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>More people moved out of New Jersey than all but four other states between 2000 to 2008, underscoring broader demographic shifts and, some say, a decline in the state’s attractiveness.

>More people moved out of New Jersey than all but four other states between 2000 to 2008, underscoring broader demographic shifts and, some say, a decline in the state’s attractiveness.

Many in New Jersey taking an exit

Friday, September 17, 2010
By Leslie Kwoh
Star-Ledger staff

https://www.nj.com/gloucester/index.ssf?/base/news-6/128471192669340.xml&coll=8

More people moved out of New Jersey than all but four other states between 2000 to 2008, underscoring broader demographic shifts and, some say, a decline in the state’s attractiveness.

Even with a constant influx of newcomers, the Garden State had a net loss of nearly 304,000 residents throughout the eight-year-period, who took combined annual incomes of $12.3 billion with them to other states, according to figures accessed through a database launched Thursday by the Tax Foundation, a policy research group in Washington, D.C. that advocates for lower taxes.

The data confirms residents are leaving for states like Florida, New York, Pennsylvania and the Carolinas faster than they are being replaced Ð a phenomenon that economists attribute to factors such as climate, high taxes and a lack of job opportunities.

“People are being pulled out, and they’re being pushed out,” said Joseph Seneca, a Rutgers University economics professor who studies migration. “They’re pulled because of retirement and climate reasons. They’re pushed by taxes and costs and Ð through this decade Ð a relative lack of economic opportunities in terms of job growth.”

New Jersey trails only New York, California, Illinois and Michigan for outmigration, according to the database, which tracks domestic movement by tax returns filed with the Internal Revenue Service. The number of residents moving were calculated based on tax exemptions, and incomes were adjusted for inflation.

Because one state’s loss is another’s gain, New Jersey’s outward trickle is troubling, Seneca said. And while departures appear to have waned in the last few years after peaking in the middle of the decade, he said it is most likely a temporary lull brought on by the recession.

Read more:
https://www.nj.com/gloucester/index.ssf?/base/news-6/128471192669340.xml&coll=8

https://mytaxburden.org/migration/

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>The head of security at Ridgewood High School (RHS) was bumped by a car Thursday morning while directing traffic in the high school parking lot

>The head of security at Ridgewood High School (RHS) was bumped by a car Thursday morning while directing traffic in the high school parking lot

The head of security at Ridgewood High School (RHS) was bumped by a car Thursday morning while directing traffic in the high school parking lot, according to RHS Principal Jack Lorenz.

https://privateofficerbreakingnews.blogspot.com/2010/09/nj-school-security-chief-struck-by.html

Carlos Pinto, the chief of security at Ridgewood High School (RHS), did not have serious injuries but was taken to a hospital to be checked, Lorenz said…

The high school sent an email to parents several hours after the 7:30 a.m. incident, urging those who witnessed the incident to contact RHS secretary Lynne David at 201-670-2800, ext. 20531 or the Ridgewood Police Department at 201-652-3900…

full story:
https://privateofficerbreakingnews.blogspot.com/2010/09/nj-school-security-chief-struck-by.html

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>Village Council Elections :Increasing ratables does not lower property taxes, it just spreads the pain around

>Village Council Elections :Increasing ratables does not lower property taxes, it just spreads the pain around

Increasing ratables does not lower property taxes, it just spreads the pain around. To actually lower the required revenues will take cost cutting.

Significant cost cutting must come from the School budget and the Unions. “taking on” the Unions is not the way I would put it, but I think we are both talking about the same thing. Employee costs must come down. I run a small business and I have to deal with a lot of the same issues – health insurance, benefits, compensation. There are reasonable solutions…I for one want to investigate using a Professional Employer Organization.

A PEO is an arrangement where a company’s employees are actually employed by the PEO rather than the company itself. That’s good because when it’s time to go shopping for insurance or benefits the PEO does it on behalf of all of their customer’s employees. My 5 person IT firm gets better insurance rates because the PEO negotiates as a single 50,000 employee group.

The Unions would of course have to agree to it, but it’s been done before. The Village might even be able to offer the Union employees a better deal than the Union does.

