Posted on 3 Comments

Mercedes driver injured after rear ending van in Ridgewood

Mercedes_driver_injured_theridgewoodblog.net

Mercedes driver injured after rear ending van in Ridgewood
October 27,2014
Boyd A. Loving

Ridgewood NJ, The driver of a silver 4-door Mercedes Benz sedan was transported to The Valley Hospital complaining of chest pain following a crash in which she rear ended a commercial van in front of 195 South Maple Avenue, Ridgewood on Monday afternoon at approximately 1:00 PM.  The van driver was uninjured.  South Maple Avenue between Spring Avenue and Prospect Street was closed while the crash scene was cleared.  The Mercedes was removed by a flatbed tow truck; the van was able to be driven away from the scene.  Ridgewood PD, FD, and EMS responded along with a paramedic unit from The Valley Hospital.  A minor fluid spill was attended to by FD personnel.

Mercedes2_driver_injured_theridgewoodblog.net

Mercedes3_driver_injured_theridgewoodblog.net

Photo credit: Boyd A. Loving

Posted on 3 Comments

Back seat passenger injured when Mercury slams into Ridgewood utility pole

Mercury_slams_theridgewoodblog.net

Photo credit:Boyd A. Loving
Back seat passenger injured when Mercury slams into Ridgewood utility pole
October 27,2014
Boyd A. Loving

Ridgewood NJ, A female passenger riding in the back seat of a 4-door Mercury sedan that crashed into a utility pole at the intersection of Linwood and Jeffer Avenues in Ridgewood on Monday afternoon was transported to The Valley Hospital by ambulance for treatment.  The incident occurred just after 12:30 PM and closed Linwood Avenue in both directions from Paramus Road to Jeffer Avenue for 90 minutes.  The Mercury was removed by a flatbed tow truck.  The victims injuries were reported to be non-life threatening; the driver was not injured.  Ridgewood PD, FD, and EMS responded.  A PSE&G worker stabilized the utility pole after the vehicle was removed.  There were no utility outages associated with the crash.

Mercury2_slams_theridgewoodblog.net

Mercury3_slams_theridgewoodblog.net

Mercury4_slams_theridgewoodblog.net

Photo credit:Boyd A. Loving

Posted on 5 Comments

Plants Can Tell When They’re Being Eaten

images-6

Plants Can Tell When They’re Being Eaten

By Dan Nosowitz on October 20, 2014

Eating a leaf off a plant may not kill it, but that doesn’t mean the plant likes it. The newest study to examine the intelligence (or at least behavior) of plants finds that plants can tell when they’re being eaten — and send out defenses to stop it from happening.

We’ve been hearing for decades about the complex intelligence of plants; last year’s excellent New Yorker piece is a good place to start, if you want to learn more about the subject. But a new study, conducted by researchers at the University of Missouri, managed to figure out one new important element: plants can tell when they’re being eaten, and they don’t like it.

The word “intelligence,” when applied to any non-human animal or plant, is imprecise and sort of meaningless; research done to determine “intelligence” mostly just aims to learn how similar the inner workings of another organism is to a human thought process. There’s certainly nothing evolutionarily important about these sorts of intelligence studies; a chimp is not superior to a chicken just because chimps can use tools the same way humans do. But these studies are fascinating, and do give us insight into how other organisms think and behave, whatever “think” might mean.

This particular study was on the ever-popular Arabidopsis, specifically the thale cress, easily the most popular plant for experimentation. It’s in the brassica family, closely related to broccoli, kale, mustard greens, and cabbage, though unlike most of its cousins it isn’t very good to eat. This particular plant is so common for experiments because it was the first plant to have its genome sequenced, so scientists understand its inner workings better than almost any other plant.

https://modernfarmer.com/2014/10/plants-can-tell-theyre-eaten/

Posted on 1 Comment

Law Lets I.R.S. Seize Accounts on Suspicion, No Crime Required

imgres-3

Law Lets I.R.S. Seize Accounts on Suspicion, No Crime Required

By SHAILA DEWANOCT. 25, 2014

ARNOLDS PARK, Iowa — For almost 40 years, Carole Hinders has dished out Mexican specialties at her modest cash-only restaurant. For just as long, she deposited the earnings at a small bank branch a block away — until last year, when two tax agents knocked on her door and informed her that they had seized her checking account, almost $33,000.

