String of domestic killings shocks Bergen County
SEPTEMBER 5, 2014 LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2014, 12:28 AM
BY STEPHANIE AKIN
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD
In Bergen County, where violent crime is a rarity, four deaths over the past week have punctuated a stark reality: no community is immune from the horrors of domestic violence.
The killings — a man in his 80s shot and killed his brother-in-law, his wife and then himself in Hasbrouck Heights on Wednesday morning, just days after a 24-year-old allegedly beat and stabbed his mother to death in their Ho-Ho-Kus home — join more than a dozen other domestic killings in Bergen County over the past two years.
“We are well aware that it crosses all boundaries, all races, all communities, all socioeconomic strata and all ages,” said Elaine Myerson, executive director of Shelter our Sisters in Hackensack. “The bottom line is that this happens in Bergen County. We’re not immune.”
Details of this week’s crimes were still unclear Thursday as investigators and friends and family of the victims continued to try to piece together what happened and why. A central question surrounding both cases might never be answered – what could drive a person to turn on those with whom he shared his closest bonds?
“What probably sets the domestic violence homicides apart is, you’re dealing with otherwise very decent people that do some terrible things under circumstances that you just can’t explain,” Bergen County Prosecutor John L. Molinelli said. “That’s why our courts take domestic violence cases so seriously. … These are all potential homicides.”
So far in 2014, seven of 10 homicides have been domestic crimes, Molinelli said. Last year, it was six out of seven.
– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/string-of-domestic-killings-shocks-bergen-county-1.1081398
Rogue Cell Towers Could Be Intercepting Your Call
photo by Boyd Loving hummmmm……….(Ridgewood Rogue Tower?
Rogue Cell Towers Could Be Intercepting Your Call
Dave Lewis Contributor
It seems rather far fetched at first glance. There is news that came out last week that rogue cell phone towers around the US are forcing mobile devices to disable their encryption making it possible that someone might be able to listen in to your call. “That could never happen to me,” you think out loud. But, apparently it could.
In 2010 at the DEF CON in Las Vegas, security researcher Chris Paget did the unthinkable. He built a cell tower of his own so that he could spoof legitimate towers and intercept calls.The device would mimic the type used by law enforcement agencies to intercept phone calls. In this case, he was able to build it for roughly $1500 US. Paget’s device would only capture 2G GSM phone calls. Carriers such as AT&T T +0.37% and T-Mobile would be vulnerable as they use GSM, unlike Verizon which relies on CDMA technology.
I was in attendance for this particular presentation and I had a disposable phone with me at the time. During the presentation when the device was switched on my phone was more than happy to oblige and seamlessly associated with the contraption that was across the room. Had I not been aware that this was going on, it was quite conceivable that I could have not noticed the change to the rogue tower. The point of this presentation was to raise awareness of the security flaws that affect GSM related phones.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/davelewis/2014/09/03/rogue-cell-towers-could-be-intercepting-your-call/
Steve Forbes and Steve Lonegan Team up , to Mend the Fed and Restore a Classical Gold Standard
Steve Forbes and Steve Lonegan Team up , to Mend the Fed and Restore a Classical Gold Standard
New York, NY , Steve Forbes and Steven Lonegan have joined forces and embarked on a mission to defend the liberty of the individual, which can only be protected when the wages, quality of life and savings earned through the fruits of one’s labor are preserved by the maintenance of sound currency.
According to the group ,there is no greater expression of private property than the preservation of value that is maintained in our currency. Our money is the measure of the value of our earnings and savings, our property. When someone’s property is taken without their consent, this amounts to an attack on this most fundamental right. Today’s monetary policy takes control of our money and hands it to unelected bureaucrats. Our mission is to return control of our money to the people, fix the dollar and restore sound money.
According to the two Steve’s the Golden Age of Equitable prosperity in America ended with the closing of the gold window by President Nixon in 1971 . The closing of the “gold window ” was the de-faco death of the American Dream .
