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Saturday, December 23, 2006

The People In Your Neighborhood


LITTLE FALLS - PASSAIC COUNTY- WAYNE TOWNSHIP / REFLECTIONS ON LIFE IN NORTH JERSEY NOT TOO LONG AGO



AShley Richards

Ashley Richards




Growing up in Little Falls, New Jersey, just 30 minutes outside of the city (New York City - is there any other?) it felt very much like a small town at times. Everyone pretty much knew everyone else, or you at least knew of everyone else.

Summers meant spending the day at the pool, and by fall it was time for full days of school. So the weekends were spent with the more cautious older kids who never ventured into Mean-Green land.



The People in Your Neighbourhood


In Mountain View there are characters I see on a regular basis. The homeless man that dances with an invisible partner. The rotund bearded man who wears a kilt and leather wide-brimmed hat and waits for the bus to get to his high-tech job. (Yes, he’s in high-tech; I’ve seen him waiting to go home in front of a Mountain View company.) However, the characters from my childhood hold more magic for some reason.

Pete And RePete

Growing up in Little Falls, New Jersey, just 30 minutes outside of the city (New York City - is there any other?) it felt very much like a small town at times. Everyone pretty much knew everyone else, or you at least knew of everyone else.

Two characters everyone knew were the twins that we would see walking around town together all the time. We called them Pete and RePete. I have no idea if one of them was even called Pete. That is what we called them. And their names were passed from one generation of children to the next.

In my memory they’re walking down Main Street wearing dark grey work pants and dark grey jackets (always pressed), carrying lunch pails or a book (it was something), brown short-cropped hair, and horn rimmed glasses. They were completely synchronous - walked in step, swaying their arms at the same pace. They seemed to have the same internal beat - their hearts probably had beat at the same rate since they were in utero and everything else just fell into place. Seemingly, they were inseparable and one-in-the-same.

Riding through town in the backseat of my parent’s sky blue Chevy Caprice, I’d do some Pete/RePete spotting. It was a little treat to watch them in their little world. It meant my world was as it should be with the reassuring consistency of Pete and RePete walking to and from work together. (I had no idea where they were going, but as they were adults they must have been on their way to work or back home from it. That’s what adults do.) And yet, I always found myself asking what would it be like to always have another person with you - never being alone? If one died, how would the other survive if he’s never been alone in his entire life?

Over the years, white streaks appeared on the sides of their heads. They seemed to do aging synchronously too. Slowly I saw less and less of them. Did they retire? Or was it as I grew older my daily route changed and theirs didn’t? I don’t know what happened to them. Did they ever know we called them Pete and Re-Pete? They must have.

Mr. Mean-Green

Another character lived on my street. We called him Mr. Mean-Green. He was probably more a neighbourhood character, rather than a town character. He was obsessed with his lawn and garden, and would stand guard over it while sitting on his front porch. If we got an inch too close to his front lawn, he would glare. God forbid we ever stepped on that lawn. Boy, would we get yelled at, or worse yet he’d talk to our parents. We wouldn’t even dare bring a dog anywhere near that lawn. They had small terriers, but they never pooped on that lawn. That’s what the neighbours’ lawns were for. So even though there was a sidewalk there, I would cross the street just to avoid going anywhere near Mean-Green land.

The formidable Mr. Mean-Green was no match for my curiosity though. I don’t know if he ever knew about my explorations of his backyard. I can only imagine that he didn’t, because I don’t remember my mom giving me a talking-to about them. You see there was an unfortified entry point into his backyard. I lived on the side of the street that had fairly level properties. On the other side of the street, where he lived, the backyards dropped off into a gully that had a brook running through it. This brook was the highway to adventure. On the weekends I would follow the older kids through tunnels to areas yet unexplored by me. During the week while they were in school, I would go back to the brook to the places we had been.