Oliver Train
[email protected]

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>Constitution Day, a Time to Reflect

>Constitution Day, a Time to Reflect

Ayn Rand ‎”Today, when a concerted effort is made to obliterate this point, it cannot be repeated too often that the Constitution is a limitation on the government, not on private individuals–that it does not prescribe the conduct of private individuals, only the conduct of the government–that it is not a charter for government power, but a charter of the citizens’ protection against the government.”

Sept. 17 marks the 223rd anniversary of the ratification of the U.S. Constitution. (Sept. 17, 1787).

https://www.usconstitution.net/const.html

https://www.archives.gov/exhibits/charters/constitution_zoom_1.html

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>NJ Assembly probes ‘pay-to-play’ fees at schools

>NJ Assembly probes ‘pay-to-play’ fees at schools

TRENTON — Pay-to-participate was the hot topic before the Assembly Education Committee Thursday, as educators and education advocates appeared before the panel to discuss the effect of activity fees on student programs and busing. (Bradshaw, NJ Press Media)
https://www.dailyrecord.com/article/20100917/COMMUNITIES/100916097/1005/NEWS01/NJ-Assembly-probes–pay-to-participate–student-fees-at-schools

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>Ridgewood Chamber of Commerce asks Village Council to move the tree lighting ceremony back to the train station

>Ridgewood Chamber of Commerce asks Village Council to move the tree lighting ceremony back to the train station

Chamber asks to move tree back to train station
Friday, September 17, 2010
BY MICHAEL SEDON
The Ridgewood News
STAFF WRITER

https://www.northjersey.com/news/103113484_Chamber_asks_to_move_tree_back_to_train_station.html

Members of the Ridgewood Chamber of Commerce have asked the Village Council to move the tree lighting ceremony back to the train station, sparking questions from one council member and prompting the mayor to call for resident input.

Chamber officials said they raised about $7,500 in three hours Wednesday afternoon to finance the expenses associated with cutting down, transporting and putting up a large evergreen tree in the original spot at the train station, where the tree lighting took place up until two years ago. In 2008, the council made the decision to plant a live tree near the back of Van Neste Square Memorial Park and use that for the annual holiday celebration.

“This year marks the 25th anniversary of the Chamber of Commerce tree lighting ceremony,” said Paul Vagianos, a Chamber board of directors member and business owner speaking as the “voice” of the issue. “As you know, for more than two decades the tree had been located at the train station. We think it’s a good idea to bring the tree home.”

The council would have to include the item on the agenda for its next work session on Sept. 22, and Mayor Keith Killion asked anyone interested in voicing their opinion to contact council members.

“If anybody is listening, please e-mail us … what you feel, because we need the input,” Killion said. “I don’t know any other way of doing it other than sending an e-mail to all of us at the village website so we can get the public reaction.”

The village website, which lists e-mail addresses for council members, is ridgewoodnj.net.

more:
http://www.northjersey.com/news/103113484_Chamber_asks_to_move_tree_back_to_train_station.html

Keith D. Killion [email protected]
Thomas M. Riche [email protected]
Paul Aronsohn [email protected]
Bernadette Walsh [email protected]

Contact Information:
Phone: (201) 670-5510
Fax: (201) 652-7623

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>Village Council Elections : Like it or not, in our Village the school and budgets are separate from the Municipal one.

>Like it or not, in our Village the school and budgets are separate from the Municipal one. Different groups of people work out each of them (in theory anyway). The only check-and-balance in the process is after the voters disapprove.

The school budget is clearly the target if we want to get the total tax bill down. One of the things that frustrated me the most this year was a coffee I attended with the BOE members. I really did not get the feeling that they were as interested as the spectators were in taking on the Union and being aggressive in there approach to cost savings. According to the people who spoke, they have already outsourced what can be outsourced, cut operational costs where they can, etc, etc. So the next cuts really will have to be in places that were not done before. Dr. Fishbein actually said that voting down the budget would not send a message to anyone. I wonder what the message will be next year when there is again no State aid, and again a 4.5% raise for the teachers.

 
I really think it is a unique point in time in New Jersey and municipalities who step up and push back on the Unions will get support from the State and be able to get somewhere. One Superintendent will be first – why not ours? I am a big believer in merit pay, tenure only for people that deserve it, and benefits reform. It has to happen or nobody will be able to afford living here.

