October 2009

Bergenfield SID Sees Better Times for Downtowns

BERGENFIELD, NJ, September 3, 2009 -- While gloomy economic reports continue to dominate the headlines, Grand Opening banners, sparkling new facades and “Help Wanted” posters on storefronts in Bergenfield’s Special Improvement District (BSID) may be signs of better times ahead for local downtowns. In Bergenfield, a wide range of commercial and retail spaces, a steady flow of consumer traffic along the Washington Avenue corridor and the support of the public/private partnership between the borough and the BSID have encouraged diverse business owners to open their doors in the district.

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August 2009

Community Volunteers

Community volunteers Claire Kennedy, Carol Lynn Zepatos, Spiros Zepatos, and Ron Schreck contributed to the BSID’s public/private partnership working towards enhancing the district’s streetscape by painting light poles located on Washington Avenue. BSID organized the effort and supported the work of the volunteers by providing paint and other materials.


July 2009

‘Coupon Business Blast’ on tap

Wednesday, July 22, 2009
Twin-Boro News

Four Bergenfield businesses have joined forces to support the Bergenfield Community Center (BCCBF) project with an August "Coupon Business Blast."

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Dining out at the Bamboo Grill in Bergenfield

Thursday, July 2, 2009
By ELISA UNG
RESTAURANT REVIEWER

Bamboo Grill is not for the faint of heart — or taste buds.

Milkfish, beneath a flawless, crisp crust, hides a zing that comes from at least a day marinating in vinegar.

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Bergenfield tax do-over

BY ASHLEY KINDERGAN AND DAVE SHEINGOLD
NorthJersey.com
STAFF WRITER

Homeowners who took the brunt of enormous property tax increases — nearly 30 percent — that followed a revaluation four years ago are about to get relief from a do-over.

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June 2009

BERGEN: Fair Lawn, Tenafly, Hackensack, Hasbrouck Heights, Teaneck, & Bergenfield - The Home Team

BY CAROL FLETCHER
NorthJersey.com
STAFF WRITER

More than ever, North Jersey towns need their accounting firms, doctors' offices, retail stores and pizzerias for the property tax revenue they generate, and they're doing what they can to help them stay in business.

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SID getting set to award more 'Bergenfield bucks'

The Bergenfield Special Improvement District will award 10 additional $25 "Bergenfield Bucks" gift certificates, good at participating businesses in the district.

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Enter Online to Win $250 in Bergenfield Bucks Gift Certificates

Ten $25“Bergenfield Bucks” Gift Certificate Winners to be announced on July 1 st

Bergenfield, NJ, June 11, 2009 – The Bergenfield Special Improvement District (BSID) has announced that it will award ten additional $25 “Bergenfield Bucks” Gift Certificates, good at participating businesses located in the district, to build on the success of the BSID's offer of $250 in gift certificates in May. The “Bergenfield Bucks” Gift Certificates will be awarded in a drawing of online entries received through the BSID web site, www.BergenfieldSID.org . Entries must be received by June 30th, and winners will be announced on July 1 st . The gift certificates must be used by September 30, 2009.

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Community Members Join Forces with Bergenfield SID Staff For Spring Planting Event

Bergenfield, NJ, June 4, 2009 – Bergenfield resident Karen D’Imperio approached members of the Bergenfield Special Improvement District’s (BSID) board of directors this spring regarding ways to “spruce up” the district to make it more attractive and appealing. She was eagerly welcomed – and quickly recruited to organize a volunteer effort to support the BSID’s staff at their busiest time of year.

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Bergenfield District Businesses Honored in The Record’s Readers’ Top 5 for 2009

Bergenfield, NJ, June 9, 2009 – The Bergenfield District's Speedy Car Wash, Blue Dragon School of Martial Arts and International Buffet were among the winners in The Record's annual “Readers' Top 5” competition, honoring the best of Bergen and Passaic Counties in a wide variety of business categories. Speedy Car Wash, located at 192 S. Washington Avenue, was voted #1 for Best Car Wash/Detail Center. Blue Dragon School of Martial Arts, located at 53 S. Washington Avenue, was voted #5 for Martial Arts Schools. International Buffet, located at 497 S. Washington Avenue, received an Honorable Mention from The Record's readers in the buffet category.

