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>Sovereign Bank Hires Vincent A. Ricciardi to Lead Retail Banking for Metro New York/New Jersey Division

>NEW YORK, June 27 — Sovereign Bank announced today that it has hired Vincent A. Ricciardi as Senior Market Executive overseeing Sovereign’s retail banking activities in the Metro New York/New Jersey markets and districts.

Ricciardi, of Ridgewood, N.J., has more than 32 years of banking and retail experience. Prior to joining Sovereign, he was Senior Vice President and Region Executive for Premier Banking and Investments at Bank of America. In this position, he managed more than 400 employees in New York City, Long Island, Westchester, upstate New York, New Jersey and southwest Connecticut. Prior to that role, he was a Bank of America Market Executive in New Jersey, overseeing 11 districts and 152 branches.

“As a native of the Metro New York/New Jersey area, Vince truly understands the challenges and opportunities that we have in these valuable markets,” noted Roy Lever, Sovereign Executive Vice President and Managing Director of Retail Banking. “I am confident that under Vince’s leadership, the entire team in this division will achieve great success.”

Ricciardi earned a master’s degree from New York University and a bachelor’s degree from St. Peter’s College, Jersey City, N.J. He also pursued post graduate studies at New York University.

About Sovereign

Sovereign Bancorp, Inc., (“Sovereign”) , is the parent company of Sovereign Bank, a financial institution with principal markets in the Northeastern United States. Sovereign Bank has 750 community banking offices, over 2,300 ATMs and approximately 12,000 team members. Sovereign offers a broad array of financial services and products including retail banking, business and corporate banking, cash management, capital markets, wealth management and insurance. For more information on Sovereign Bank, visit https://www.sovereignbank.com or call 1-877-SOV-BANK.

Sovereign Bank is a registered trademark of Sovereign Bank or its affiliates or subsidiaries in the United States and other countries.

CONTACT: Ellen Molle, +1-617-757-5573, cell +1-617-548-9932,
[email protected]; or Mike Armstrong, +1-347-563-9251, or cell:
+1-917-279-8437, [email protected], both of Sovereign Bank

Web site: https://www.sovereignbank.com/

J&R Computer/Music World

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>Come celebrate Independence Day in Ridgewood

>
Ridgewood Fourth of July Celebration Information

Come celebrate Independence Day in Ridgewood – Friday, July 4th! TICKETS FOR FIREWORKS: Pre-event $5 (at Gate $10 adults/$5 children) NOW on sale in Ridgewood at Alice, Alice, Alice; Artventure; Backyard Living; Citizens Community Bank; Daily Treat Restaurant; Goffle Brook Farm; Harding Wine and Spirits; Hillmann Electric; Hoskins Propane; Irish Eyes Imports; Ridgewood Cycle Shop; The Wine Seller and Town & Country Apothecary & Fine Cosmetics. JUNE 27 – JULY 3 at Ridgewood Library

SCHEDULE DETAILS: www.ridgewoodjuly4th.org2008 Celebration Theme ChosenLet’s Make it a Safe CelebrationTicket Sales Information

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>***It’s Not Too Late to Volunteer for the 4th of July Parade!

>

The Ridgewood Fourth of July Celebration needs small teams of 2-4 volunteers each to carry Sponsor Banners in the Parade. A great opportunity for a family or group of young people to participate and help to “Support the Tradition” of celebrating Independence Day in Ridgewood.

email: [email protected]

phone: 201-602-1922

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>George Carlin – Saving the Planet

>

George Carlin
May 12, 1937–June 22, 2008

Great comedian – Rest In Peace

There’s some language (but what did you expect…It’s George Carlin) but not too bad and no, its not the 7 Dirty Words bit.

A quick Bio from Wikipedia

George Denis Patrick Carlin (May 12, 1937–June 22, 2008)[19][20] was an American stand-up comedian, actor and author who won four Grammy Awards for his comedy albums.
Carlin was especially noted for his political and black humor and his observations on language, psychology, and religion along with many taboo subjects. Carlin and his “Seven Dirty Words” comedy routine were central to the 1978 U.S. Supreme Court case F.C.C. v. Pacifica Foundation, in which a narrow 5–4 decision by the justices affirmed the government’s right to regulate “indecent” material on the public airwaves.
In the 2000s, Carlin’s stand-up routines focused on the flaws in modern-day America. He often took on contemporary political issues in the United States and satirized the excesses of American culture.
He placed second on the Comedy Central cable television network list of the 10 greatest stand-up comedians, ahead of Lenny Bruce and behind Richard Pryor.[21] He was a frequent performer and guest host on The Tonight Show during the three-decade Johnny Carson era, and was also the first person to host Saturday Night Live.