The Bank of England calculates, If America had stayed with the gold standard your real income would be 50% higher. That would solve a lot of problems. Moreover, there are solid reasons to believe that America can make up for lost time and create the kind of sizzling economic growth that would raise wages across-the-board, making up in a decade what ground was lost over the last 40 years.
The Federal Reserve System was invented to work within the classical gold standard. What, then, is to be done? If the Fed follows “the golden rule” — a better version of the Great Moderation that led to the great job growth under Presidents Reagan and Clinton — we can restore the American Dream.
By restoring the classical gold standard, and if possible changing a few laws so as to permit competing currencies, America can create a climate of equitable prosperity that will generate tens of millions of good new jobs, end wage stagnation, restore a climate of opportunity wherein everyone – blue or white collar, of every age, race, and creed – can climb the ladder to affluence, balance the federal budget via economic growth, provide the resources to improve the natural environment and fix our decaying national infrastructure.
Bergen luxe car makers post record August sales
Maserati Ghibli
Bergen luxe car makers post record August sales
SEPTEMBER 4, 2014 LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2014, 1:21 AM
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD
Print
* Record results at luxury car makers with N.J. offices
Maserati North America of Englewood Cliffs said August was its best month ever, with the Italian carmaker selling 1,274 vehicles, reflecting a 268 percent increase compared with the same month last year.
By LINDA MOSS
Two luxury automobile makers with U.S. headquarters in Bergen County posted record sales in August, with Maserati boosted by what the company calls its “accessibly” affordable Ghibli, whose base price is $66,900.
Maserati North America Inc. of Englewood Cliffs and BMW Group of Woodcliff Lake reported banner Augusts.
Maserati said August was its best month ever, with the Italian carmaker selling 1,274 vehicles, reflecting a 268 percent increase compared with the same month last year.
Year-to-date, Maserati has seen a 312 percent increase in sales in the United States and Canada, with 2014 already surpassing total sales for 2012 and 2013 combined, the automaker said.
– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/business/strong-month-for-maserati-bmw-1.1081006
Traffic Alert for Friday 9/5/14 Fall Car Show
Traffic Alert for Friday 9/5/14 Fall Car Show
East Ridgewood Ave will be closed between North Maple Ave and Prospect Street between 4:30pm and 9:00pm for the Chamber of Commerce fall Car Show. Oak Street, Walnut Street and Cottage Place will all be closed between Franklin Ave and Dayton Street. Cars will not be able to park in the business district on the closed roads after 4:00pm.
For information about the event click on the link below.
https://www.ridgewoodchamber.com/events/details.php?month=9&event=787

Quick action by Ridgewood PD saves house from major fire
Photo credit: Boyd A. Loving
Quick action by Ridgewood PD saves house from major fire
September 4,2014
Boyd A. Loving
2:13 PM
Ridgewood NJ, Ridgewood PD Uniformed Patrol Officers Raymond Tarino and John Ward, Jr. were in the right place at the right time on Thursday afternoon, 09/04, just two (2) blocks away from the 200 block of Circle Avenue when they heard dispatchers broadcast a report of an “unknown type fire” inside of a home located within that block. Tarino and Ward raced to the scene and were informed of a small fire located in the 3rd floor attic, reportedly ignited by a young child who was playing with a lighter. After ensuring that all occupants of the home had been safely evacuated, the officers entered the structure with a fire extinguisher from one of their patrol cars and snuffed the fire out. A full complement of Ridgewood FD personnel arrived shortly thereafter with more extinguishers to wrap things up completely. The home was then ventilated of accumulated smoke and turned back over to the owner within 30 minutes. Damage was limited to a rug and sub flooring on the 3rd floor. No injures were reported.
Photo credit: Boyd A. Loving
Let them Eat Fries : Fast food workers take to the streets
Let them Eat Fries : Fast food workers take to the streets
Thousands of fast food workers are expected to stage protests Thursday outside of restaurants such as McDonald’s, Burger King and Domino’s in a coordinated push for higher pay.
