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Planning Board members have much to consider

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Planning Board members have much to consider

JUNE 12, 2014    LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014, 5:42 PM
Lisa Baney

To the Editor:

Let me start by saying I could never be a Planning Board member, but if I were, I would be so tired. Over the past 14 months, they have had to attend 26 sometimes very long hearings, and listen to and dissect thousands of pages of testimony focusing on details and information that any normal human could scarcely nail down. All in response to a prestigious applicant, Valley Hospital, and its application for a master plan amendment that would allow its near-doubling of size at its location at South Van Dien Avenue next to the Benjamin Franklin Middle School.

It has become evident through this process that there are many different ways to slice and dice the data. By that, I mean a litany of measurements such as square footage, lot coverage, floor area ratios, shadow lines, changes of buffers, heights and setbacks at various sections of the buildings and property. Moreover, the board members have needed to distinguish each of these measures according to the current 2014 expansion proposal, the former 2010 proposal and what exists today. Add differing testimony on hospital beds needed, numbers and types of trucks during specific years and stages of construction, possible impact on child safety and schools, and a magnitude of other information – most importantly village character.

If I were a Planning Board member, I would see three things through all these nights.

1. Land use is primary as the basis of a master plan change.

2. As a key burden of proof, the applicant for the master plan change has not substantiated why it is absolutely necessary to conduct this degree of expansion on its main hospital campus. Valley affirms that this scale of expansion, at its current location, is the only way to well serve both our village and region, and that it is cost-prohibitive to relocate additional services, re-think its bed counts here, or follow other paths to modernize – based on elements of a business plan that it chooses not to make clear.

3. There is more than enough reason to believe that the detriments of this permanent change to our village outweigh the positives, and that the hospital has not made a convincing case to the contrary.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/opinion/opinion-letters-to-the-editor/letter-planning-board-members-have-much-to-consider-1.1034646#sthash.6Qg61KBE.dpuf

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Hospital officials are misleading

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Hospital officials are misleading


JUNE 12, 2014    LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014, 5:43 PM
Melinda Wagner

To the editor:

When my husband and I began attending Planning Board meetings years ago, we were deeply annoyed with Valley Hospital, whose officials had already drawn up elaborate plans to double in size while neglecting to consult the taxpayers who would have to endure years of construction, and its permanent aftermath (to date, residents have yet to be consulted).

More than eight years later – after countless meetings, thousands of dollars, and numerous, stressful hours, my family is no longer annoyed. We are furious!

Valley wants to place a structure the size of Paramus Park Mall in the middle of a neighborhood of single-family homes, three schools, and playing fields – an area traversed by many hundreds of children daily. In order to get their way, Valley officials have spun, sliced and diced the “facts,” treated residents with disrespect, and have consistently failed to address the matter at hand. It is this last point that I find most infuriating. Indeed, every single argument in support of this gargantuan project has been specious, beside the point, and misleading – no matter how compelling, heartwarming or dire.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/opinion/opinion-letters-to-the-editor/letter-hospital-officials-are-misleading-1.1034647#sthash.RXWCtLb6.dpuf

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If you remember, Valley started this ambitious push in September 2006

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If you remember, Valley started this ambitious push in September 2006

As the June 17 Ridgewood Planning Board meeting about Valley’s proposed Master Plan changes approaches, it is worth considering what this fight is really about and what Ridgewood has already been through.

If you remember, Valley started this ambitious push in September 2006, with bold move to get what they wanted through a change to the Village’s Master Plan. It was clear then that Valley had been developing their strategy years before this 2006. Having been thwarted by the Ridgewood Council in 1983, the highly paid Valley legal team decided to do an “end-around”; by passing the elected council by using a tactic that more commonly used by developers on the Jersey Shore to push through high-rise developments.

Also in 2006 Valley believed that they had a sympathetic Major in the person on David Pfund, who had a long history of family connections with the hospital. Many members of the Council and the Planning Board chaired by David Nicholson were also tainted by Valley through, work, family or membership of the elite Valley Foundation social club. Even the members of the Ridgewood BOE seemed to be sympathetic to Valley, refusing to take a stand against Valley’s proposal on behalf school children and their teachers through their spokesperson Sheila Broga, first in 2009 and again in 2013. Instead the BOE took the attitude that the development was going to be approved so the school community needs to adapt!

