March 8, 2012 - WestchesterGuardian.com
Transcription
March 8, 2012 - WestchesterGuardian.com
Vol. VI, No. X Westchester’s Most Influential Weekly Raging Lawsuits in Yorktown Thursday, March 8, 2012,,,,$1.00 SHERIF AWAD Capturing Neverland, Page 5 ABBY LUBY Transformer Trouble Again, Page7 Dr. EVAN LEVINE. Emergency Rooms, Page 10 The Writer’s Collection The Hill, Page 14 By ABBY LUBY, Page 22 Injudicious Justice By ABBY LUBY, Page 9 Yonkers Corruption Trial By HEZI ARIS, Page 22 WWW.WESTCHESTERGUARDIAN.COM JOHN SIMON O’Neill’s First Pulitzer, Page 18 MARY C. MARVIN I Didn’t Know That!, Page 20 Dr. ED U. CATOR Mindless Talk and Chatter, Page 24 SALOME THOMPSON Overlooked Epidemic, Page 24 History ................................................................................................10 Every Monday is special. On Monday, February 20th, Krystal Wade, a celebrated participant in http:// Ed Koch Movie Review ...................................................................12 www.TheWritersCollection.com is our guest. Krystal Wade is a mother of three who works fifty miles from home and writes in her “spare time.” “Wilde’s Fire,” her debut novel has been accepted for publication Spoof....................................................................................................13 and should be available in 2012. Not far behind is her second novel, “Wilde’s Army.” How does she do it? Sports Scene .......................................................................................13 Tune in and find out. Najah’s Corner ...................................................................................13 Writers Collection.............................................................................14 Co-hosts Richard Narog and Hezi Aris will relish the dissection of all things politics on Tuesday, February Page 2Books...................................................................................................16 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN 21st. Yonkers City THURSDAY, March FEBRUARY 23, 20128, 2012 Page 3 THE WESTcHESTER GUARDiAn CouncilTHURSDAY President Chuck Lesnick will share his perspective from the august inner sanctum of the City Council Chambers on Wednesday, February 22nd. Stephen Cerrato, Esq., will share Transportation...................................................................................17 his political insight on Thursday, February 23rd. Friday, February 24th has yet to be filled. It may be a propiGovernment Section ............................................................................17 RADIO tious day to sum up what transpired throughout the week. A sort of BlogTalk Radio version of That Was Of Albany Significance Correspondent ....................................................................17 The Week That Was (TWTWTW). Mayor Marvin’s Column .................................................................18 For those who cannot join us live, consider listening to the show by way of an MP3 download, or on Community Section................................................................................3 Section ...............................................................................4 Government .......................................................................................19 demand. Within 15 minutes of a show’s ending, you can find the segment in our archive that you may link Calendar................................................................................................3 Business ................................................................................................4 OpEd Section .........................................................................................23 to using the hyperlink provided in the opening paragraph. Creative Disruption. . ...........................................................................4 Calendar ...............................................................................................4 Ed Koch Commentary.....................................................................23 Westchester On the Level is usually heard from Monday to Friday, from 10 a.m. to 12 Noon on the Internet: Cultural Perspective............................................................................5 The entire archive is available and maintained for your perusal. The easiest to find aofparticular Charityto..................................................................................................5 http://www.BlogTalkRadio.com/WestchesterOntheLevel. Because of theway importance a Federalinterview court case Letters the Editor ..........................................................................24 Energy Issues........................................................................................6 is to search Google, or any other search engine, for the subject matter or the name of the interviewee. purporting corruption and bribery allegations, programming with be suspended for the week of March 5 For to 9, Contest ..................................................................................................6 Weir Only Human ............................................................................25 History...................................................................................................7 example, search Google, Yahoo, AOL Search for Westchester On the Level, Blog Talk Radio, or use the 2012. Richard Narog and Hezi Aris are co-hosts of the show. Creative Disruption ............................................................................6 Legal Notices ..........................................................................................26 Westchester On the Level is heard from Monday to Friday, from 10 a.m. to 12 Noon Legal.......................................................................................................9 hyperlink above. on the Internet: http://www.BlogTalkRadio.com/WestchesterOntheLevel. Join Education.............................................................................................10 .............................................................................................7 Medicine. the conversation by calling toll-free to 1-877-674-2436. Please stay on topic. FashionReview.....................................................................................11 ..................................................................................................8 Movie Fitness....................................................................................................9 Richard Narog and Hezi Aris are your co-hosts. In the week beginning February 20th and ending on People...................................................................................................12 February 24th, we have an exciting entourage of guests. Health ..................................................................................................10 Safety....................................................................................................12 The Westchester Guardian is a weekly newspaper devoted to the unbiased reporting History ................................................................................................10 Sports....................................................................................................13 Every Monday is special. On Monday, February 20th, Krystal Wade, a celebrated participantofinevents http://Thur Page 26 and The WesTchesTer Guardian developments that are newsworthy and significant to readers living in, and/or employed in, Writers Collection.............................................................................14 Ed Koch Movie Review ...................................................................12 www.TheWritersCollection.com is our guest. Krystal Wade is a mother of three who works fifty miles Westchester County. The Guardian will strive to report fairly, and objectively, reliable informaWestchester’s Most Influential Weekly Books. . ..................................................................................................16 from home and writes in her “spare time.” “Wilde’s Fire,” her debut novel has been accepted for publication Spoof....................................................................................................13 tion without Our“Wilde’ first duty will beHow to thedoes PEOPLE’S SportsScene. and should be available in 2012. Not far favor behindoriscompromise. her second novel, s Army.” she do it? Sports Scene........................................................................................17 .......................................................................................13 RIGHT TO KNOW, by the exposure of truth, without fear or hesitation, CLASSIFIED ADS Technology. . ........................................................................................18 Tune in and find out. Najah’s Corner ...................................................................................13 no matter where the pursuit may lead, in the finest tradition of FREEDOM Guardian News Corp. Eye On Theatre. ..................................................................................18 Writers Collection.............................................................................14 Co-hosts Richard Narog and Hezi willPRESS. relish the dissectionOffice of all things politics on Tuesday, February Space AvailableOFAris THE Government Section.............................................................................20 P.O. Box 8 21st. Yonkers City Council President Chuck Lesnick will share perspective from the august inner Books...................................................................................................16 Primehis Location, Yorktown Heights Mayor Marvin’sNew Column..................................................................20 Rochelle, New York 10801 sanctum of the City Council Chambers on Wednesday, February 22nd. Stephen Cerrato, Esq., will and share 