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Bergenfield Special Improvement District offers overview

By BARBARA PARKER
Managing Editor
Twin Boro News

A mall? Not exactly.

What Washington Avenue and the surrounding streets in this diverse town have going for them is something rarely found in malls — an eclectic mix of independently owned restaurants, food stands and ethnic grocery stores that offer an array of food adventures. Whether it's halo-halo or vanilla gelato, burgers or taquitos, fresh lumpia or a different kind of quesadilla, you're likely to find something to try, and often, at surprisingly low prices.

It was hard to know where to start.

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March 2009

Bergenfield 's Diverse, Delicious Downtown

By BARBARA PARKER
Managing Editor
Twin Boro News

D owntown used to be the place where locals did most of their shopping, from shoes and clothing shops to butcher shops and mom-and-pop markets to hardware and furniture stores.

No more.

Over the past 50 or so years, the malls have siphoned off most of that business.

 

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Bergenfield SID Announces Winners of
District Dining Promotion

Winners Used “Bergenfield Bucks” Gift Certificates
to Dine at Local Restaurants

Bergenfield, NJ, March 24, 2009 – Winners in the Bergenfield Special Improvement District (BSID) sponsored “Bergenfield Bucks” District Dining Promotion enjoyed excellent Irish and Japanese fare and more – courtesy of great local restaurants who participated in the BSID effort. A total of ten $50 gift certificates were awarded to entrants who registered online through the BSID web site, www.BergenfieldSID.org. The Twin Boro News partnered with the Bergenfield District for the promotion to help showcase the local dining scene.


Thomas O’Reilly, owner of Tommy Fox's, joined gift certificate winners Joann and Robert Kocher, and JoAnn Carr of the Twin Boro News after their meal.

“Many people, from Bergenfield and surrounding communities, are surprised to learn that Bergenfield’s mile-long business district has over 40 dining establishments including restaurants offering American, Chinese, Salvadoran, Mexican, Filipino, Japanese, Irish, Italian, Pan-Asian, Caribbean and Latin American cuisine,” noted Walter Johnson, BSID Chairman and owner of Perfect Cut Carpets. “In these tough economic times its good to know that you can find a place close by in Bergenfield for lunch or dinner that won’t empty your wallet, and there’s plenty of convenient free parking nearby.”

Participating restaurants in the Bergenfield SID Dining Promotion included:

  • Armando’s - 96 S. Washington Ave
  • Beijing Duck House - 359 S. Washington Ave
  • Chapala Grill - 52 S. Washington Ave
  • Cusinera Fine Asian Eatery - 66 S. Washington Ave
  • International Buffet - 497 S. Washington Ave
  • La Batalla - 83 N. Washington Ave 385-0303
  • Matthews Diner & Pancake House - 430 S. Washington Ave
  • Nihon Kai Japanese Restaurant - 41 S. Washington Ave
  • Terrana’s Italian Restaurant - 127 S. Washington Ave
  • Tommy Fox’s - 32 S. Washington Ave
  • Swad – 4 Bedford Ave.
  • Wuzz Up Café - 8 Bedford Ave

The District’s restaurants include a wide range of styles and ambiance in addition to their ethnic diversity. Visitors can take a shopping break at a family-owned fine dining establishment or enjoy a casual meal at a sandwich shop, pub, pizzeria, deli or fast food spot. Some are liquor-free; others are licensed for liquor sales or BYOB. There’s even live music to be found.

To view complete lists of Bergenfield’s eating places and businesses, or for more information about BSID’s programs and services, visit www.BergenfieldSID.org or call 201-384-8555.


The Lee family, owners of Nihon Kai Japanese Restaurant, hosted contest winners who redeemed their gift certificate and enjoyed a great meal. JoAnn Carr of the Twin Boro News and Diana Vitrano of the Bergenfield Special Improvement District staff visited Nihon Kai to collect the used gift certificate and thank the Lee's for participating in the promotion.

