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>N.J. OKs medical marijuana bill

>Associated Press

https://www.courierpostonline.com/article/20081216/NEWS01/812160348/1006/news01

New Jersey moved closer to allowing chronically ill patients to smoke marijuana to relieve symptoms of pain and nausea by advancing a medical marijuana bill Monday.

The bill was approved 6-1 by the Senate Health Committee following a lengthy and sometimes passionate hearing that attracted scores of supporters and detractors including a doctor, multiple sclerosis patients, and a marijuana grower from Canada.

New Jersey would become the 14th state with a medical marijuana law on its books.

Those who favor the bill, including its Senate sponsor, Sen. Nicholas Scutari of Linden, said the “Compassionate Use Medical Marijuana Act” would allow a “new route of treatment” for patients with AIDS, cancer, MS, and other serious illnesses for whom other drugs fail.

“Society is able to distinguish between the lawful use of a substance” and recreational use or drug abuse,” said Scutari, a Democrat.

The measure allows chronically ill patients to petition Human Services to allow them to use marijuana medicinally. Physician certification of their condition would be required.

If approved, the patient would be issued an identification card allowing them to grow six marijuana plants or access the drug at an alternative medicine center without fear of being arrested or prosecuted.

Responding to critics who say medicinal marijuana amounts to tacit approval of an illegal drug, Scutari said safeguards have been built in to the proposal.

Patients would not be able to smoke and drive, for example, and would be barred from smoking in public places. They’d be permitted to possess only a small amount of the drug, he said.

“This is not legalizing marijuana for recreational use,” he said.

Opponents argued that allowing patients to smoke marijuana is akin to approving drug use.

They said the pill Marinol, made from a synthetic form of THC, the active ingredient in marijuana, has FDA approval and is as effective as smoking the drug.

David Evans, executive director of the national Drug Free Schools Coalition, cited the lack of scientific studies on marijuana use.

“You have to make sure it is safe,” he said. “There are no proper studies about dose, how many times do you take it. Once this bill is approved, you can smoke your head off all day long.”

Patients, however, disagreed.

They said they didn’t get high, but were able to function with the drug. Marinol did not work as well, if at all, they said.

Sen. Bill Baroni, a Hamilton Township Republican who voted for the bill, said he spent the weekend reading literature on both sides of the argument.

“The people who are asking us to do this today, these are people who can’t play piggyback with their 3-year-old. These are people who get up every day and battle HIV/AIDS. They are people who wonder if their chemotherapy is going to work,” said Baroni. “I can’t look at those folks and let them be perhaps the only ones who don’t have the ability to have less pain.”

A hearing two years ago brought celebrity Montel Williams to the New Jersey Statehouse. A longtime multiple sclerosis sufferer, Williams said he uses marijuana regularly.

The bill next heads to the full Senate for possible consideration. The Assembly held an informational hearing on the proposal last year, but has not scheduled it for a hearing. Similar proposals did not advance during the prior legislative session.

Most of the other states that began allowing medical marijuana have done so through ballot referendums. In New Jersey, the law must be changed by the Legislature.

States where medical marijuana is legal are: Alaska, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Michigan, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont and Washington.

https://www.courierpostonline.com/article/20081216/NEWS01/812160348/1006/news01

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>Moonachie Students Use Discarded Items to Decorate Christmas Tree

>Recycled items deck the halls in this school

THE RECORD
Monday, December 15, 2008

BY JOHN A. GAVIN

MOONACHIE — The theme this year at the Robert L. Craig School has been recycling — reusing old items that otherwise would be discarded.

There are trash receptacles made of soda cans, Styrofoam food containers that now store paint, and a collection bin for used batteries.

But perhaps the most innovative idea is a 6-foot tall Christmas tree. It is a work of art designed by students using a secondhand ladder as its base; outfitted with cardboard tubing as a dowel; and decorated with bottle caps, string, old CDs and green transparent bags once used to hold The Record newspaper.

In fact, all the holiday décor at the Craig School has taken on a recycling theme, with wreaths, mini trees and menorahs ornamented with bottle caps, buttons, worn pipe cleaners and those green bags.