Hotwire

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>Victory on “Clean Elections” Bill!

>AFP-NJ News and Views for June 24, 2008

Victory on “Clean Elections” Bill!

AFP activists have once again proven that we can win when we act together. It is because of your efforts that the “Clean Elections” bill has been taken off the legislative table.

Over 1,000 AFP-NJ activists sent almost 11,000 messages to Assembly committee members urging them to not post this expensive welfare for politicians bill. This response is incredible and demonstrates how much power we can bring to bear when we need to.

Thank you all for a job well done! Your messages, letters, and phone calls made the many committee supporters of this bill think twice about their position.

I would also like to thank Assemblywoman McHose (R-Sussex County, District 24) for leading the charge against this bill in the Assembly. We need more Assembly members with her ideals and courage.

——————————————————————————–

Letter to Steve Lonegan from Assemblywoman McHose
Dear Steve,

Thanks for your help and that of the hundreds of volunteers and activists from Americans for Prosperity in getting the message out on A-100. Because of you and AFP, this legislation has been at least temporarily halted in the Assembly Budget Committee.

As you know, A-100, is the enabling legislation for the so-called “Clean Elections” program for 2009. It is the brainchild of the Camden County Democratic machine and was cooked-up as part of a backroom political maneuver to put forward taxpayer-subsidized political campaigns for a few hand-picked districts, and call it “reform”.

This is a bad bill for a whole host of reasons — as even its honest supporters acknowledge. Thanks to you, we’ve made the Legislature think again before spending millions in taxpayers’ money to fund a selected group of politicians’ campaigns.

Not only can’t New Jersey afford it, the way this bill goes about it is ethically wrong. Now we must stay vigilant in case the bill is brought up again.

Thank you and thank AFP.

Sincerely,
Alison Littell McHose,
Assemblywoman
(R-Sussex County, District 24)

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

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>North Maple Turf Field Analysis Report Safe Conditions

><https://www.ridgewoodnj.net/main.cfm?ArticleID=588> North Maple Turf Field Analysis Report Safe Conditions

Samples of the North Maple Turf Field were submitted to EMSL Analytical for laboratory analysis. The results have just been reported. …”the fiber came back with an undetectable level for content at below 1mg/kg. The standard being used is 400 mg/kg as per the soil clean up standards.

For the wipe test, the dust result yielded a reading of 1.1 ug/wipe which is attributed to normal dust in the air. The clean up standard is the HUD criteria for floors and carpets at 40 ug/wipe.”

These results report that the field is safe for athletic use.

https://www.ridgewoodnj.net/main.cfm?ArticleID=588 <https://www.ridgewoodnj.net/main.cfm?ArticleID=588>

3balls Golfshow?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=55539

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>Just The Facts Please Ms. Zusy . . .

>Zusy’s Campaign Expenditures In Detail

As reported to the NJ Election Law Enforcement Commission by Anne Zusy (Candidate) and James R. Pfeiffer (Campaign Treasurer) on May 30, 2008.

Meet the candidate coffee gatherings – $2,115.00
Professional photographic portrait – $150.00
Mailing labels – $117.70
Postcards and postage – $752.85
Cardboard placard lawn signs – $983.20
Photocopies and miscellaneous supplies – $215.76

Grand Total = $4334.51

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>Councils Told: Stop Spying On The Public

>Updated:11:30, Monday June 23, 2008

Councils have been urged to stop using controversial surveillance powers for “trivial” offences.

CCTV not being used properlyBosses have been warned by the head of the Local Government Association (LGA) that they risk alienating the public for so-called snooping.

They may also be stripped of the right to use spying methods.

But Sir Simon Milton defended councils that used surveillance to tackle fly tippers, rogue traders and tax and benefit fraudsters.

There has been growing anger about the methods used by councils to probe minor crimes, such as dog fouling.