1,000 Sq. Ft.: $1800. Contact Wilca: 914.632.1230 The Guardian will cover news and events relevant to residents Transportation ...................................................................................17 Economic Development. ..................................................................20 his political insight on Thursday, February 23rd. Friday, February 24th has yet to be filled. It may be a propibusinesses all over Westchester County. As a weekly, rather than Government Section ............................................................................17 Prime - Westchester County Campaign Trail. ..................................................................................21 Sam Zherka , Publisher & President tious day to sum up what transpired throughout week. A sort of BlogTalk Radio version of That Was focusing on the the immediacy ofRetail delivery more associated with daily Albany ....................................................................17 Best Location in Yorktown Heights Funding.Correspondent ...............................................................................................21 The Week That Was (TWTWTW). journals, we will instead seek to provide the broader, more comprepublisher@westchesterguardian.com 1100 Sq. Ft. Store $3100; 1266 Sq. Ft. store $2800 and 450 Sq. Ft. Mayor Marvin’s Column .................................................................18 Legal.....................................................................................................22 hensive, chronological step-by-step accounting events, enlightened For those who cannot join us live, consider listening to the show by way anofMP3 download, or on Storeof$1200. Government .......................................................................................19 Legislation...........................................................................................23 with analysis, where appropriate. Hezi Aris, Editor-in-Chief & Vice President Suitable for any type of business. Contact Wilca: 914.632.1230 demand. Within 15 minutes of a show’ s ending, you can find the segment in our archive that you may link OpEd Section .........................................................................................23 Permits.................................................................................................24 to using the hyperlink provided in the opening paragraph. whyteditor@gmail.com From amongst journalism’s classic key-words: who, what, when, OpEd Section. .........................................................................................24 Ed Koch Commentary.....................................................................23 HELP WANTED The entire archive is available andwhere, maintained perusal. The and easiest waywill toseeking find a two particular interview why, for and how, the why drive ourjobpursuit. We Letter totothe Letters theEditor............................................................................24 EditorAdvertising: ..........................................................................24 A your non profit Performing Artshow Center is positions1) Direc(914) 562-0834 is to search Google, or any other search engine, for the subject matter or the name of the interviewee. For tor of DevelopmentFT-must have a background in development or expewill use our more abundant time, and our resources, to get past the New York Civic. . .................................................................................25 Weir Only Human ............................................................................25 rience fundraising, knowledge ofcharacteristic what development entails and the experiexample, search Google, Yahoo, AOL Search for Westchester On the Level, Blog Talk Radio, or use News and Photos: (914) 562-0834 initial ‘spin’ and ‘ d amage control’ often of immediate Legal Notices. . .........................................................................................26 Legal Notices ..........................................................................................26 ence working with sponsors/donors; 2) Operations Manager- must have a hyperlink above. news releases, to reach the very heart of the matter: the truth. We will Fax: (914) 633-0806 good knowledge of computers/software/ticketing systems, duties include take our readersoverseeing to a point andmovie insight which all of boxunderstanding office, concessions, staffing, day cannot of show lobby be obtained elsewhere. staffing such as Merchandise seller, bar sales. Must be familiar with POS Published online every Monday Westchester On the Level with Narog and Aris and Aris Mission Statement Print edition distributed Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday Graphic Design: Watterson Studios, Inc. Westchester’s Most Influential Weekly www.wattersonstudios.com Guardian News Corp. westchesterguardian.com P.O. Box 8 New Rochelle, New York 10801 Sam Zherka , Publisher & President publisher@westchesterguardian.com Hezi Aris, Editor-in-Chief & Vice President whyteditor@gmail.com Advertising: (914) 562-0834 News and Photos: (914) 562-0834 Fax: (914) 633-0806 Published online every Monday Print edition distributed Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday Graphic Design: Watterson Studios, Inc. www.wattersonstudios.com westchesterguardian.com system and willing to organize concessions. Full time plus hours. Call (203) Mission Statement and ask forfrom Julie or To succeed, we 438-5795 must recognize theAllison outset that bigger is not neces- The Westchester Guardian is abetter. weekly newspaper devoted to the unbiased reporting of events sarily And, furthermore, we will acknowledge that we cannot be and developments that are newsworthy and significant to readers in, and/or employed in, all things to all readers. We must carefullyliving balance the presentation of Westchester County. The Guardian will striveWestchester to report fairly, reliable relevant, hard-hitting, newsand andobjectively, commentary, withinformafeatures tion favor or compromise. duty will be thearound, PEOPLE’S andwithout columns useful in daily livingOur andfirst employment in,to and the RIGHT TOmust KNOW, theand exposure fear or hesitation, county. We stayby trim flexibleofif truth, we arewithout to succeed. no matter where the pursuit may lead, in the finest tradition of FREEDOM OF THE PRESS. The Guardian will cover news and events relevant to residents and businesses all over Westchester County. As a weekly, rather than focusing on the immediacy of delivery more associated with daily journals, we will instead seek to provide the broader, more comprehensive, chronological step-by-step accounting of events, enlightened with analysis, where appropriate. From amongst journalism’s classic key-words: who, what, when, where, why, and how, the why and how will drive our pursuit. We will use our more abundant time, and our resources, to get past the initial ‘spin’ and ‘damage control’ often characteristic of immediate news releases, to reach the very heart of the matter: the truth. We will take our readers to a point of understanding and insight which cannot be obtained elsewhere. To succeed, we must recognize from the outset that bigger is not necessarily better. And, furthermore, we will acknowledge that we cannot be all things to all readers. We must carefully balance the presentation of relevant, hard-hitting, Westchester news and commentary, with features and columns useful in daily living and employment in, and around, the county. We must stay trim and flexible if we are to succeed. Guardian Advertising (914) 562-0834 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN CALENDAR News & Notes from Northern Westchester By MARK JEFFERS Everyone is Irish these next few weeks, so grab yourself a corn beef and cabbage, have a taste of Harp and keep those Irish eyes a smiling by checking out this week’s “News and Notes…” One of my favorite events celebrating the Green… is coming up, the 22nd annual St. Patrick’s Day Parade sponsored by the Ancient Order of the Hibernians; Division 16 will start along Main Street in Mount Kisco on March 10th. All of my daughters have marched in this great community affair. This year will feature over 60 participants, including fife and drum corps, military bands, Irish step dancers, fire trucks, marching bands, youth groups, antique cars and community associations. You probably can’t go wrong with something called “A Friendly Gathering 2012, A Night of Irish Food, Song and Laughter,” this is happening on March 10th at the Kearnery Gym in White Plains with proceeds benefiting the RDC Center for Counseling & Human Development. Here’s some Irish fun for the youngsters, St, Patrick’s Day Crafts for pre-schoolers and their parents on March 14th at the Pound Ridge Library. The Horace Greeley Scholarship Fund is honoring Lyndall Boal, a long time beloved social worker at Seven Bridges and Robert E, Bell middle schools. The next meeting of the middle school book group, In-Between Pages will be held at the Bedford Hills Free Library on March 14th, author Sheela Chari will discuss her book “Vanished.” A Joint Conference of the American Lung Association in New York, POW’R Against Tobacco, the American Cancer Society and Westchester Community College in Valhalla will be held at the college on March 8th. The conference will feature Ty Patterson, Director of the National Center for Tobacco Policy, who will discuss how to involve students, faculty and administration in sustaining and maintaining a successful tobacco free campus policy. Local farmer Nick Mancini, an expert in organic gardening will lecture on “Growing Edibles in Containers,” at the Pound Ridge Library on March 13th, I better attend, the last thing I grew in a container was a mold… Congratulations to the Village of Pleasantville as the village just celebrated its 47th birthday! The Schoolhouse Theater in Croton Falls is currently running JP Miller’s brilliant, drama and