Paramus, New Jersey
Paramus (pronounced /pəˈræməs/ pə-RAM-əs) is a borough in Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. As of the United States 2000 Census, the borough population was 25,737. As of the Census Bureau's 2007 estimate, the population was 26,278. A suburb of New York City, Paramus is located between 15–20 miles (24–32 km) northwest of Midtown Manhattan and approximately 8 miles west of Upper Manhattan.Paramus is one of the largest shopping meccas in the country, with over $5 billion in annual retail sales, more than any other ZIP Code in the United States. This is despite the fact that Paramus is noted for having some of the most restrictive blue laws in the nation (even stricter than those prevailing in the rest of Bergen County), banning nearly all retail and white-collar businesses from opening on Sundays. So, almost everything is closed except restaurants and some grocery stores on Sunday.Paramus was incorporated as a borough by an act of the New Jersey Legislature on March 2, 1922, based on the results of a referendum held on April 4, 1922 that passed by a vote of 238 for and 10 against. Paramus was created from portions of Midland Township, which now exists as Rochelle Park.
Local government
Paramus is governed under the Borough form of New Jersey municipal government. The government consists of a Mayor and a Borough Council comprising six council members, with all positions elected at large. A Mayor is elected directly by the voters to a four-year term of office and only votes to break a tie. The Borough Council consists of six members elected to serve three-year terms on a staggered basis, with two seats coming up for election each year.The Mayor is James Tedesco (D, term ends December 31, 2010. Borough Council Members are Council President Frank A. Ciambrone (D, 2008), Richard Conte (D, 2010), Frederick Hayo (D, 2009), Denis Niland (D, 2009), Richard LaBarbiera (D, 2010) and Michael Blitzstein (D, 2008).In elections held on November 6, 2007, voters turned out to fill two three-year seats on the Borough Council and answered two local ballot questions. Democratic incumbents Richard A. LaBarbiera (2,775 votes) and Richard J. Conte (2,748) were re-elected, edging Republican candidates Sam Casiello (2,552) and Michael Mariniello (2,534). Voters rejected both local ballot initiatives, turning down an Open Space Trust Fund that would collect one cent per $100 in assessed value by a 2,912–1,881 margin, and a $26.6 million library expansion by a vote of 3,125–1,759On Election Day, November 7, 2006, voters chose a mayor and filled two seats on the borough council. The 2006 council was composed of five Democrats and a Republican, with one Democratic and one Republican seat up for reelection, in a community in which numbers of registered Republicans and Democrats are almost even. Democratic incumbent Mayor James J. Tedesco III (4,823 votes) was reelected, defeating Republican challenger Michael Mariniello Jr. (3,662). Democratic newcomers Denis Niland (4,853) and Frederick Hayo (4,319) were elected to the borough council, defeating Republicans Sam Casielo (3,850) and Patrick O'Brien (3,635). The 2007 council elected to office is composed entirely of Democrats.
Federal, state and county representation
Paramus is part of New Jersey's 38th Legislative District and is in the Fifth Congressional District.New Jersey's Fifth Congressional District is represented by Scott Garrett (R, Wantage Township). New Jersey is represented in the United States Senate by Frank Lautenberg (D, Cliffside Park) and Bob Menendez (D, Hoboken).38th District of the New Jersey Legislature, which is represented in the New Jersey Senate by Robert M. Gordon (D, Fair Lawn) and in the New Jersey General Assembly by Joan Voss (D, Fort Lee) and Connie Wagner (D, Paramus). The Governor of New Jersey is Chris Christie (R, Mendham). The Lieutenant Governor of New Jersey is Kim Guadagno (R, Monmouth Beach).Bergen County's County Executive is Dennis McNerney (D). The executive, along with the seven-member Board of Chosen Freeholders administer all county business. As of 2010[update], Bergen County's Freeholders are Chairman James M. Carroll (D, Demarest), Vice-Chairwoman Elizabeth Calabrese (D, Wallington), John Driscoll, Jr. (R, Paramus), David L. Ganz (D, Fair Lawn), Robert G. Hermansen (R, Mahwah), Bernadette P. McPherson (D, Rutherford) and Tomas J. Padilla (D, Park Ridge). Other countywide elected officials are Sheriff Leo P. McGuire (D), Surrogate Court Judge Michael R. Dressler (D, Cresskill) and County Clerk Kathleen Donovan (R, Rutherford).