The Internal Revenue Service agents did not accuse Ms. Hinders of money laundering or cheating on her taxes — in fact, she has not been charged with any crime. Instead, the money was seized solely because she had deposited less than $10,000 at a time, which they viewed as an attempt to avoid triggering a required government report.

“How can this happen?” Ms. Hinders said in a recent interview. “Who takes your money before they prove that you’ve done anything wrong with it?”

The federal government does.

Using a law designed to catch drug traffickers, racketeers and terrorists by tracking their cash, the government has gone after run-of-the-mill business owners and wage earners without so much as an allegation that they have committed serious crimes. The government can take the money without ever filing a criminal complaint, and the owners are left to prove they are innocent. Many give up.

https://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/26/us/law-lets-irs-seize-accounts-on-suspicion-no-crime-required.html?_r=0

Posted on Leave a comment

New debate over protecting New Jersey’s open space

imgres-22

New debate over protecting New Jersey’s open space

OCTOBER 26, 2014, 11:53 PM    LAST UPDATED: SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014, 11:53 PM
BY SCOTT FALLON
STAFF WRITER | 
THE RECORD

The future of New Jersey’s open space program will be decided on Election Day, when voters consider amending the state constitution to provide a continuous source of revenue for a popular program that has gone broke.

If approved, tens of millions of dollars from the state Corporation Business Tax will be shifted from existing environmental programs to ones that acquire open space, upgrade playgrounds and historical sites, preserve farmland, and buy out flood-prone homes.

The ballot question comes as the 53-year-old Green Acres program is without a source of money, having used the last of a $400 million bond approved by voters in 2009. The measure has bipartisan support from legislators and backing from many environmental groups that have been trying for decades to secure a source of financing that is more stable than bond issues, which require voter approval every few years.

“We can go from a point where there is no money left for these programs to one where they have a long-term, steady source just like that,” said Tom Gilbert, chairman of NJ Keep It Green, a coalition of more than 180 environmental groups. “Here’s a chance to dedicate existing funds for something that New Jerseyans constantly say is important to their quality of life.”

But the method to obtain millions for open space has drawn opposition from Governor Christie and the conservative anti-tax group Americans for Prosperity, who say it is fiscally irresponsible to use the state constitution to finance government instead of the traditional budgetary process. Even some environmentalists oppose it because it takes money away from programs that remove underground storage tanks, turn old toxic sites into usable land, and monitor water for pollution.

“I’d rather do nothing than do the wrong thing,” said Scott Olson, a Byram Township councilman who publishes an environmental blog and has long supported open-space acquisitions. “This is just robbing Peter to pay Paul because you’re going to end up with fewer people to do inspections, fewer enforcers and important programs that are now watered down.”

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/new-debate-over-protecting-new-jersey-s-open-space-1.1118455#sthash.pql1O0oU.dpuf

Posted on 16 Comments

Readers say Chief Ward deserves an Apology by Mayor Aronsohn, the Deputy Mayor and Councilwomen Gwenn

imgres-8

file photo Boyd Loving

Readers say Chief Ward deserves an Apology by Mayor Aronsohn, the Deputy Mayor and Councilwomen Gwenn 

First I am glad that our new manager had the decency to announce that Chief Ward had been cleared of any wrong doing by the prosecutor. I am once again disappointed that the council sat in silence with no apology from Mayor Aronsohn, the deputy mayor and Gwenn. # 6 you are so correct, I watched the two council meetings and I am appalled by the conduct of the mayor and deputy mayor, not to mention our concerned citizen. The concerned citizen was clearly reading off a script, which seemed to mirror the deputy mayor and mayor’s inquisition.
That left me with questions as to where our concern citizen got his information from Hmmmmm.
It is also very interesting how the council and our concerned citizen did a complete reversal after the Chief requested an investigation by the prosecutor’s office.

Funny how some of the people most vocal about tolerance and respect are the ones repeatedly trashing others.

With the public trashing of their professional reputations and what has now been shown to be false accusations against Chief Ward and Heather Mailander, I would not be surprised if there is not another lawsuit against our fair Village thanks to the actions of certain council members.

Posted on 2 Comments

Ridgewood High School Learning Commons , Whats in a Name?

558968_319582428155666_1898708200_n

Ridgewood High School Learning Commons , Whats in a Name?