love story “Days of Wine and Roses,” through March 25th. Shirley Ann Tabatneck’s Psychic Fair happens the first Sunday of the month at the Elks Club in White Plains, and of course, they all ready know if you will be attending… The Westchester Jewish Film Festival will be held at the Jacobs Burns Film Center April 11 – May 1, give them a call at 914-773-7663 for details. This sounds like a ton of fun… Rickie Broff will share her favorite museum stories and museum trips and then following the talk, kids will be able to create their own museums…all this at the Katonah Museum on March 10th. Having taught two daughters to drive, I highly recommend this workshop, “Safe Behind the Wheel: A Parent Teen Workshop,” being held on March 21st at the White Plains Library. Here’s an item from my wife’s rumor mill… the town of Bedford is thinking of purchasing the Bedford Hills train station building from the MTA, if they do I hope they put in some good coffee and snacks for us weary commuters… The new Westchester Destination Guide for 2012 is now available.The 60-page magazine, the official tourism and travel guide to Westchester County, printed annually, can be picked up free by calling 914-995-8500. Bedford’s very own Rooney Mara looked stunning on the red carpet at the Academy Awards, we hear she is going to work on the sequel to her lead role in “The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo.” There certainly are a number of celebrities that live up here in northern Westchester, and are often very generous with their time to help raise funds for many different worthwhile charities…hats off to these folks who enjoy living here as much as you and I… see you next week. Mark Jeffers successfully spearheaded the launch of MAR$AR Sports & Entertainment LLC in 2008. As president he has seen rapid growth of the company with the signing of numerous clients. He resides in Bedford Hills, New York, with his wife Sarah, and three daughters, Kate, Amanda, and Claire. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Please submit your Letter to the Editor electronically, that is by directing email to WHYTeditor@gmail.com Please confine your writing to between 350 and 500 words. Your name, address, and telephone contact is requested for verification purpose only. A Letter to the Editor will be accepted at the editor’s discretion when space permits. A maximum of one submission per month may be accepted. THURSDAY March 8, 2012 Page 3 When was the last time you dealt with Lexington Capital Associates? With over 50 years experience, Lexington Capital Associates provides loans from $1m-$150m at some of the lowest interest rates available in the marketplace. • For cash flowing loans- NO PERSONAL GUARANTEE • 30 year payouts • Int. only loans available Lexington Capital Associates, LLC. 240 North Avenue New Rochelle, NY 10801 Phone (914) 632-1230 fax (914) 633-0806 Page 4 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY March 8, 2012 CREATIVE DISRUPTION Interlude By JOHN F. McMULLEN As we move through our analysis of the impact of technology on everything we do, destroying age-old ways of doing things, while often opening the doors to new opportunities, we must note the factor that impacts industries across the board – marketing, law enforcement, manufacturing, science, education, politics, government, and on-and-on – Data! Never before in history have we had so much data available to use and misuse. It has been written that, if we use the variable “X” to indicate all the data developed by humans from the beginnings of time until the inauguration of Barack Obama, that “10X” has been developed since then. Although it is also estimated that over 50% of that data is redundant or spam, it is still an awful lot of data! There is census data, scientific data, economic data, marketing data, credit data, sports data --- data about every possible thing – and constantly increasing personal data about us. It is the personal data that constantly attracts our attention. We read and perhaps worry about the amount of data that Google and / or Facebook has on each of us and how it may be used. Some are concerned about government surveillance; others are bothered by the collection of information about our purchasing habits by stores and credit card companies; others think that medical data collected by doctors, hospitals and insurance companies may somehow be used against them. In short, data is a big deal! How did this explosion of data occur? Obviously, computers were the original prime component. No longer was information simply typed to paper and kept in articles, journals and books. With computers, it was stored and could be modified, refined, and / or built upon. The advent of the Internet added another dimension; now it could be transported, collaborated on, and made available worldwide. A very important factor was constant breakthroughs in storage technology. Storage devices have gotten bigger in capacity, smaller in size, and much less expensive. In the less than 50 years of microcomputer use, storage devices have gone from cassette tape to “floppy diskette” to lowcapacity fixed disks to high-capacity fixed disks – and the cost keeps coming down. A case in point -- in 1980, I purchased my first fixed disk for a microcomputer, a 10 million character (byte) Corvus. It cost me $5,500. I now have trillion-byte fixed disks and, as we can see from the following table, the cost has shrunk geometrically: The two terabyte (TB) disk sitting next to my MacBook cost around $200. If prices per megabyte had remained at 1980 levels, it would have cost over $1 million! Additionally, I have 16 Continual Decreasing Cost of Storage Unit Capacity 1MB 1,000,000 10 Million Byte Drive 1GB 1TB Cost in 1980 10,000,000 1,000,000,000 $5,500.00 1,000,000,000,000 billion bytes (GB) on a chain around my neck. The 16GB USB drive weighs about an ounce while my 10MB Corvus drive in 1980 must have weighed 15 pounds; it was heavier than the computers it serviced. It is important that storage capacity keeps increasing because the data universe is now doubling every two years – EVERY TWO YEARS! This doubling puts more demands not only on our storage capacity but also on our communications channels and, most important, on the software tools that collect, extract, combine, and analyze this data. I have used the terms “data” and “information” rather interchangeably so far – actually they are quite different. Data is the raw material – numbers, pictures, etc. while Information is data that has been shaped into a form that is understandable and useful to human beings. It is the task of the computer scientist to develop tools and algorithms, which will constantly make the masses of data more useful to human beings. While we are generally happy (or at least not troubled) by the fact that our orthopedist’s report goes immediately via computer link to our internist; that Amazon immediately makes us aware of a new book by a favorite author or a new accessory for our Kindle Fire; that CVS and Best Buy are telling about bonuses due us from our shopping; and Apple and / or Microsoft are ready to download new versions of the operating system, we certainly do not like the idea of purchases of X-rated movies or sex toys or very expensive devices or jewelry that are kept in our homes being gathered by some service out there. We don’t really like the idea of surveillance cameras all throughout our cities. We would certainly not like being denied employment, a promotion or a mortgage because of intemperate postings on Facebook, Twitter or Tumbler about a politician, a company, or an annoying neighbor. We would definitely not like the idea that a government agency had collected all of such information about us in one place – They can’t do that, can they?? No, they, meaning the government, can’t gather such information --- BUT – as is pointed out in the very comprehensive 2005 book, “No Place to Hide”, by Washington Post investigative reporter Robert O’Harrow, private firms are not restricted by law from gathering this information and putting it together – and then selling it to government agencies. We each have many digital identifiers – Social Security Number; Credit Card Numbers; Home and Cell Phone Numbers; Supermarket, Drug Store, and Box Store Bonus Programs; Cost at 1980 Prices $550,000 $550,000,000 $550,000,000,000 Insurance Policies; Auto Registrations and Driver’s Licenses; etc. (and as Facial Recognition becomes more refined, the TV show, “Person of Interest” won’t seem as far fetched) -- and these identifiers are cross-referenced to build a demographic picture of us (or, at least attempt to – if you go to the web service, Spokeo.com, and look up yourself or friends, you’ll find that it is far from accurate – but much better than it was 2 years ago). Two recent New York Times articles, “The Age of Big Data” by Steve Lohr (http://www. nytimes.com/2012/02/12/sunday-review/bigdatas-impact-in-the-world.html) and Charles Duhigg’s “How Companies Learn Your Secrets” http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/19/ magazine/shopping-habits.html), take us inside the world of those trying to find out all about us. Lohr’s piece focuses on “Big Data” itself and the vast research efforts going on to be able to glean more quality information from it by such entities as The United Nations, IBM, WalMart, Match.com, The Federal Reserve, and Kohl’s. In the corporate world, just a little edge in this area could mean multi-million dollars in sales while government entities can provide either better service or better surveillance. The Duligg piece, on the other hand, goes into one firm, Target’s mission of finding everything possible about clients and potential clients -- not only what you buy and /or return but where you live, your income level, when you buy – and what’s going on in your lives when you do. New baby? New House? Child away to College?, etc. – and, once you are in its system, it will purchase demographic information to supplant what