Politics
As of April 1, 2006, out of a 2004 Census estimated population of 26,624 in Paramus, there were 16,636 registered voters (62.5% of the population, vs. 55.4% in all of Bergen County). Of registered voters, 3,144 (18.9% vs. 20.7% countywide) were registered as Democrats, 3,148 (18.9% vs. 19.2% countywide) were registered as Republicans and 10,342 (62.2% vs. 60.1% countywide) were registered as Undeclared. There were two voters registered to other parties.On the national level, Paramus leans toward the Republican Party. In the 2008 presidential election, Republican John McCain received 51% of the vote here, defeating Democrat Barack Obama, who received around 47%.
Public Library
There are two public libraries in Paramus. There is the Main Library on Century Road. There is also the Charles E. Reid Branch library on Midland Avenue, which was originally a four-room schoolhouse built in 1876.The borough's original Public Library, known locally as the Howland House, was originally located at the intersection of Spring Valley Road and Howland Avenue. It was demolished sometime in the late 1990s. A September 11, 2001 memorial park now exists at the site.
Education
The Paramus Public Schools serve students in Kindergarten through twelfth grade. Schools in the district (with 2005–06 enrollment data from the National Center for Education Statistics) are five K-4 schools — Memorial Elementary School (294 students), Midland Elementary School (282), Parkway Elementary School (378), Ridge Ranch Elementary School (373) and Stony Lane Elementary School (246) — both Eastbrook Middle School (637) and Westbrook Middle School (699) for grades 5–8 and Paramus High School for grades 9–12 (1,680). Three of the district's schools have been formally designated as National Blue Ribbon Schools: Paramus High School, Parkway Elementary School and Ridge Ranch Elementary School.Paramus is home to many private religious schools. Paramus Catholic High School is a co-educational Roman Catholic high school founded in 1965 and operated by the Archdiocese of Newark. It is the largest Roman Catholic high school in the state of New Jersey, enrolling approximately 1,500 students. It is also the location of Visitation Academy, a K-8 Catholic school. Annunciation School, another K-8 Catholic school, operated from 1954–1982 at the Annunciation Church on West Midland Avenue. Paramus is home to both the Yavneh Academy, a K-8 Jewish day school, and the Frisch School, a large Modern Orthodox Jewish yeshiva serving high-school age students in grades 9–12.Bergen Community College is based in Paramus, with other satellite centers located elsewhere around the county. The Bergen campus of Berkeley College is located in Paramus.
History
The term Paramus comes from the Lenape Native American word meaning 'land of the wild turkey' or 'place of fertile soil'. That is why there is a giant metal statue of a turkey in the Paramus Park mall.[citation needed]Paramus, and the neighboring communities of Ridgewood and Hackensack, was the scene of a great deal of activity during the American Revolutionary War.A section of Paramus known as Dunkerhook (meaning dark corner in Dutch) was an African-American community dating back to the early 18th century. Although historical markers on the current site and local oral tradition maintain that this was a slave community, contemporary records document that this was actually a community of free blacks, not slaves.During World War II, Farview Avenue was closed off by the United States Army, who positioned anti-aircraft artillery along the street to defend against an air attack on New York City. Farview Avenue is located at the highest peak in Paramus and has a clear view of the New York City skyline.
Public transportation
New Jersey Transit bus routes 144, 145, 148, 155, 157, 162, 163, 164, 165, 168, 171, 175, 709, 722, 751, 752, 753, 755, 756, 758, 762 and 770 serve Paramus.
Road
Route 17, Route 4, and the Garden State Parkway pass through Paramus.