Backed by the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), fast food workers in 150 cities plan to walk off the job and pick up picket signs to demand that they be paid no less than $15 per hour. It will be the seventh strike organized by the Fast Food Forward campaign since November 2012, when the campaign began.
“At Thursday’s strike, fast food restaurants will see firsthand that workers are willing to do whatever it takes to win $15 and union rights,” said Kendall Fells, the organizing director at Fast Food Forward, which receives funding from the SEIU.
Business groups and franchises are pushing back on the campaign, arguing an increase in the minimum wage would be bad for the economy and ultimately hurt workers.
Steve Caldeira, CEO of the International Franchise Association, said in a Wednesday statement that the SEIU and other labor groups were putting pressure on the corporations in a callous attempt to grow their membership.
“When you boil this all down, it’s really about the unions being hypocritical and greedy by exploiting proposals meant to support fast food workers to enrich themselves,” Caldeira said in a statement.
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the nation’s most powerful business group, produced an analysis that says more than 40 of the full-time employees at SEIU headquarters make less than $15 per hour — the same amount that the union says should be the minimum for fast food workers.
Read more: https://thehill.com/business-a-lobbying/business-a-lobbying/216594-fast-food-workers-take-to-the-streets-for-15-minimum#ixzz3CLvkywmD
Ridgewood Historical Society’s Schoolhouse Museum reopens this weekend
Ridgewood Historical Society’s Schoolhouse Museum reopens this weekend
Bolger Heritage Center, Ridgewood Public Library
Ridgewood NJ, Don’t forget the Ridgewood Historical Society’s Schoolhouse Museum reopens this weekend with their exhibit “A Community’s Journey”!https://www.ridgewoodhistoricalsociety.org/visitus.htm
Also this weekend, the Meadowlands Museum is hosting a lecture with Prof. Mark P. Donnelly titled “Baritsu: The Lost and Found Scientific Self-Defense of Sherlock Holmes”. For more information, check out their Facebook event: https://www.facebook.com/events/742012055863117/?ref=5
Ridgewood college students set sail on a journey to learn
PHOTOS COURTESY OF DOUG LICITRA
Students from the SEA program on the bow of the Corwith as they enter their first port in France. Pictured (above): Doug Licitra, second from left, and Mo Howard, third from left.
Ridgewood college students set sail on a journey to learn
SEPTEMBER 3, 2014 LAST UPDATED: WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 2014, 4:19 PM
BY BY LIZ WELLINGHORST
STAFF WRITER
They say once a shipmate, always a shipmate.
That proved true for two Ridgewood college students who spent four weeks at sea on a 134-foot sailboat, SSV Corwith Cramer, working on a tall ship as part of a 23-person crew, learning about life on the sea, themselves and visiting remote, exotic ports of call in Western Europe.
“It’s true. Definitely something different about a shipmate,” said Mo Howard, a junior at the University of Rhode Island.
“You live with them in tight quarters, see them at the worst, at their best and when they’re seasick.” Howard said. “I know my shipmates saw me not feeling so great.”
Howard spent a semester at sea this summer with Doug Licitra, a senior at Saint Joseph’s University in Philadelphia, and other college students from across the country. The two didn’t know each other before the program started.
Licitra graduated from Ridgewood High School (2011) and Howard graduated from the Hun School in Princeton (2012). On the sea, the two became fast friends.
The two mariners participated in SEA Semester’s Historic Seaports of Western Europe, a study abroad program that combines academics with a voyage on the sea. The journey, which covered approximately 1,800 nautical miles, had port stops and walking tours in Cork, Ireland; Douarnenez, France; Lisbon, Portugal and Cadiz, Spain.