it already has. Duligg writes “Target can buy data about your ethnicity, job history, the magazines you read, if you’ve ever declared bankruptcy or gotten divorced, the year you bought (or lost) your house, where you went to college, what kinds of topics you talk about online, whether you prefer certain brands of coffee, paper towels, cereal or applesauce, your political leanings, reading habits, charitable giving and the number of cars you own.” – all this information can be found somewhere and, as written above, can also be sold to government agencies. What can we do about this? The obvious first step is to realize what you are doing when you sign up for a new service of any type? How much information do you have to give to obtain the service? Is it worth it? The next thing to consider is does this subject really concern you. Some see the loss of privacy as inevitable. Computer scientist / science fiction writer David Brin, in his 1999 Actual 2012 Prices $1 $100 book, “The Transparent Society: Will Technology Force Us To Choose Between Privacy And Freedom?” sees no end to cameras and computer monitoring so he wants us to be able to monitor those monitoring us. We should be able to have cameras inside of those locations monitoring us – and we should know everyone who has our information and what they may do with it. If we are concerned and wish to do what we can to slow or curtail these practices, we can bring pressure on Google, Facebook, Twitter, etc. to be totally transparent as to who has access to our data. It’s not the other members of the network who concern us; it’s rather the advertisers’ – what are they getting for their dollars – information about us. We can bring pressure on our lawmakers to put tight restrictions on re-selling of our personal information. We must, however, be careful about bringing lawmakers anything to do with the Internet or Social Networking. The proposed cure is often worse than the disease. We can join the Electronic Frontier Foundation (“EFF” – www.eff.org) and / or the Electronic Privacy Information Center (“EPIC” -- http://epic.org/). Both organizations understand the issues and are very effective in bringing reasonable solutions to problems before the appropriate legislative bodies. As we educate ourselves on these issues, we might also consider the following paragraph from Lohr’s “The Age of Big Data” article, “A report last year by the McKinsey Global Institute, the research arm of the consulting firm, projected that the United States needs 140,000 to 190,000 more workers with “deep analytical” expertise and 1.5 million more data-literate managers, whether retrained or hired.” There is opportunity, as well as pitfalls, connected with the data explosion. Creative Disruption is a continuing series examining the impact of constantly accelerating technology on the world around us. These changers normally happen under our personal radar until we find that the world as we knew it is no more. John F. McMullen has been involved in technology for over 40 years and has written about it for major publications. He may be found on Facebook and his current non-technical writing, a novel, “The Inwood Book” and “New & Collected Poems by johnmac the bard” are available on Amazon. He is a professor at Purchase College and has previously taught at Monroe College, Marist College and the New School For Social Research. THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY March 8, 2012 Page 5 CULTURAL PERSPECTIVE Capturing Neverland By SHERIF AWAD Lebanese born Sara Khazemsince the age of nine, always had a video camera in her hands recording everything around her. But, at that time, she did not take art that seriously. When she moved with her family to the United States in 2001, Sara began taking art classes in drawing, painting and sculpture in California. When she was given a still camera as a gift from one of her mentors, she discovered that she could better express her ideas, thoughts and feelings through digital photography. Traveling to and She wanted to particularly help the kids. She began the project last July. She brought her concept into fruition through a proj- Surrender by Ramadan Waiting for the Sun by Dina. Sara Khazem. fro to the Middle East, particularly her homeland, Sara, then 24, tended to focus on underprivileged communities. Her photos captured the nomadic Bedouins who still reside in Lebanon, and street children from Syria. who was illustrated in Disney’s cartoons and cinema. Basically, I wanted the young children to appreciate their lives; grownups appreciate them more when they see their photos. When I was explaining to the children the meaning of “Neverland,” they would all be smiling. I guess they fully understood what it means. ect she called “Capturing Neverland.” It was about getting children to be sensitive to their environment and to express their hearts and mind about themselves and their environment through photography. By engaging in this task, the kids developed skill sets and enhanced self-esteem. Sara recognized it would be these kids, among others, who would mature and maintain residence in the neighborhoods she found them. They would become part of the same community in the years ahead. It was a challenge because Sara did not have a background in social work and never dealt with street children. Nevertheless, she was undeterred. She flew to Egypt and spent ten days working with orphans, whose age ranged between eight and twelve, on a workshop that teaches them basic photography techniques. The young children’s photos were exhibited in Egypt and are soon to be exhibited in the United States. AWAD: We know from Peter Pan’s story that “Neverland” is the place for eternal childhood. Why did you choose this name for your project. KHAZEM: “Capturing” is obviously about taking photos and “Neverland” is a Dangerous by Mohamed. name that kids can relate to. It is about dreams and fantastic adventures related to Peter Pan Opening by Basma. AWAD: How did you conceptualize and bring your project to reality? KHAZEM: I started creating this website featuring a mission and a goal of my project. And because I did not have the resources to realize it, I asked people I know to donate. Mostly they were artists, actors or filmmakers who are familiar with the struggle of rising Middle Eastern artists starting from scratch. I guess my passion was convincing enough of them to reach out to help me. I then started to search the Internet to locate an Egyptian based shelter or organization to choose the children for inclusion in the project. The shelter or organization would house kids who would likely be more qualified and communicative than raw street children. I decided to Continued on page 6 Page 6 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY March 8, 2012 CULTURAL PERSPECTIVE Capturing Neverland Continued from page 5 contact Hope Village in Cairo because it had usually used art as a methodology to educate and rehabilitate children. By December, I had the necessary funds to secure my travel arrangements and the necessary equipment to come to Egypt and make it real. AWAD: How did you choose the children? What was your process to communicate and to teach them? KHAZEM: I interviewed about 24 boys and 7 girls using my video camera. It was more of a chat that I would later review rather than anything else. I did not tell them what I wanted them to do. After reviewing the interviews, I finally chose 7 boys and 3 girls, because the latter were less receptive. The first few days were about teaching them basics like composition and framing using some disposable cameras. Then I started to show them how to capture live shots by making them act inside the frames in order to create a good image. I also taught them how the concept of a photo is altered when someone’s figure is cropped or when a photographer points at a subject from a certain angle. In the days that followed, the children started to use digital cameras to shoot photos during field trips to the old market of Khan Alkhalili and to the Pyramids where I gave them the freedom to shoot whatever they liked as long as their photos “can tell a story.” After I showed them some of my photos in addition to other photographer’s work, they slowly started to develop their own style. For instance, one child, Islam is his name, started to mostly shoot portraits. During the ten-day course, we reviewed and chose their best photos when we returned to the village. The children were very competitive. I also made them name their pictures and taught them how to explain to others why they chose such names. I also tutored them on how to write their own notes in some kind of daily journal. It was something they really loved because they never did that before. I guess children easily related to me because my age is closer to their age and I did not act like an instructor. AWAD: What did you notice about their respective character? KHAZEM: They were talking to me about everything but were most discrete about their background or how they ended up in the Village. They are also ver clever, street smart, and full of life, but some of them were shy approaching subjects; they were reluctant to approach people. One day, I went to see them after we finished the course only to be surprised by their talents in putting on a show of dancing and singing for me! They really appreciate each other; calling each other, “brother” or “sister,” and calling grown-ups, “mum” or “dad.” This was one of the most important aspects of the project; in essence, the project lessened the fear adults had in accepting these children because the kids’ approach of adults was not threatening. I met people my age who were fearful of these young children. AWAD: What about the final photos that had been chosen for the exhibition? KHAZEM: The kids took hundreds of pictures but one of them, Ramadan, was the most talented and he now dreams of becoming a photographer when he grows up. Eight of his photos will be featured among the Sara