Commerce
Paramus is known for its multitude of stores and malls. It has five major indoor shopping centers, due to its easy access for residents in the areas of Bergen County and Passaic County in New Jersey and Rockland County in New York. New Jersey also does not levy a sales tax on clothes, which makes it an attractive shopping destination for people even further away in New York City.On Route 4, are The Outlets at Bergen Town Center (known as the Bergen Mall until 2006) and the Mall at IV. On Route 17, are Paramus Park and the Fashion Center. At the intersection of Routes 4 and 17 is Paramus's biggest and most famous mall, Westfield Garden State Plaza. Across from Westfield Garden State Plaza is the world's third-largest IKEA, one of three IKEAs in the New York City metro area. Westfield Garden State Plaza is the largest mall in the Westfield Groups' global portfolio with a gross leasable area of 1,993,182 square feet (190,000 m2). Westfield Group is the largest retail property group globally.Paramus, along with the rest of Bergen County, has strict blue laws preventing stores selling non-food items from opening on Sundays. Although it started as a religious observance, it is kept on the books due to a desire of the residents of Paramus to have one day a week when traffic is tolerable in the town. Furthermore, both Paramus and the surrounding county have significant Jewish and Muslim populations who do not observe Sabbath on Sunday. This law was called into question most recently when a BJ's Wholesale Club opened at the 4/17 junction. BJ's was allowed to open on Sundays, but is only allowed to sell food and basic necessities. The store has been structured to deny access for shoppers to purchase items that cannot be purchased on Sunday. Paramus has its own blue laws that are significantly more restrictive than those in effect in other communities in Bergen County. It is one of the last places in the entire United States to have such an extensive blue law.Local blue laws in Paramus were first proposed in 1957, while The Outlets at Bergen Town Center and Westfield Garden State Plaza were under construction. The legislation was motivated by fears that the two new malls would aggravate the already-severe highway congestion caused by local retail businesses along the borough's highways.The Paramus Borough Code forbids the performance of any 'worldly employment' on Sunday, with exceptions for charity, and the sale of newspapers, drugs, meals, prepared food and cigarettes, among a limited number of exceptions. Even work performed inside one's own home is prohibited, unless one can 'prove to the satisfaction of the Judge that he uniformly keeps the seventh day of the week commonly known as the 'Sabbath'...'. In spite of its six-day shopping week, Paramus consistently has the most retail sales of any ZIP Code in the United States. Many national chain stores boast Paramus as their most prominent locations, including Nordstrom, in which the Paramus store is their best-performing chainwide. There are 25 retailers that occupy multiple stores in Paramus, including Macy's which had outlets in three malls for a short period of time. Some retail analysts view Paramus as being two markets, centered on the two major highways. Lord & Taylor has two locations in Paramus, giving Paramus the distinction of the only town with more than one Lord & Taylor location.When Paramus residents go shopping on Sundays, they can visit Willowbrook Mall, an approximate 30 minute drive to its location in Wayne, New Jersey, or Palisades Center in West Nyack, New York, only 15–20 minutes away by car.
Mall history
1957 – Westfield Garden State Plaza was built by Muscarelli Construction Company on 198 acres (0.80 km2) at the intersection of Routes 4 and 17.
1957 – The Outlets at Bergen Town Center (known then as the Bergen Mall) was built on 101 acres (0.41 km2) on an area east of the Plaza on Route 4.
1968 – The Fashion Center was built on 35 acres (140,000 m2). The owners originally referred to its location as being in Ridgewood/Paramus to appeal to the Ridgewood population. Over the years, the references to Ridgewood became somewhat lost.[citation needed]
1974 – Paramus Park was built by the Rouse Company. The last of the large centers was built on 66 acres (270,000 m2) in the middle of an area where the old farms were located.
2003 –IKEAopens its third-largest store at the intersection of Routes 4 and 17, on the site of the oldAlexander'sdepartment store. It was joined the next year by three other retailers.
Due to the blue law, all malls in Paramus (as with rest of Bergen County) are closed on Sunday. Malls are also closed on two public holidays; Thanksgiving Day and Christmas Day. Early closing (half days) on Christmas Eve, New Year's Eve and New Year's Day.
Entertainment
In 1931, one of the earliest drive-in theaters opened in Paramus, and boasted the world's largest and brightest screen, located behind what is now Westfield Garden State Plaza. The Paramus Drive-In closed sometime around 1983.Paramus' lone movie theater complex is a 16-screen AMC Theatres located in an area of new construction at Westfield Garden State Plaza. Two theatres which have been closed within the last five years include the Route 4 Tenplex and the Cineplex Odeon Route 17 Triplex, once located next to Westfield Garden State Plaza on Route 17. The Triplex theatre was opened in 1965 by Century Theatres and was closed on January 19, 2006 by Loews Cineplex Entertainment. The Tenplex on Route 4 was closed on May 24, 2007, the day before the new AMC Theatres opened at Westfield Garden State Plaza. The Cinema 35 was also closed when the Plaza 35 Shopping Center was renovated in 2005.
Parks and recreation
Paramus is the home to two county parks. On the eastern side of the borough is Van Saun County Park. It features Bergen County's only zoo, home to a wide variety of wild and domestic animals living in recreated habitats natural to each species. On the western side of the borough is Saddle River County Park which features a 6 mile bike path reaching from Ridgewood to Rochelle Park.The borough also has four golf courses. Two are open to the public with one operated by the borough and another operated by the county (Orchard Hills County Golf Course). Two private golf course are also located in Paramus, they are the Ridgewood Country Club and Arcola Country Club. In 2008, the Paramus Golf Course opened up a miniature golf course that is themed after the town of Paramus as well as the state of New Jersey. Turkey statues are scattered around the course to celebrate Paramus as the 'land of wild turkeys.'