October 24,2014

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, In September 2012 The Ridgewood High School (RHS) Home and School Association (HSA) launched an aggressive fall fundraising campaign to pay for the transformation of the RHS library into a space better suited for 21st century learners. At the time it was thought that the renovation would potentially cost $850,000.The new RHS Learning Commons was needed to replace a library that has not been renovated since it was originally designed in 1963. After a little debate the Village embraced the idea and the needed funds were raised .

The Learning Commons is an attempt to bring the modern world of technology in to the library for all students to enjoy and use . The idea was originally the brain child of former Ridgewood High School principle Principle John (Jack) Lorenz. Jack had a stormy tenure as principle often clashing with the BOE . A reader summed it up best by saying ,”Jack Lorenz is one of the most highly regarded persons in Ridgewood. The educats at Cottage Place and the BOE fear and are jealous the public’s regard for him.”

Sources have confirmed to this blog that the BOE had promised to name the Learning Commons after Jack but has since reneged on the idea . While recent years have witnessed a decisive turnaround at the BOE with the reintroduction of the idea of the pursuit of excellence ,some things sadly have not changed.

Posted on 17 Comments

Once you turn Ridgewood into Hackensack, it is Hackensack.

Clock_Ridgewood_theridgewopodblog.net_-16

Once you turn Ridgewood into Hackensack, it is Hackensack.

I am sorry, but I really can’t listen to folks like this letter writer. I try to be objective, but the stupidity is overwhelming.

Since when does the prospect of adding 500 new families to our downtown do ‘something” as to the “pressing needs” of our Village. Excuse my harshness, but this fellow presents himself as a complete moron. What exactly is he thinking? Once you turn Ridgewood into Hackensack, it is Hackensack. There’s nothing wrong with Hackensack. Plenty of multifamily housing, plenty of space and housing stock for developers to develop. But, it is not Ridgewood. The two towns are something different — equally unique and special in their own way. The question folks like this don’t address honestly is why should those of us who chose to live in a town like Ridgewood now be forced to live in a town like Hackensack? Both lovely options, but those of us who chose Ridgewood did so for a purpose.

This whole debate has really gotten beyond the pale. The developers want to make money — period and end of story. They don’t want to engage in conversation about what’s right for the Village, they simply want to talk about how much money they can make by cramming in as many units as they can. Please, let’s have no more false allegations about the developers only wanting to figure out what’s right and the best thing to move Ridgewood “forward”. Let’s have no more false talk about how the projects will “revitalize” our downtown. And while we are on the subject, why the hell does our downtown need revitalizing? If no one want to shop there anymore, let’s turn it back into single family homes or parkland. Again, it is simply shear stupidity to make the argument that “if no one who lives here wants to shop downtown, then let’s bring in 500 new families who may want to do so.” Such ill-logic does not improve our schools or our standard of living and certainly doesn’t lower our taxes.

These false proponents of “modernization” contend that “We need to turn Valley into a super-regional hospital — we need to start turning our downtown into housing projects.” My answer to that is “no, we don’t need these things at all.” If you feel you need to live next to a regional hospital — if you feel you need to live in a multi – family environment, then move your butt to Hackensack or one of the many other very nice options available to you.

Personally, we have paid taxes for the last fifty years to be just where we are — and I would thank you very much to leave me and my family where we are and not make choices about my community simply to put money in the pockets of the developers and satisfy the desires of 500 new families who may want to move into Ridgewood. We have a healthy diverse housing stock and we don’t need new projects. Our Master Plan does not need amendment simply to suit the whims and profit desires of the developers who speculated on land purchases in the hope and game plan that they will pull the wool over the eyes of the misguided.

Leave Ridgewood alone. And if you feel you can’t, then leave Ridgewood — period and end of story.

Posted on 2 Comments

WOODWARD: LOTS OF UNANSWERED QUESTIONS ON OBAMA’S INVOLVEMENT IN IRS SCANDAL

imgres-3

WOODWARD: LOTS OF UNANSWERED QUESTIONS ON OBAMA’S INVOLVEMENT IN IRS SCANDAL

Sunday on Fox News Channel’s “MediaBuzz,” Bob Woodward said there are, “lots of unanswered questions,” about the Obama administrations involvement in the IRS scandal surrounding the targeting conservative groups for extra scrutiny.