Khazem with the children. thirty pieces that comprise the exhibit. I can say all the photos have great composition and aesthetics. Most of the people who have seen them so far cannot believe they were really taken by young children. AWAD: You were planning to leave by the end of January but you decided to stay in Egypt. KHAZEM: I bought a roundtrip ticket because I was planning to make the exhibit and to return to the States thereafter. But I decided to stay in Egypt a longer time to work on other projects or to start “Capturing Nev- erland” all over again. Like the children, the country is vibrant and people are passionate about everything. I guess Egypt stimulates my senses in every way. Born in Cairo, Egypt, Sherif Awad is a film/video critic and curator. He is the film editor of Egypt Today Magazine, and the artistic director for both the Alexandria Film Festival, in Egypt, and the Arab Rotterdam Festival, in The Netherlands. He also contributes to Variety, in the United States, and Variety Arabia, in the United Arab Emirates (UAE). ENERGY ISSUES Indian Point Suffers Transformer Troubles Again By ABBY LUBY BUCHANAN, NY -- To avert a transformer explosion at Indian Point, like the two previous explosions over a year ago, Entergy decided to take the Unit 3 reactor off the grid last week because of transformer problems. The plant was back on line after a 36 hour, unplanned shut down. Entergy, the owner of Indian Point, announced that there was no release of radioactivity and no threat to workers or the public. Officials here at the nuclear power plant had detected an increase in combustible gases such as carbon dioxide and nitrogen, which are needed to run the transformer, and which, if ignored, can be the catalyst for igniting a fire. Transformers take electricity generated by the plant - some 22,500 volts - and step up that voltage to a level needed to feed the electrical grid (typically 215,000 to 500,000 volts). Highly flammable A new transformer being delivered to the Oyster Creek nuclear power plant, in New Jersey, in 2008. oil, used to cool the transformers, has to be carefully monitored because mixing the oil with high voltage can cause the transformer to blow up. An option to using oil is the more expensive nitroglycerine. Transformer problems at Indian Point are nothing new. A transformer exploded at Indian Point Unit 2 in November 2010, prompting Entergy to shut down the reactor for 17 days. A month later the 30-year-old transformer at Unit 3 exploded, closing that reactor for almost a month. In 2007 a transformer fire caused an automatic shut down of Unit 3. “Plant workers monitor the condition of the oil, such as the temperature, salinity, contamination,” said David Lochbaum of the Union of Concerned Scientists. “When problems are detected, one can either remove the transformer from service and fix the problem before it gets worse, or wait until the transformer blows up.” When Entergy took Unit 3 offline last week, NRC spokesman Neil Sheehan said the transformer would be swapped out for another auxiliary transformer. Continued on page 7 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN ENERGY ISSUES Indian Point Suffers Transformer Troubles Again Continued from page 6 “Our Senior Resident Inspector assigned to Indian Point 3 was at the plant overnight to monitor the downpower and the company’s approach to dealing with the auxiliary transformer issue.The inspector did not identify any immediate safety concerns. We will continue to follow the situation and assess repair activities associated with the transformer.” Unplanned shutdowns lower a plant’s safety rating if there are more than three unplanned shutdowns within a year. Because the reactor was not taken offline, this occurrence would not count as a shutdown. It will, however, count as a hit against the plant’s Performance Indicator for Unplanned Power Changes per 7,000 Critical Hours. Unit 3 had been online generating electricity for 327 continuous days prior to last week. Unit 2 is at full power and has been online for 44 continuous days. The two working reactors are capable of pumping out about 2,000 megawatts of electricity. According to records from Con Edison, the utility company who sells electricity to New York City and Westchester County, the region uses 9,000 to 13,000 megawatts of electricity daily, depending on the weather. The 2,000 megawatts produced by Indian Point is about 15% to 22% of the daily region demands. Entergy has claimed that Indian Point provides up to 40% of the region’s electricity needs, which it does when the demand falls to 5,000 megawatts. Usage usually drops on Sunday mornings in the spring and fall between 3 a.m. and 5 a.m. when the city is asleep, offices are shut down, and air conditioners are off. Those off-peak times of less usage happens about 12 times a year. Entergy has applied to renew their operating license to run Indian Point for another 20 years. One license expires next year, the other in 2015. Abby Luby is a Westchester based, freelance journalist who writes local news, about environmental issues, art, entertainment and food. Her debut novel, “Nuclear Romance” was recently published. Visit the book’s website, http://nuclearromance.word- press.com/. HISTORY The Golden Age of Hudson Valley Brickmaking, 2 The Brickmaking Process By ROBERT SCOTT As a business venture, brickmaking was financially extremely risky. Partnerships were formed easily and dissolved quickly. Fortunes were made and lost. Brickmaking was also a seasonal business that shut down for the winter when the ground became frozen. Wages were low, and the physical labor involved was arduous. Many brickyard workers found winter employment cutting ice in the area’s many lakes and ponds, and hauling it to ice houses for storage and later use. A brickyard was labor intensive, and dependent on immigrants and itinerants for its work- Prior to burning in the kiln, molded bricks were dried on racks in open-sided storage buildings that protected them from damaging rainfall. Kilns for burning bricks were massive, Note the openings at the base in which fires were lit to provide the high temperatures needed. ers. Owners of brickyards supplied housing to many of their laborers. So isolated was the brickmaking community on Croton Point that the Underhill brickyard built a school for the children of its brickyard workers. Clay and sand banks could suddenly peter out. Warm, dry weather was necessary for the initial drying of bricks--but the weather could be unpredictable and capricious. Overproduction in this highly competitive industry was common. The price of bricks was dictated by the state of the economy, the amount of new construction and the annual production of bricks. Continued on page 8 THURSDAY March 8, 2012 Page 7 Page 8 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY March 8, 2012 HISTORY The Golden Age of Hudson Valley Brickmaking, 2 Continued from page 7 Extracting the Clay Bricks were made by what was called the “soft mud process.” Early brickmakers laboriously dug the clay for bricks by hand. (The steam shovel was not invented until 1879.) Fortune smiled on any brickyard whose clay deposit was overlain by sand, another necessary brick ingredient. Clay and sand were transported in wheelbarrows or horse-drawn carts to the tempering pit and mixed with water. The mixture was then kneaded by being trod upon by oxen until it reached the proper consistency. Later, tempering was done in horse-driven or steam-powered pug mills. To achieve more thorough burning of the heavy Hudson River clays, powdered anthracite coal dust (called “culm”) was added. This also saved fuel by reducing the burning time. After being properly tempered, the clay mixture was removed from the pit or pug mill and delivered to the molding table. Constructed of locally produced Underhill bricks, brick-lined wine cellars on Croton Point are being restored to their original condition. Bricks slid easily from molds because their sides had been coated with fine sand. The empty molds were then returned to the molding table to be refilled. Drying the Bricks At the roofed-over hacking area, the bricks were laid out to dry. After two days, they were turned over. At this stage, rough handling could easily damage a brick. While the bricks were still moist, young boys used special tools called “edgers” to straighten the edges of the bricks. After four days of drying in warm weather, the bricks were sufficiently hard to allow them to be stood on one side with a finger’s width between them to continue drying. After another two weeks of drying, the bricks were ready to be moved to the kiln shed. Building and Firing the Kiln Interwasser (“Between the waters”), the Underhill mansion, no longer stands at the southern tip of Croton Point In the years before the Underhill properties were purchased by Westchester County in 1923, picknicking was popular, as seen in this picture postcard. Molding the Bricks The assistant brick molder, also called a “clot molder,” would prepare a lump of clay and pass it to the brick molder. The latter, the key worker in the brickmaking process, was the star of the team. Highly skilled, the brick molder would take the clay and “dash” it into the already-sanded mold, making sure that the corners were filled. Any excess clay mixture was removed from the top of the mold with a “strike”--a flat board kept soaking in water--and reused. Molds could make one, two, four or six bricks at a time. Smaller capacity molds had the advantage that a child could carry them. Child labor was common in brickyards. Hardwoods--cherry, beech or maple--were used in making the open-topped rectangular molds that were often reinforced with iron straps to prevent excessive wear. The next worker in the team would take the mold from the molding table and move it by flatbed wheelbarrow to a leveled and carefully swept “hacking” (drying) area. A temporary kiln was constructed of “green” (raw) bricks, stacked 54 bricks high, with “arches”--apertures