but not surprising. The union movement has helped lead to the staggering loss of manufacturing jobs in the United States, and the demands it has made on employers and governments help create the very conditions leading to the tragic unemployment in Detroit and across the country. But they are strong political allies of the President—having spent $1.1 billion on politics and lobbying in the last election cycle—and they continue to hold a prominent seat at the table.

It follows, then, that President Obama continues to put the institutional interests of unions ahead of America’s economic well-being. In a new paper, Heritage’s Rea Hederman and James Sherk explain that the latest example comes from the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), which issued several rulings recently undermining employer and employee rights: snap elections, restricting secret ballot elections, and a new rule that allows unions to cherry-pick which workers get to vote on unionizing. All these rules are designed to facilitate organizing companies whose workers are unenthusiastic about unions.

Private-sector workers have a right to unionize, of course. Management gets the union it deserves. But unionization has economic costs, as Sherk and Hederman write:
Unions make businesses less competitive and discourage investment. This reduces job growth. Studies show that jobs fall by 5–10 percent at newly organized firms. Going forward, employment grows by three to four percentage points more slowly at unionized businesses than at otherwise identical non-union companies.

The result can be felt in places like the Motor City as unionized manufacturing employment plummets. Since 2005, GM shed half of its unionized workforce. Nationwide, unionized manufacturing employment fell by 80 percent between 1977 and 2010, while non-union manufacturing employment decreased by 6 percent over that same time period. Unions are feeling the effects, with membership falling by over 600,000 workers in 2010 alone. If workers are happy without a union, the government should not foist one on them.

Sherk explains why unions are on the decline:
Union membership has fallen because traditional collective bargaining does not appeal to most workers. Polls show that only one in 10 non-union workers wants to organize. This makes sense: in the competitive private sector, unions can do little to raise their members’ pay. Additionally, most workers like their jobs and believe they are on the same side as their employers.

Fortunately, Big Labor doesn’t have to be the only game in town. Workers want a say in their workplace, but they’re becoming increasingly aware of unions’ limitations. Private-sector unions have little power to raise their members’ wages, while employers have learned that respecting their employees makes good business sense. That is why large majorities of workers say they are satisfied with their jobs and their bosses.

Unions, though, aren’t going to go down without a fight. That’s why they’re lobbying the Obama Administration to protect their interests. Unfortunately, the President is obliging, whether it’s by changing the rules of the game to make unionization easier, preventing private employers from locating in right-to-work states—as the NLRB is doing with Boeing case in South Carolina—or pushing for more government spending on infrastructure projects that employ primarily union members (while leaving the rest of the economy in the lurch).

Meanwhile, Americans are suffering from the President’s decision to satisfy unions before reducing unemployment, all while there are more signs of a declining labor market than there are of a recovery. There are things Congress and the President can and should do to improve the business climate, such as repealing Obamacare, opening the door to domestic energy production, preventing harmful regulations, passing pending free trade agreements, and reining in the NLRB. Labor Day 2012 can be brighter than today, but Congress and the President must choose the right path to help get us there.

https://blog.heritage.org/2011/09/05/morning-bell-a-jobless-labor-day/

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>A bad year for big labor

>A bad year for big labor
Last Updated: 10:41 PM, September 4, 2011
Posted: 9:46 PM, September 4, 2011

Today America observes Labor Day, as it has every year since 1894.

The holiday was ostensibly meant to pay a tribute to the “strength and esprit de corps of trade and labor organizations” — but the subtext has always been about unions flexing their political muscle.

Atrophied muscle, to be sure — even in New York City, long a “union town,” membership has been in steady decline — but muscle nonetheless.

Such vitality as does persist in the movement resides in public-sector unions — whose relatively generous wages and benefits are funded by tax dollars.

In New York, for example, there is an astounding 57 percentage-point gap between private- and public-sector unionization rates, according to a new report by CUNY researchers. While fewer than 14 percent of private-sector workers in the city are unionized — itself twice the national rate — fully 71 percent of public employees in the city and state are union members.

Still, even the powerful public-sector unions like AFSCME and the various state and national teachers unions are finding their members hard to keep in line.

Consider that membership in the Colorado Association of Public Employees has declined 70 percent since 2001, when that state required public-sector unions to have annual votes reauthorizing dues collection.