One of the places the older kids always by-passed was Mr. Mean-Green’s portion of the gully. They always stayed in the brook there where it decided to dig deeper into the ground, so that we would have had to climb up vertical walls to get out. But I would peak over the edge of the brook while my older sister begged me to keep up. To me it looked like something out of Alice in Wonderland. Vast areas of perfectly even, soft, green grass, with a bridge over the brook that led to a secluded garden area rimmed with flowers. It was too much temptation for a little girl to resist. So one Spring weekday, I climbed out of the brook to the garden. I didn’t stay too long. But it was so exciting to be in the forbidden territory where there was a table set surrounded by flowers that was just dying to be used for tea parties. Oh Alice would have loved this place, and a little girl could play tea party for hours.

Mrs. Mean-Green must have spotted me perched up on her look-out, the back porch. She started coming down the hill with her terriers. I was terrified of dogs, even small ones that I could have crushed just by sitting on them. My memory gets hazy here. I can’t remember if she talked to me or if I got away. I do remember clambering down the side of the brook and jumping from rock to rock to reach the safety of the Freeland’s portion of the brook, where I could run back home undetected. But silly little me returned a few more times that Spring to play. After that Spring I never got out of the brook there again. Summers meant spending the day at the pool, and by fall it was time for full days of school. So the weekends were spent with the more cautious older kids who never ventured into Mean-Green land.

There are more characters like the man that supposedly chased kids out of his yard with a shot gun and the purple house lady. But this post is getting too long and travelling down memory lane is probably boring for anyone other than me.





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Saturday, December 16, 2006

N.J. Bears Smarter Than Government Leaders


WEST MILFORD / NEW JERSEY BEARS SMARTER THAN GOVERNMENT LEADERS



Black Bear Blog



One town in New Jersey has been trying to do something about nuisance bears for so long, I’m not sure they can remember when the process started. West Milford was supposed to purchase bear-proof garbage cans with money from a grant issued by the DEP. It’s been an embarrassment to the town and to the DEP because they can’t get it done.



I Think Bears In New Jersey May Be Smarter Than Government Leaders


Tom Remington

~ By Tom Remington


New Jersery’s commissioner of the Department of Environmental Protection, called off the 2006 bear hunt. One of the reasons Lisa Jackson gave in cancelling the hunt was because she didn’t think the newly approved Bear Management Plan included enough non-lethal ways of dealing with bear problems and complaints from residents. Of course a simple bear hunt would have reduced numbers, reduced complaints, provided for a healthier bear population and wouldn’t have cost the state anything as the cost would be absorbed through hunter license and permit fees. But that’s not the New Jersey way!

At least one town in New Jersey has been trying to do something about nuisance bears for so long, I’m not sure they can remember when the process started. West Milford was supposed to purchase bear-proof garbage cans with money from a grant issued by the DEP. It’s been an embarrassment to the town and to the DEP because they can’t get it done.

This was all part of a plan to see if bear-proof garbage cans would reduce the number of complaints from residents. The plan was to purchase 3,075 cans and distribute them to 1,525 homes in selected areas most affected by bears. When the proposal was announced, the garbage haulers wanted to renegotiate their contract with the town because of increased labor costs of having to unscrew the lids of all the garbage cans before emptying them. (Of course it wouldn’t be all of them because we know that many people won’t bother to take the time to screw the lids on anyway. Heck, they won’t buckle a seat belt, why would they take the time to screw on a lid to a stinking old garbage can?)

Then the town council couldn’t make up its mind whether to buy a cheaper version of the screw-of lids or a more expensive kind of spring-loaded lid. Finally, the bids went out but within a couple of months they had to rebid the process all over again because they failed to provide detailed information necessary for contractors to make accurate bids.

Believe it or not, it does get worse. The company that won the bid, Compliant Solutions, secured a contract to manufacture 3,075 screw-off lid garbage cans for a price of $176,000. Yes, folks that’s $57.24 a can ... and oh, by the way, you expected handles to come for that price?

Compliant Solutions said they would be happy to drill the holes and put handles on the cans but that would be another negotiated price.

“That’s four holes per handle, and four handles per can,” Township Manager Richard Kunze said Thursday. “That’s a lot of holes.”

Representatives of the winning bidder, Compliant Solutions of Elmwood Park, were at the council meeting to demonstrate the rubberized critter cans with the screw-off lids. The company offered to drill the holes, but said it would have to pass the labor costs on to the township.