Woodward said, “The reality now in my view that in the Obama administration, there are lots of unanswered questions about the IRS, particularly. If I were young, I would take Carl Bernstein and move to Cincinnati where that IRS office is and set up headquarters and go talk to everyone.”

https://www.breitbart.com/Breitbart-TV/2014/10/26/Woodward-Lots-of-Unanswered-Questions-on-Obama-Involvement-in-IRS-Scandal

Posted on 2 Comments

Meanwhile, as Gov. Christie tries to protect New Jerseyans from Ebola…

imgres-22

Meanwhile, as Gov. Christie tries to protect New Jerseyans from Ebola…

Ebola Czar: “Overpopulation” is #1 Concern

Oct. 26 Disease, National, National Security no comments

By Matt Rooney | The Save Jersey Blog

And I suppose Ebola is the result of global warming?

I’m losing my patience with these morons, Save Jerseyans! While Gov. Chris Christie is trying to keep us all alive, we’re learning that Obama-appointed Ebola Czar Ron Klain has different priorities (from 2008):

https://savejersey.com/2014/10/ebola-czar-overpopulation-ron-klain/

Posted on Leave a comment

Libertarianism’s Untroubling Aristocracy of Self-Control

imgres-3

Libertarianism’s Untroubling Aristocracy of Self-Control
by Pamela J. Stubbart

Pamela Stubbart theorizes that a no-holds-barred libertarian political order would benefit everyone, not only those born with exceptional self-control.

All prospective political orders, by their existence and maintenance, would create advantages for some people (as compared to the baseline of no state having been formed at all, or the baseline of some pre-existing state). Indeed, that is a main point of having a state at all: systematically conferring benefits (construed broadly) that are justly due to citizens. It is a mistake to think that any state is or could be “neutral,” in the sense of benefiting everyone literally equally. Rather, we use a normatively-loaded conception of “fairness” to evaluate whether any possible set of benefits and burdens to citizens is distributed equitably.

That being said, consider the claim that a libertarian system (i.e. one created by a government significantly smaller and/or less active in most citizens’s individual, properly private lives) would generate a “self-control aristocracy.” Although this objection has undoubtedly been raised many times, I find Joseph Heath’s statement of the “self-control aristocracy” objection to libertarianism particularly straightforward and succinct.

Because I am self-conscious about my membership in the self-control aristocracy, I am acutely aware of the fact that, when I think about questions of “individual liberty” in society, I come to it with a particular set of class interests. That is because I stand to benefit much more from an expansion of the space of individual liberty than the average person does—because I have greater self-control. So I recognize that, while a 24-hour beer store would be great for me, it would be a mixed blessing for others… What does this have to do with libertarianism? It is important because every academic proponent of libertarianism—understood loosely, as any doctrine that assigns individual liberty priority over other political values—is a member of the self-control aristocracy. As a result, they are advancing a political ideal that benefits themselves to a much greater extent than it benefits other people. In most cases, however, they do so naively, because they do not recognize themselves as members of an elite, socially-dominant group, that stands to benefit disproportionately. They think of liberty as something that creates an equal benefit for all. (Or, to the extent that it fails to benefit some people, it is entirely the fault of those people, for failing to exercise sufficient self-control.)

Indeed, humanized portrayals of the realities of willpower are sometimes clearly aimed at making us feel as though our own capacities to make good choices are deeply fragile (our membership in the “self-control aristocracy” only tenuous), and that poor people whosedecision fatigue leads them astray are owed our sympathy. High time preference, learned helplessness, and the apparent rationality of objectively poor choices…there but for the grace go we.

Au contraire, understanding self-control as not just fragile but rather as learned and malleable is the proper response to the science. Practicing and developing more willpower won’t make every poor person rich, but it will make the importance of willpower and self-regulation into a largely self-fulfilling prophecy. One likely upshot of the incremental (“growth”) theory of intelligence is that people who see their failure of self-control as inevitable (fixed by genetics and circumstances) will be much less likely to do the things that will help them to choose better the next time. Heath may be correct that many individual libertarians have this blind spot with respect to their self-control privilege, but it is not an inherent philosophical difficulty of libertarianism.

This is not to deny that there are individual differences in capacity for willpower and self-control: almost certainly there are. But these differences are not revealed by simply observing how people behave in one situation or at one slice of time and inferring immutable personality traits from that. Indeed, Walter Mischel’s now-legendary “marshmallow test” may have done just as much to obscure understanding of self-control as it did to elucidate its nature. If you recall, the marshmallow test confronted small children with the difficult choice between two marshmallows later or one marshmallow now. Delaying gratification was found to be correlated with other positive outcomes even much later in life (e.g. higher SAT score, lower BMI).

