Loading...
Loading...

In a candid sit-down interview, Montclair Public Schools Superintendent Ruth B. Turner joins us for the first installment of a new series we’re calling “Supper with the Super.” Over pizza and pasta at Italiana by Zod, we talk about the controversial school referendum, the district’s financial challenges, a potential school “reinvestment”, and what comes next for families, students, and taxpayers.
We also share Part Two of our interview with U.S. Senator Cory Booker, where the conversation expands beyond Montclair schools to the cost of living, immigration policy, healthcare costs, political fundraising, and the future of independent media.
Plus in this episode:
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Big news, Montclair. You can now watch the Montclair pod on YouTube.
That's right. Same local drama, same hot takes, same school budget stress, but now with faces.
Starting with today's episode, we're officially on YouTube. If you ever thought, I wish I could
watch this whole thing while folding laundry or doom scrolling. This is for you. Go to youtube.com,
slash at the Montclair pod or search the Montclair pod on YouTube. Subscribe, watch, judge our expressions,
and as always, still local, still independent, still very Montclair.
I've really had my head down for what I felt like for seven months because this is a, I don't think
anybody understands the depth of this crisis. It's almost, I like in it too, every month your mortgage
comes up and you're not sure if you can make that house payment, right? You know, the level of
anxiety that you have, not knowing if you're going to have a roof over your head. That is what
has been like for us. Welcome back to the Montclair pod, everybody. I'm Farneesh.
And I'm Mike, and that was our school superintendent Ruth Turner at the top of the show.
She is joining us for the first of a series of interviews we'll be doing with her at local
restaurants. We'll be talking about the food and maybe education a little bit. A little bit,
just a smidge. And obviously, there's a lot to talk about this week, the referendum,
school closures, staffing cuts, earthquakes, title waves, human sacrifice, dogs and cats,
living together, mass hysteria. Mass hysteria actually goes down pretty smoothly with some
delicious pizza. We did the interview at italiana by Zod, by the way. Finally, finally, we were
actually supposed to go there a month ago or so for your birthday, Farneesh. And every time we
talked about something upsetting relating to the schools, I was able to soothe myself immediately
was in delicious food. What did you find to be the most soothing food? I mean, it was all comforting.
It was actually the best restaurant we could have chosen given the topic at hand. It was all
comfort food. I really liked the margarita pizza. I also really liked the spicy Caesar salad,
but I swallowed a giant portion of the spicy dressing. I always do this. This is my thing.
I'm not really good with spicy food. I always want to brave it. And I always end up like
swallowing a clump of spicy something into the side of my throat. It was a five alarm fire in
my throat as she's talking about, you know, something very sobering, like reinvesting a renaissance
middle school. Do you could you tell that I was like, you felt the pain of the news?
I felt it. I really did. I should have ordered you some milk. We'll fill you in on all the food
and the schools during that segment, but that's not all because we've also got part two of our
interview with Cory Booker, where we'll talk about media consolidation and why he and other
elected leaders see a hyper local podcast like ours as a smart way to reach their constituents.
We also talk about why health care costs are so freaking high. We talk about his thoughts on ice
and the current immigration crackdown, the political fundraising industrial complex and his
favorite restaurant in Montclair hint. It sounds like far news, but that's not our only
senatorial experience of the week. We actually spoke to our other senator on Tuesday,
Senator Andrew Kim for an upcoming episode about the sandwich generation and aging in Montclair.
Senator Kim has been pretty public about his own father's battle with Alzheimer's and he's
been elevating the caregiving crisis on the Senate floor. In that episode next week, we're going to
talk about what happens when families get financially stretched caring for their kids and their
parents at the same time. Make sure you're subscribed to the pod. So you get that first thing next
Thursday. Also this week, we got healthy. We sure did. We got men. We got men did.
For the latest installment of far news, you might get healthy. It's sponsored by men. A lymphatic
wellness center just off Valley Road in Upper Montclair. Yeah, that's a thing I didn't know existed
until we did this segment. It's all about fluid people and getting rid of the fluid. It's like
ringing out all the bad stuff and let me tell you I'm here for it. It's right. It's definitely for
everybody, but women who are postpartum or people dealing with the aftermath of any number of
surgeries rely on this a lot and we're going to explain why and we'll introduce you to the owner.
Someone called the poop whisperer. That deserves a theme song. Don't do it, Mike. Please, we've got
serious things to talk about. All right. Of course, but I do think that I might end up creating
like a Montclair pod album of all of these theme songs or Spotify list because we've had some
bangers and I'm thinking about weaving in samples from the podcast. So it's like, you know,
it's going to be great. I mean, well, you did say you wanted to work smarter, not harder this
year, but you know, we did talk a lot about music with superintendent Ruth B. Turner. That was one
of the more informal get to know you questions that we asked her. That's right. She grew up in
Queens in the 90s and she got to here and see some great music and she met us at Italiana by
Zod on Bloomfield Avenue between Park and Midland. Everything was delicious. So good. That spicy
kale salad, the meatballs and the pizza. And then they brought a special dish. She was like a
truffle pasta, compliments of Zod. Very good. Yeah. It was a combination of great food and an
intense discussion about our schools, calling this segment supper with the super. And for this one,
there is a jingle inspired by 90s hip-hop from Queens.
Are you surprised by the yes, no? I was surprised by how close it is. I had a sense that we would
get a yes on question one and a no on question two. How does this affect the cuts? So like we get
yes, yes, 10 million if it's no, no. This is a split a little bit. Does that change the number at all?
Right. If we indeed get a yes in question one and a no on question two, it provides very little
relief for our current budget. Certainly for next year. So it won't be too much of a change in terms
of our budget, but the budget we will present on Wednesday, assuming we don't have anything official
before Wednesday would be with our current state aid and also the assumption of a no no.
I think one of the things that still tends to have pledged, let me say that is that I have been
as open and transparent as I possibly can be when I told folks what would happen if we don't get
the resource that we need. I was some people accused me of being fear mongering and that I was
exaggerating and now that we're living it out, people are acting like they're shocked or as if
I can't believe this is happening and all along we've said these are the things that will happen
because of the budget gap being so large that if we don't get the resources that we need,
these are some actions that we're going to have to take and yet people are still
surprised by that. What was the thinking behind announcing the Renaissance closure on Tuesday night,
the night of the vote? Was that timed for any particular reason?
Yes, let me clarify that because I know that in the world of social media, you know people
make their own assumptions. So one of the things about me is that I try as much as possible
to allow folks to hear from me. So I wanted to give individuals because I recognize you have
working families, things that I didn't think would be fair to call a meeting on Thursday or
Friday the week before without much notice. So Monday, we had a board retreat. I couldn't do
it Monday. One's day, we had a board meeting. I couldn't do it one's day. So initially, my thinking was,
okay, six o'clock on Tuesday, folks will vote and then come down. They were still
enough time. And so that was the original announcement was that we will call a meeting
with the staff after school as soon as dismissals over and that we wouldn't buy families to join us
at 6 p.m. in person. I got very quickly feedback from folks that says, you know, how can you have a
meeting during the vote and so forth? So I said, okay, then we pivoted to virtual 830. After the
vote was done and then folks could put their kids to sleep or still be home and participate because
I felt it was important to hear it from me before going public. So I shared with the board on
Monday, shared it with the families and staff on Tuesday and I shared it publicly on Wednesday.