“I want them to have an appreciation for art,” said Lee Ten Hoeve, an art teacher, who came up with the theme: “Reduce, Re-Use, Recycle.”

“I know that everyone doesn’t have a talent for drawing, but they can be creative and become a problem solver,” she said.

At the 285-student school, youngsters used junk mail to design collages and created an American flag using bottle caps as the stars and scrap paper for the stripes. They wore hand-me-down hospital scrubs as smocks while painting and pasting.

“It’s good for the environment.” said James Pichardo, 12, a seventh-grader. “We need to recycle a lot of things.”

That theme will also be relayed in the school’s Christmas musical, “Have a Green Holiday,” an original script about the environment that students will perform Dec. 23.

Jillian Mazzo, 12, has persuaded her mom to make homemade Christmas wreaths and said she has already learned an invaluable lesson.

“Not only should we recycle, but it’s good for the economy, too,” Jillian said. “We need to help go green and use [the green] plastic bags as much as we can.”

At school, secretaries and support staff have also caught on, making double-sided photocopies and using small note pads instead of full sheets of paper to write memos.

“It brings an awareness to all the school,” said Mark Solimo, the school’s superintendent and principal.

Alejandra Torres, 12, was philosophical about the importance of saving the environment.
“If we don’t recycle soon, the trash in the landfills will overflow,” she said. “It would be bad for all living creatures. &hellip It’s really going to affect our generation and our kids.’ “

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>Village Council: Read This Before You Vote On North Walnut Street Redevelopment Project

>With no tenants, stores put on hold

Sunday, December 14, 2008
THE RECORD
BY ASHLEY KINDERGAN

RIVER EDGE – Construction of new retail space on the site of the former Huffman Koos furniture store will be delayed because developers say they are having difficulty securing tenants.

Demolition of the site at Route 4 and Kinderkamack Road is nearly complete, but there is no start date for construction. The economic slump has made possible tenants scarce, builders said.

“The new project will be delayed until tenancies can be secured,” said Paul Ciancia, a property co-owner. “It obviously doesn’t make much sense to build a multimillion-dollar center if there’s no tenant.”

Ciancia said he expects the project to go forward at a later date.

The developers received Planning Board approval last year to build two new retail buildings on the site in the Kinderkamack Road corridor slated for redevelopment.

Chuck Lanyard, president of the Goldstein Group, said the developers and retail outlets alike are waiting for an indication that the economy is on the mend before expanding. The Goldstein Group is marketing the town center.

“The retailer attitude is, ‘Why push to open more stores?’ ” Lanyard said. “They want to concentrate on making the stores they already have open as profitable as possible.”

Lanyard said that at a recent shopping center convention, retailers and developers were making plans and talking about future deals when the economy turns the corner. He is optimistic that the Huffman Koos project will lock in tenants and is courting gourmet supermarkets as potential users of the space.

Mayor Margaret Falahee Watkins said she was concerned about just what the Huffman Koos project’s difficulties would mean for redevelopment elsewhere along the corridor.

“I’m concerned that we really need to have redevelopment, but I think everyone is going to be at a standstill for quite a while,” Watkins said. “The major reason for it was to give tax relief. … I would pray there’s going to be some kind of relief because our residents are going to suffer, and I feel badly about it.”

The Huffman Koos site was not included in a list of buildings designated as an area in need of redevelopment by the Borough Council in 2006, but it sits near several properties in that zone. The Planning Board approved demolition of the existing building and construction of two new ones last October.

Councilman Thomas Smith said he had hoped the Huffman Koos project would spur other local developers to start their own projects. He said he was worried about the loss of tax revenue once the building is down if the owners should ask for a reassessment.

“I do believe if they put a good, viable project up there, it would encourage other owners in that area,” Smith said.

One downtown property owner said he is sticking by a plan to develop an abandoned site on Johnson Avenue next to Route 4. Calisto Bertin said he is using the economic downturn to secure permits from the borough and Department of Environmental Protection. By the time that process is done in approximately two years, he hopes the economy will have recovered.

“The economy is terrible now, and anyone who has property on the market right now knows it’s very difficult,” Bertin said. “But the thing is, we’re going to start now, and by the time we get through the approval process … our feeling is, the market will rebound.”