SEA Semester is affiliated with the Sea Education Association, an undergraduate educational-based group on Cape Cod and located in the oceanographic research community of Woods Hole, Mass. Students earned four academic credits for their course, entitled Maritime History and Culture, offered through Boston University.
“It wasn’t your normal study abroad,” Licitra said. “We worked on the boat, stood watch during the middle of the night, did a boat check every hour, learned the sail lines and nautical language, but we also had academic work to fulfill with deadlines. It was exhausting.”
– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/towns/ridgewood-college-students-set-sail-on-a-journey-to-learn-1.1080324#sthash.OvN42FYy.dpuf
The Name-Dropper: Van Neste Square
The Name-Dropper: Van Neste Square
SEPTEMBER 4, 2014 LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2014, 1:21 AM
BY JEFFREY PAGE
SPECIAL TO THE RECORD
THE RECORD
Who was Lee of Fort Lee, Votee of Votee Park and Merritt of Camp Merritt? The Name-Dropper gives you the lowdown on some of the people whose names you see on public statues, memorial plaques, park signs, highways and even some local streets around North Jersey. Have suggestions? Email them to features@northjersey. com and put Name-Dropper in the subject field.
In the legendary first intercollegiate football game, when Rutgers beat Princeton, 6-4, John Alfred Van Neste of the Rutgers team may have kicked the ball, may have helped score a point, may have blocked a Princeton player.
Then again, maybe not.
Accounts of that game played in New Brunswick in 1869 report the score, but provide little about how individual players performed.
It seems easy, 145 years later, to assume Van Neste got a chance to play since the rules of that time dictated large lineups, 25 players per side.
But in one respect, how Van Neste played doesn’t matter since it was not his exploits on the gridiron that caused the Village of Ridgewood to name a sweet little downtown park in his memory. Rather it was for the remembrance of Van Neste as an adored minister in mid-19th to early-20th-century Ridgewood. He was the Reformed Church pastor who helped people of other denominations establish and build their own places of worship, and in the meantime allowed them to use his church.
– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/education/ridgewood-park-ministers-to-all-as-did-its-namesake-1.1081013#sthash.y4WRDtCp.dpuf
Ridgewood elementary schools using new world language program
Ridgewood elementary schools using new world language program
SEPTEMBER 3, 2014 LAST UPDATED: WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 2014, 5:59 PM
BY JODI WEINBERGER
STAFF WRITER
The world language program in the elementary schools will look a bit foreign this year.
Ridgewood educators are piloting what they call an “exploratory immersion” Spanish program for Grades K-5 after being unhappy with the results from language learning software Rosetta Stone.
The software was purchased by the district in 2010 after three world language elementary teachers were eliminated in response to $6 million in budget cuts in 2009.
“[Teachers] felt [Rosetta Stone] was ineffective to teach children the information,” said assistant superintendent Cheryl Best. “They didn’t really feel that students were effectively learning.”
Best called the program “a little glitchy” and said students would work on a section of the program only to return to it and find that their progress had been lost.
“It was very hard for students to make headway in the program,” she said.
As a result, teachers were barely meeting the minimum usage of 30 minutes a week with their classes.
– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/education/ridgewood-elementary-schools-using-new-world-language-program-1.1080360
“Parking Authority” vs. “Parking Utility”
“Parking Authority” vs. “Parking Utility”
September 3rd 2014
11:46 PM
What are the differences between Parking Authorities and Parking Utilities in the State of NJ, and why does Ridgewood choose to retain a Parking Utility?
Parking Authority
The Legislature of the State of New Jersey in 1948 adopted N.J.S.A. 40:11A et seq., commonly known as the “Parking Authority Law,” which authorized municipal governments to create an independent parking authority. A parking authority has the same geographic boundaries as the city that created it but is “a public body corporate and politic and a political subdivision of the State (of New Jersey).” ANew Jersey parking authority has five commissioners who are appointed by the governing body of the municipality (city council or city commissioners) for staggered five-year terms, or seven commissioners with two mayoral appointments and five governing body appointments. A parking authority may employ an executive director, attorney, engineer, accountant, and any other professionals and staff necessary to manage and deliver parking services to the city’s residents and the general public.