When did you guys make that decision that that you were going to make this change? Looking at
projections for next year and enrollments and also recognizing that even though yes, yes,
there would be a consolidation of school. I didn't say what school because I had to look at numbers
and figure all that out. Once we looked at the numbers, that's how that decision was made. So
was maybe Tuesday, like definitively. One mom I spoke with who did actually vote yes now.
She said how she learned that Renaissance was on the chopping block before voting. It would have
given her more confidence to vote yes, yes. Because to her, the reason she voted no one question
to was she felt like I wanted more of a definitive plan for going forward. What's the go forward
plan? Do you regret not communicating it earlier? Absolutely not. Absolutely. It was communicated
at the appropriate time once. I'm not going to communicate anything that's not definitive.
I'm not going to communicate anything without looking, making sure the plan is viable.
Now you have to recognize, I think from day one, we've worked with these ridiculous deadlines. It's
always, you know, like we just got our stay date, right? Everything has to be done within a couple
of days, within a couple of weeks. What I did present before people voted was that they would be
a school consolidation and that would also be likely heard of another school being impacted.
So no, I don't have any regrets about that. When you're not in it, it's easy to give feedback.
It's easy for folks to say, why don't you do this? Why don't you do that? How do I know?
Does how do I know that? But it's completely a different viewpoint from where I'm sitting at.
But let's eat a little bit because you've been doing a lot of talking. Well, it's okay. You have
a little bite. I like Brussels sprouts. This is kale Caesar and it's got a little bit of a kick
and it's really good. I got to try that because I do like spicy. Yeah. And the fish is got
yeah, and that's a big on seafood, but oh, it does have a, you know, yeah, it's basically like
smoked salmon. Yeah, yeah, you want to get that jalapeno. It's a good, it's a good kick. Oh,
and I got you like it here on town. Do you get a chance to try the different restaurants here?
I've tried a couple. I don't get to go out very much, but I've tried a couple.
What's your typical day like? Like what time do you wake up? What are your, what's your morning
routine? I usually wake up between 4.35 a.m. What do you do first? I'm trying to get
sometimes earlier. What time do you go to bed? Midnightish. Wow, 11. That's not healthy.
11 is a early, this is early day. No, it's, it's not sustainable. I recognize that.
I'm with you. I do the same thing. But I'm also not, I've never been like one, he suits like
six, seven, eight hours. No. No. And when I do, I know this sounds strange. I'm sluggish. Like,
I start yawning. I mean, it happens every time. It's, it's interesting. So we wake up at 4.30.
What do you do first thing? Do you journal? Do you meditate? Do you make breakfast? Do you have coffee?
Do you go for a workout? I wish I won't for workout. I'm having a new, I'm adopting a new lifestyle,
so that's, that's, that's slowly becoming a part of it. I usually wake up, like I said, 4.35
o'clock. First thing I do is read my Bible and I spend about a half an hour in prayer every day.
And then I watch the news and then I, I'm usually taxing, emailing a little bit. I'm learning
to schedule it so people don't get the emails when I send them. Because then they're like, what,
she's, she's a little noony bin. No, I've done that. So that's pretty much it. And then
make my way to the office or make my way to meeting or make my way to a school. What time
you get to your desk? It depends. If I go straight, I get about eight. If I, you know, if I have to go
to a school or somewhere else, I get there when I, when I get there. It's the leaving part,
that's hard. Yeah. Because it's always one thing, you know, I'm going to do this next. I'm going to
do this next. So that, that gets difficult. So that I leave the office sometimes maybe seven o'clock,
but then I continue working at home, whether it responded to emails, whether it's, you know,
drafting something or my mind is constantly thinking. Yeah. You said that restructuring
rent into the preschool center is going to save 2.3 million. Is that annually or is that
of one time savings? It will be a one time savings. And that also allows us to lease our, our building
that, that's behind central office. So that would generate an annual, a monthly revenue. Great.
What are some other examples of that scale of magnitude of savings that that maybe aren't
considering? Yeah. As I said, we're looking at transportation. So I expect by the time we present
on Wednesday that we found efficiencies in transportation that will be maybe not as equal,
but close to that savings. So honestly, there's really not much in that sense. But what we want
to do is have cuts that impact, what everything impacts, I hit using that word because everything
impacts students, everything impacts staff. But as much as possible, not allowing majority of the
cuts or hundreds of the cuts to come from staffing. Yeah. As much as we can. It's really, really
difficult, but as much as we can. And as I said, when I shared about the information about
the structural deficit, is that one of the things I said about the structural deficit, you have to
make structural changes. That's reducing your footprint, looking at, at, at enrollment. And again,
of course, it does, it doesn't feel good. Schools are one of the things that we are very attached to.
All right. And I understand now, however, as I stated, it's, it's something necessary for us to
have to do. And it should have probably been done a while, a long time ago. Could there be other
school closures in the future? So it's not a school closure, it's a reinvestment on a
consolidation, which is very different than a school closure. It's a difference. Usually when
you close a school, you close that school and you usually let go of the property, you sell it,
or you do something else. What we're trying to do is be innovative and reinvest instead of just
having empty buildings or selling buildings or things of that sort. So I don't know. I'm being
very honest. I don't know. I think if we continue to see a decline in enrollment, especially a
significant one over the next couple of years, the responsible thing to do would be to consolidate
those resources. But I do believe that we're going to come out of this and I do believe we're
going to come out of it stronger. I really do. If I didn't believe that, I wouldn't be doing what I'm
taking a lot of the heat that I'm taking. I mean, I'm not stupid. Yeah. Even though some people
like to believe I may be, but I'm not. So it's just as hard when you're in the middle of that painful
struggle transition period, right? It's hard to see a positive or hard to see what the end is going
to be in terms in a positive outlook. But it will get better, especially if we, and I'm willing
to make those tough decisions because I have to think of the long term and I have to think of the
whole students and the whole system as a whole and not just pockets. And those are not important
too, but that's how I look at it. I think in the next two years or so, we'll be having a different
conversation. I'm positive of that. And then I do believe down the road will have periods of growth.
There is a question as well as to, are we going to remagnet the magnet schools? What are the
magnet schools that we want? You know, because we created these in the 70s. Like the world is
changing. AI, job market. This isn't probably right now. What you're thinking about? It's my
guess. No, but that's definitely, I have been thinking about that that's going to have to be our
undertaking to to look at our magnet systems. I said very openly is one of the things that attracted
me to to not clear. So I'm fond of it. I think the magnet system is a good way where schools can
still have like their individual focus and then students and families have an an option within
that. But I do agree that even as that looking at them strengthening it, I think sometimes
some schools have their magnet theme and then they have other stuff that's not part of their
magnet theme. I'm committed to preserving the magnet theme. Let's say one school is let's say
the STEM school. That's not to say that there's not STEM opportunities in other schools, but their
opportunities shouldn't look like what the STEM school looks like. Right. That's going to be unique.
Whether we're talking about the arts, things like that, we just got to
of tying that. But I do believe that our next undertaking is having a community conversation
around the magnet schools and what would it look like for us moving forward? As I said, a lot of
things have changed and that doesn't mean that having those discussions doesn't mean that we're
trying to eliminate the magnet system. I think we have to evolve and change and strengthen it.
So I do believe does the next critical step. What did you think of Governor Cheryl's announcement
on the same day that she's how she's addressing the structural deficit in New Jersey specifically
with schools? What I remember is an overall increase of 3% in education funding. We saw an increase
in our state aid. I was really nervous because I think a week and a half prior to it and I
think I shared it with the board publicly and definitely with my staff. We were told that our last
superintendent monthly meetings that to anticipate possibly a small decrease, I was really concerned
about that. And I know some folks that they've experienced a decrease, but I was glad that not only
did we not get an increase, but we, I mean a decrease, but we've also got a little bit of an increase.