All would have gone according to Valley’s plan, except for some Ridgewood Residents who noticed that there were some unusual proceedings occurring on at Council and the Planning Board.

Once Valley tactics became known, people from all over Ridgewood began to organize against the plans for mega hospital. The gang of three, that later become known as the Valley Girls (Meyers, Frazer and Goldfischer) hastily went it damage control. Do you remember the newsletter and cards we all received in the mailbox from Valley? It was a campaign that was built on a perceived personality cult centered on Audrey Meyers. In the fliers Mrs Meyers was photographed perpetually sporting a fixed smile under a thick fringe of black hair, “Its alright, trust me…trust Valley what could we possibly do to hurt the Village?”

Of course the forced folksy facade was exposed when the first public hearings started in September 2007. More and more of the monstrous facts emerged and within a short time Mrs Meyers stopped attending the public meetings. We can assume that she was advised not attend as she drew too much heat. Instead the residents of the Village sat through weeks of hearings watching the spectacle of Frazer and Goldfischer in the audience chatting and laughing during many, many sincere and heart felt speeches against the Valley’s plans.

Then there was Mr Collins the local legal hack for Valley who’s only job seemed to be to disrupt proceedings as much as possible.

Despite Valley’s attempts at intimidation, stalling, legal maneuverings and costly PR campaign the opposition to the Mega Hospital continued. All sorts of tactics were used. Valley supporters formed a front-group to try and convince Ridgewood people that there was also a grass roots organization that supported Valley. It was seen for what it was. Donations to the BOE from Valley increased and Mrs Frazer, VP of Marketing of Communications for Valley, became a director of the Ridgewood Chamber of Commerce; a strange situation as the chamber was formed to support Ridgewood’s small businesses.

After hearings that dragged on for years, the planning board approved the Master Plan amendment in favor of Valley at a tumultuous meeting held in August 2010 at GW middle School. Three police districts were in attendance to control the crowd that could not fit into the building and there as an attempt by a Valley supporter to prevent people parking at the adjacent church.

While the Ridgewood Council finally decided not to approve the ordinances that would be needed support the Master Plan, it still left the Master Plan in place. It then took the Concerned Residents of Ridgewood CRR to take Valley to court try and remove the time-bomb of the altered Master Plan that still remained supporting Valley’s Mega hospital.

Thanks to court proceedings won by CRR, the residents and village have had to spend more time before the Planning Board through the last 12 months.
Now 8 years from 2006 when Valley first tried to tamper with Ridgewood Master Plan, the Planning Board will again look at the Master Plan. Since 2006 Audrey Myers the CEO of the non-profit Valley Hospital has seen her salary rise by over one million dollars from $787,000 (2007) to $1,988,369 (2013). The highly paid driving force behind 8 years of turmoil in Ridgewood. Meanwhile CRR and its supporters have had to spend well over $100,000 to defend the Village against Valley.

Hopefully next week and for the last time the Ridgewood Planning Board will finally put an end to this madness.

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Planning Board – Meeting Schedule June 16 & 17 – Valley Hospital Application

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Planning Board – Meeting Schedule June 16 & 17 – Valley Hospital Application

PLANNING BOARD

AMENDMENT TO MEETING SCHEDULE

Special Public Meetings: June 16 & June 17, 2014

In accordance with the provisions of the “Open Public Meetings Act,” please be advised that the Planning Board has scheduled special public meetings for:

Monday, June 16, 2014 at 7:30 p.m. in the auditorium at the Benjamin Franklin Middle School, 335 North Van Dien Avenue, Ridgewood, New Jersey, at which time the Board will receive instructions regarding the proposed H-Hospital Zone amendment to the Master Plan.

Tuesday, June 17, 2014, at 7:30 p.m. in the auditorium at the Benjamin Franklin Middle School, 335 North Van Dien Avenue, Ridgewood, New Jersey, at which time there will be Board deliberation and vote only concerning the proposed H-Hospital Zone amendment to the Master Plan. Doors will be open at 6:30 p.m.; all ingress into the auditorium will be limited to the doors located at the rear of the auditorium. 

The Board may take official action during these Work and Public Meetings. 

All meetings of the Ridgewood Planning Board (i.e., official public meetings, work session meetings, pre-meeting assemblies and special meetings) are public meetings which are always open to members of the general public.