in which fuel was placed--at the base. Wood was used until the supply of local trees was exhausted, and then coal was substituted. Several hundred thousand to a million bricks could make up a kiln. Even with the drying that had taken place, the unburned bricks still contained about 15% water, so fires were kept low at first to complete the drying process. Too much heat applied too soon could cause bricks to explode. Steam would issue from the top of the kiln. Old-time brickmakers called this “water smoke.” After the water had been driven off and it was safe to increase the heat, the temperature of the kiln was raised slowly until it reached 1800 degrees Fahrenheit. It took a knowledgeable and experienced brickmaker to know when the fire holes should be bricked over and the heat allowed to dissipate slowly. Burning the bricks took about a week. Another week was needed to allow them to cool before the kiln could be taken apart. Sorting the Bricks Bricks closest to the fires received an unwanted glaze deposited on their surfaces from wood ash or vaporized sand that dropped in the fires and was vaporized. Such bricks could still be sold for use in the interior courses of walls. A boardinghouse and store for workers, one-room schoolhouse, and three-story brick barn from the Underhill brickyard community still stand on Croton Point. rectangular aperture could make 100,000 bricks Bricks that were overburned or cracked or a day. The extruded column was then cut into warped were designated as “lammies” or “clinbricks by a wire cutter similar to a hard-boiled kers” and sold for use in garden walls or footegg slicer. Tunnel-type dryers and kilns were also paths. introduced. Bricks making up the outer walls of the kiln After the building boom that followed the were always less properly cured. Called “lightwar, builders in the 1960’s decided that Hudson hards,” these were put aside to be used to cover Valley brick was too porous. The cost of added the outer walls of the next kiln and then daubed ingredients to overcome the porosity problem with mud to seal it. made it impossible for Hudson Valley brickMarketable bricks were transported to makers to compete. docks at the river’s edge. In the early days they Today, shale is the preferred raw material, were loaded on sloops, but barges holding from and most of the country’s bricks come from the 300,000 to 500,000 bricks later supplanted South and the Midwest. Only one brickyard sloops for the trip to New York City’s docks. making molded bricks survived in the Hudson Twelfth Avenue and 52nd Street became the site Valley--the Powell & Minnock Brick Works at of an informal brick market, a gathering place for Coeymans, about a dozen miles south of Albany. the city’s building materials dealers. This company ceased operations in 2001. Decline and Fall The visitor to the sites of previous riverside By the turn of the 20th century, some 120 brickmaking operations between Croton and brickyards, employing between eight and ten Peekskill will find little to show that this chapter thousand workers, were producing over a billion in Westchester’s industrial history was once writbricks a year in the Hudson Valley--more than ten here. The harsh outlines of gouged-out clay any other part of the world. and sand pits have softened and merged with A quarter-century later most of the brickthe landscape. Never intended to be permanent, yards in Westchester and Rockland counties brickyard buildings have long since disappeared. closed, having depleted the banks of clay and A diligent searcher may scuff up a few discarded sand along the river. Moreover, these brickyards imperfect bricks. With luck, their brands may be had not modernized or mechanized their brickidentifiable. making. Except for machines to mix the clay Tangible proof of the area’s prodigality with and pack the molds, much of the work had still its natural resources, however, can be found miles involved manual labor. to the south in New York City. From humble Brickyards upriver around Beacon, Newtenements and millionaires’ mansions to soaring burgh and Kingston managed to hang on longer, skyscrapers, thousands of sturdy brick buildings thanks to abundant reserves of clay and the instill stand, their bricks mute testimony to the troduction of machine methods. Despite modgolden age of brickmaking in the Hudson Valley. ernization, many of these brickyards succumbed Robert Scott is a semi-retired book publisher and an during the Depression, and only a few survived avid local historian. He lives in Croton-on-Hudson, the Second World War. N.Y. Other brickmaking methods had supplanted the soft mud process. A steam-driven machine that forced a stiffer mixture through a THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY March 8, 2012 Page 9 LEGAL Injudicious Justice? Part 2 By ABBY LUBY Last week’s story was about two New York State Supreme Court judges allegedly favoring a New Rochelle condo board where the Chief Clerk of the 9th Judicial District, Nancy Mangold, is a resident. (Mangold lives with her partner Jerry Cohen, who is one of the plaintiffs). The two embattled Greencroft Condominium boards, Greencroft 1 (Mangold’s board) and Greencroft 2, have appeared in the courtrooms of Judge William Giacomo and Judge Joan Lefkowtiz. Initially, the case was heard by Judge William Giacomo, who, in July, 2011, had to recuse himself for an inappropriate, private conversation with one of the condo owners. After July, the cases were transferred to Judge Lefkowitz. (Of note, last week when this newspaper came out with the first installment of this story, sources reported that all of The Westchester Guardian boxes in New Rochelle had been emptied early in the day). The arguments on either side are about arbitration, dues owed to Greencroft Homeowner’s Association (HOA), questionable capital expenditures by the HOA and the alleged fraudulent Board elections by Greencroft 1. Judge Lefkowitz has consistently denied arbitration, a ruling that would keep the case in the courts where the outcome is usually controlled. Arbitration is usually recommended because it’s a transparent process that cuts legal costs and, according to the American Arbitration Association that oversees the process, each side can choose their own arbitrators. In her February 14, 2012 order, Judge Lefkowitz ruled against arbitration citing a fictitious order of January 23, 2012 – an order that was never issued. (The court’s on-line docket (https://iapps.courts.state.ny.us/nyscef/ verifies that no such order exists). Also, records show that the request for arbitration wasn’t made until February 17, after the February 14 order. Not only did Lefkowitz pre-rule on something that wasn’t asked for, but she based her rule on a nonexistent order she never made. Five days after The Westchester Guardian tried to contact Judge Lefkowitz regarding the Greencroft case, Greencroft 2 attorney Saul Fellus, received a letter from Judge Lefkowitz’s law secretary, James Fine, stating that the February 14 order was “vacated” and said, citing the January 23 ruling, was an error. Lefkowitz apparently “reissued” a new order dated February 24, 2012. Re-adjusting dates seems to be a repeated occurrence by Judge Lefkowitz and her staff. When Greencroft 2 resident Robin Pastorana sued her own board, the board hired Robert Corini, an attorney based in New Rochelle. Corini, who would hand off the case in part to an attorney whose fee would be covered by Greencroft 2 insurance, noticed a discrepancy in new materials filed with Judge Lefkowtiz after the case had been adjourned. Administrative court rules state that if a case is adjourned, no new matters could be raised or filed. Not only was the petition accepted by Judge Lefkowitz after the case had been adjourned to February 10, 2012, but the petition was filed January 23, the same day Corini received an email from Lefkowitz’s part clerk Robert Arena, confirming the February 10 adjournment date. The January 23 filing date was recorded on the e-court on line system. “Judge Lefkowitz doesn’t follow that [administrative] rule,” said Lefkowitz’s law clerk James Fine to Corini when asked about the state rule. Fine was responding to a letter Corini wrote the judge: “My client and I are incapable of understanding what occurred here,” Corini wrote, requesting an explanation. When Corini asked Fine if he could to reply to the new information by the plaintiff, known as a sur-reply, Fine told him Judge Lefkowitz “never allows sur-replies.” Two days after Fine’s call, the e-court filing date for the plaintiff was changed again from January 23 to January 27, 2012. Westchester law prohibits altering a petition once it is submitted to the court. “Names on those petitions were gathered under false pretenses,” said Howard Mandelbaum, Treasurer of Greencroft 2. “Some people were strong-armed to sign, other people asked to have their names removed and then, for some reason, asked to have their names added back. Judge Lefkowitz allowed this. She approved and back dated the original order to make it look clean.” When part clerk Arena was asked by The Westchester Guardian about the backdating, his brief email reply affirmed that motions were decided upon even though there was an adjournment. “The dates you see reflect past motion dates. Motions are decided on the submission of papers only.” The Greencroft 1 board was dogged in their attempts to get Greencroft 2 disqualified for not paying what they considered back dues to the HOA. Greencroft 2 attorney Fellus got a decision from the Appellate Division after Judge Giacomo failed to specify how much members should pay. An August 3, 2011 order of Appellate Division ordered the sum to be $35,000.00, which was subsequently paid. But Greencroft 1 board upped their demand and wanted $80,800 as an outstanding amount due. Judge Lefkowitz refused to recognize the Appellate Division’s Continued on page 10 Page 10 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY March 8, 2012 LEGAL Injudicious