The powers were introduced under the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act as part of the Government’s anti-terror drive but it is claimed some councils are abusing the powers.

Sir Simon has now written to every council in the country urging them to review their use of the Act.

“Parliament clearly intended that councils should use the new powers, and generally they are being used to respond to residents’ complaints about fly tippers, rogue traders and those defrauding the council tax or housing benefit system,” he wrote.

Figures released by councils under the Freedom of Information Act show that the telephone and email records of thousands of people have been accessed under the Act.

A sample of less than 10% of councils disclosed using spying techniques 1,343 times.

Sky’s political correspondent Niall Paterson said: “If councils continue to use their powers in this fashion they’ll soon find them being withdrawn – especially given the focus of late on our ‘surveillance society’.

“It certainly lends weight to David Davis’ by-election campaign against the abrogation of our privacy, even if there’s no one of any real importance to campaign against in Haltemprice and Howden.”

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>New Principal at Somerville School

>v.
Changes of Assignment Dr. Brennan

Administrator

OATES-SANTOS, Lorna � from Assistant Principal, Benjamin Franklin Middle School, to Principal, Somerville School, effective July 15, 2008, through June 30, 2009. From:� AP, 12m,

Step 4D

$126,784

Includes Doctorate Stipend

To:� EP, 12m, Step 4D, $136, 558, Includes Doctorate Stipend

Dr. Oates-Santos�s credentials are as follows:

� Bachelor�s Degree, History � University of Notre Dame

� Master�s Degree in Social Studies � Columbia University

� Master�s Degree in Administration � Caldwell College

� Ed.D. � Seton Hall University

� 2005-2008 � Assistant Principal, Benjamin Franklin Middle School

� 2002-2005 � Renaissance Middle School, Montclair, New Jersey

� 2000-2002 � Clarke Middle School, Lexington, Massachusetts

� 1999-2000 � Renaissance Middle School, Montclair, New Jersey

Match.com

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>Will our new superintendent bury TERC now that we know what we know?

>2008 TERC Math vs. 2008 NMP Math: A Snapshot View

The March 2008 Final Report of the National Mathematics Advisory Panel recognized algebra as the gateway to all higher mathematics. The Panel carefully defined “school algebra” by identifying 27 specific topics, organized into major categories, such as linear equations, quadratic equations, and the algebra of polynomials. The Panel then identified the “critical foundations of algebra.” They stressed proficiency with the standard algorithms of whole number arithmetic and proficiency with fractions. The Panel said students should develop “automatic execution of the standard algorithms.” They cautioned that the use of calculators could “impede the development of automaticity.”

The TERC 2008 PDF document Early Algebra: Numbers and Operations vaguely defines “algebra” as “a multifaceted area of mathematics content that has been described and classified in different ways.” TERC doesn’t identify any specific “algebra” topics. They do list “four areas” that they believe to be “foundational to the study of algebra,” but nothing about mastery of standard arithmetic. TERC promotes nonstandard methods that attempt to avoid carrying, borrowing, and common denominators. These are three keys to computational automaticity! Here are two examples found in TERC 2008 materials.

1) How TERC avoids the concept of borrowing:
3,726
– 1,584
2,000
200
-60
2
2,142

This example of TERC’s “Subtracting by Place” method is found in the TERC 2008 5th Grade Student Handbook. The student somehow knows that 20 – 80 can be written as -60, a negative number, and the student also knows how to compute 2,142 as the sum of positive and negative integers. TERC avoids the concept of borrowing by assuming knowledge of negative numbers and integer arithmetic. These two middle school topics are not explicitly mentioned anywhere in the TERC 2008 program materials.

2) How TERC avoids the concept of a common denominator:

Shandra compares 2/5 to 3/8 by arguing “For 3/8, you need another 1/8 to make a half. For 2/5, you need half of a fifth to make a half. That’s the same as 1/10, so 1/10 is smaller than 1/8, so 2/5 is closer to 1/2. This means that 2/5 is more.” But how much more? If Shandra used 40 as a common denominator and converted 2/5 to 16/40 and 3/8 to 15/40, she would easily see that 2/5 is exactly 1/40 more than 3/8. Typical for TERC, Shandra’s method requires considerable time, significant conscious thought, and fails to give an exact answer. Converting to a common denominator should become an automatic skill. This skill is essential for exactly adding, subtracting, and comparing fractions.