What would be your message to teachers right now? Because some teachers are thinking, do I stay,
do I go? Teachers who want to maybe work here one day, but wondering, this place is in transition,
is it really a safe place for me? What do you really want to communicate to teachers?
Hang in there with us, and it's that that I don't want to say is that what what gives me comfort
because it doesn't, is that there's other places laying off significantly, more than what we will
probably have to. So I think looking at that to say it's not just isolated to my clear, it's a tough
time in education right now. And then we have so many committed individuals, right? That's why when
we had the layoffs in the mid-year and worked with some of our nearby school districts to help those
individuals secure employment, there was like, well, if there's an opportunity for me to be
required back, and I come back, and we said, you know, of course, and we worked with those folks to
our wave their 60-day notice to do so. Of course, we didn't end up calling all of them back, but there's
people that are committed, not just to public education, but to Montclair, and it really are, and would
rather work here and stay here. So I just tell those folks, you know, hang in there with us, we're doing
the best we can to stabilize it. Once we're stable, they won't be this like, I don't know what's going on,
you know, month by month, year by year. And that's what I'm doing trying to work to the point
where we can be stable and move on from there. We're not quite there yet, but we're getting there.
I wonder if there's a world where we could fundraise because there was a lot of people who voted yes,
yes. A lot of people who were ready to pay an increase in taxes, right? If you want to write a
check to the Montclair School District, in honor of that, yes, second, yes. Could they do that?
Is that like actually legal to do that? I've actually done a lot of questions from parents.
Yeah, about that, wanting to help support so that programs and opportunities are not eliminated
for our students. So there is a path forward for that. We've talked with legal counsel.
So what most places do is create, not the school district, but the community, create a
an awful profit foundation. I'll give an example back in New York, one of the work that I was doing
that was always underfunded because it was a connected social emotional learning. They created
a novel private called Friends of Rocky Story, where they were able to fund it. So that could happen
here and it will most likely happen here, folks that are willing to do that and to create something
like say, Friends of Montclair Public Schools, a novel profit foundation that would be able to then
donate those resources to the district. One thing that I'm very careful about is I've got a lot
proposals from a lot of folks who of course care about let's say, you know, they hear that they
might be a reduction in sports. Let's just say, I bet that there's going to be no more
freshman lacrosse. We can raise the money. All the parents will raise the money and that we can
have, we can have freshman lacrosse, right? No, we can't and I'll tell you why because that will
create inequities that I will not, I will not contribute to and I will not support. What I'm
open to if folks are willing is have one pot, let's say for sports, have one pot, you know,
whatever we think is important and find an equitable way to be able to fund those sound families
in various sports or activities may be able to raise, let's say, 50,000, I've seen it with a
matter of days and weeks. Like the ice skating rink. Yeah, they raised hundreds of thousands. Yeah,
other individuals can't. So if I allow that to happen, then I'm allowing inequities to take place
and I can't, I can't do that in good consciousness. It's not the right thing to do.
Everything has to be for all students. I know this is the argument against sort of the PTAs
that some schools have more lucrative PTA funds because I'm just the demographic and their
ability to fundraise better or whatever it is. Have you thought about that too? Because that also
creates inequitable structures. I'm working with them. As I said, you know, I've really had
literally my head down for what I felt like for seven months because this is a, I don't think
anybody understands the depth of this crisis. It's almost, I liken it to every month your mortgage
comes up and you're not sure if you can make that house payment, right? You know, the level of anxiety
that you have, not knowing if you're going to have a roof over your head. That is what it's been
like for us because it needed such great attention. I would say 85, 90% of my time has been
studying that, analyzing it, you know, paying attention to that, talking with our state officials
and to really get a handle on that and to make sure that we're able to to meet payroll and all
of the obligations that we have for this year. So I have seen some of that. I am going to work with
the PTAs to get a better sense of that and to find a more equitable way of doing that because
I say equities to me is not just a word and I don't think say by intention, you know, to say,
oh look what we have. Look what you don't have. I think you just get focused. That is your child
school. That is your school community. And that's all, that's like your lane, you know what I mean?
So I don't think anything is dealt with ill intention. But once we know the unintended consequences,
we have a responsibility to say, how do we address that moving forward?
Oh my god. Our giggly pasta. I was going to call it the gilly pasta, the giggly. What's inside?
Hi, it's a wild, a full mushroom base. Wow. Oh, that pizza is good.
Really good. How was your salmon? That's great. Yeah. I have some. It's not spicy at all,
but by sure. This is amazing. The gilly pasta. It's like a truffle mushroom pasta.
You're like, how's the truffle balance? It's not overpowering. It's really good. Yeah,
the lush and its pasta is perfectly. Yeah, and it's really nice. I'm going to have a bite.
Take everything here has been really great. Yeah. What's been your last communication with the town?
Any traction there? Yeah, as you as you are aware, they did a resolution to form this work group.
I don't know. Yes, task force or task community. Yeah. That way we can talk about share services
and just have regular communication and co-plan together. So I believe in the next couple of weeks
where we're going to meet for the first time. So whose idea was that? The towns.
Okay. Like the mayor or the I can't speak. I can't speak today. Well, that's an olive branch
of olive branches, I'd say. Because it seemed like in the beginning, it was sort of like,
good luck school district. And now there's a little bit more of an understanding that we are all
in this together. Well, I don't know. I don't want to come by. Yeah. I don't know if we're there yet.
There's always been at least in my experience. You know, I have not spoken with everybody.
As I said, I think I've always said this. The mayor has been very supportive. She checks in all the
time. You know what I mean? She's like, well, can we do the help? When we went to them initially
and said, hey, look what we discovered. You know, what do you think? Can we get some assistance?
She was really, really advocating. So I don't want to throw everybody in there. And
Eileen Burman-Hamm has been another one also that is a bit very commutative and, you know,
offering support. We joked that we should do like a boss swap where like, you become a town manager
for a week and the town has to even becomes the superintendent for a week. Oh, yeah, I think
that's a great idea. All right. Well, how can we figure that out? Well, you get in the reality
production people. This is my, this is my Claire. If you're watching. Yeah. I had a very good
friend of mine sent me a quote. You know, I'm very big and so cold. So they haven't
figured that out yet. That's nothing. I do it every morning. I read a call. I just had to share
this because I was like, this is so true. The cost of leadership is criticism from people who
would collapse under your pressure. Uh-huh. Yeah. And that price is high in Montclair. Yeah.
And that pressure is high. All right. Let's do some, I like to do like, what's it called? Like,
Round Rob in a favorite book that you're reading of the last year. Because you have so much time
to read. The 2026 budget plan. I'm not really between, you know, the school from my finishing up my
doctorate and this budget thing. I don't think I've read for pleasure. Also, when are we going to
call you, Dr. Turner? Hopefully, mate. Yeah. If I ever devote the time that I need, but I'm
dissertation time. You're right in your dissertation. Wait, I don't think we know enough about
that. Yeah. Why don't you explain to us what, what's the course of study is and what you're
dissertation about? I'm getting a EDD in ed leadership. Mm-hmm. And my dissertation is looking at,
it wasn't originally what I thought about, but you know, you evolve and it changes. I'm looking
at professional development and whether they support, you know, whether they translate to, um,
I'm trying to think of the technical name for whether they translate to good pedagogies and
instructional strategies in the classroom. I see. Because we in some places invest a lot of time
and money into professional development. So that is what I'm, yeah, what I'm, does it pay off
basically? I see. And where are you studying? Where's, what, what, what's the program? It's been
a seven year almost at the tail end of it. I'm at Capella. Ah. Yeah, I was originally a University
of Buffalo. Okay. And then stopped because my mother was sick because a lot of things were happening.