At first blush, the marshmallow test’s implications seem as clear as day: we can see differences in the innate willpower of even preschool-aged children, and these children carry their willpower (or lack thereof) with them throughout the rest of their lives, for better or for worse. If this were the simple truth, we would rightly worry that a more laissez-faire regime than we have presently would do more to create than rectify misery and injustice for citizens (most of whom must, on this view, be rather unremarkable in the innate willpower department).

But that’s not the simple truth. Though a few kids may be natural self-control superstars, those who “passed” the marshmallow test by delaying gratification often showed overt signs of effort. Coping mechanisms like distracting oneself with another object or body part helped the gratification-delayers to take focus off the immediate pleasure of one marshmallow and to reach their self-defined goal of waiting for two. Although these self-control boosting tactics surely happened largely subconsciously in the small children, they may have been learned in the first place and are surely learnable.

For this reason, suggestions about how to improve willpower (“do your hardest work earliest in the day!” “don’t shop on an empty stomach!”) are not merely silly “lifehacks”appropriate only for elites. Notice that some self-control self-help tips already comprise the psychologically-accurate core often unfortunately hidden in exchanges about, for instance, why poor people don’t eat well. It may be true that no one (poor or wealthy) makes good food choices when they’re that tired and in a hurry. This reflects proper humility with respect to the limits of human willpower. But those urging others to “plan meals ahead of time” and “make a food budget” are correct, too. These are reasonable pre-commitment measures that really can enhance even a tired and hurried person’s ability to make good choices.

A libertarian world may be one in which citizens with self-control most fully reap the benefits of self-control, but it’s also a world where citizens are best-positioned to develop it. In other words, a libertarian world’s systematic (but organic) benefit to those with self-control is a feature of that world, not a bug. How people respond to policy by developing willpower (or not) is to some extent an empirical question, and we can study these matters empirically. But is it any wonder, for instance, that Americans stopped saving when they had become confident that big government would take care of them forever? A less generous, means-tested retirement benefit might seemingly slight a few people on the margin, but it also could help to recreate a society of savers. Either “libertarian paternalist” policies or unilateral individual practices (like opting in to a automatic monthly savings account contribution) can get us there. And this is the power of allowing conditions to reward virtuous behavior: you get more virtue.

Citizens improving their willpower is a positive-sum game, and government can encourage this game to flourish by largely leaving untouched the institutions and structures that inherently reward delaying gratification. This does constitute, in some sense, a systematic benefit of libertarianism bestowed (or allowed to fall) upon those who do achieve and maintain self-control throughout their lives. But a large degree of self-control is prosocial (good for self and others), widely available, and conducive to long-term societal stability. Sometimes the government helps citizens to develop their moral and intellectual powers by providing materially, as in the case of education. In the case of self-control, the goal may be better reached through declining to provide. If this creates a “self-control aristocracy”—merely a group of people whose natures and choices have caused them to develop and benefit from the exercise of willpower—then long live the self-control aristocracy. This is one aristocracy into which one needn’t be born.

https://www.libertarianism.org/columns/libertarianisms-untroubling-aristocracy-self-control?utm_content=buffer19c96&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_campaign=buffer

Posted on 11 Comments

Christie stands by mandatory quarantine for health care workers treating Ebola

images-4

Christie stands by mandatory quarantine for health care workers treating Ebola

OCTOBER 26, 2014, 8:50 AM    LAST UPDATED: SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014, 4:48 PM
BY MELISSA HAYES AND CHRISTOPHER MAAG
STAFF WRITERS | 
THE RECORD

Governor Christie on Sunday defended the 21-day quarantine for health care workers returning from treating Ebola patients in West Africa, as the nurse who became the first target of the policy continued to criticize her treatment from an isolated tent by University Hospital in Newark.

RUSS DESANTIS/SPECIAL TO THE RECORD
Christie speaking in Toms River Thursday.

“We’ve taken this action and I have absolutely no second thoughts about it,” Christie said on “Fox News Sunday” in response to a question about concerns raised by Kaci Hickox, the nurse who was quarantined upon landing at Newark Liberty Airport on Friday, having returned from treating Ebola patients in Sierra Leone.