Read more: https://www.nypost.com/p/news/opinion/editorials/bad_year_for_big_labor_Xo6BnXu7dsUBOveoZXIedN#ixzz1X4lcSeK5

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>The Orpheus Club Men’s Chorus opens its new season Sept. 7

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orpheusclub the+ridgewood+blog

photo ridgewoodorpheusclub.org


RIDGEWOOD  NJ— The Orpheus Club Men’s Chorus opens its new season Sept. 7 and is looking for men who like to sing.

On October 11, 1909, eight men met at the Ridgewood home of Frank R. Pawley do discuss a men’s singing club. A week later, 10 men gathered in the village library, a room in the First National Bank Building. The group paid 75 cents per night to use the room and began singing together, with Dewitt Clinton, Jr., as director. The Orpheus Club Men’s Chorus was born.

Others joined the club and by December, it was agreed that a concert would be presented in February at the Library, but the actual decision was left to the director, and the first Performance was in May. The opener in that concert was the rousing “Winter Song.”

Club membership quickly rose from the 18 who sang the first concert to 35. The members met weekly on Wednesdays from October to May, and in 1913, the club gave it’s first performance of “Pilgram’s Chorus” frim Wagner’s Tannhäuser.

Variety in repertoire was common in Orpheus Club concerts. A program might include “The Boog-a-Boo,” a ragtime number, “Pld Black Joe,” the Stephen Foster song, comedy numbers like “But They Didn’t,” and classics, sometimes sung in French or German.

Ten years after its founding, the Orpheus Club was making guest appearances around New Jersey, and traveled as far as Brookly to sing at a fundraiser for the rebuilding of the Baptist Temple, which had suffered a fire.

As the years continued , the Orpheus Club Men’s Chorus remained a significant part of New Jersey’s cultural life. When the Kasschau Memorial Band shell was dedicated in Ridgewood, the club sang at the inauguration.

In 1962, Richard Lane signed on as pianist for the club, beginning a distinguished career that would continue for 42 years until his death in 2004. A brilliant composer and teacher, Lane wrote 20 numbers for the Club and today’s concerts always feature at least one of Richard’s compositions.

Today, the Orpheus Club Men’s Chorus includes about 50 singers from New York and New Jersey and generally makes eight to 10 appearances annually including four formal concerts. The Club has sung “Alto Rhapsody” (Brahms) with the Adelphi Chamber Orchestra as well as “The Testament of Freedom” (Thompson) and “Hymn to the Nations” (Verdi) with the Orchestra of St. Peter by the Sea. The men of Orpheus have joined with the Ridgewood Choral to sing “Song of Democracy” (Hanson) and appeared with the Ridgewood Concert Band to sing the music of Aaron Copland and Richard Wagner.

In the Spring of 2005, the Chorus made its Lincoln Center debut, performing at the Lincoln Center Library with the Palisades Virtuosi chamber ensemble. Additional performances in recent years have included concerts at the Kasschau Memorial Band shell in Ridgewood, singing in Ridgewood’s Independence Day parade, area churches, and in November 2009, a presentation of Beethoven’s Fantasia for Piano, Chorus, and Orhcestra, Op. 80 (the Choral Fantasy) with the Ridgewood Choral, the Ridgewood High School Chamber Choir, and the Eastern Christian High School Chorus.

Richard Lane’s composition declares: “We are men who like to sing. We are the men of Orpheus.” For more than 100 years.

The Orpheus Club rehearses on Wednesday evenings at 8 PM in The Georgian Room at The Cupola Senior Residence, West 100 Ridgewood Avenue, Paramus, NJ .

For anyone interested in joining the Club for the Winter 2010 Season, we will begin our spring rehearsal schedule on Wednesday, September 8th. We have openings in all sections.

For more information about the Orpheus Club Men’s Chorus, call Greg Farrell at 201-652-2873, or visit the website at ridgewoodorpheusclub.org.

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PSE&G Hurricane Irene Update: Sep. 1, 2011 at 5:30 a.m.

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PSE&G Hurricane Irene Update: Sep. 1, 2011 at 5:30 a.m.