But the town couldn’t just pay Compliant to put the handles on because it might create some real legal messes when complaints from the losing bidders began pouring in.

Now the town still doesn’t have bear-proof cans. I wonder if the New Jersey Supreme Court would have ruled differently about the bear hunt if they had known that the same DEP that stopped the bear hunt was the same DEP that couldn’t get a town to “find more non-lethal ways” of dealing with bears.

Just think how simple and cost effective one simple little 5-day bear hunt could have been. No problem!

Tom Remington




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Friday, December 15, 2006

State Assembly Passes Civil Union Bill


NEW JERSEY / STATE ASSEMBLY PASSES CIVIL UNION BILL


Citizen Link



Under orders from the New Jersey Supreme Court to give equal benefits to same-sex couples, members of the Assembly chose civil unions instead of gay "marriage" as the means to comply with the court's order.



New Jersey Assembly Passes Civil Union Bill


Lawmakers in the Garden State this afternoon voted 56-19 in favor of creating civil unions, The Associated Press reported.

Under orders from the New Jersey Supreme Court to give equal benefits to same-sex couples, members of the Assembly chose civil unions instead of gay "marriage" as the means to comply with the court's order.

Last month the justices ruled that the state must either allow same-sex couples to marry or create civil unions that provide the same legal rights and benefits.

Civil unions are legal partnerships that allow gay couples all the protections and benefits of marriage, but which stop short of being called "marriage." Both Vermont and Connecticut have similar civil-union laws and California has a similar domestic-partnership law.

The New Jersey Senate is expected to vote on the bill soon. If it passes, the legislation would be sent to Gov. Jon Corzine for signature. If he signs the bill, which he has promised to do, it would take effect 60 days later.




© 2006 Focus on the Family. CitizenLink is a registered trademark of Focus on the Family.
All rights reserved. International copyright secured. (800) A-FAMILY (232-6459).




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Thursday, December 14, 2006

Senior Citizen Christmas Dinner Planned


PASSAIC COUNTY / SENIOR CITIZEN CHRISTMAS DINNER PLANNED


PRESS RELEASE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

December 13, 2006



Passaic County Board of Chosen Freeholders and Department of Senior Services have planned a Christmas dinner on December 25.

Passaic County seniors will feel the love of the season at this special Christmas Day celebration.



Christmas Dinner Planned For Passaic County Seniors


The Event:

Passaic County Board of Chosen Freeholders and Department of Senior Services have planned a Christmas dinner on December 25.

Passaic County seniors will feel the love of the season at this special Christmas Day celebration.

While most will enjoy the Christmas Holiday surrounded by family and friends, there are many of our elderly neighbors who might otherwise not have that joy.

When:

Monday, December 25, 2006
12:00 – 3:00 p.m.

Where:

Passaic County Department of Senior Services
Suite 200

930 Riverview Drive (at the Totowa Business Center)

Totowa, New Jersey 07512

Transportation is available.

Sponsors:

Passaic County Board of Chosen Freeholders

Reservations:

Call 973-569-4060

Recognition:

Sincere appreciation is extended to our volunteers for their compassion and willingness to change their Christmas Day tradition in rder to share it with others.





This event is funded through private donations.
Contributions are being accepted and are greatly appreciated.




Contact:

Mary Kuzinski, Director,
Passaic County Senior Services
973-569-4060

Dolores Choteborsky,
Passaic County Public Information Officer
973-569-5050

www.passaiccountynj.org




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Virgin Mary Tree Stump Moves To New Location


PASSAIC CITY / VIRGIN MARY TREE STUMP SHRINE TO BE MOVED TO PERMANENT LOCATION


WJRZ-13



The stump was to be moved to a nearby church, but a group of business owners of Mexican heritage from New Jersey and New York raised money for a permanent shrine, which has a devoted following of Mexican and Polish immigrants.



Virgin Mary Tree-Stump Shrine On The Move



The Virgin Mary tree-stump shrine in Passaic, N.J..
CBS


(CBS) PASSAIC, N.J. -- Now, the site is getting a permanent shelter to replace the plywood lean-to that the city dismantled two months ago.