Copyright 2008 William G. Quirk, Ph.D.

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>Economics 101 : Price Controls

>Economics 101 : is a new series brought to you by local Independent Investment Representative

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

https://onesmallvoice.blogspot.com/

excerpts from BASIC ECONOMICS: A Citizen’s Guide to the Economy
by Thomas Sowell

Chapter 3, “Price Controls”
To understand the effects of price control, it is necessary to understand how prices rise and fall in a free market. There is nothing esoteric about it, but it is important to be very clear about what happens. Prices rise because the amount demanded exceeds the amount supplied at existing prices. Prices fall because the amount supplied exceeds the amount demanded at existing prices. The first case is called a “shortage” and the second is called a “surplus”–but both depend on existing prices.

Simple as this might seem, it is often misunderstood–sometimes with disastrous consequences. A closer examination shows why shortages persist when the government sets a maximum price lower than what it would be in a free market and why a surplus persists when the government sets minimum prices for farm products higher than these prices would be in a free market.

PRICE CEILINGS AND SHORTAGES

When there is a “shortage” of a product, there is not necessarily any less of it, either absolutely or relative to the number of consumers. During and immediately after the Second World War, for example, there was a very serious housing shortage in the United States, even though the population and the housing supply had both increased about 10 percent from their prewar levels and there was no shortage when the war began.

In other words, even though the ratio between housing and people had not changed, nevertheless many Americans looking for an apartment during this period had to spend weeks or months in an often vain search for a place to live, or else resorted to bribes to get landlords to move them to the top of waiting lists. Meanwhile, they doubled up with relatives, slept in garages or used other makeshift living arrangements.

Although there was no less housing space per person than before, the shortage was very real at existing prices, which were kept artificially lower than they would have been because of rent control laws that had been passed during the war. At these artificially low prices, more people had a demand for more housing space than before rent control laws were enacted. This is a practical consequence of the simple economic principle already noted in Chapter 2 that the quantity demanded varies with how high or low the price is.

Some people who would normally not be renting their own apartments, such as young adults still living with their parents or some single or widowed elderly people living with relatives, were enabled by the artificially low prices created by rent control to move out and into their own apartments. These artificially low prices also caused others to seek larger apartments than they would ordinarily be living in. More tenants seeking both more apartments and larger apartments created a shortage, not any greater physical scarcity of housing relative to the population. When rent control laws expired or were repealed, the housing shortage likewise quickly disappeared.

As rents rose in a free market, some childless couples living in four-bedroom apartments decided that they could live in two-bedroom apartments. Some late teenagers decided that they could continue living with mom and dad a little longer, until their pay rose enough for them to afford their own apartments, now that apartments were no longer artificially cheap. The net result was that families looking for a place to stay found more places available, now that rent-control laws were no longer keeping such places occupied by people with less urgent requirements.

None of this was peculiar to the United States. The same economic principles can be seen in operation around the world and down through history.

——————————————————————————–
— excerpted from Chapter 3 of BASIC ECONOMICS: A Citizen’s Guide to the Economy by Thomas Sowell.
Find the book here: https://FreedomKeys.com/bkecon.htm

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>Compromise Restores $32M in Charity Care

>By LINDY WASHBURN, STAFF WRITER

The governor restored $32 million to charity care funding for hospitals in Tuesday’s budget compromise, but executives at some hospitals say they’ll still be hurt by a budget that drastically reduces what they received last year.

The revised budget will include $604 million for care that hospitals provide the indigent, a drop of 15.5 percent from last year. Overall, hospitals statewide provided $946 million in charity care in 2007.

“I just don’t see how some of our hospitals will survive these cuts,” said Betsy Ryan, president of the New Jersey Hospital Association. “The needs of our charity care patients vastly outweigh the level of state support.”

Seven hospitals including Pascack Valley Hospital in Westwood, Barnert Hospital in Paterson, and PBI Regional Medical Center in Passaic have closed in the last 18 months. Ryan predicted more would fail with the cuts.

For hospitals that had seen their state payments for charity care “zeroed out” in Corzine’s initial proposal, the compromise offered a slight improvement: 10 cents for every dollar of charity care documented last year. But that figure still falls millions short of what many hospitals say they need.