The Bergenfield Special Improvement District was created in 1998 to help improve the local economy and overall commercial climate in the Borough of Bergenfield. Through an active series of programs and initiatives including facade and signage upgrades, parking and streetscape improvements, special events and marketing and public relations efforts on the district’s behalf, BSID has helped Bergenfield become the commercial destination of choice for many residents of Bergen County and Northern New Jersey.


InvestNJ Business Grant Program

To help New Jersey businesses face the fiscal challenges of the current national economic crisis, Governor Jon S. Corzine signed legislation creating the Invest NJ Program. The bill, A3294/S6 (December 9, 2008), establishes the program within the New Jersey Economic Development Authority and authorizes $120 million in grants to stimulate capital investment and job creation in the Garden State for a two-year period.

Click here to learn more about the criteria to qualify for the grant. > >


December 2008

Santa arrived by special transportation at the Plaza in front of Bank of America, 35 South Washington Avenue. Free photos and refreshments were provided to those who came to visit Santa.

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Click to read about 2007 Free Photo with Santa event > >


October 2008

BSID business owner Karim Ben-Fredj of Scentsational Shoppe was interviewed by MSN regarding the impact of the current economic crisis on small business owners and local business districts competing in today’s global economy. Click here to view the MSN Money video and read the interview.

Click here to view the MSN Money video and read the interview > >


 

September 2008

The Arrival of New Fall Banners in the Bergenfield SID


July 2008

Bergenfield SID Businesses:
In the News and Earning Special Recognition
There's a lot happening in the Bergenfield SID – diverse products, services and dining opportunities provided by business owners who make customer service a top priority to match their experience and expertise.

Recently, several new and established businesses in the Bergenfield SID have received well-deserved recognition.

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MAY 2008

Appearance Counts in the Bergenfield Special Improvement District

Spring Flower Plantings, Clean-Up Crew Efforts Contribute
to a Warm Welcome for Visitors
Running a business, earning a living, raising a family…in  Bergenfield 's commercial district, everyone has more than their share of daily responsibilities and choosing one over another isn't easy. That hasn't stopped volunteers from Bergenfield's Venture Crew 139 and the volunteer board members of the Bergenfield Special Improvement District (BSID) from making the appearance and cleanliness of the district along North and South Washington Avenue a top priority. And this community partnership has contributed to an attractive, clean and welcoming environment for residents, visitors and local businesses as well.

Spring and summer always present the BSID's maintenance crew and local businesses and property owners — the “Clean Team” as they're often referred to — with a greater challenge, because with the arrival of warmer weather more people are outside longer and, as a result, leave behind larger amounts of litter. “With the cooperation of Bergenfield's Venture Crew 139, consumers, visitors, and business owners, the district has quite a few individuals keeping a keen eye on everything that has to do with the cleanliness and appearance of the BSID,” noted Walter Johnson, president of the BSID and owner of Perfect Cut Carpets. 


Bergenfield's Venture Crew 139 volunteers, lead by Bergenfield's Special Improvement District (BSID) board member and former mayor, Richard Bohan (standing second from right), show district administrator, Don Smartt, (standing at left) its planting work in the decorative planters that are placed around the center of the BSID business district.

On a busy Sunday morning in May, Venture Crew 139 volunteers, lead by BSID board member and former mayor, Richard Bohan, took their responsibility to the streets, planting flowers in the 13 decorative planters located in the center of the BSID business district. The BSID provided the funds for the soil and plants, and Venture Crew 139 provided the labor.

The Venture Crew is a youth development program of the Boy Scouts of America for young men and women who are 14 (and have completed the eighth grade) through 20 years of age. Venturing's purpose is to provide positive experiences to help young people mature and to prepare them to become responsible and caring adults.

Through the spring and summer months, the BSID, with financing contributed by district property and business owners, sends its “crew” – a professional maintenance team equipped with brooms, bags, and buckets — to empty trash cans every Monday, sweep sidewalks and curb lines, and remove debris from sewer grates.