— Outage update: About 15,000 PSE&G customers remain impacted by Hurricane Irene, down from 33,000 as of last evening
— Estimated restoration: By Friday midnight for remaining customers in Bergen, Hudson, Essex, Passaic, Burlington, Camden, Gloucester and Mercer counties. By Sunday for last remaining customers in central NJ counties of Union, Middlesex and Somerset, where power restoration has been hampered by severe flooding.
 — Worst storm in the company’s history impacted more than one-third of the utility’s 2.2 million electric customers.
— PSE&G has 6,000 employees supporting the restoration effort, including crews from Wisconsin, West Virginia, Florida, Missouri, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Tennessee. The crews are working around the clock.
— Flooding is also affecting gas service in counties such as Somerset and Passaic.
— Next update will be approx. 5:30 a.m. on Sept. 1.
FLOODED BASEMENTS
Flooded basements can pose a genuine safety risk. Customers should be cautious:
If they lose electricity and their basement is flooded, notify PSE&G (1-800-436-PSEG (7734) and call their municipality for direction and assistance in pumping water out of their basements. Stay away from the breaker box if it’s in a flooded basement. And don’t go into a flooded basement if energized wires are present.
If water is rising to the height of any gas appliance, the gas supply to the appliance should be turned off. If customers are unable to do so, they should contact PSE&G or their local police or fire department for assistance. To restore gas service to appliances call PSE&G (1-800-436-7734) and have the appliances checked for safety and restored to proper operation.
Customers should call PSE&G (1-800-436-PSEG (7734) immediately if they smell gas.
GENERATORS
Customers who use portable electric generators should carefully read and follow the manual that came with it. Be sure your generator is UL-approved, installed by a licensed electrician and inspected by your local electrical inspector. There must be a way to physically disconnect your generator from utility lines. Customers who improperly install, operate or maintain a generator are responsible for any injury or damage suffered by themselves, their neighbors or utility workers.
To report a power outage, call PSE&G’s Customer Service line: 1-800-436-PSEG (7734).

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>Why are MVC offices in flood plains?

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Why are MVC offices in flood plains?

Wednesday is the day when this column usually becomes a Q&A forum — often about the Motor Vehicle Commission — but with much of North Jersey still underwater, I’ve got a question of my own about an agency that so many reader love to hate:
Why are so many motor vehicle offices in flood plains?

This question is being asked as the people who entered the Wallington office early Tuesday were being shooed out the door to prevent them from being engulfed in the wet aftermath of Hurricane Irene. MVC offices in flood-prone Lodi, Paterson and Wayne were closed all day.
Why are these offices in Paterson, Lodi and Wayne?

Of all places, why in Wayne on Route 46 near the Willowbrook Mall, the retail capital of chronic New Jersey flooding?  (Cichowski, The Record)

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Congressmen Scott Garrett Tours Oakland, Westwood and Hillsdale to Inspect Flood Damage From Hurricane Irene

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Congressmen Scott Garrett (R) Tours Oakland, Westwood and Hillsdale to Inspect Flood Damage From Hurricane Irene 

WASHINGTON, DC, August 30, 2011 – Rep. Scott Garrett (NJ-05) yesterday toured towns in Bergen County affected by flooding from Hurricane Irene.  Garrett toured flood-damaged areas in Oakland with Mayor John Szabo, Westwood with Mayor John Birkner and Hillsdale with Mayor Max Arnowitz.  He will be touring flood-damaged towns in Warren and Sussex counties today.

ScottGarrett theridgewoodblog

Rep. Scott Garrett tours flood damage in Oakland.

ScottGarret2t theridgewoodblog

Westwood family takes Rep. Garrett on tour of flood-damaged home.

ScottGarrett3 theridgewoodblog

Hillsdale flood victims talk with Rep. Garrett.

“This is some of the worst flooding I’ve ever seen in North Jersey.  Words cannot describe how heartbreaking it is to see so many homes and businesses under water,” said Garrett after touring the flood damage on Monday.  “I will do everything in my power to make sure FEMA helps 5th District residents recover from this disaster.  In the meantime, I encourage everyone to pitch in and lend a hand to neighbors in need.  The best thing we can do right now is stick together as a community.  My thoughts and prayers are with everyone affected by this terrible tragedy.”

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Storm Related Pickups – Random Collection through Sept. 20th 2011

> Storm Related Pickups – Random Collection through Sept. 20th 2011

Yardwaste – Storm Damage

Branches which have fallen as a result of the recent storm can be placed on house side of sidewalk…NOT at curb or street. Please do not block sidewalks or place in the street. We will randomly be going around town to collect storm debris. Do not call for at least 2 weeks for a missed pick up. Collection will be for branches only, not tree stumps.

Water Damage

If you have bulk garbage as a result of flooding, please place at the curb and it will be collected. Wednesday, August 31st is a scheduled bulk pick up for the West side. For the East side just place at the curb and it will be collected. PLEASE only debris as a result of flooding.

Pickup anticipated completed by Sept 20th. All yardwaste must be placed house side of sidewalk. Not on sidewalk or road area.

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>Irene: could have been so much worse had it hit as a category one hurricane!