Jane Wondergem

Secretary to the Board

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Reader says Valley Construction will create a Mass Exodus from Benjamin Franklin Middle School

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Reader says Valley Construction will create a Mass Exodus from Benjamin Franklin Middle School

Based on the statement made by the Board of Ed. president at one of the meetings, you really have to wonder where her( and the board’s) head is at. If I had a child in BF, and this goes thru, I would be looking to transfer.

If the BOE can be so ignorant in saying this and doing this about BF. What about the Planning Board and Council? Does anyone in power have any sense? More importantly will this town be saved from Valley?
We have to believe that this absurd 2X over expansion will not happen? Then what more years of 1 3/4, 1 5/8, or 1 1/2 expansion plans? God save us?

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Reader Points to Conflict of Interest Between BOE and Valley

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Reader Points to Conflict of Interest Between BOE and Valley 

Between the half-mil with which Valley cheaply bought the BOE and the glaring conflict of interest represented by the Superintendent’s physician-wife’s relationship with the hospital, the Board would have done better to “recuse itself” than to force its president to make appallingly inaccurate statements (“no problem! bring it on!”) so destructive to children and so exciting to Valley that Valley’s legal team quoted her in its final (thank goodness), unexpected greatest-hits slide show on Monday night. This was the definition of sellout.

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Reader says It does not take much to turn a real estate market and we are likely on the tipping point.

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Reader says It does not take much to turn a real estate market and we are likely on the tipping point.

Perhaps the most interesting indication of this is the No Valley and No Apartment signs that appear on the lawns of houses that have recently sold to young families moving into town. They came here for the schools and the neighborhood feel of the town. Then, they learn that what they just bought into is under the threat of the massive hospital and apartment complexes. Having just sunk their young fortunes into new homes, they are justifiably worried.

Think now of what happens if that worry becomes known to those currently looking. Through this blog, for instance, or newspaper coverage of the planning board hearings or letters to the editors. Real estate can very quickly take a nose dive in Ridgewood when towns in close proximity offer almost as much without the looming risk.

If you were 30-35 again, with two young children and enough money to buy a house in Ridgewood, and there was a chance Ridgewood was going to turn into something more along the lines of the hustle and bustle found in a small city sometime in the next 5 to 10 years, would you risk your hard earned down payment money on Ridgewood property? And for those of us in the 45 to 55 range, on the verge of being empty nesters, do we risk riding the property market to the bottom when we can cash out now?

No, make no mistake, Ridgewood is very much on a precipice formed by the intersection of a monolithic hospital concerned about its future revenue stream, developers who want to increase their profits and well meaning Villagers who are buying into false arguments and fears generated by the Hospital and developers.

wine.com

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Readers begin to face prospect of declining Real Estate Values

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Readers begin to face prospect of declining Real Estate Values

If your scenario plays out take whatever money you win and put it towards moving costs since it will not be worth staying in a town that gives into a group that lies, manipulates figures, distorts, deceives, etc.

What they are asking to do defies logic, and then another group(PB) agrees that it is o.k. to insult both their intelligence, and the people that they are representing ?


Simply put, the bad press will only get worse if this gets past the PB.

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Ridgewood Planning Board holds contentious meeting about Valley Hospital

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Ridgewood Planning Board holds contentious meeting about Valley Hospital

JUNE 10, 2014, 6:40 AM    LAST UPDATED: TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 2014, 2:25 PM
BY BARBARA WILLIAMS
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

The Valley Hospital has been aggressively seeking approval from the Planning Board to double in size and on Monday night it took its most vigorous stand yet, presenting information that some board members said they found selective, confusing and disingenuous.

Valley Hospital in Ridgewood and the surrounding neighborhood homes.

The board will vote next week on whether Valley should be given the master plan amendment it is seeking to undertake an expansion project that will nearly double the size of the hospital.

Monday’s meeting was to be a time for the board to hear summations from the attorneys representing Valley and residents opposing the project. But first Valley’s planner, Joseph Burgis, made a 45-minute presentation he characterized as clarifications that the village planner had requested. Instead, Burgis addressed some of the complaints and questions raised by residents over the last 15 months of hearings.

Burgis acknowledged that the construction is a detriment, but added that air monitoring will be done during the duration. He said that the school board issued a statement saying it is not concerned about the construction affecting students attending Benjamin Franklin Middle School, which is located next to the hospital.