Bertin has received approval from the mayor and council to build a six-, eight- or 12-story building, with the first floor devoted to retail and the rest to dwelling units and possibly office space. A specific plan must still be finalized and approved by the Planning Board.

Smith said another property owner downtown is also floating a plan to construct a five- or six-story building, and yet another hopes to refurbish an existing building. All are continuing negotiations with the mayor and council. NJ Transit is also set to begin constructing mixed-use buildings near the North Hackensack train station, but has not yet sent out a request for proposals.

Redevelopment attorney Colin Quinn said developers are still negotiating and spending money on planners and architects, which is a good sign that construction will start eventually.

“There’s people working on this, and they’re spending time, money and effort on it,” Quinn said. “Once they see the appropriate economic indicators are there, they’re going to build the projects.”

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>We are just lowering the bar once again…..

>By accepting this tree (as decorated) we are just teaching kids that it is acceptable to use garbage as decorations. We are just lowering the bar.

The larger underlying message of this “teaching” will not serve them well in the future (when they leave the increasingly wacky bubble that is Ridgewood) even though it is the larger underlying message that the BOE and VC is specifically trying to teach them.

Ridgewood kids used to go into the world with a distinct advantage over their peers. Now the BOE and VC seem hell bent on sending them into the world with a distinct disadvantage.

Common sense left the administrators long ago and now it is being systematically removed from your children unless you teach it to them at home.

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>Village Council Follows BOE Lead; Headcount Increase at Village Hall Planned Also

>ASSISTANT VILLAGE MANAGER- VILLAGE OF RIDGEWOOD, NJ. Ridgewood is a full service community in Bergen County, New Jersey, that operates under the Council Manager form of Government, Plan B of the Faulkner Act. While the Village is willing to look at a newcomer with the right skills, the applicant should have a four year college degree with graduate studies, preferably in Public Administration. An applicant with a minimum of three years of related experience is preferred. The position requires strong analytical skills, special project management, both written and communication skills and computer literacy. Job Responsibilities – will be to assist the Village Manager in overseeing several special projects in progress or about to begin in the Village. Interact with the various Department Directors on budgets, purchasing, grants, interlocal services, preparation of requests for proposals for professional services and assist in the preparation and coordination of other items to be presented to the Council. Send resume with cover letter to: James M. Ten Hoeve, Village Manager, Village of Ridgewood, 131 N. Maple Avenue, Ridgewood, New Jersey 0745 or e-mail to [email protected]
Ad Posted December 1, Ad Removed December 31, 2008.

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>The tree is an embarrasment. This season is one of kindness, love and charity. A garbage strewn tree does not reflect the season.

>The tree is an embarrasment. This season is one of kindness, love and charity. A garbage strewn tree does not reflect the season.

And it is inappropriate for the holiday of Christmas or Hannukah or Kwansai…or anything else. I think Ms. Zusy needs to understand beauty and have some common sense in regard to when and HOW to use recycleables. There are so many wonderful things being done with recycleables. But the Ridgewood tree is not one of them. It is a disgrace. Children have to learn how to create something pleasing to the eye and to the heart when using recycleables. Creating is not just moving them from the recycle barrel to the tree!!!

Take the decorations down, NOW, and leave a beautiful lighted tree.
Another shame on Ridgewood. As a Ridgewood resident and taxpayer I stress that our council needs to be voted down and out.

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

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>have been appalled by the village’s lack of fiscal discipline

>Given the current economic environment, fiscal discipline certainly is in order. Look at approval of emergency appropriations from 12/10 meeting-
Approve Emergency Appropriations – Current Fund – Makes an emergency appropriation for various departments in a total amount of $332,548 which is necessary due to the fact that the Uniform Construction Code Trust Fund will not generate sufficient revenues to support its indirect expenses for the Current Fund Operating budget for these various departments

In addition, you would have to imagine next year’s budget will be facing a big hole in terms of higher pension costs given most pension funds are down 20%+ this year and this is one of the largest expenses in the budget.