As for the open space issues, I think I am going to drift away from the crowd on this one. I don’t think they should be sold. Open space is a finite thing. Once it’s gone you never get it back. Maybe we don’t have a good use for those properties now but we will in the future, it would be a shame to see them cut up into townhouses. That being said…we should find SOMETHING to do with them.

Oliver Train
[email protected]

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>NJ government workers rush to retirement

>NJ government workers rush to retirement

With Governor Chris Christie proposing dramatic reforms for the public pension system, far more New Jersey government workers are filing retirement papers. (Gregory, WHYY)
https://whyy.org/cms/news/government-politics/2010/09/15/nj-government-workers-rush-to-retirement/45766

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>State Government: A Crisis in Management

>State Government: A Crisis in Management

Since his first day in office, Governor Christie has repeatedly attacked the compensation of public sector employees. Like a well trained sniper, Governor Christie has successfully picked off individuals with “egregious” and “bloated” salaries. Through these actions, Governor Christie has drawn a line in the sand relative to public employee compensation……nobody in state government should earn more than its Chief Executive Officer. (Lisa Ginther, guest columnist, PolitckerNJ)
https://www.politickernj.com/state-government-crisis-management

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>A Cupcake to fight Childhood Cancer

>

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A Cupcake to fight Childhood Cancer

September is Childhood Cancer Awareness Month and Go4theGoal wants to help in the fight! Before the age of 20, one in every 330 Americans develop cancer and every school day 46 young people are diagnosed, hoping to become a survivor. Today, because of collaborative research, 78% of childhood cancer patients overall will survive. Yet, there is still more work to be done to improve the cure rates for all pediatric cancer types and to pioneer new treatments with fewer long-term side effects.

Go 4 the Goal,(https://go4thegoal.org/ ) is a foundation that’s teaming up with local businesses to spread awareness and raise money for cancer research in honor of September’s National Pediatric Cancer Awareness Month.

Cupcakes by Carousel,(https://cupcakesbycarousel.com/ ) of Ridgewood, NJ is one of the local businesses partnering with Go4theGoal to raise money to find a cure. For the month of September, they will be donating 100% of all the profits of the cupcakes designed by Blake and Mikey, two Bergen County children currently fighting cancer. We’d love to spread the word by having more people stop by Cupcakes by Carousel (192 East Ridgewood Avenue, Ridgewood, NJ— next to the movie theater) on Sunday, September 18th and 19th from 11am to 3pm—plus ALL SEPTEMBER LONG! Both kids will also be outside the shop selling their tasty creations at the Ridgewood Street Fair.

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>Scott Rasmussen and Douglas Schoen: One nation under revolt

>Scott Rasmussen and Douglas Schoen: One nation under revolt
By: Scott Rasmussen and Douglas Schoen
Op-Ed Contributors
September 14, 2010

Pollster Scott Rasmussen and political consultant Douglas Schoen argue in their book released Tuesday that the Tea Party movement will elect senators, representatives, governors, and maybe even someday a president.
First of a three-part series, excerpted from “Mad as Hell: How the Tea Party Movement is Fundamentally Remaking Our Two-Party System”

The Tea Party movement has become one of the most powerful and extraordinary movements in recent American political history.

It is as popular as both the Democratic and Republican parties. It is potentially strong enough to elect senators, governors and congressmen. It may even be strong enough to elect the next president of the United States — time will tell.

But the Tea Party movement has been one of the most derided and minimized and, frankly, most disrespected movements in American history. Yet, despite being systematically ignored, belittled, marginalized, and ostracized by political, academic, and media elites, the Tea Party movement has grown stronger and stronger.

The extraordinary turnout on April 15, 2010, at rallies across the country speaks volumes to the strength, power, and influence of the Tea Party movement, with more than 750 protests held across the country, demonstrating a level of activism and enthusiasm that is both unprecedented and arguably unique in recent American political history.

Survey data collected at about this time bears out the same point. In mid-April 2010, a Rasmussen Reports survey in which nearly one quarter (24 percent) of the electorate self-identified as being members in the Tea Party movement — up from 16 percent a month earlier.