And then when I decided to go back, I, they were no longer offering the remote options. So then
I transferred. What's your music of choice? Oh, I don't, I don't know. What's your theme song?
Yeah, do you have a theme song? I will survive. I am very big 90s hip hop. Me too. I am in
for 90s hip hop song plays somewhere. Make it sound like mom, please don't. I'm talking about
like every bigger. I hate me. I'm talking about. Biggie. Oh, biggie. What's your favorite vacation? Are
you like a relax on the beach? I am anywhere that has a beach. I grew up by the ocean. Come from a
country that's right along the red scene. Anywhere the ocean. I don't care where it is. Give me a
little sun and the ocean when I'm good. Do you get vacation? Built into your schedule. Are you
going to be taking it this year? I have, I have vacation time, you know, as part of my contract. I
think like 25 days. I've probably taken two and that's only because I had to go back home for. Yeah,
some family. It doesn't roll over? No, it doesn't roll over. Well, thanks for coming out to dinner with
us. Thank you for having me. I love the idea of supper with the super supper with the super. Since she
loves hip hop, we need to change the jingle to some sort of hip hop vibe. Okay. Yeah. He's good with that.
All right. That was supper with the super volume one. Yeah. It was a success. We did it. We pulled
it off. I am sight. She's down to do more of these. And where are we going to do the next one?
It's the question like, Oh, I think we said me sob, right? Yeah. I guess we're going to have to ask
me. So if that's okay. Oh, we know one thing that stayed with me when we were discussing
Renaissance and the reinvestment, a Mrs. Turner, she had a quote about how in difficult times,
the adults set the tone. If the adults sort of, you know, seem like they're okay and they're
showing strength during tough times, the kids are going to be okay too. The kids kind of take
cues from us. I was sort of like when there's turbulence on a plane, the first people you look at,
at least for me, the flight attendants, right? Yeah. The flight attendant looks calm and like
business as usual, I'm calm. But if she or he is panicking, I'm not going to be in a good place.
This is such good wisdom for parenting in general because whenever I'm freaking out about one
thing or another, I can tell that like my kid is leaching it off of me and I immediately feel
bad about that. Yeah. I mean, listen, you can't control it. Sometimes we all go through emotional
shit. But just be aware that when that happens, like they are absorbing that energy and it happens
between all of us, really. Right. Well, thanks to Italiana by Zod for being down with us filming
in their restaurant. Full disclosure, separate with the super was financed by the Montclair Pod.
No pay for play people. And we do have some behind the scenes of Zod's kitchen and a little conversation
with him about running a restaurant in Montclair in this moment. The challenges head to the Montclair
Pod on Insta. And before we get to our next segment, let's talk a little bit about the yes no vote.
And why for some people in Montclair, this was the preferred outcome. We spoke with three
different voters, one, a former student who recently graduated, another, a mom of three, and another,
a dad whose child graduated a bunch of years ago, they all wanted to remain anonymous.
And you know, despite coming from different perspectives, I spoke to all three of these people.
Again, a former student, a parent of three, and a dad whose child already graduated, they all
shared the same concern. They were willing to help fix the past deficit because they felt as though
it wasn't really anybody's fault currently, but they didn't want to give the district a blank check
going forward without more accountability, without more of a to put it in one voter's words,
a go forward plan. And another person said, you know, they wanted the district to be forced to make
difficult decisions, financial decisions, and operate more like a business. They felt like
this recurring tax hike, it was just going to give the district sort of a license to kind of
overspend potentially and repeat some of the past mistakes as opposed to be really stealthy.
And you know, adjust their spending and kind of again, run it like it run the operation like a
business. And like also it was going to set a precedence potentially that they can always go to
the taxpayers for more funding. And so this was something that we had asked our audience on Instagram,
you know, hey, did you vote? Yes, no. We want to hear from you because I think most people
went to the polls either with a double yes or a double no, but as it turned out, we are here at
yes, no. Yeah. And I think we were both kind of surprised initially. I'll tell you for me, I was
surprised because I was like, like, if you're going to do yes, no, maybe you just might as well
do no, no, because the likelihood is is that because of the budget gap with that we now have,
we're still going to need some money from the state, which could trigger a state monitor. And if
we're going to end up getting a state monitor anyway, and I know that's not a foregone conclusion,
then we might as well have just taken the advance on the state aid that was interest free as opposed to,
you know, an average tax bill of over $1,000 for everybody, which is not a little bit of money,
even though it's only one dime, there are no clear lines here. And we heard from a lot of people to
your point that voted this way. It would be interesting to see what the breakdown of all of the
votes were, you know, how many people voted yes, yes, how many people voted no, no, how many people
voted yes, no, and how many people voted no, yes. I'm sure we could make that request to the
Essex County folks and maybe they can figure that out for us. No, I mean, do they, they must be
counting it that way, right? Be interested in the state because I wonder if there was a plurality,
a clear plurality of one versus the other. And then if you look at the votes, there's one website
where you can look at the votes according to the different districts. Yes. And they voted differently,
you know, I mean, very clearly in some cases. Yes. Well, moving along time now for Cory Booker Part
last week, we shared the first half of our in-person conversation. We spoke about his new tax
proposal that keep your pay act, which proposes raising the standard deduction to $75,000. We also
brought it up the challenges facing our schools, New Jersey's fraught school funding formula. And
what it was like when Booker was mayor of Newark and the school district had a state monitor.
Go back and listen the last week's episode if you missed it. And this week we pick up where we
left off, digging into issues like immigration, the cost of living, health care, food policy,
political corruption. And where the Senator believes the Democratic Party needs to go next?
First, though, we begin with a question that feels really personal to us as independent journalists.
What's the future of local media in an era of massive corporate consolidation? Take a listen.
Big media companies are getting bigger. We, on the other hand, are a small independent media
company. Can you talk a little bit about your position on this paramount merger and the latest
developments since Netflix came out of the deal? As well as what you think the role of independent
media is, because we obviously think there's an important role for that. And it's possible for two
people like us to come here and sit with a US Senator and with our phones record all of this and
get it out into the world, it tends to mean I think that what's possible now for independent
media maybe wasn't possible 10 years ago. So talk a little bit about, I guess, this consolidation
of big media in the context of the ability for people like us to do what we're doing right now.
Well, first of all, we're in crisis in our country because local media is being devastated.
When I was married, the city ignored the star ledger alone had five people focusing on everything
that I did. There was real local accountability. I used to call them pains in the neck, but they
were always watching and you want your government always to be watched. That was just one media outlet.
I also had to deal with New York Times, New York Post, the Bergen record, all rifling around,
looking at reports, trying to figure out what was going on. And it kept me on my toes in a good way.
Now there's none of that. When it comes to the print newspapers we've talked about. The star ledger
isn't even in New York really anymore. And that's bad. And a lot of the reason why that happened
was because of the monopolistic power of big tech companies. Google controls so much now of the ad
spend. The resources of revenue that our newspapers had is just dried up completely because who's
going to newspapers to look for help wanted or local government's advertising on in their local
newspapers. And that's created a very tough environment. And on top of that, this corporate
consolidation is giving a lot more power to a few corporations and a lot less power, frankly,
even to folks like you who are creating content that people really want to see, but monetizing
the content you're creating is very difficult given the power, the corporations, how even have
even over the platforms that you all post on. So I'm very worried about this continued corporate
concentration and what it's doing to media and what it's doing, frankly, to jobs and artists.