Since I moved to Ridgewood 5 years ago, I have been appalled by the village’s lack of fiscal discipline (spending on putting greens,etc.) and inability to manage large capital projects (village hall reconstruction, Habernickel farm development). Why will the Schedler property be any different? Also, the Village would be giving up $40k in annual taxes as an undeveloped property plus how much in additional costs (insurance, etc.) where the Village really needs all the revenue it can get at this point.
I’d rather see Schedler developed as single family homes or as a commercial space where we can get more property taxes.

There’s nothing wrong with open space but the problem with Ridgewood is they haven’t shown any ability to manage or maintain properly their existing open space.

Enterprise Rent-A-Car

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>Owner of Paramus Park and Willowbrook Malls May Declare Bankruptcy

>Mall owner’s default risk high

Wednesday, December 10, 2008
THE RECORD

NEW YORK — Fitch Ratings downgraded Tuesday the credit ratings of General Growth Properties Inc., which owns shopping centers in Paramus and Wayne, saying default may be imminent for the mall owner.

Fitch noted that General Growth’s recent move to extend the amount of time it has to repay debt and said it thinks the company may need to restructure its debt to avoid bankruptcy. Fitch considers a distressed debt swap, in which a company exchanges its debt for new bonds at a heavily discounted rate, to essentially be a default.

Fitch also said conditions in real estate debt capital markets are hurting General Growth’s ability to raise money to repay about $600 million in 2009 maturing unsecured debt. General Growth, which has 200 malls nationwide, owns the Paramus Park and Willowbrook malls. It is not expected that bankruptcy would affect the malls’ operations or relationships with tenants.

As one of the nation’s largest shopping mall owners, General Growth has been hit hard by the deteriorating U.S. economy and problems at struggling retailers. It also has taken on massive amounts of debt — last month in a regulatory filing, General Growth said nearly $3.1 billion worth of debt will come due next year.

Earlier this month, General Growth reached an interim agreement to extend the time it has to pay back $58 million in notes to Thursday, just days after the Chicago-based real estate investment trust got a two-week reprieve to pay off $900 million in mortgages.

Fitch downgraded the issuer default rating to “C,” its lowest junk rating, from “B” for General Growth Properties Inc., GGP Limited Partnership and unit The Rouse Co. Fitch also downgraded the revolving credit facility, term loan and exchangeable senior notes ratings for GGP Limited Partnership to “CC/RR5” from “B-/RR5.”

General Growth remains on “negative watch,” meaning further downgrades are possible.

Last month, the company reported disappointing third-quarter results and cut its year-end forecast, weeks after the mall owner’s board removed its chief executive, president and chief financial officer. Their ouster came after the company disclosed that former CEO John Bucksbaum’s family trust provided $90 million in personal loans to cover margin debt for the former CFO and president.

New management has warned that crushing debt combined with the declining economy bring the company’s viability into question.

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>Report: Bergen and Passaic counties dangerous for elderly walkers

>THE RECORD
Wednesday, December 10, 2008
BY KAREN RO– USE

Bergen and Passaic counties ranked among the five worst in New Jersey for older walkers, according to a transportation report released Wednesday.

The Tri-State Transportation Campaign study, based on National Highway Traffic Safety Administration data, found that while adults 65 and older make up roughly 14 percent of Bergen County’s population, they comprised 30 percent of pedestrians killed between 2005 and 2007.

In Passaic County, the non-profit organization , which promotes transit-friendly communities, found that seniors 65 or older make up 11 percent of the population, but 23.5 percent of those killed in pedestrian accidents.

“Older pedestrians are less likely to survive getting hit by a car or truck,” said Zoe Baldwin, New Jersey advocate for the New York-based group. As a result, she said, transportation officials should incorporate safety measures that protect older walkers.

Those include engineering crosswalks so that the distance from once side of a street to another isn’t too long, banning right turns at red lights, and extending the time pedestrians have to cross the street.

“I’m in my mid-20s and if I’m in the middle of the intersection when it starts flashing, ‘Don’t Walk,’ there’s a problem,” Baldwin said. Communities “don’t always think of children, seniors or disabled people as they cross the road.”

Read tehe full report on Bergen County conditions here:

https://www.tstc.org/reports/seniors08/bergen.pdf

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>A CHRISTMAS CARD IDEA

>

When doing your Christmas cards this year, take one card and send it to this address. If we pass this on and everyone sends one card, think of how many cards these wonderful special people who have sacrificed so much would get.