Passaic cited safety concerns after the makeshift roof collapsed amid prayer candles, flowers and rosary beads.

The stump was to be moved to a nearby church, but a group of business owners of Mexican heritage from New Jersey and New York raised money for a permanent shrine, which has a devoted following of Mexican and Polish immigrants, the Herald News of West Paterson reported in Tuesday's newspapers.

"It was just time that the Mexican community came together as one to focus on helping the community," Maria DeDios, treasurer of the newly formed United Mexican Chamber of Commerce, told the newspaper. "The shrine has brought us together and it shows what unity can do."

One volunteer worker, Laurencio Barrios, a native of Mexico who lives in Passaic, smoothed mortar on bricks at the site on Monday.

"I'm taking extra care, because it's for the Virgin," he said.

Work is to be done by Dec. 12, the holy day of the Virgin of Guadalupe, a manifestation of the Virgin Mary who is the patron saint of Mexico.

Landscaper Jaime Delgado, who is overseeing construction, said he has secured permits for work on the state-owned land from the city and the state Department of Transportation.

The DOT had no immediate comment Tuesday.


(The Associated Press contributed to this report.)





© 2006 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.





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Paterson Police Seek Possible Serial Rapist


PATERSON / POLICE HUNT FOR POSSIBLE SERIAL RAPIST


WABC 7



Young women in the community say they are concerned, enough to take extra precautions on the streets.

"Life is getting tough, and everybody needs to be careful," Kys said.

"I'm a woman, and I know I'm pretty," Paterson resident Nicole Atkinson said. "Some guys, you never know what they're really after. So you just have to be careful. Now you have to think twice."



Paterson Police Hunt For Possible Serial Rapist

Officials say two reported rapes have striking similarities


WABC Eyewitness News

- The search is on in New Jersey for a rapist who police say is pulling woman right off the street.

There have been at least two attacks so far, according to authorities.

Police say they think the attacker, in both cases, is the same man.

One victim is a 25-year-old woman. The other, a 16-year-old girl.

Both rapes were reported in Paterson this week.

That's where we find Stacey Sager with the story.

"I worry about it," Paterson resident Yudel Kys said.

And Kys isn't the only one.

Police in Paterson say they are very concerned about two sexual attacks in just three days.

Authorities say the latest attack was Wednesday night at East 39th Street.

Two days earlier, in broad daylight, the teen was reportedly attacked on East 19th Street.

Police say they haven't ruled out a connection because of similarities between the two attacks.

"One of the key similiarities is that they were grabbed from behind and dragged into the backyards," Lieutenant Richard Reyes said.

And the victims in both cases were also similar. Both were young Hispanic women. And each gave a similar description of the attacker. But neither victim saw his face.

Young women in the community say they are concerned, enough to take extra precautions on the streets.

"Life is getting tough, and everybody needs to be careful," Kys said.

"I'm a woman, and I know I'm pretty," Paterson resident Nicole Atkinson said. "Some guys, you never know what they're really after. So you just have to be careful. Now you have to think twice."

Police are asking anyone with information to call.





(Copyright 2006 WABC-TV)




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Religious Education Expands For The Disabled


NEW JERSEY / RELIGIOUS EDUCATION EXPANDS FOR THE DISABLED



North Jersey.com


Families who would have preferred religious school must enroll their child in public school programs instead. But religious educators are expanding their resources and finding new ways to deliver religious studies to special-education students.

Teachers use a special curriculum for students with disabilities, one that breaks down the steps of religious education into smaller bits, which are easier to understand.



EDUCATION
line
The Record


Religious Special Ed Growing


A shortage of programs and lack of funding make it difficult for parents to find appropriate religious education for children with learning disabilities.

In many cases, families who would have preferred religious school must enroll their child in public school programs instead. But religious educators are expanding their resources and finding new ways to deliver religious studies to special-education students.

A new school for special-needs Orthodox Jewish children recently opened in North Jersey -- giving some parents an alternative to an after-school program run in River Edge.