As noted elsewhere in this report, New Jersey parking authorities have extraordinary statutory authority. N.J.S.A. 40:11A-6 grants parking authorities the powers necessary to carry out and effectuate essential government purposes. Furthermore, parking authorities may buy, sell and/or lease property as a lessee or lessor; construct multiuse projects and parking facilities; borrow money; issue bonds; mortgage or otherwise encumber its assets; enter into contracts; and retain earnings.
Because parking authorities fund their operations from revenue derived from parking user fees rather than through real estate taxation, and board members traditionally are appointed from the business community, parking authorities tend to be operated like a business. Parking authorities are conscious of the fact that annual expenses should not exceed parking revenue. Surplus annual revenue is retained to pay for renewal and replacement repairs at existing parking facilities and to purchase real estate or build new facilities.
The strength of a parking authority is its independence. The parking authority’s commissioners are appointed, not elected, public officials. Consequently, a parking authority board of commissioners can make difficult planning decisions such as raising parking rates, installing parking meters, increasing parking enforcement, acquiring property by eminent domain, or selecting a location to construct a parking facility without regard to its immediate political consequence. A parking authority provides elected officials with a measure of political cover in that the authority’s decisions are the result of the actions of the authority’s board rather than the city’s governing council/commission.
Among the other advantages of a parking authority:
• Its debt is outside the municipalities bonding limit (Cap)
• Its sole purpose and function is to construct, maintain, and operate public parking
• It can retain earnings and accumulate surplus revenue for capital projects
• It can develop income-producing mixed-use projects exempt from real estate taxes, which are intended to subsidize the cost of providing public parking.
The negatives of a parking authority are the reverse side of its strengths. Parking authorities are independent and, on occasion, choose to raise parking fees or pursue goals, objectives, or projects that are not supported by a majority of the municipal governing body. Parking authorities are not directly controlled by the local governing body, which has the power only to appoint or reappoint one authority commissioner per year to the authority’s member board. Parking authorities traditionally have generated revenue surpluses at year end or have accumulated significant financial reserves through retained earnings that local municipal governments prefer be utilized for taxpayer relief or be transferred to the municipality’s general fund to offset the city’s operating budget expenses.
Based upon a review of Who’s Who in Parking 2005, published by the International Parking Institute (IPI), there are seven states—Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, New Jersey, Ohio, and Pennsylvania—that have parking authorities. However, it should be noted that Miami is the only parking authority in the state of Florida that was created by a special act of the legislature. The state of New Jersey has approximately thirty parking authorities, more than any other state in the nation.
Parking Utility
A municipality, as an alternative to a parking authority, may create a parking utility. A parking utility has a number of the strengths of a parking authority: executive director; operating budget and debt service separate from the municipality; ability to generate annual surplus revenue and retain earnings; ability to set its own rates and fees; and a function strictly limited to providing public parking.
The good news/bad news aspects of a parking utility are that the municipal governing body maintains virtual control of the parking entity. However, the hands-on control exercised by the municipal governing body places parking planning and decision making within the political process.
In municipal environments where control of the mayor’s office and governing body are continually contested, parking can become a political rather than a planning issue, which may affect a parking utility’s ability to aggressively pursue public parking improvements and objectives.
There are at least four parking utilities within the state of New Jersey: East Brunswick, Hoboken, Princeton, and Trenton.
The Answer:
Parking Utility revenues in excess of annual operating expenses are moved over to the Village’s general fund. If Ridgewood had a Parking Authority all these years, all revenues collected (and not stolen) would have been used exclusively to maintain and/or improve parking. There would be no parking problem now, because there would have been plenty of money to resolve it.
Proving once again ladies and gentlemen that you can’t have your cake and eat it too!