While scheduled maintenance services, supported by the supplemental clean-up efforts of the BSID's maintenance team and the volunteer efforts of groups like Venture Crew 139, contribute to a cleaner environment for the community, everyone has a part to play. The BSID's board members urge all of the district's businesses and property owners to join the “Clean Team” by:

  • washing windows on a regular basis
  • sweeping up and discarding winter trash, leaves, and broken glass
  • sweeping not only in front but also at the sides of all properties
  • painting weathered exteriors (including trim and doors)
  • repairing gutters, leaders, and sidewalks
  • properly recycling bottles, cans, newspapers, and magazines.

“With the help of local business owners keeping their own businesses clean and the arrival back on the scene of Bergenfield SID's maintenance crew, our efforts make a difference every week,” concluded BSID President Walter Johnson.

For more information about the Bergenfield Special Improvement District's maintenance program or other district programs and services, contact the BSID at 201.384.8555 visit the district's web site at www.bergenfieldsid.org or email director@bergenfieldsid.org .


April 2008

The Board of Trustees presented, outgoing Chairman, Ray Addison with a recognition award for his service and leadership on the BSID Board of Trustees and wished him well in his new ventures in his relocation to the South.


Corned beef is cross-ethnic star 

Monday, March 3, 2008 
BY ROBERT BIESELIN
STAFF WRITER, The Record 

As regaled as corned beef is this time of year, you'd never expect such an embrace were you to witness the less than auspicious process that produces that pinkish beef.

DON SMITH / THE RECORD
Manager Harvey Melinkoff of Harold's II Kosher Superette, a kosher deli in Paramus, holds up the finished product.

It goes something like this:

Take a beef brisket, chuck it into a tepid bath of seasoned saltwater, and forget about it. For a week, maybe two or three. Then, as if you haven't already treated it badly enough, exhume the beastly hunk of meat from the brackish depths and give it a thorough boiling. Once cooked - and tinted to a pinkish hue somewhere between a sunset and a chemical fire - slice it, serve it up with sides of your choosing and watch the response.

For some inexplicable reason, the dish, despite this harsh treatment, is welcomed with open arms (and mouths) by folks in North Jersey. Chalk up the appeal to tradition.

FAST FACTS

Where to get fresh corned beef in North Jersey

Some of North Jersey's pubs and delis that always make their corned beef from scratch:

  • Harold's II Kosher Superette: 67 E. Ridgewood Ave., Paramus; 201-262-0030.
  • Manhattan Kosher Restaurant: 26 Chestnut Ridge Road, Montvale; 201-307-8707.
  • Noah's Ark: 493 Cedar Lane, Teaneck; 201-692-1200 or noahsark.net.
  • Fitzgerald's Harp 'n Bard: 363 Lakeview Ave., Clifton; 973-772-7282 or fitzgeralds harpnbard.com.
  • Egan and Sons: 118 Walnut St., Montclair; 973-744-1413 or eganandsons.com.

Where's the corn?

According to the "Food Lover's Companion," corned beef got its name from the English use of "corn," meaning "small particle," such as salt granules, which are used to make the brine. The traditional St. Patrick's Day accompaniments are cabbage, potatoes, carrots and onions -- no corn.

"Our most popular sandwiches here are corned beef and pastrami," said Glen Shorr, co-owner of Harold's Kosher Superette, a kosher deli in Paramus. "There's just something about a good corned beef sandwich. It's something that's been passed down for generations. With the rye bread, the mustard - the way it's supposed to be served - people just love it."

Lathered with mustard and piled high on marbled rye or paired with sauerkraut, Swiss and Thousand Island dressing, corned beef is a year-round mainstay at self-respecting kosher delis like Harold's. Still, despite its ties to Jewish cooking, with St. Patrick's Day just around the corner, the brutalized beef is likely more popular this time of year thanks to its association, or rather mis-association, with Ireland.

In reality, according to Thomas O'Reilly, the so-called Irish tradition owes its popularity to the same generations of Jewish New Yorkers that Shorr lauds for passing down the heritage of corned beef on rye.