So let's go specifically to the merger we're talking about. Remember that when Disney merged
with 20th century Fox, the number of movies that were being created that you see on the screens
went down significantly. When the Paramount emerged with Skydance, they laid off over a thousand
people and you might see people more. And what you're seeing for consumers, people among
Claire who are already saying paying too much in property taxes, Jersey energy costs have just
gone up 20%. And now I'm going to have to pay more for my Paramount subscription or pay more to watch
the shows that I like. That's the problem with corporate concentration is that it creates higher
costs, unfortunately, lots of job loss. And then on top of that, the lack of competition
often means that they're not trying to compete for your eyes as much. And so they're
even making less content until those artists have less platforms to go on. So this Paramount
merger really concerns me. And it also concerns me that one family now is going to control CDS,
CNN, a lot tick-tock, a lot of the things that we use. They now will be able to control and
influence. You've probably heard people talk about the disappearance of third spaces. Those places
outside of home and work where communities gather. As more of our lives move online, a lot of
people are feeling that loss. And one of the most powerful ways to bring people back together
is through the arts. That's the idea behind champion for the arts. A special event hosted by
peak performances at Montclair State University happening Thursday, March 26 at 6 p.m. in presentation
hall. The featured guest is Donna Walker Cune, widely considered one of the nation's leading experts
on building audiences for the arts. She's helped shape engagement strategies at organizations
like the public theater, New Jersey Performing Arts Center, and the New York City Opera.
The conversation will be moderated by Montclair Film's Tom Hall. And it's all about how communities
like ours can strengthen and grow inclusive arts audiences across Montclair and Essex County.
The event will also recognize MSU students as champions for the arts for their work supporting
creativity on campus. And the best part tickets are free. You can learn more and register at peakperfs.org.
That's p-e-a-k-p-e-r-f-s.org. That all said, we now spend a lot more of our time with local
podcasters like you all, because the consumer now often doesn't trust media. But when folks like
you, especially with your track record, the connection, the audiences may not be like when we all
watched the final episode of MASH. You all might not be old enough. Okay, when we all watched,
when we all watched Roots, these are things that literally like a third of Americans watch.
Nobody's aggregating those audiences anymore. Maybe the Super Bowl, American Idol.
Now we have a much more fragmented market, but trust is so important and so valuable.
I meet these influencers that only have 50,000 followers, yet they're able to get companies
that want to place their products because they know that the persuasiveness or the intimacy of
the connection is a lot deeper. And so what you all do to me is vital, not important. It's vital,
because a lot of people among Claire know you. They say, wait a minute, you guys go to the same
restaurants as me. It's because of a problem, actually. So welcome to my world. It takes me an hour
longer to go shopping than the average person. But no, but that's so valuable. And we're thinking
about creating a caucus in the center called the creators caucus to really try to help
the smaller creators out there because as newspapers have crashed as shows like Colbert
report, somebody that New Jersey loves are being forced out by I think some really bad decisions
of these large corporations. It necessitates those vacuums being filled by people like you
that have real trust and connection to their viewers, to their audience, to the community they've
created. Well, thanks for indulging us. Yeah. No, I love that you guys. This is a great conversation.
We got to do this regularly. We can we have a wish start on. Well, in other news,
immigration New Jersey home to hundreds of thousands of immigrants. We have one of
most diverse populations in the country. If Congress had to pass comprehensive immigration reform
tomorrow, what would you like to see on that? Oh my gosh. Well, well, first of all, I think both
parties have been wrong in this. I think that Democrats didn't do enough to secure our border
or southern border, which was a humanitarian crisis down there as much as it was a public safety
crisis when you have families dying in the desert dying right across the river. So the democratic
party has to get serious about securing borders and protecting this nation from
the people that are coming here to do harm. Now, like I want to be very clear that immigrants have
a lower crime rate than undocumented immigrants even have a lower crime rate than average
Americans, but that's still no excuse not to have borders that are secure. But then we need to
expand legal immigration. We need to triple quadruple legal immigration. When the conservative
Cato Institute says that it is outrageous how long and how hard it is for legal immigrants
to get status in our country that we've restricted it so much. It's like winning the lottery.
When we know that if you bring in immigrants, they create a multiplier effect on our economies.
Immigrants grow our economy. And so whether it's agricultural workers or high end scientists,
it is insane that this country is not expanding pathways to legal immigration three or four
hundred percent. We will fight for secure borders and we will fight for expanded pathways
for immigration. Let me tell you my favorite story on this because I graduated from Stanford
University. For those of you who don't know in New Jersey, I got into Stanford because of a 4.0
1600 4.0 yards per carry 1600 receiving yards. I was a high school American football player.
The best way to get into college and you know when you get into college because of sports and not
necessarily because you had a perfect SAT score. You have a little bit of an imposter syndrome the
entire time you're there that lasts your whole life. So here I am in the United States Senate and I
get a call. My office gets a call from the Stanford President's office saying the president
demanding to see me when he comes to Washington. And I'm all sudden panicked. Oh my god. Did I not
finish a paper? Did I not really graduate? I'm like, oh my god. And so he comes to see me angry
because he says, I'm tired of seeing this. People come into Stanford University, get
degrees and things that half of Congress can't spell. And then as soon as they're done, we kick
them out of our country. Like we should be stapling these us on these kids because they're
getting PhDs in quantum physics and quantum computing and robotics. Like why is it so hard
for the best minds on the planet to stay in our country and start businesses that could
employ hundreds of thousands of people if not more. So our broken immigration system is hurting
everybody. People are terrified, Senator. In Montclair, we've spoken to law experts at Montclair
State University. We've spoken to a restaurant operators who say, a, my workers are afraid to come
into work. Oh my god. Keep our free leather homes and not just Montclair. I mean, this is like a
national problem. So how would you address your constituents New Jersey specifically around
this fear piece and the unlawful practices? Okay, so that's a whole different topic than what I
would do if I could write immigration laws. Look, we have a president who's unleashed hell in our
communities. They are allowing secret police to jump out of unlast marked cars masked and drag
people out of New Jersey schools, courts, places of worship. I've stood with priests in our
state. I've served with stood with local police officers. They're saying that Donald Trump's
reckless and out of control, ice enforcement is making our communities so much less safe.
That is assaulting the dignity of our communities. But even more than that, striking fear,
literally have had friends. One of my closest friends in Newark told me that her neighbors
begged her to please walk my children to school. My American children to school because I'm
afraid to do so. Businesses all over our state are telling me anywhere between 5% to 30% reductions
in patronage because people are afraid to even come out and use their businesses. And then you
have these private prisons like the one here in Newark where I visited and it was appalling to me.
But I speak to people there don't even have an accent that lived in this country for 30 years
that have families here. American family members that are now being put in a private for-profit
prison and then being tagged to be deported out of our country to countries they don't even know.
This is such a violation of our values and here's something that should even more outrage you.
It's a violation of the federal court orders. When we had a federal judge here, Judge Farbiage,
order the U.S. Attorney's Office to tell them, document how many times have I given a court order
and you all violated the court order? They had over 50 times that they gave them a court order
involving an immigrant that had a right to be here or was on a legal pathway that they unjustly
deported. So this president is out of control. He's hurting our communities and fundamentally
making us less safe. Why? Because now people who are victims of crime, if you happen to be an
immigrant, you are afraid to even go to the police. So that means the person that mugged them,
robbed them, assaulted them is still free in our communities because the witnesses to those crimes
are afraid to come forward. So right now I am telling you, Jersey, I'm not voting for one more dollar
to fund that age to. We're going to technically in a government shutdown right now on a standoff.