Choices are still somewhat limited for Catholic parents looking for the same sort of full-time parochial education, but many parishes also hold after-school programs. The Newark Archdiocese, which includes Bergen County, tries to mainstream children with learning disabilities, and has special-education classrooms or resource rooms within various church schools, said the Rev. Kevin Hanbury, the archdiocese's vicar for education and superintendent of schools.

The Sinai School, an Orthodox Jewish private school for children with learning disabilities, has been a blessing for Laurie Gopin of Bergenfield.

The removal of a brain tumor when he was 18-months-old left Gopin's son, Shmuel, now 5, with some communication delays. Gopin and her husband enrolled him in a Bergenfield afternoon public school program last year because the district could address his disability. But the family was still not satisfied; they wanted him to learn about his Orthodox Jewish heritage.

"We wanted him to be in a religious setting, especially because he loves all the religious aspects of school," said Gopin, of Bergenfield. "We felt at this time that a religious program would benefit him and make us feel more comfortable."

Funding is the main reason there is no Catholic equivalent to the Sinai School, said Jim Goodness, a spokesman for the archdiocese. "To provide that full range of services that public districts tend to do, it's a lot more money than we can afford," he said.

Catholic parents pay about $3,500 for an elementary education, and about $8,000 to send a child to parochial high school within the archdiocese, Goodness said. Parents pay a nominal fee, $80, if they can afford it, for an after-school program at St. John the Evangelist Church in Bergenfield, said Paula Andrade, who oversees all religious education in the parish.

Tuition is $27,500 a year at Sinai School. The school also is funded through private donations and the Jewish Federation, a non-profit umbrella organization. It is not eligible for state funding because it is religiously affiliated.

Catholic after-school education is all parish-based, said Ronald Pihokker, director of the archdiocesan office of catechetics. And it's up to each church to educate their children. There also are several "magnet centers, parishes that open their doors to children with severe special needs in different areas of the diocese," he said.

Sinai is the only Jewish private school in Bergen County completely dedicated to children with learning disabilities.

The school, housed in a wing of Yavneh Academy in Paramus, has 18 students, from 4½ to 10 years old, in three classes: a kindergarten, a first/second-grade class, and a third/fourth-grade class. Students are grouped according to ability and not solely by age.

There are five Catholic parish centers in the Newark Archdiocese, and two in Bergen County: St. John the Evangelist in Bergenfield and St. Anne's in Fair Lawn, said Ann Masters, director of the archdiocesan department for pastoral ministry for persons with disabilities. Fifty parishes in the archdiocese provide some sort of inclusive religious education. Of those, 26 are in Bergen County, she said.

The Tuesday night CCD program at St. John, which is 30 years old, was created for children who need in-depth attention, such as those who have autism. The special-education program is open to any family in the diocese.

There also is an after-school program for Jewish students with disabilities. The twice-weekly Jewish Education for Special Children program, held in River Edge, instructs children from Bergen and Passaic counties from all streams of Judaism and with a wide range of disabilities, said the school's director, Rabbi Yisroel Schwab.

Curriculum for children with learning or developmental disabilities is adjusted but still gives the education that mainstreamed children receive. The lessons at Sinai are multi-sensory.

When the children learned the story of Abraham and Sarah leaving their home to go to Canaan, the children played with toy camels in a sand table, kindergarten teacher Shulamis Fishman said.

Hands-on lessons, which also include learning a chapter of the Torah, are important in "trying to make spiritual and religious ideas concrete in [the children's] minds," she said.

At St. John, special-needs children are prepared for each sacrament as they begin to understand religion and faith, and not solely by age, said Andrade.

This year, 18 students from age 6 to about 40 attend the hour-long Tuesday night sessions. The program introduces the students to Catholic tenets and themes of each week's Mass, Andrade said.

The teachers use a special curriculum for students with disabilities, one that breaks down the steps of religious education into smaller bits, which are easier to understand, Andrade said.

And though the philosophy of religion can be difficult for anyone to grasp, the students understand the basic tenets of their faith.

"These kids understand better than many adults, because they know that Jesus is their friend and loves them," Andrade said. "They don't have a hard time with that concept. And they believe it."





E-mail: firschein@northjersey.com

Copyright © 2006 North Jersey Media Group Inc.




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