When you are making out your Christmas card list this year, please include the following:

A Recovering American Soldier
c/o Walter Reed Army Medical Center
6900 Georgia Avenue,NW
Washington,D.C. 20307-5001


If you approve, please pass it on.

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>So, we need to save money. How about some more ideas our VC could love

>A six day week – canceling 1 day could save us 1/7th of our costs. Nothing should happen on that day, nothing, just breathing. Just pick any day. I would go for Wednesday. It’s hard to spell anyway.

Rent space in our enormous Village Hall to other towns. C’mon, do we really need a palace THAT BIG just for us?

As mentioned above, NO 4th of JULY parade or holiday period. I mean, the nation’s birthday was sooo long ago.

Get rid of the VC and the BOE. We’ll save a lot of hot air that way and who knows what else.

Do we really need a town swimming pool? Get rid of Graydon and its subsidy; it’s a chemical laden toxic site anyway. Just think of how much we’ll save on insurance.

Cops should use horses. Hay is cheaper than gas.

School should only be 4 days a week. Less bad math to screw up our kids. Let the tutors parents hire fill in the gaps. They do that now anyway.

Let the Internet be our town library. Close the building down. Have all the library donations go into the now flush town fund.

Let’s get a blow up doll to be our superintendent. You think anyone will notice? Nah.

Ignore all state and federal mandates. That should save us a bundle. What are they going to do, invade?

Make divorce a 1/3, 1/3, 1/3 affair. Split everything equally between the husband, wife and town.

Kids are expensive, pay us a hefty fee if you want to have them.

Hotwire: Rental Cars from $13.95!

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>crosswalks

>The problem is a simple. There is much more money to be made in giving parking tickets than there is in enforcing moving violations. And, there is no confrontation as there would be if a policeman actually pulled a car over for failing to yield in a crosswalk or talking on a cell phone.

The problem is only going to get worse until the Ridgewood police change the priorities and take crosswalk and cell phone violations seriously.

Enterprise Rent-A-Car

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>Food Bank of NJ Needs Your Help!

>

Economy Leaves Americans with Empty Plates

More than 35 million Americans, including 12 million children, either live with or are on the verge of hunger. In New Jersey alone, an estimated 250,000 new clients will be seeking sustenance this year from the state’s food banks. But recently, as requests for food assistance have risen, food donations are on the decline, leaving food bank shelves almost empty and hungry families waiting for something to eat.

The situation is dire, no more so than at the Community FoodBank of New Jersey (CFBNJ), the largest food bank in the state, where requests for food have gone up 30 percent, but donations are down by 25 percent. Warehouse shelves that are typically stocked with food are bare and supplies have gotten so low that, for the first time in its 25 year history, the food bank is developing a rationing mechanism.

As the state’s key distributor of food to local banks – providing assistance to nearly 1,700 non-profits in the state serving more than 500,000 people a year – the stability of replenishment of the CFBNJ is essential to ensuring that individuals in need have access to food.

If everyone could just do a little, it would help those in need a lot. To help, people can:

1. Make a monetary contribution: Visit www.njfoodbank.org.
2. Donate food: Drop off a bag of food at your local food pantry.
3. Organize a food drive: The CFBNJ can help explain the logistics of starting a food drive. Just call 908-355-FOOD.
4. Help “Check Out Hunger:” Look for the “Check Out Hunger” coupons at your local supermarket and donate. No donation is too small!

One thing that people commonly confuse is the role of the food bank. The CFBNJ is similar to a wholesale distributor, as they provide food to more than 1,600 charities throughout the state, which then give food directly to the hungry (the food bank does not give food directly to individuals). The food bank also does not accept small amounts of food, such as a cart of groceries. They encourage those donations go directly to a local food pantry or soup kitchen. Rather, the food bank accepts large quantity food donations, such as a truck full of groceries, as well as monetary donations which they stretch to purchase food at wholesale prices, such as 300 lb. bags of rice, for example.

Thank you for taking the time to review all this. Please contact me ASAP if you would like to participate. We are planning to do press releases and include the list of blogs involved.

Deborah Smith
JerseyBites.com