So first and foremost, your senator, I'm pledging everybody, I'm not funding an agency that is doing
so much harm and so much damage. And I will vote against anything that comes before
when you have this reckless out of control immigration work. That's number one. Number two is
New Jersey, no matter of months is going to have a chance to vote on this issue. Do you endorse
these immigration practices or do you reject them? And if New Jersey resoundingly rejects them,
here in this state, we can win a house seat or two and take back the House of Representatives.
Now we have the ability to further do what Congress should be doing, which is check and balance
a president that's out of control. Congress has rolled over for the United States,
for the president of the United States and is allowing him to do whatever they want. They're
complicit and complacent in this kind of outrageous in our community. And it will continue as long
as the Republicans are in power in the House and the Senate. So if people in New Jersey are
tired of this, especially in those districts where you have Republican House members that are
not fighting, that are voting along with all this outrage, then vote them out. We live in a consumer
culture in many ways in a consumer-based economy, largely built on the strength of the dollar
and our ability to buy inexpensive things, either because they're built somewhere overseas with
cheap labor or they're picked here using cheap labor, which is why we have so many immigrants coming
here to do these jobs that, frankly, don't pay enough for average Americans to want to do.
Can that change? I mean, it seems like that's what the American economy is built on. It seems like
it's impossible to talk about immigration reform without acknowledging the fact that if you're working
a minimum wage job, you're not getting any of the things that you need necessarily to survive and thrive
as a citizen of the richest country in the world. So let me connect the dots here real quick
when what we've talked about. So first of all, if my big idea goes through and nobody pays income
tax on the first $75,000 and part of that bill is expansion of the earned income tax credit
and the child tax credit. If you wear a single mom making $50,000, $60,000 in New Jersey, you will
get almost 10%, you'll be able to keep almost $6,000 more. They can help you afford childcare,
help you afford rent. We have got to make work pay. That's the first big idea. The second thing,
one of the other things we talk about is corporate concentration. We spend more money than any other
nation on the planet earth on healthcare and we get the worst results because we've allowed corporate
concentration. How is it that a health insurance company now controls the doctors, the pvms,
and the pharmacies? They've vertically integrated and drive up the costs. We put limits on health
insurance companies and what profits they can and how much money they return. So you know how they
make their profits? They own the pharmacy and they say overcharged people and really who they're
overcharging is the insurance company. So we're going to shift our profits to the things that are
not being curtailed. Enough of that. We need to break up these big corporate monopolies that are
doing all kind of schemes to jack up prices on consumers and make healthcare too expensive.
And then the final thing that we have to do is you're talking about keep your pay act, which is
very important. Breaking up corporate monopolies, which is really important. And then do what I did when
I was mayor the last thing. When I was mayor of the city in Newark, I just my philosophy when I
first came in there, let's just attack stupid. We had detectives in our gang task force working
Monday through Friday 9 to 5. I don't know about the gangs in Montclair, but the gangs in Newark
did not work 9 to 5. So the people investigating them shouldn't work 9 to 5. I had 4000 or so employees in
Newark. And we had 3,500 outstanding workman compensation claims. I mean, these things you couldn't
make up. And I just wanted to attack stupid. If we attack stupid, then we're going to create a
result. Two of the costs I couldn't control, though. I told you we cut our government overall 25
percent, but the cost that would go up every year I was mayor were my pension costs and my healthcare
costs. I couldn't figure out why healthcare every year was going up so much. And I was looking
for ideas and somebody told me an idea of how to attack stupid. And what was that idea? I went to a
big casino company. We're in New Jersey, but my mom was in Vegas. So I'd be going out to Vegas to
visit my family. And this is a casino company that had thousands and thousands of employees.
And he told me to I couldn't control my healthcare costs. They kept going up. And so one day I went
down to my cafeteria where we feed thousands of people. And he goes, Corey, I saw deep friars, I saw
cinnabot. The food we were giving our people were so ultra processed. It was insane. And so what did
I do is he said, I ripped out all of these deep friars, got rid of all the highly processed foods
and brought in the best chefs there were. At first, they fought me because they wanted their
cinnabons or whatever. But when I brought these chefs in, they loved the food. And he said, then
I'd have these single moms that work two shifts at the gaming table. And then they they're going
home and they're they say, can I take some food home from my kids? So I'm not stopping at that fast
food restaurant. Lo and behold, he said his cost curve on his healthcare costs started going down
because his people got healthier. So let me tell you what's stupid in the United States of America
that most people don't know. 93% of our ag subsidies go to ultra processed foods. Only 7% go to the
foods our doctors tell us to eat the most of. It's why in Montclair, your kids go to a corner grocery
store and a Twinkie product is cheaper than an apple, not because of the free market. I have not
heard literally like we subsidize everything at the fast food restaurant and then we go and have
to pay $15, $20 for a bucket of salad. This is insane. We have designed this system by monopolized
food companies to make ultra processed highly luring foods and not support that. So if we just said
no more of this, we were going to put our subsidies on the food that we want people to eat
and it's going to create healthier habits. How do I know this works? It's because when I was
mayor of the city of Newark, we created an entire city block that was an urban farm and then as a
mayor, as a senator, I supported something called the double bucks program. What the heck is that? Well
your food stamps or your snap benefits. When you go to a farmer's market, they're worth double.
And so I went out to this farm to do a food ink. It was this documentary. So they were doing
food ink too and I went out there with them to show them this great thing and all of these
Newark residents, I will never forget, came up to me and said, I had diabetes and then I sourced
all my food from this farm because I got double bucks and my diabetes, my doctor said his
reverse is gone. Another woman said she had a gut problems that her doctor said would not be
soft. She'd do on medication the rest of her life. The monthly cost of her medication was $700
and her, she paid $100. We picked up as taxpayers. It's $100. She started sourcing all fresh
vegetables from this farm. Her doctor called it a miracle cure. It's not a miracle cure.
It's having access to fresh healthy foods. So if it works for one of the biggest casino operators
in Las Vegas to lower his health care costs, why aren't we in America doing the same thing and
making access to fresh healthy foods low cost and affordable and letting the free market deal with
the expensive foods. I'm a vegetarian. I'm a plant-based guy. If you want a hamburger,
I want you to eat that hamburger. I'm going to do everything I can to stop the big neat packing
industries from driving up your hamburger costs. But I don't think that we should be subsidizing
the cheese and the grains and the corn syrup and all the other things that goes into your ketchup.
We shouldn't be subsidizing that. We should let the free market control those costs. And if there's
any food that we're subsidizing as a nation, let's subsidize the fresh healthy food. Let me say one
thing more controversial like why do we with our snap payments not expand the programs I've
been supporting that help you get healthy food and not let people buy sugar water.
Coke and Pepsi make billions of dollars every year from snap payments from food stamps.
That's outrageous. There's nothing nutritious about a Coke. You want to buy it, buy it. But why are
my taxpayer dollars helping you buy Coke? And whenever you try to change this and say you can't buy
Coke or Pepsi, but you can. We'll increase the ability to buy fruits and vegetables. Their lobby
comes in big soda comes in and then they want to cry things like it's racist that you're doing
this, which by the way, it's really problematic that they even say that in the first place.