"The funny thing about corned beef as we sell it over here is that you wouldn't really find it in Ireland ... it was the Irish immigrants here in New York that were next to the Jewish neighborhoods who first adopted corned beef," said O'Reilly, owner of Tommy Fox's Public House in Bergenfield, which is celebrating its 10th anniversary this month. "Corned beef and cabbage has come to mean St. Patrick's Day over here, but it's definitely an Irish-American dish more than an Irish dish."

Traditional methods

For a more authentic dabble in Irish culinary tradition, O'Reilly suggests a lamb stew or a boiled bacon and cabbage dish like the one he pairs with live Celtic bands on Sunday afternoons in March. At the end of the day though, his Irish-minded customers don't feel ashamed ordering platters of the pink beef. According to O'Reilly - whose parents emigrated from Ireland - Tommy Fox's moves more than 1,000 pounds of corned beef in the weeks surrounding St. Patrick's Day.

He's not the only one dishing it up in the area, either. As a culinary focal point for the Jewish and Irish, several local purveyors of corned beef even go so far as to make their own, buying the brisket un-brined and pickling it themselves.

It's not a quick process but, as they say, one well worth the time invested.

"Every corned beef is going to taste a little different due to the size of the meat and the brining mixtures," said Shorr. "But the big difference when you make it yourself is that it's going to be fresh. It's not pickled three or four months ago ... it's going to taste fresh like corned beef should."

To get this fresh taste, the folks at Harold's II don't deviate far from the methods that have always been used when brining meat. Besides the use of a pickling machine, which employs little needles to inject the brisket with brining solution, the formula is the same as it's always been.

"After running [the brisket] through the [pickling] machine, we put it into a barrel with the rest of the brine and it takes five to seven days to pickle or corn," Shorr said.

Give it time

For folks without a pickling machine, the duration of time the beef spends in the bucket can likely be longer. With your meat enduring a lengthy soak, it's tempting to get impatient, but it's best to let the process run its course, according to Melissa Fitzgerald, owner of Fitzgerald's Harp 'n Bard in Clifton, which has brined its own beef for the last five years.

"We don't have a brining machine, so we just leave it in the solution for at least a week," she said. "The meat will brine itself ... you just have to be patient."

According to Fitzgerald, whose pub dishes out upward of 1,000 pounds of corned beef during the week surrounding St. Patrick's Day, the time to become hands-on arrives later, just after the meat is boiled.

"One of the most important things to do after you take the boiled meat out of the water is to put cold, wet rags over it and cool it down quickly so the cooking process stops and it's not overcooked," she said.

Still, no matter how it's brined, boiled or served, chances are guests at your St. Patrick's Day celebration - be they Irish, Jewish, both or neither - also will have some curious affinity for the pink beef, even if it's just for one day a year.

"My son's birthday is March 14th, so every year we'll have a corned beef and cabbage party," said John Bruggeman of Wyckoff, who makes 30 corned beefs for the annual party. "It started with just the family and then it took on a life of its own. Now we'll draw around 75 or 80 people."

Bruggeman, who likes to add Guinness to the broth when boiling his beef, can expect another successful party assuming one of his 80 guests isn't Pat Philbin of Moonachie. The International Federation of Competitive Eating competitor, known as Pat from Moonachie, rakes in some of his own massive numbers in relation to corned beef. In 2006, he wolfed down 3¾ pounds of corned beef and cabbage in 10 minutes, good enough to pull in fifth place in the IFCOE-sanctioned bout in Boston.

He, like Shorr and Bruggeman, says there's just something inexplicably good about the dish.

"I'm Irish, so I love corned beef, even though I only eat it about once a year," said Philbin, 41, who works as a courier when he's not participating in competitive eating contests. "If you're eating as much as I did though, you have to remember to drink a lot of water ... it can get stringy and hard to swallow."

Apparently, as with everything else, corned beef is best consumed in moderation.

E-mail: bieselin@northjersey.com


December, 2007 - Santa Claus came to town—the town of Bergenfield, that is. This holiday season, the Bergenfield Special Improvement District sponsored a Free Photo with Santa and Strolling Holiday Music event on Saturday, December 15th.