While Englewood Hospital and Medical Center went from getting nothing in the proposed budget to $831,500 under the compromise, that is a far cry from the $8.3 million in charity care it provided last year. The hospital will take the biggest hit in Bergen County, with a loss of $2.6 million over last year.

“It’s drastic,” said Michael Pietrowicz, Englewood’s vice president. “It’s going to significantly impact services.”

Others expecting to receive 10 cents on the dollar for charity care costs are Holy Name Hospital in Teaneck, The Valley Hospital in Ridgewood and Chilton Memorial Hospital in the Pompton Plains section of Pequannock.

“To take more than $100 million out of the system at a time when all the hospitals are in a very strained financial environment doesn’t make sense,” said Michael Maron, president of Holy Name. His hospital will receive less than half a million dollars for care that cost $4.6 million last year.

Hackensack University Medical Center saw its fortunes improve with the budget compromise, as its projected cuts were eliminated. It is now slated to receive $14.6 million for charity care costs tallied last year at $32 million. The total includes $3.4 million for training medical residents.

Hackensack plans to turn many of its clinics over to North Hudson Community Action Corp. this summer, and it is not known how that will affect its reimbursement level.

St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center also will see its funding restored to this year’s level. It will receive 90 cents on the dollar for charity care costs documented last year at $64 million.

St. Mary’s Hospital in Passaic saw a dramatic increase under the compromise. It is now projected to receive $12 million, compared with $2.6 million in Corzine’s initial proposal. It is the sole hospital in that city, following the closure of PBI.

A complicated formula devised in the compromise establishes “ceilings” and “floors,” so that funding at individual hospitals will not swing widely from last year. That capped Bergen Regional Medical Center’s reimbursement, for example, at about $28 million, trimming the $4.2 million increase it had expected to about $1.5 million, under the hospital association’s projections.

A spokeswoman for Bergen Regional, Donnalee Corrieri, said, “Until the final budget is presented and approved, we can only be hopeful that it will reflect the high percentage of charity care that we provide here.”

Similarly, Palisades General Hospital in North Bergen will see an increase in its charity care funding, but it will not keep up with the increase in charity care it provides, said its chief executive.

“The state requires us to take care of patients, regardless of their ability to pay,” said Bruce Markowitz, the Palisades president. “There should be an obligation on the state to pay for it.”

***

By the numbers

Charity-care funding for North Jersey hospitals, under the proposed budget compromise:

Hospital Projected Cents

charity care on the dollar**

Bergen Regional* $26,916,692 75

St. Joseph’s Regional* 57,315,937 90

St. Mary’s Hospital 12,065,241 60

Palisades Medical Center 5,637,644 60

Hackensack* 11,184,217 35

St. Joseph’s Wayne 945,570 42

Holy Name Hospital 458,542 10

Englewood 831,510 10

Valley Hospital 386,005 10

*Hospital will receive additional state funding for graduate- medical education.**Cents on the dollar compares projected reimbursement to actual charity care provided in 2007, calculated at Medicaid rates.

Sources: New Jersey Hospital Association, unofficial projections

***

E-mail: [email protected]

(c) 2008 Record, The; Bergen County, N.J.. Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning. All rights Reserved.

Story from REDORBIT NEWS:

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>Valley Hospital gets $30 million gift

>Monday, June 16, 2008
BY EVONNE COUTROS
STAFF WRITER, The Record

The Valley Hospital has received a $30 million gift from Ridgewood resident and philanthropist David F. Bolger.

The gift, announced today, is believed to be the largest single donation ever to a hospital in New Jersey, say hospital officials.

Audrey Meyers, President and CEO of hospital, called the gift “extraordinary.” A gift, Meyers said, that would benefit future generations.

Valley is planning a $750 million expansion that will include new buildings and a parking deck.

The money will be used for “whatever Valley says it needs,” Bolger said.

Bolger, 75, is President of Bolger & Company, Inc., a real estate and investment firm headquartered in the village. Bolger is president of The Bolger Foundation and a much lauded and major supporter of West Bergen Mental Healthcare.