(Special thanks go to James Ten Hoeve, who revealed the answer publicly several years ago.)

NEW FREINDSHIP HAS EMERGED
NEW FREINDSHIP HAS EMERGED

North Jersey Islamic centers ‘strongly condemn’ journalist’s killing by Islamic State
The New Jersey chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) has a new Executive Director: Mohamed El-Filali. His previous position was as the Executive Director of a large Hamas-linked mosque where he worked since 2004.
North Jersey Islamic centers ‘strongly condemn’ journalist’s killing by Islamic State
SEPTEMBER 3, 2014, 8:03 PM LAST UPDATED: WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 2014, 8:03 PM
BY MINJAE PARK
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD
PATERSON — Local Muslim leaders convened at the Islamic Center of Passaic County on Wednesday to condemn the killing of journalist Steve Joel Sotloff by the Islamic State, the extremist militant group that posted a video of his beheading on Tuesday.
– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/north-jersey-islamic-centers-strongly-condemn-journalist-s-killing-by-islamic-state-1.1080373#sthash.28XCdj9V.dpuf
CAIR Picks Hamas-Linked Official to Lead NJ Chapter
CAIR will continue to offer itself as the voice of the Muslim community. The media and public shouldn’t forget their Islamist ideology.
The New Jersey chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) has a new Executive Director: Mohamed El-Filali. His previous position was as the Executive Director of a large Hamas-linked mosque where he worked since 2004.
El-Filali is from the Islamic Center of Passaic County, whose imam is being targeted by the Department of Homeland Security for deportation. El-Filali was also listed as an official of the American Muslim Union in 2002. He has been quoted as comparing the Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon to Adolf Hitler. He has also refused to condemn suicide bombings, saying, “I am not in their shoes. My house has not been destroyed; my brother has not been shot dead.”
El-Filali’s mosque was founded by Hamas operative Mohammad El-Mezain, who was convicted in 2008 for financing the terrorist group. El-Mezain was a leader of the mosque until 1999.
In 1990, a Muslim Brotherhood operative named Muhammad al-Hanooti became the mosque’s imam. He led the Islamic Association for Palestine, a known Brotherhood/Hamas front. A 2001 FBI document reported that al-Hanooti was suspected of fundraising for Hamas. He left the Islamic Center of Passaic County in 1995 to leadDar al-Hijrah Islamic Center, another mosque with strong Brotherhood/Hamas links.
https://www.clarionproject.org/analysis/cair-picks-hamas-linked-official-lead-nj-chapter
1.4 million New Jersey students return to school this year
1.4 million New Jersey students return to school this year
SEPTEMBER 3, 2014, 12:24 PM LAST UPDATED: WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 2014, 7:58 PM
BY HANNAN ADELY
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD
HACKENSACK — Around 1.4 million New Jersey students returned to school this week in what is expected to be a year of transition for both students and staff.
Schools continue to apply academic standards in the classroom that the state adopted in 2010 and to prepare for new tests based on those standards. They are also using new methods to evaluate teachers.
Photos: First day of school in Bergen, Passaic counties
While schools braced for changes by training teachers, upgrading technology and writing lesson plans, students were making their own choices for the first day: what to wear to school and pack in their bags.
Priyansh Saha, a third grader at the Nellie K. Parker School in Hackensack, chose his clothes and school supplies on his own and had everything ready for school days ago, said his mother, Priyanka Saha.
“We’re very excited,” Priyanka Saha said. “We hope he will learn a lot through the year.”
Saha said she expected this year to be more challenging for her son. “If he works hard he will get better in everything, whatever challenges he faces,” she said.
Maribel Breton said she also expected her son, Adonis, will have to study more in third grade. “He has to learn to read and write perfectly,” she said.
– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/1-4-million-new-jersey-students-return-to-school-this-year-1.1080056#sthash.kIPbd8b0.dpuf



