Santa was delivered by special transportation—the Bergenfield Fire Department—and set up shop on the sidewalk in front of The Bank of America at 35 South Washington Avenue. Parents who brought their children were entitled to a free Polaroid photograph of their child with Santa.

In addition, the BSID distributed gift bags and refreshments while the Salvation Army Brass Ensemble strolled through the district performing holiday music.

Santa’s visit is just one of the local highlights this holiday season, thanks to the efforts of the Bergenfield Special Improvement District (BSID), a public/private partnership between the business community and the Borough of Bergenfield. Adding to the festive spirit are over 90 beautifully decorated wreaths placed on utility poles along the entire length of Washington Avenue from the Teaneck to the Dumont border.

“The success of the district’s improvement efforts year-round is directly related to the volunteer work of SID members, of many of our commercial district friends and associates, and of the people in our local communities,” said SID board member David Cassens of Arista Trophies & Awards. “Also, we have always been able to count on the additional support of the Borough of Bergenfield, the Bergenfield Police Department, the Bergenfield Fire Department and the Bergenfield Boy Scouts Venture Crew. The willingness of so many people to loan valuable time, good ideas and special skills to our holiday events is a clear signal that Bergenfield is a town with an abundance of pride. Everyone wants to see it succeed.”

Cassens’ Arista Trophies, on Portland Avenue, prepared the holiday giveaway bags for Santa day visitors. Board member Tom O'Reilly, of Tommy Fox’s, on South Washington Avenue, organized the refreshments. Bill Tompkins, owner of Peter’s Camera Center, also on South Washington, provided the Polaroid photo services.

Click here for view the gallery of event photos.

The Bergenfield SID was created in 1998 to help improve the local economy and overall commercial climate in the Borough of Bergenfield. Its goals include facade and signage upgrades, parking and streetscape improvements, special events, and marketing and public relations on the district’s behalf. It achieves its goals through an active series of programs and events, many of which have already been instrumental in turning Bergenfield into a commercial destination of choice for many residents of Bergen County and Northern New Jersey.

For further information contact Don Smartt, District Administrator at 201 384-8555 or visit www.BergenfieldSID.org.


Click here to see the March BSID ad on the back page of the Bergenfield Bulletin.

Click here to see the February BSID ad on the back page of the Bergenfield Bulletin.

Click here to see the December BSID ad on the back page of the Bergenfield Bulletin.

Click here to see the November BSID ad on the back page of the Bergenfield Bulletin.

Click here
to see the October BSID ad on the back page of the Bergenfield Bulletin.

Visit the Bergenfield Bulletin.


October 2007
Shoppers and strollers took the streets for the Bergenfield's Chamber of Commerce's annual Street Fair. Rides and entertainment were part of the day's activities.


Photo courtesy of Twin-Boro News, a community newspaper of North Jersey
Media Group. Photo by Bill Slossar. Oct. 10, 2007.


The Borough of Bergenfield held the official groundbreaking ceremony for Phase II of the Washington Avenue Improvement Project on Wednesday, June 6, 2007. The event marked the start of this new phase of the Washington Avenue Revitalization project, which will consist of new curbs, sidewalks, brick pavers, trees, and decorative lighting, funded by the NJ Department of Transportation.  For photographs, please see Bergenfield in Progress at http://www.bergenfieldboro.com/bergenfieldinprogress.htm.
 


To ensure an effective flow of communication and efficient delivery of services between businesses, developers and investors in Bergenfield, the Bergenfield SID is pleased to offer these helpful links to the PSE&G website:

Call Before You Dig  
http://www.pseg.com/customer/town/damage/overview.jsp

Report a Streetlamp Outage
https://extsecure.pseg.com/webformsWeb/resources/jsp/psegcom/streetlight-out.jsp

New Construction Services
http://www.pseg.com/customer/business/new_service/process.jsp

Request Service for New Construction
http://www.pseg.com/customer/business/new_service/overview.jsp

Request a Service Removal
http://www.pseg.com/customer/home/service/demolition/overview.jsp

Planting the Right Tree in the Right Location  
http://www.pseg.com/customer/home/safety/tree.jsp

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