Justice? Continued from page 9 decision and in a November 7, 2011 order, she agreed to the higher sum of $80,800. Although Greencroft 2 paid the $35,000, the ired board of Greencroft 1 sued to disqualify Greencroft 2 from the HOA board, made up of five members from each building. According to Mandelbaum, Greencroft 1 held an HOA election in September, 2011, without notifying Greencroft 2 members; Greencroft 1 “voted themselves into office.” A motion was made to declare the election invalid but Judge Lefkowitz, in a February 14, 2012 ruling, declared that the election was valid and that Greencroft 2 was disqualified which, she stated in her ruling, was why they weren’t notified. Greencroft 1 then demanded that back dues be paid directly to the HOA. Attorney for HOA, Jack Malley of Smith Buss & Jacobs in Yonkers, handed in a motion personally to Judge Lefkowitz to rule on collection of dues. The judge, who decided to immediately hear arguments from both sides, called Fellus on the phone foregoing the required 24-hour notice. According to Fellus, three of his requests for a court reporter to be present were denied by the judge who then told Fellus she was ready to proceed “with or without him.” So far, Mandelbaum said he perceives the judicial decisions as unfair and biased. “They [Greencroft 1 and Judge Lefkowitz] are in lock-step with each other and it bothers me tremendously. We offered Greencroft 1 three dates where we could look at the books; and what did they do? They got a lawyer and sued us. In all honesty, it’s all so cartoonish.” Correction: “The Law Office of Saul Fellus is a solo practice which rents offices from but is not otherwise affiliated with Bisogno & Meyerson, LLP” Abby Luby is a Westchester based, freelance journalist who writes local news, about environmental issues, art, entertainment and food. Her debut novel, “Nuclear Romance” was recently published. Visit the book’s website, http://nuclearromance.word- press. com/. MEDICINE What Your Doctor Won’t (or Can’t) Tell You—Emergency Rooms By Dr. EVAN LEVINE Walk into an Emergency Room on a busy day. The doctors are generally very good, but they are overwhelmed, and there are patients perched in every nook and cranny. Patients are stuffed into hallways and corners (sometimes while they are lying on gurneys.) Three or four patients may be placed in a space with room for one; curtains obscure monitors that should be carefully attended. Patients, some of whom haven’t taken, or brought with them, their accustomed medications, and who came in hours ago, may sit or lie there, and not be seen for many hours. A terrified woman in the throes of a heart attack is placed next to a demented and screaming patient, with feces dripping from her stretcher. More doctors and nurses could be called in, but why do that? It is not as though an Emergency Room is a restaurant, where people can get up and leave. But even in an Emergency Room patients sometimes do decide to get up and leave, despite it possibly being decidedly dangerous to do so. The morale of the staff deteriorates; good and caring doctors become zombies simply hoping to make it home and somehow put what they’ve experienced and seen out of their minds. Hospital administrators sometimes show up for a moment to do what administrators do. They instruct harried physicians to admit anyone they can. Other administrators run to hospital floors to press other doctors and nurses to discharge anyone they can -- so the ER can admit more new patients to -- keep the money machine rolling. Beyond the, penny-wise, pound-foolish, tactic of hospitals not adding doctors or nurses to an ER that may be being besieged by twice or even three times the normal amount of patients, administrators often decline to interest themselves in listening to complaints or to concerns from their own personnel. Interviews with a variety of doctors and nurses reveals the same thing: Nurses, because they have a union, are able to present grievances to administrations, but too often, they just get turned down; doctors who have no union, and knowing that if they complain they will be smeared by bottom-line-obsessed administrators, just swallow-it and try, sometimes against all odds, to do their jobs. In a malpractice suit, a doctor was sued for allegedly harming a patient through lack of attention. The malpractice attorney asked why the patient hadn’t been seen often enough. Appar- ently the doctor’s response, explaining that the ER was dangerously overcrowded and understaffed, was met by the inevitable question from the plaintiff ’s attorney; “Did you document in your note that the ER was overcrowded and understaffed, or did you complain that the ER was overcrowded or understaffed.” And again, because doctors are instructed never to document anything that may make a hospital look liable, the answer had to be, “No.” While it is the doctors and nurses who seem to be on the receiving end of much of the blame for poor Emergency Room care, it is not at all uncommon that it is the administrators, the ones who sit in their glamorous offices and count the beans, who are responsible. Imagine any other business, like a restaurant, for example, being run the way most emergency rooms are run. Imagine twice the usual numbers of patrons showing up, and some being forced to wait outside for hours, while others are escorted to tables occupied by complete strangers. In order to try to maximize profits, the size of the staff is not modified to adapt to the need – time after time. My guess is that the restaurant would go broke, unless they were the only one in town -- and in that case, I’d bet a lot of people would just stay home and make their own dinners. But in the real world, as with any rational business, the owners would hire more staff, build a bigger space, and prosper. In the world of Emergency Rooms, however, reality is turned on its head. Here, because there are times when the ER is not full, and times when it is exploding with three times the normal load of patients, no extra staff are hired, no more space is provided, and because patrons have little alternative, they wait, and wait, and wait, inside and outside the ER. Having interviewed and observed many patients and doctors over the years, I’ve seen first hand what goes on when too many patients encounter too few doctors; it becomes the most chaotic and among the most dangerous parts of our healthcare system. One way to fix this mess is to create the only incentive a hospital and its administrators will appreciate; make it very costly for hospitals who leave patients in their ER for a prolonged period of time and create guidelines that require all ERs to have a minimum ratio of doctors to patients ( much like child care centers have ). If it costs the hospital money, when they leave patients in the ER for long periods of time, then they will find a way to fix this mess. Hospitals could open up clinics or urgent care centers (or cooperate with urgent care centers in Continued on page 11 2 column Get Noticed Legal Notices, Advertise Today 914-562-0834 WHYTeditor@gmail.com THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN MEDICINE What Your Doctor Won’t (or Can’t) Tell You—Emergency Rooms Continued from page 10 their neighborhood) near the hospital that can see non-emergent cases, ERs can actually divert patients to other hospitals when their hospital is too full to adequately treat patients, administrators can call in more doctors when some threshold is reached where a patient to doctor ratio is just too high to safely care for patients. As I finish writing this I feel hopeless. With the members of congress immune to any personal emergency room saga, since they have a free VIP pass when it comes to their healthcare, I cannot imagine that any part of our broken health-not-care system will be fixed. Evan S. Levine, MD FACC is the author of “What Your Doctor Won’t (or Can’t) Tell You” and a practicing cardiologist in Westchester and The Bronx. He is a Clinical Assistant Professor of Medicine at Montefiore Medical Center. Dr. Levine can be reached at 914-237-1332 or direct mailto:VaNLeV@aol.com. Page 11 RIVERVIEW COURT APARTMENTS • 47 RIVERDALE AVE., YONKERS, NY 1 & 2 BR APARTMENTS AT A GREAT PRICE! 1 BR STARTING AT $1075 • 2 BRS STARTING AT $1300 MOVIE REVIEW Ed Koch Movie Reviews By Edward I. Koch of a cabal of Mexican drug lords and Jihadists who want to bring the U.S. down with acts of terror. The special force team of Seals is assigned the mission of rescuing a female member of the C.I.A. who has been kidnapped and is being tortured. The shooting and all rescue scenes are done with great excitement and accompanied by lots of pyrotechnics. We owe a lot to these special forces, and when I saw the film, the audience indicated that sentiment as well. They stayed for the credit crawl, and in my conversations with some viewers, they made it clear that they love the Seals and enjoyed the film. Movie Review: “Act of Valor” (+) The film is a mishmash of fiction and actual situations in which the U.S. Navy Seals participated. In her New York Times review, Jeannette Catsoulis puts the movie down stating that the cast members are real Seals who are not very good actors and the script is “a concocted narrative.” It is all true. Nevertheless, the movie is exciting and well worth seeing. A major reason is due to the tremendous success of the Seals in storming Osama bin Laden’s home in Pakistan. They killed him and later buried his body at sea, all with no casualties to the Seals. We know the dangers the Seals overcame in that situation and that there are certainly many other incidents in which they were involved of which we are not yet aware. The script takes us to the Philippines, Mexico and other places in the world in pursuit THURSDAY March 8, 2012 Movie Review: “Rampart” (-) The story is about a rogue L.A. cop, Dave Brown (Woody Harrelson), who admittedly is a bigot. He doesn’t limit his blind hatred to Hispanics Continued on page 12 914.798.9410 • Luxury