This is not Bolger’s first donation to Valley Hospital. Several years ago his $1 million gift helped fund the expansion of the emergency department and the pediatric emergency room of the facility. He recently contributed to the hospital’s purchase of a portable CT scanner, the first hospital in the state to have the equipment, hospital officials say.

Bolger recently put plans and funding together to refurbish the Pease Library in Ridgewood, a 1920s era building that in its day was the crown jewel of Garber Square. A supporter of the Ridgewood, Glen Rock, and Midland Park libraries, Bolger has also supported numerous institutions and organizations in the area, including the William Paterson University School of Nursing; the Bergen County Chapter of Community Blood Center Services, The YMCA of Ridgewood, the School House Museum in the village and the Midland Park Ambulance Corps. He is known for putting forth challenge grants to institutions and churches.

The father of three children and four grandchildren, Bolger recently funded the refurbishing of “The Barn” community center for youth and senior citizens in Midland Park and is a trustee emeritus of The Kessler Foundation and honorary trustee for Children’s Aid and Family Services of New Jersey.

Bolger, whose parents emigrated from Holland, came from a working class background, shoveling snow, delivering papers, and serving as a firefighter in his native Sewickley, Pa. He attended prep school at the prestigious Northfield Mount Hermon School in Massachusetts – the recipient of several large donations from Bolger — and worked nights and weekends in a steel mill to graduate the University of Pittsburgh.

It was while working at the mill, Bolger has said, where numerous immigrant workers were generous enough to allow him to finish his homework when there was minimal work to do.

Soon after, Bolger landed a job as personal executive assistant for financier Thomas Mellon Evans. For 4 ½ years, he purchased companies, rolling stock, overseas property, and ran a Philadelphia hotel for his demanding boss.

He founded his own Bolger & Company in the early 1960s and moved the company from Hackensack to Ridgewood more than two decades ago.

His gift to Valley trumps the large donations to other hospitals.

In March, an investor and his wife pledged $25 million to the University Medical Center at Princeton to build a new facility in Plainsboro.

In April, Helena Theurer of Park Ridge gave $10 million to Hackensack University Medical Center to build a cancer center bearing the name of her late husband, John.

Over the last 17 years, radio personality Don Imus has contributed more than $30 million out of his own pocket and from fund-raising efforts for Hackensack. A pediatric treatment center, the Don Imus/WFAN Pediatric Center for Tomorrows Children, was named in his honor.

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>Homeowners Fight Back as Market Cools Off

>June 15, 2008

Real Estate

Homeowners Fight Back as Market Cools Off

By JILL P. CAPUZZO

JOSEPH ELLIOTT has been the tax assessor for Ocean City since 2003. In his five-year tenure, he has already overseen the reassessments of all 18,934 properties in this shore community — twice. And going a third round in the not too distant future is a distinct possibility.

In a state where the major burden of paying for government services falls to the property tax, New Jersey bears the unenviable distinction of having the highest property taxes in the country. Over the last five years, the average state property tax has increased 30 percent.

Since housing values have started to drop, some homeowners are balking that they are now paying too much — based on inflated property assessments made at the height of the real estate boom — and are now asking the assessor to come back for another look.

“Was it criminal?” asked Harold Frankel, speaking of the 2005 reassessment of Lakewood that resulted in a 60 percent increase in his property tax bill. “No. But it was unfair. I think it was stupid to do a reassessment at a time when half of the market was driven by speculation.”

From 2003 to 2007, the average assessed price of a home in New Jersey rose by 50 percent: to $256,450 in 2007, up from $173,110 in 2003, according to data from the State Department of Treasury. As property values were increasing, thousands of homeowners throughout the state received notice that their municipalities were planning to reassess or revalue all the properties in town.

Municipalities are required by state law to reassess properties every so often to bring all properties within a taxing district up to “full and fair value” — the actual price a house would sell for in the current market.

Throughout the state, county boards of taxation, under the direction of the State Division of Taxation, order up the reassessments when there is more than a 15 percent differential between the average sales price of houses versus the average amount those houses are being taxed at within a municipality. The assessment establishes the base upon which a property owner pays taxes, which are determined by a rate set by the municipality each year to cover the local, county and school budgets, then multiplied by the assessed value of the property.