So because the people that are worse impacted are often disadvantaged communities
by diabetes and prediabetes. Half of our country now, half of the adults in our country are either
diabetic or prediabetic because Coke and Pepsi and a lot of other companies and so easily push
that stuff into our food system, not according to the free market, but because a taxpayer substance.
So how do you work with Robert Kennedy Jr. on that where you've probably aligned with him on
stuff like that, right? But at the same time, you know, he's got other positions that I'm sure,
are you totally aligned? I'm just saying about human beings is we're all mountain ranges. We all
have peaks. We all have valleys. Some people have deep cavernous, grand canyon like valleys
that I'll do everything I can to fight. This measles outbreak we're having right now falls directly
at the feet of the Trump administration and they're not science-backed attacks on common sense
vaccines, but I will find alliances wherever I can. Remember, you all at the dissender that it
really believes in working across the aisle and getting stuff done. I will fight Donald Trump in
every way possible, but I will tell you also with him, I passed the first step act in his first
term, deliberated thousands of people from prison, hundreds in New Jersey alone from being unjustly
carcerated. I don't demonize anybody. I will work with you where you are doing what's right. I will
fight you like hell when you're trying to hurt people in New Jersey. Final question, you know,
we're going to ask. Please. What is your role in the Democratic Party in the future and is there
presidential run in your future? I will tell you right now, I want to be reelected in New Jersey,
please. In November, I hope that New Jersey will give me another six years, especially I got the
receipts. Nobody. If you're a taxpayer in New Jersey, no senator in six years has brought more money
back to the state. A lot of that was obviously COVID, but a lot of that was the big infrastructure
programs we did. I just came back from whom feel where we got them hundreds of thousands
dollars from lead paint abatement. I'm hoping that I've earned New Jersey's trust again to be
reelected. But then after that, I want the Democratic Party to be redeemed because it has let a
lot of folks down. I think our party needs new leadership, needs a new vision. I think America
needs a new vision and that we've got to redeem the dream for working families that are going to
be the kind of ideas that could create transformative change, not incremental change, but transformative
change for working America. What would you love to see the Democratic Party doing in terms of
how it's messaging and not that this is not a big idea in terms of the standard deduction, but
you know, what other big ideas are you talking? Are we talking about single payer health care or
the expansion of Medicare to everyone? Are we talking about college that does not cost $100,000 a year?
This might shock you between now and November. This is not the last big idea we're going to be
unveiling. So I'm going to try to be the change I want to see in the world. Democratic Party has
failed in its communications. One of the greatest evidence points of that is Donald Trump is the
president. We fail to effectively communicate. I'm done. I want to show the way now. So this is the
first one. I will foreshadow you the next one as my team behind you gets really upset with me.
But the next one is going to be what every American knows is that our political system is deeply
corrupted by big money and politics. One of the reasons why Jersey should know this. I was the
fourth Senator in American history to say I will not take corporate pack money anymore because when I
got down there, I started seeing what this concentrated power of corporations that were getting
wealthier and wealthier and could easily put $20 million, $30 million, $50 million. I've seen
industries put together $100 million packs to affect our politics. And you don't even know it.
You're watching these ads and you don't even realize some dark money corporation has put that
money in there. If we will never fix our democracy and make it work for working people, if we're giving
big money, wealth like we've never seen before, the ability to influence our politics so easily.
So the next pillar we're going to talk about is corruption and how to end the corruption from
senators being able to trade stocks, something I don't do that should be, should be outlawed
all the way to how do you get the big money out of politics because corporations are not people,
by the way. And Citizens United was one of the worst decisions ever decided by our Supreme
Court that allowed us ugly amounts of money to come to our politics in the first.
Well, it seems like, you know, all either of the parties do. Their core confidence these days
is raising money whether from big organizations or even individuals. I mean, we all get
text messages all the time from every campaign. And I don't give money to politicians because I'm
a journalist and cheap. But I get them all the time. And I guess the question is, is do politicians
need to raise this much money through every election cycle? Why can't there be a public option?
That's enough. I mean, there's no barrier to distribution as we're demonstrating right now.
You don't need to buy air time. But essentially, there's this huge political industrial complex. So
is that is that part of the solution? Yes, it is part of the corrupt system that I'm describing
that, you know, I feel very blessed. And people will say this to me in politics or you have
big platforms, which you can communicate on. But I don't. And this big pack is corporate pack
is about to put 20 million dollars against me. I got to raise money every day. That's crazy.
New Jersey didn't elect me to be a full-time fundraiser. They elected me to bring forth big ideas
to grapple in the Senate to get things done. And we've created this very perverse system where
you send a congressperson down there and they are constantly sitting in a room, especially
House members who have to run every two years, a sit in a room, make fundraising call,
a fundraising call after fundraising call, and take all this pack money that I don't think they
should be taking. So how did we change that? You can't blame the senators in that bad system.
You need to change the system. And that's what I'm calling for. And we'll probably be the next big
rollout we have when we hope you'll come and join us for the conversation about it. But we have
a inherently corrupt political system. I've seen it with my own eyes that some corporation wants
a little loophole so that they can avoid paying their taxes and they rig our system so that we don't
get as much money revenues as a government. And then you have Donald Trump running around saying
we need to cut your health care. We need to cut your food stamps. We need to cut your special needs
funding for your school in Montclair. That's outrageous.
Senator Booker will see you next time. I hope so. We ate so much.
We already do. We need to ask him about Montclair, favorite places in Montclair, favorite restaurant in
Montclair. Well, it is, I told you already on my plant-based guy. My wife is not. So I took her
this Friday to a happy medium that you're going to teach me how to pronounce because I could not
pronounce it well. For a bouge, for a bouge, for a bouge. For a bouge.
It was a great meal. I could not pronounce the name, but the restaurant and they have a vegan menu,
which I was really psyched. Yes, but there is a vegan in Montclair that I have
Uber-eated from many times Veggie, what is it? Veggie heaven? Oh, that's, yeah, that's, that's, that's an upper Montclair down the street from my house
Oh my god, I'm ever, ever and I've tricked friends and told them it wasn't
vegan and they have not they've believed me that they were actually eating pork when they were not eating pork
They're like masters at that unbelievably good food and so that is almost like a comfort place
Favush
Favush, not Farnush by the way he was like gonna call it Favush didn't he?