“As far as construction, there’s no getting around the timetable,” Burgis said. “I don’t mean to minimize the 6-year time frame, it’s a long period of time but it’s necessary to make this happen.”

He said that traffic will decrease by 430 trips per day because Valley will be moving outpatient services off-site. It wasn’t until the end of his presentation, however, that it became clear that the predicted decrease was not based on current traffic but instead was a comparison between this plan and previous expansion plan Valley had before the board in 2010.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/ridgewood-planning-board-holds-contentious-meeting-about-valley-hospital-1.1032397#sthash.6nOuaWi6.dpuf

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Readers set up Betting Pool as to how and who will cave to over development in the Village

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 file photo Boyd Loving
Readers set up Betting Pool as to how and who will cave to over development in the Village

DO NOT bet the ranch on either Ms. Hauck or Mr. Pucciarelli abstaining.

Ms. Hauck has already strongly hinted that she will not be abstaining (her thought being that voters knew her position when they pulled the lever and she has no skin in the game from a financial standpoint, thus no conflict).

And it is rumored that Mr. Pucciarelli may offer a legal opinion that holding an elected office differs from being appointed to a position. Therefore, although he recused himself from Planning Board matters about Valley, he will not do so in connection with Village Council business about Valley.

Case in point, he did not recuse himself from the discussion about whether Council members should accept a donation from Valley to cover printing costs for the OEM manual.

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My $20 parlay bet is on a yes from the PB and a no from the Council 3-0 because of abstentions.

My $20 says the plan will be approved by the Planning Board and the Village Council (in a 3-2 vote, of course).

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Reader says the Village should Follow the rules that are in place to protect all of us. Valley Hospital, developers, and tax paying residents!

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file photo Boyd Loving

Reader says the Village should Follow the rules that are in place to protect all of us. Valley Hospital, developers, and tax paying residents!

Follow the rules that are in place to protect all of us. Valley Hospital, developers, and tax paying residents!

It’s not East vs. West. When you change H-Zones, Master plans, and variances…you are asking for future problems. Double Valley’s size, allow heights too high for the CDB, etc. You will get higher taxes, due to the need for more services. Traffic is bound to increase and cause problems getting to any side of town.

The answer has always been no to these requests. Why would the current board or council even entertain any of these requests? Your job and elected jobs are to follow the rules and in force them. Stop the nonsense. Logic and reasoning will prevail?

The master plan needs to be changed so that developers cannot ask for ‘spot zoning’ to suit them.

Leave the zoning as is, and make everyone, whether Valley, or an apartment developer have to operate within the current zoning, and get variances approved.

It keeps everything more within reasonable sizes, footprints, etc.
As it currently is, allowing someone to change zoning is a lottery ticket for the speculator who bought the land.

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Reader asks Will the Planning Board flip a collective bird to residents again?

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Reader asks Will the Planning Board  flip a collective bird to residents again?

Is the Valley Expansion Bought and Paid For a long time ago ?

Was “treating residents with contempt” the best strategy 

I don’t think that residents had the opportunity to provide any input on the revised plan. Will the PB flip a collective bird to residents again?

Valley has “Treated with contempt” the whole Village . If this was a group that was truly interested in being a trusted part of a community they sure as hell would have approached this whole thing differently. They don’t come across as dumb, just arrogant. Would it not be better to accomplish their goals working WITH the community they do business in ?

I notice that what was once a fierce group of Valley supporters has gone noticeably silent. To watch Valley’s attorney shout down everyone from the little old ladies to Planning Board members themselves must have made them cringe. To say that Valley has contempt for Ridgewood and its residents is a massive understatement. If it were such a great plan why are they so afraid of letting those opposed to their plan speak? Why did they feel the need to lock their opposition out of the last Planning Board vote?

Sad thing is, they are going to get most of what they want. This deal was bought and paid for years ago.

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Readers debate the future of Ken Smith

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Readers debate the future of Ken Smith 

Reader says Failure to turn the Ken Smith lot into a parking garage with some kind of overpass walkway to get to and from it would be to miss a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to fix much of the parking problem, at least for commuters, for once and for all. VILLAGE COUNCIL–HELLO–THIS IS IMPORTANT. Take out a bond and pay it back with parking revenue.

Other readers disagree and say It will never become a government operated parking garage. They don’t want to lose the property tax revenue.