Hickox, who lives in Maine and worked for Doctors Without Borders, complained that the new state protocols were disorganized, and said she had no symptoms and should not be held and treated like a criminal in a first-person account published in the Dallas Morning News on Saturday.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/christie-stands-by-mandatory-quarantine-for-health-care-workers-treating-ebola-video-1.1118340#sthash.71vHtZ6B.dpuf

Posted on 4 Comments

Teacher spends two days as a student and is shocked at what she learns

RHS_BEST_theridgewoodblog.net_13

Teacher spends two days as a student and is shocked at what she learns

What could our Ridgewood schools learn from this post and this process? We need more transparency in our schools as to methods and best practices. How are we engaging our kids’ brains? We must demand more from the unions, teachers and the administration.(Reader)

Do teachers really know what students go through? To find out, one teacher followed two students for two days  and was amazed at what she found. Her report is in  following post, which appeared on the blog of Grant Wiggins, the co-author of “Understanding by Design” and the author of “Educative Assessment” and numerous articles on education. A high school teacher for 14 years, he is now the president of Authentic Education,  in Hopewell, New Jersey, which provides professional development and other services to schools aimed at improving student learning.  You can read more about him and his work at the AE site.

Wiggins initially posted the piece without revealing the author. But the post became popular on his blog and he decided to write a followup piecerevealing that the author was his daughter, Alexis Wiggins, a 15-year teaching veteran now working in  a private American International School overseas. Wiggins noted in his follow-up that his daughter’s experiences mirrored his own and aligned well with the the responses on surveys that his  organization gives to students.

by Alexis Wiggins

https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/wp/2014/10/24/teacher-spends-two-days-as-a-student-and-is-shocked-at-what-she-learned/?tid=pm_pop

Posted on 2 Comments

Ex-CBS reporter’s book reveals how liberal media protects Obama

51db9heujtl-_sl500_aa300_

Ex-CBS reporter’s book reveals how liberal media protects Obama
By Kyle Smith
October 25, 2014 | 5:12pm

Sharyl Attkisson is an unreasonable woman. Important people have told her so.

When the longtime CBS reporter asked for details about reinforcements sent to the Benghazi compound during the Sept. 11, 2012 terrorist attack, White House national security spokesman Tommy Vietor replied, “I give up, Sharyl . . . I’ll work with more reasonable folks that follow up, I guess.”

Modal Trigger

Another White House flack, Eric Schultz, didn’t like being pressed for answers about the Fast and Furious scandal in which American agents directed guns into the arms of Mexican drug lords. “Goddammit, Sharyl!” he screamed at her. “The Washington Post is reasonable, the LA Times is reasonable, The New York Times is reasonable. You’re the only one who’s not reasonable!”

Two of her former bosses, CBS Evening News executive producers Jim Murphy and Rick Kaplan, called her a “pit bull.”

https://nypost.com/2014/10/25/former-cbs-reporter-explains-how-the-liberal-media-protects-obama/

Posted on 10 Comments

Ho-Ho-Kus planners blast online petition

images-4

Ho-Ho-Kus planners blast online petition

OCTOBER 26, 2014    LAST UPDATED: SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014, 1:21 AM
BY CHRIS HARRIS
STAFF WRITER | 
THE RECORD

HO-HO-KUS — An online petition opposing a controversial subdivision proposal has disappeared from the Web, not even 24 hours after being dubbed “illegal” by Planning Board Chairman John Hanlon.

Launched via Change.org, the petition called on the Planning Board to reject a subdivision application filed months ago by Upper Saddle River’s Chamberlain Developers.

The Planning Board has been considering the application since the spring.

Chamberlain seeks to convert nearly 4 acres of mostly wooded land into 11 single-home plots, called the Hollows at Ho-Ho-Kus.

Seven of the 11 subdivided lots would be accessible via a proposed cul-de-sac opening onto West Saddle River Road, while four other properties would have frontage on Van Dyke Drive.

The survey called the planned project deficient and not compatible with the borough’s master plan.

Hanlon said at a meeting last week the survey was emailed twice to each of the Planning Board’s 10 members; only one, Borough Administrator Don Cirulli, read it.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/ho-ho-kus-planners-blast-online-petition-1.1118238#sthash.RF6PNylT.dpuf