Popular culture
The 1993Saturday Night Livespin-off movieConeheadsis set in Paramus.Dan AykroydandJane Curtin's characters decide to move to and permanently reside in the town so daughterMichelle Burkecan attendParamus High School. Aykroyd's character 'Beldar Conehead' spends his days in Paramus teaching driving lessons and playinggolf.
Vinnie Fiorellofrom the popular bandLess Than Jake, the band has a few songs dedicated to Paramus.
In the movieRansom,Mel GibsonandGary Sinisedrive right past the now-defunct tenplex movie theater located on Route 4.
Several episodes ofThe Sopranos, theHBOmob drama, have used Paramus locations.Westfield Garden State Plazawas used as the 'Paramus Mall,' and the Ramsey Outdoor Store on Route 17 became the 'Ramsey Outdoor,' and a character is 'whacked' at the remnants of the Old Mill Bathing Beach on Paramus Road.In the final episode of the series, a scene withPaulie Walnutsis shot in Paramus, where he was in a car, driving past a gas station.[citation needed]
Arcola Amusement Park (Arcola section Rochelle Park/Paramus) was built in 1926 which covered about 20 acres (81,000 m2). A fire destroyed it in 1929.
Burn After Readinga 2008 film by theCoen Brotherswas partly filmed in Paramus at the site of the old Tower Records annex building located on Route 17S.
The Colbert Report, during its Threat Down segment on April 24, 2008, listed the bear sightings in Paramus as the Number 1 threat to our country. TheParamus Parkmall was also shown in the segment.
The 1979 movieThe In-Lawsmentions the Paramus Philharmonic as the wedding band.
An episode ofBoy Meets Worldmentions Cory and Shawn eating cake at the 'Paramus Mall'
An episode ofThe West Wingmentions the 'Paramus Mall' while discussing Christmas music at the White House.
An episode ofSaturday Night Livefeatured actor Jimmy Fallon wearing a Paramus Babe Ruth League—Fireplace Restaurant t-shirt in one of the skits, given to him by local Paramus resident Jesse Richardson.
Ghostbusters 2—A guest on Peters talk show said she met an alien at a hotel in Paramus.
Rotten Apple series creator and head writer; Jesse Aaron Richardson attended Paramus High school and was raised in Paramus.
Less Than Jakehas written a song called '24 Hours in Paramus' on the album titled 'Losers, Kings, and Things We Don't Understand.'
Notable residents
Notable current and former residents of Paramus include:Joe Benigno(born 1953), sports radio personality onWFAN.
Chase Blackburn(born 1983), linebacker for theNew York Giantsand a member of theSuper Bowl XLIIchampion Giants.
Spero Dedes, (born 1979) Los Angeles Lakers radio commentator, NFL Network television host, and CBS NCAA tournament basketball announcer.
Dean Friedman(born 1955), one-hit wonder with the top tune 'Ariel' in 1977,which to date is the onlyTop 40song to ever include the word 'Paramus' in the lyrics.
Peter Gennaro(1919–2000),Tony Award-winning dancer and choreographer.
Matt Ghaffari, Olympic wrestler.
Jamie Gold(born 1969), winner of the 2006World Series of Poker.His father was a Dentist located on Ridgewood Avenue in Paramus.
Michael Kay, sportscaster.[citation needed]
Louis F. Kosco(born 1932), politician who served in both theNew Jersey General Assemblyand theNew Jersey Senate.
Lloyd Levin, film producer whose work includesUnited 93.
Tony Lip, actor who appeared onThe Sopranos, playing the role ofCarmine Lupertazzi.
William Marchant(born 1923), playwright and screenwriter, author ofDesk Set, died in Paramus on November 5, 1995.
Dean Obeidallah,Arab/Italian-Americancomedian.
Kazbek Tambi(born 1961), former professional soccer player.
Theodore Trautwein(1920–2000), judge who sentenced a reporter fromThe New York Timesto 40 days in jail in the 'Dr. X' trial ofMario Jascalevich.
Trixter, aglam metalband, formed in Paramus.
Elaine Zayak(born 1965), one of the worlds top figure skaters in the early 1980s, attended Paramus High School.
Historic sites
Paramus is home to the following locations on the National Register of Historic Places:Midland School– 239 W. Midland Ave. (added 1978)
Terhune House– 470 Paramus Rd. (added 1996)
Terhune-Gardner-Lindenmeyr House– 218 Paramus Rd. (added 1972)
Harmon Van Dien House– 449 Paramus Rd. (added 1983)
Zabriskie Tenant House– 273 Dunkerhook Rd.. (added 1984)