>Irene: could have been so much worse had it hit as a category one hurricane! 
Mary Ann Copp


The headquarters firehouse property flooded considerably
during Irene, including the area where the proposed cell tower was to
sited. While the tower theoretically could be built on stilts so large
equipment cabinets would not be flooded, one wonders how stable that
arrangement would be. Further, there are no federal standards for wind
speeds cell towers must be constructed to withstand.  A communications
industry committee recommends somewhere around 85 mph, far less
than sustained wind speeds that Irene hit in the south and were
predicted to hit here. That said, cell towers are not appropriate for
virtually all of Ridgewood because of the hazards they pose to the
public and property in this largely residential and very populated area.
Seventeen cell towers fell during the Joplin, MO, tornadoes this
year. Cell towers have fallen even in 55 mph winds. All this risk is
unnecessary because Distributed Antenna Systems, or DAS, provide the
same, if not better, cell coverage through tiny antennas mounted on
telephone poles and connected by fiber optic wires.


Getting back
to our flooded headquarters firehouse–despite the relocation of fire
trucks and other equipment, our firefighters provided outstanding
service in our neighborhood, which was inundated. Firefighters surveyed
our neighborhood for flooded basements–there were a few–by early
afternoon, and by 4 p.m. returned to pump water from basements.  They
did so between providing assistance to neighboring towns. We are
fortunate to have such an outstanding fire department. We were unable to
travel very far from our neighborhood due to roads being closed due to
flooding, but roads were very quickly blocked to prevent motorists from
going into flooded areas or areas where trees and power lines were down.
So village workers were out in full force and helping protect the
public.

My husband did a survey early Sunday morning of the
HoHoKus Brook to determine why so much flood water was coming
down nearby George Street and into our street. He found that water was
backing up behind an old cement bridge, much of which had fallen into
the brook. The bridge used to serve as a driveway from North Maple
Avenue into a house located on the western corner of Burnside Place.
Later, water was observed pooling around the area of this fallen bridge
and moving toward the firehouse, recycling center and water company
properties.  Burnside Place residents told my husband that they have
asked the village to remove the dilapidated bridge many times. Now that
we have learned the hard way that this old bridge and its
debris contributes to flooding of residences and village property, the
village should take immediate action to remove it.   As this constitutes
illegal fill in a floodway, the NJ DEP would agree. Village residents
and village property should not be subject to unnecessary additional
flooding risk, nor should our headquarters firehouse have further
impediments thrown in the way of its vital emergency services.


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>Board of Education Regular Public Meeting

>Board of Education Regular Public Meeting
Date:     8/29/2011 (7:00 PM)
Calendar: Ridgewood Public Schools (Board of Ed Meetings)
Summary: NOTE CHANGE OF TIME

Ed Center, 3rd. Floor
49 Cottage Place
Ridgewood, NJ 07450

RHS Principal Jack Lorenz’s contract will be discussed among other things

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Did United Water inadvertently cause power outage ?

>Did United Water inadvertently cause power outage ?

Rumors continue to fly that a major cause of  the blackout that has hit Washington Twp, Paramus, Oradell, River Edge and several other towns in Bergen County was the release of water from the Oradell reservoir by United Water Resources that in turn inadvertently flooded the  PSE&G New Milford substation .

United Water began lowering the level of the Oradell Reservoir in an attempt to minimize flooding in the New Milford and River Dell areas.

PSE&G after the first denial than is now admitting that if your power is out because of a flooded substation it could take up to 7 days to restore you power .

Contrary to the predictions that PSE&G was prepared for the storm ,the most obvious danger for a hurricane in the North East is flooding .

According to  Kathleen A. Donovan’s Bergen County Executive’s Office, United Water has reported that on Monday, over a foot of water is  expected to spill over the Oradell dam with significant flooding expected to occur south of the dam. The flooding will effect Oradell and River Edge residents.

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Bernie Walsh : Kudos to OEM, EMS, Police and fire for job well done

>Bernie Walsh :  Kudos to OEM, EMS, Police and fire for job well done


“Just walked the east side of brook with councilman Wellinghorst. Met
with neighbors along the way offering assistance if needed. Everyone
seemed to have weathered the storm ok. Some basement and backyard
flooding. Was notified early this morning that water was breaching
village hall.  Excellent preparation minimized damage and disruption.
River is impassable and we told residents we saw to stay out of the
water.

Kudos to OEM, EMS, Police and fire for job well done.”

Bernie Walsh Village Council