In the past, property reassessments took place every 10 years on average. But with the rapid rise in real estate values in the first half of this decade, the process spun into warp speed in some hot markets. Since 2000, 272 of New Jersey’s 566 municipalities have undergone revaluations. In recent weeks, some homeowners in Ridgewood have been getting a bit of a shock upon receiving notice of the newly assessed values of their houses, which on average increased almost 70 percent. Last done in 2001, a revaluation was ordered by Bergen County when the taxed value of town properties fell below 67 percent of the fair market value. For residential properties, the average property assessment increased to $802,127 for 2008 from $473,770 in 2007 (based on the 2001 valuation). The new tax rate has not yet been set, but Michael S. Barker, tax assessor for the Village of Ridgewood, said the revaluation would help spread the tax burden more equitably.

As property values have recently begun to decline in many places throughout the state, homeowners are asking if their towns will be as quick to initiate a revaluation to reflect dropping home prices. Thomas Bell, spokesman for the State Treasury Department, said the revaluations were ordered based on a number of factors and not just the differential between house values in a town and the rate at which they were being taxed.

“They would never go by just one year of sales prices,” Mr. Bell said. “They never look at a one-year trend, if there is such a thing.”

During a full revaluation, an appraiser — either the local tax assessor or independently hired assessors — will do a thorough inspection of each property in town. The property’s value is determined by factors like size, style, age, condition, location and recent comparable sales within the immediate neighborhood. Within some towns, these “comps” can vary widely, especially if one neighborhood becomes particularly desirable. Such disparities can prompt calls to reassess by those living in less popular neighborhoods who are seeking equity.

“Advocates of reassessment are looking for fairness,” said Athan Efstathiou, president of the New Jersey Association of County Tax Boards and the tax administrator for Hunterdon County. “Sometimes one area of town gets hotter than another. Even in a soft market, it’s still all about location, location, location.”

While the tax rate is adjusted in relation to the reassessment, and some property tax bills could go down, most homeowners see an increase in their new tax bills, which continue to grow annually. According to the Treasury Department, the average property tax bill in the state has increased to $6,796 in 2007, from $5,239 in 2003 — a 30 percent jump in five years.

“They tell people it’s not costing them more because the rate went down, even though your value went up,” said Yehuda Shain, a real estate broker and certified tax assessor in Lakewood. “But it gives the town leeway to start nudging it up. People don’t realize how it creeps up over the next four or five years.”

Mr. Shain has advised many Lakewood homeowners to appeal their assessments, a process he said was well worth it if a homeowner had data about comparable area homes being sold for less than what the assessment states is the value of the person’s house.

“If a homeowner believes it’s out of whack, that’s what the appeals process is there for,” Mr. Bell said, “and relief is granted, absolutely.”

Those hardest hit by a revaluation tend to be people who have lived in the same house for a number of years, particularly elderly residents on a fixed income, many of whom complain that they are being taxed out of New Jersey. Frank Spatola, a retired postal worker, lives in Greenbriar Woodlands, an adult retirement community of 1,250 homes in Toms River.

“We’re seniors on a fixed income,” said Mr. Spatola, 84, who is also the legislative chairman of the state chapter of the National Association of Retired Federal Employees. “Our social security only increases by 2 or 3 percent, while our taxes go up 4 or 5 percent each year.”

When Toms River reassessed properties 10 years ago, Mr. Spatola said many residents in Greenbriar Woodlands picketed Town Hall and received some relief. With a new reassessment under way, Mr. Spatola predicted residents would rise up again. For now, the town has decided to delay releasing the new assessment figures.

“They’re holding it up because they knew we’d protest,” Mr. Spatola said. “In the last year, we’ve seen a 20 percent drop in the value of our houses because of the fallout in the real estate market. If they went through with the reassessment, they’d have 1,250 people appealing it.”

The Township of Montclair underwent a reassessment last year for the first time in nearly 20 years. With more than 500 homeowners seeing their assessed values jump between from 30 and 50 percent, Montclair’s reassessment resulted in numerous appeals. On a Montclair-oriented Web site, Larry Rosenshein, a Montclair resident, protested a reassessment that has him now paying about $15,000 in annual taxes on his 3-bedroom, 1 ½-bathroom house on a quarter acre. When he and his wife moved to Montclair in 1979, he said he paid about $5,500 in annual property taxes, on the house, which he bought for $250,000. His property is now assessed at $679,000.