Others sarcastically argue to Add a few more buildings to vacant lots and soon no traffic at all! The perfect solution to our parking and traffic problems. Why didn’t we think of this earlier?

And finally one reader observers Although only 3 applicants are currently before the board, the Ken Smith site’s property still will fall within the new high density zone. Apparently that property owner is buying up more land surrounding what they currently own. Probably a smart tactic to sit on the sidelines while others duke it out. Either way any zoning benefit will be realized on this site as well.

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Concerns about hospital proposal

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Concerns about hospital proposal

JUNE 6, 2014    LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, JUNE 6, 2014, 12:31 AM
PAGES: 1 2 > DISPLAY ON ONE PAGE

Concerns about hospital proposal
Marcia Ringel

To the editor:

At two recent Planning Board meetings, residents were invited to share their concerns about Valley Hospital’s expansion proposal. This letter roughly reiterates my statement on May 20.

A child says, “I want a pony.” The parent says, “How about a puppy — or a guppy?”

Child’s counteroffer: “How about a slightly smaller pony with setbacks and an above-ground parking lot?”

The family doesn’t spend eight years discussing where a horse could be stabled or what it would eat. Just: “No pony.”

Valley Hospital’s revised proposal is a slightly smaller pony.

In the past 42 years I have entered Valley as an inpatient, outpatient, parent and visitor. But Valley feels less caring to me now. Our community has been treated with contempt by our community hospital, marketing madly with millions saved in taxes on the backs of this community. What began as David and Goliath morphed into David and Godzilla.

I feel perplexed as my neighbors must repeatedly remind our elected and appointed officials that we love our village, begging them not to destroy it in the name of progress or for fear of litigation.

I feel alarmed that almost every year a new group of residents has felt compelled to band together to protest the handing over of our public lands and space.

I feel betrayed by our Board of Education, who wimped out when they should have spoken out.

I feel dismayed that this issue has overshadowed five council elections.

Ridgewood neighborhoods are adjacent to schools, fields, parks, shops and a hospital. We lived in harmony for many years. That delicate balance must return.

Several decades ago the late Barney Van Dyk told me that he wanted to include indoor seating in his ice cream store, nestled among homes on Ackerman Avenue. But he graciously accepted the zoning board’s refusal, understanding that zoning laws protect residents. Ice cream is still eaten in the parking lot.

We have no dearth of fine hospitals. Even New York is coming: Memorial Sloan-Kettering in Basking Ridge and in the fall, physicians’ offices in Paramus for the Hospital for Special Surgery.

Village Planner Blais Brancheau’s recent report said Phase 2 of the hospital expansion might not happen. Of course it would, as would Phase 3, causing decades of unstoppable derangement — a tax-exempt Juggernaut that no wall, buffer or traffic island could mitigate.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/opinion/opinion-letters-to-the-editor/letter-concerns-about-hospital-proposal-1.1030466#sthash.qhqYB8WM.dpuf

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Issues with road project

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Issues with road project

JUNE 6, 2014    LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, JUNE 6, 2014, 12:31 AM

Issues with road project
Kira Semler

LETTER TO THE EDITOR:

With regard to the article that appeared in the Friday, May 30, 2014 edition entitled, “Road project moving ahead,” I am in agreement with the thoughtful editorial letters submitted by Ridgewood residents regarding the fiasco with the paving of the road under the railroad bridge. I would like to add my comments:

1. The decision to reduce the lanes to one each way is ridiculous and seems to lack even a small thread of common sense.

2. Concerned residents attended this meeting with a panel of Village of Ridgewood employees and council members. Residents’ opinions/concerns fell on deaf ears.

3. How much are the cameras going to cost for the monitoring of this insanity? How about the extra manpower? Another cost the residents of the Village of Ridgewood will have to bear.

4. Will any cost overruns for later modifications be borne by the Village Council and the village manager? You know the answer to that question: There is no accountability and costs will come out of the pockets of the residents of the Village of Ridgewood.

5. What about the impact on the CBD? Of course, no one even gave that a thought.

6. I do not believe there was a study done on this project. No one heard about it until it was printed in the newspaper two weeks ago. The reason this project was not previously announced is simply because the village council did not want to hear any feedback.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/opinion/opinion-letters-to-the-editor/letter-issues-with-road-project-1.1030448#sthash.ystHaBUK.dpuf