He called it Farnush I think it's okay well for that full interview be sure to check out our YouTube page
All right, it's time for you know what Farnush and Mike getting healthy a sponsored series that
supports our ongoing attempt to become slightly more functional human beings while living in Montclair
Slightly and you can too, you know, I'm really glad we're doing this series because as we've learned
It's not always easy between work kids commuting finding parking and keeping up with whatever school district
Controversy is happening this week. Yes, taking care of your own health can slip pretty far down the list
But we got to stop making this and after thought and you're gonna be proud of me Mike because last Friday
I checked something huge off my list. I got my first colonoscopy best sleep of your life, right? Yes
I have to say the anesthesia was a nice cap to last week school drama and the many hours that we spend producing the show you and I were up really late last week
Last week kicked my butt. Yeah, but in all seriousness to all my
45 and up friends listening public service announcement you got to get your colonoscopy done
Go schedule it very important the prep is not so fun
But it's the hardest part of the whole thing and then you got a beautiful sleep like Mike said and it can literally save your life
So very very important. Yeah, and once you start thinking about what's going on inside your body you start realizing
There are a lot of systems in there doing important work that most of us never think about including one
We learned a lot about recently the lymphatic system. Yep, and that's why we ended up visiting men the lymphatic wellness center in upper Montclair
We're found a Renee Ambrose specializes in something called manual lymphatic drainage and as we learned pretty quickly
This treatment has some very enthusiastic fans take a listen
If you walked down Cooper Avenue in upper Montclair you might pass an old brick building that once housed horses
Back when commuters arrived by carriage
This was a livery a place where the horses stayed before people caught the train into the city
Today the building is still about movement just a different kind
Inside is men lymphatic wellness center founded by Renee Ambrose her specialty a part of the body most of us barely learned about in school
The lymphatic system and once you hear about it you start realizing it might be responsible for a lot of things
You didn't know how to name the lymphatic system performs a couple of primary duty is it's most important duty is to
Generate immune cells and it also performs the duty of transporting the immune cells from the lymphatic system to wherever in the body
those immune cells need to go
To attack whatever invader is in the body whether it's bacteria or virus or whatever and that's just part of it
The lymphatic system isn't just about immunity
It's also quietly regulating fluid levels throughout the body when we
Just kind of go through our daily lives. There's always some fluid dynamic shifts going on in our body and the lymphatic system helps to manage that
Translation when people talk about feeling bloated puffy or like they're retaining water
This system might be part of the story
Ambrose's work focuses on helping that system do its job better using a technique called manual lymphatic drainage
I provide classical
Water style manual lymph drainage. That's a technique that was developed in Europe almost a hundred years ago
And it is the gold standard for treatment of the lymphatic system all around the world
Ambrose didn't come to this work from the spa world
Her background is medical one of the only providers in New Jersey who's a dual licensed physical therapist assistant and massage therapist
She's also one of the only providers in New Jersey who's certified in treatment of the head and neck
Which means the people who come through her door aren't just looking to relax
They're often dealing with real health issues right now
I'm actually seeing a lot of women come in with perimenopause and metapause related issues
However, I do see a fair amount of perineal clients as well
And we treat everything from women who are trying to conceive to help them optimize their fertility
All the way through postpartum recovery, breastfeeding and beyond
She also works with people recovering from surgery, cancer treatment, or chronic conditions
But one of the biggest themes she sees right now midlife
As we age in our hormone shift for example, there's a
flux in estrogen and progesterone levels in our body
That can disrupt our fluid dynamics and we can become
Kind of tense and you know the tissues can feel tight and we can feel bloated because we start to retain more fluid
The lymphatic drainage can help to reduce that feeling of bloating fluid retention tension
But beyond the physiology, Ambrose says there's something else happening when people come in for a treatment
People often report that they feel very safe
Because they know that there's no point during the treatment that it's ever gonna hurt
Which brings us back to the bigger idea behind men
Ambrose didn't want to just open a treatment room
She wanted to create something closer to a support system
A third space wellness environment that she says inhabits the space between medical treatment and daily life
And this can be especially important for women
A lot of women are discharged from medical care
To go home and they're cleared
quote-unquote cleared to do whatever
But they don't have any ongoing support and I wanted to be the one providing that support
And if you're wondering what the treatment actually feels like
Ambrose has a surprisingly good metaphor
Think of it as
They're ringing out the tissues
It's gentle though. It's not like cranking on a on a wet towel. It's more like kind of
smoothing out the wrinkles on a blanket
Which may explain why some of her clients leave feeling lighter more relaxed even a little reborn
And occasionally with very enthusiastic digestive results
I've had a couple of clients call me the poop whisper
It makes me happy it brings me joy
Thank you to Renee Ambrose for partnering with us and teaching us so much
About how our lymphatic system works. She's helping so many people
And I feel like she kind of needs to trademark the poop whisperer
I mean if she hasn't already I got a theme song for that one too. I'm sure you do
Learn more everybody at mend lymphatic massage.com. We'll put that link in our show notes as well. All right. Let's get into the news
Students at Montclair high walked out of classes last Friday to protest ice marching from Rand Park to municipal building
Yes, a lot of kids participated in this the Montclair local covered it
And there's a good gallery of images from the walkout on tap into Montclair
We're going to link to those in our show notes and sticking with the local big congrats to their reporter's Matt Kadoche and Asa Jung
They want an excellence in community media award from the center of cooperative media at Montclair State University
Yes, this was awarded for their coverage of the school budget crisis
And they even got a nice tip of the hat from the governor Mikey Cheryl who was there great work guys and congrats
The whole Montclair local team very well deserved now time for the one big thing
All right, Mike you go first, okay, so we have a very cool only in Montclair double feature for the arts and comic nerds in the audience
And I say this with love because I'm I'm one of them. Yes, you and my son Evan both of you
I assume this involves east side mags. It does this Saturday from three to five PM east side mags
Is hosting a signing for a new 3D graphic novel based on the 1950s camp classic robot monster
It features stories from 30 different artists and writers
But the coolest part is the local tie in recent Montclair high grad Carl Shekel actually has his first two professional stories published in the book
He'll be there at the signing alongside the pros
And afterward, there'll be a screening of robot monster at the clerage just across the street and a panel discussion after
So head over to Montclairfilm.org for more information on that sounds like fun
What I know what I'm doing kind of I guess go ahead tell me
I'm going on a shopping challenge with the Montclair Nista
Wendy to Bertio if you remember Wendy joined us for our food challenge our food tour
Back in like us last year when we were kind of going off the beaten path to find some interesting places to eat
So she's kind of the eyes and ears of Montclair
She knows where all the cool places are she's like a cool monger in Montclair
And so we wanted to do something light and exciting after all this heavy coverage of schools
And so let's shop and I said Wendy let's go out and like discover some cool things in town and support small business
And let's give it a theme. Let's give it like a spring theme. She's so down for it
She's already got a list of things to find places to go
So that's happening this weekend
We're going to go find some spring themed items outfits gardening items
etc
And along the way we're going to showcase some of the cool retail shops in town mom and pops
You know, I didn't tell you this but I bumped into Wendy this weekend
And I suggested that I might just bomb in on this little shopping excursion
And that you guys might be able to pick some clothes out for me. All right. Well, it's not like we weren't going to invite you
Oh, I didn't necessarily feel like I thought it was like kind of a girl shopping trip and I wasn't so sure
Well, I don't know. You're going to be like all siphying it out. So I well, I got that
I also have a gig. Have you ever been to the meat locker in Montclair? Which is like a metal club?
I'm one who's ever been to the meat locker
I don't know. I don't judge. I don't judge
But yeah, I'm playing with my buddy Mike Patenz's band at the meat locker on Saturday night
So maybe you could pick out an outfit for me for that because you know
I'm going to need to like look metal like a seersucker outfit because we're going spring theme
So yeah, I should show up for the metal concert in a sea
It's not really a metal band, but like yeah totally seersucker suit absolutely. All right. I'm thinking like
Dick Van Dyke from Newary pop it
Yeah, all right everybody. Thanks for tuning in
We will see you next week
We're going to have senator Andrew Kim on the show talking about aging and sandwich generation
You don't want to miss that episode see in town
I've been named after you should get a plate a special dish there, right?
I really should I've been you know, I have a dress named after me get out. Yeah
From when mm. Lafler
It's my friend Sarah Lafler is the founder of mm. Lafler
And she surprised me one day and named a dress after me. So the far news check it out
There were a piece of clothing named after me. What would it be? Well be called the Mikey the Mikey Shriver
The Mikey Shribes. That's what Ray and her friends call me Mikey Shribes sometimes

The Montclair Pod

The Montclair Pod

The Montclair Pod