And a mid-April 2010 CNN/Opinion Research Corp. survey showed that 10 percent of Americans say they have actively supported the Tea Party movement: Gone to a rally, contributed money, or taken specific steps to support the movement.

Even a New York Times/CBS News poll showed that close to one in five Americans call themselves supporters of the Tea Party movement.

Read more at the Washington Examiner: https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/columns/One-nation-under-revolt-859047-102901454.html#ixzz0zglFUDl1

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>Annual Fall Luncheon of the League of Women Voters Presents State Senator Loretta Weinberg ; "Transparency in Government"

>Annual Fall Luncheon of the League of Women Voters Presents State Senator Loretta Weinberg ; “Transparency in Government”

“Transparency in Government” is the subject of a talk by State Senator Loretta Weinberg at the Annual Fall Luncheon of the League of Women Voters of Ridgewood. All Bergen County residents are urged to attend.

Senator Weinberg has been instrumental in reducing the costs of copies under the Open Public Records Act, and is cosponsor of the modernization of the Open Public Meetings Act. It is vital that every citizen know what leads to decisions made by their elected and appointed officials. With the advent of tweeting, texting, we must know that all the requirements of public transparency are met. It has been 20 years since this law was renewed.

When: Wednesday, Sept. 29, 12 noon-3PM
Where: Old Paramus Reformed Church, E. Glen Ave., Ridgewood
Cost: $25 for an excellent lunch

Please send reservations to: League of Women Voters of Ridgewood, PO Box 79, Ridgewood 07451

Please reserve by Sept. 20.

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>Bergen County Executive Race : McNerney said that, despite the indictment, it is inappropriate to describe the BCIA as “scandal-plagued.”

>Bergen County Executive Race : McNerney said that, despite the indictment, it is inappropriate to describe the BCIA as “scandal-plagued.”

Bergen County Exec McNerney defends finance agency at senior picnic
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Last updated: Tuesday September 14, 2010, 6:39 PM
BY MICHAEL GARTLAND
The Record
STAFF WRITER

Senior citizens gathered Tuesday for food and politics at the annual Bergen County Senior Picnic in Paramus, where the county’s funding agency was the hottest topic not on a grill.

About 2,500 seniors attended the event at Van Saun County Park, chowing down on sandwiches, cookies and political rhetoric, not to mention the various pens, stickers and other campaign items distributed by candidates and their aides.

Bergen County Executive Dennis McNerney gave a heated response when asked about the Bergen County Improvement Authority’s $450 million debt and the indictment of Ronald O’Malley, its former chairman.

McNerney said that, despite the indictment, it is inappropriate to describe the BCIA as “scandal-plagued.”


“It’s not scandal-plagued,” he insisted. “I did the right thing for the taxpayers … I’m doing good public policy.”

He also said that the agency’s debt is conduit debt for which municipalities, not the county, are responsible for paying off.

https://www.northjersey.com/community/091410_Bergen_County_Exec_McNerney_defends_finance_agency_at_senior_picnic.html

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>Keep teachers off school boards

>Keep teachers off school boards

Is it wrong, or rather, a conflict, for a fifth grade teacher to also serve as a paid municipal councilman?

Yes. So says one of the planks of Gov. Chris Christie’s ethics proposal.
But how about if that same teacher sits as an unpaid member of the local board of education?

There’s nothing wrong with that at all, at least according to the proposal the governor unveiled last week.
Does he have it backwards? (Snowflack, Daily Record)

https://www.dailyrecord.com/article/20100914/COLUMNISTS01/100913064/1099/COLUMNISTS/-Keep-teachers-off-school-boards

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>Christie to propose major changes to NJ employee pensions, health benefits

>Christie to propose major changes to NJ employee pensions, health benefits

TRENTON — Gov. Chris Christie today will propose cuts in pension payments for state and local government workers and teachers, along with dramatically higher employee health benefit payments, according to two administration sources. The proposed reforms will also end annual cost-of-living pension increases for all state and local retirees, the sources said. (Method, Asbury Park Press)

https://www.app.com/article/20100914/NEWS03/100913116/Christie-to-propose-major-changes-to-NJ-employee-pensions-health-benefits

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