“We pay for a county government that’s just an extra layer that we don’t need, and a school system that is not ranked particularly high,” Mr. Rosenshein said. “Our expenses keep going up, while we can’t run a deficit, and we can’t print money.”

Depending on the number of properties that need to be assessed, formal revaluations can take up to two years and can cost a municipality from $1 million to $2 million. In some communities, they have served as a political lightning rod, with local officials losing their seats soon after the new assessment figures come out.

Scott Alexander was elected mayor of Haddon Heights last fall, running on a platform that largely focused on the incompetence of the reassessment effort in his Camden County town. With its 2006-7 reassessment, three-quarters of the town’s 3,039 properties saw their assessed value go down, while one-quarter saw huge increases in their home’s assessed values, and, concurrently, property tax bills that were more than double the previous year.

“Everyone thought the whole town’s values went up and therefore the tax rates were going to go down, but that wasn’t the case,” Mr. Alexander said. “The results were all over the place.”

The disparity was in part because some neighborhoods that had grown more desirable had been undervalued, but also because the revaluation was carried out in a haphazard manner, Mr. Alexander said. The town hired an outside firm to do the inspections, and the four teams that canvassed the town varied widely in their approach, with some doing a complete walk-through while other inspectors never entered the homes. Mr. Alexander said there was also poor communication between the town’s tax assessor and the governing officials, and between the governing officials and the residents.

Mr. Alexander’s first order of business as mayor was to accept the resignation of the town tax assessor.

Now several hundred homeowners in Haddon Heights, including Mr. Alexander, are appealing their reassessments. The mayor said his house, at $525,000, has lost 20 percent of its value since the reassessment was completed last year and the real estate market has continued to soften.

In Ocean City, the assessor, Mr. Elliott, has made a science out of reassessing this Cape May County municipality’s numerous homes, which range from inland bungalows to multimillion-dollar oceanfront properties. With shore property values going through the roof earlier this decade, no sooner had Ocean City done its previous revaluation, in 2003, than the ratio of assessed value to market value was already exceeding the 15 percent differential. In 2004, the average assessed value was 83 percent of the market value; in 2005 it had slid to 69 percent, and in 2006 it was down to 59 percent.

Another round of revaluations began in early 2006, just about the time the real estate market began making a serious correction. While Ocean City experienced a 72 percent jump in real estate values from 2003 to 2005, it has seen a 9 percent drop each year, on average. By continually making adjustments over the nearly two-year revaluation process, Mr. Elliott was able to capture both the boom and the bust years, ending up with an average increase of 54 percent between the two reassessments. The average value of a home in Ocean City now stands at $679,000, Mr. Elliott said.

If real estate values continue to decline, there is always the possibility that Mr. Elliott’s team will be called into action again.

“It’s rare that revaluations would be ordered if assessments are too high, but it’s certainly a possibility,” Mr. Elliott said. “Whatever comes along, we’ll handle it.”

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>North Jersey Businesses Hurt As Brokers Cut Back On Bagels, Lactose

>Posted by Bess Levin, Jun 11, 2008, 1:05pm

You’d think strip clubs, steak houses, and Real Doll outfitters would be the only ones feeling the pinch of financial professionals not making/spending any money, but you’d be wrong! In Northern New Jersey, bagels and cheese, items heretofore considered staples in the community, are being cast aside, deemed luxuries too expensive to justify in these hard times. Rick Breistein, proprietor of the Cheese Shop of Ridgewood which sells $60/pound English Stilton and Brillat-Savarin, says that many of his former customers are “bond traders…[who] don’t come in anymore…they are suffering–they are not making the money.”

And according to bagel guy Elliot Cohen, there’s been a dramatic drop in orders from the nearby Morgan Stanley and Smith Barney. “We used to get breakfast and lunch deliveries there, and we’ve seen a lot less,” he said. “One guy used to buy breakfast for the whole group on Friday. He doesn’t come anymore.” I speak for everyone here when I say there’s an almost unbearable sadness about this permeating the DBHQ this morning. So here’s what–our sandwich welfare program is now being extended to include bagels and lox. If you know a deserving individual who can no longer afford his/her own shmear, get in touch. Jews and non-Jews welcome. Any requests for flagels will be sent to spam.