Apartment Living at a Great Value • High Rise Building in Yonkers with Hudson River Views • Nearby Public Transportation, Shopping and Restaurants • Fitness Center On-Site TTY # 800.662.1200 • 24 Hours Access Control Patrol Riverview Court • Large State of the Art Laundry Room Does Not • 24 Hr. Maintenance Discriminate • On-Site Management On The Basis Of Disability. • Indoor Parking On-Site, with Controlled Access • Resident Lounge 15 MIN. • Business Center FROM NYC • Beautiful Landscaped Courtyard in the center VIA of the complex METRO NORTH! Page 12 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY March 8, 2012 MOVIE REVIEW Movie Review: “Rampart” (-) Continued from page 11 who inhabit his poverty-stricken beat. When investigated by the police department’s head of internal affairs, (Sigourney Weaver), Brown states, “I hate all people equally.” That quote reminded me of a statement I heard Sonny Carson (a black racist) make years ago at City Hall here in New York City. When accused of being an anti-Semite he said, “I don’t just hate Jews. I hate all white people.” Harrelson does an excellent job portraying the tough, grumpy, sometimes incomprehensible, twice married, father of two girls. He lives with his two former wives, (Cynthia Nixon and Anne Heche), and the two daughters he fathered, one with each of the women. The talent- ed cast also includes Ice Cube (an internal affairs investigator), Robin Wright (a wealthy woman with whom Brown is involved), and Steve Buscemi in a relatively small role. I love cops-and-robbers movies, but this picture had no robbers. It was dominated by one rogue cop. Notwithstanding the terrific acting, the film is too disjointed and doesn’t work. Woody Harrelson devotees, however, will abso- lutely love it. It is really a one-man show and a tour de force by him. Visit the Mayor at the Movies to learn more: http:// www.mayorkoch.com/. The Honorable Edward Irving Koch served as a member of member of Congress from New York State from 1969 through 1977, and New York City as its 105th Mayor from 1978 to 1989. PEOPLE “Fordham Golf 2012 and Beyond” Honors Mamaroneck’s Paul Dillon Mamaroneck, NY Actor and HBO’s Entourage star Kevin Dillon made the coast-to-coast flight from California to New York to join a packed house at the prestigious Links Club on Wednesday night, February 29, to pay tribute to beloved Fordham University Golf Coach and his dad, Paul Dillon. The Dillon clan hails from Mamaroneck, NY, in Westchester County. (L-R): Fordham alumnus Tom Humphrey generously hosted a tribute dinner for Fordham Golf Coach Paul Dillon (center), pictured with his son Kevin, star of HBO’s Entourage, at the Links Club in New York City on February 29. Two distinguished Fordham alum, Tom Humphrey (FCRH ’82), and his wife Cynthia Humphrey (FCRH ’83), generously underwrote the celebration and tribute to the dedicated service of coach Dillon, also renowned as a portrait artist whose celebrated works hang in golf course clubhouses across America and Ireland, not to mention in the homes of every senior that he has graduated. Family members also on hand were Paul’s wife of 60 years Mary Ellen, and sons Paul Jr., Timmy and Brian (actor son Matt was in Toronto filming his latest flick, and daughter Kate Scholz, were unable to attend). The Humphrey’s 16 year old son Theo Humphrey attends Rye Country Day, and is ranked 24th in the nation among the class of 2014 high school golfers. Fordham’s own “entourage” included Vice President of Student Affairs Jeff Gray, executive director of athletics Frank McLaughlin, members of the board of trustees Mike Cosgrove and John Wilcha, and alumnus Tom Nolan, a se- NAJAH’S CORNER Two Faced By NAJAH MUHAMMAD What I feared the most has manifest A friend betrayed me The friend I thought to be my best It took me over as I frolicked in the bliss of ignorance Crept on top of me while I was sleeping A shadow I thought to have my back Pushing me forth Past the misery of the world; past the things that I lack A true friend I had perceived, though I stand rightfully deceived A foe instead A shock indeed I had been growing successfully though this makes it hard to proceed One minute we had everything under control, now the world is rotating at its fullest speed To me you once were true I have to admit that with you in my way I will never be free But how can I stop my enemy from getting close when my enemy is me? Najah Muhammad is a 17-year-old senior in high school. She plans to attend college next year majoring in communications. Fordham University Golf Coach Paul Dillon, center, is flanked by four of his five sons Paul, Jr., actor and Entourage star Kevin, Timmy and Brian at the prestigious Links Club in New York City on Wednesday night, February 29, at a tribute and fundraiser for Fordham Golf. nior VP at Ralph Lauren. Rev. Fr. Patrick Ryan, S.J. gave the invocation. Student golfer Devon O’Rourke spoke on behalf of the team, and presented Coach Dillon with his award. WFAN Radio’s Rich Ackerman was Master of Ceremonies, and Pulitzer Prizewinning columnist Dave Anderson was keynote speaker, reflecting on great golfers past and present. Paul Dillon’s most amazing record at Fordham: in 17 years as head coach, every player has earned his degree from the university, and that’s 100 percent. In heartfelt remarks, with the entire present golf team on hand, former player John Cesarz, now a member of the President’s Counsel, had a riveted audience choking back tears: “Paul Dillon has encouraged us to be the best we can be, to believe in ourselves and to never give up… he exemplifies the best of the Jesuit tradition of “homines pro aliis” – a man or woman for others. He lives this by example. His generosity of spirit, the life lessons you have taught us will endure long past your coaching days… You have helped mold boys into men.” Photos by Chris Taggart, with courtesy provided by Fordham University. SAFETY Keeping Guns off Campus from North Salem By RICH MONETTI One of effect of the numerous mass shootings in the 1990’s, such as the tragedy at Columbine was a rise in state laws that allowed people to carry concealed weapons. “The gun lobby was emboldened by these victories,” says North Salem’s Andy Pelosi, and he’s made it his mission to wage an effective counter campaign on the newest front of the nation’s gun control debate. With Virginia Tech fresh in minds of the gun lobby, says the nonprofit founder of Gun Free Kids and its Campaign to Keep Guns off Campus, “There is now a movement to allow weapons on campus.” 2011 saw 20 states introduce legislation to nullify the bans most colleges have on guns. In turn, Oregon, Mississippi and Wisconsin have gone on to lift university bans on firearms.“These are setbacks,” he says, but his efforts have 12,000 individuals and 280 colleges signed on in the face of an organization called Students for Concealed Carry on Campus. “The NRA will not Continued on page 13 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY March 8, 2012 Page 13 SAFETY Keeping Guns off Campus from North Salem Continued from page 12 necessarily identify itself with it, he says, “but the funding is coming from somewhere.” He emerged on the scene of this debate 13 years ago by just being someone who had been active in various causes. “I started doing volunteer work with New Yorkers Against Gun Violence,” he says, and four years ago began Gun Free Kids. As a result, he’s off to lobby legislatures in obvious hot spots like Arizona and Texas. Closer to home, New Hampshire occupies a large part of the campaign’s current focus as a concealed carry bill has been introduced in the house. In response, administrations from the five state colleges have lent their support to the campaign, but creating a coalition across faculty, alumni, parents and activist citizen groups is the new strategy. “New Hampshire is our test case on this,” he says. Otherwise, encompassed within the initiative is getting the word out that the gun lobby is trying to wrestle control from the universities who for the most part do not want guns on campus, he says. Campus security personnel are also on the same page with administrators. One of the reasons, according to an April 2007 article in The Christian Science Monitor, is if there are multiple shooters on the scene, how will security be able to distinguish who poses the threat. “Not only might the wrong people get shot but it will take longer to get the incident under control,” he says. Of course, the argument is made over and over that one person carrying could have averted the carnage at crime scenes like Virginia Tech. He begs to differ from someone who was there and was shot four times. “It all happened so fast that it would have been impossible to return fire,” he relays the firsthand account. At the same time, law enforcement statistics he points to show that trained officers only hit their targets 20% of the time in actual incidents.. “So you’re expecting people with far less training to take somebody down in a spur of the moment situation,” he says. Furthermore, he believes gun proliferation doesn’t equal deterrence. The majority of incidents that happen take place off campus, where controls on guns are much weaker,” he says. Add guns to the abundance of alcohol and the slightly advanced stage of adolescence that proliferates college life, and the mix could be deadly. “There are so many possible unintended consequences,” he says. Nonetheless, there are about 25 colleges that do allow guns on campus. For details, he directs concerned parents and students to ArmedCampuses.org. Otherwise, he hopes students can lend their voice and are ready to be counted. “We’re trying to connect with as many students as possible in order to fight back,” he concludes. http://www.keepgunsoffcampus.org/ Rich Monetti lives in Somers. He’s been a freelance writer in Westchester since 2003 and works part time in the after school program at Mt. Kisco Childcare. You can find more of his stories at www. rmonetti.blogspot.com. SPORTS Historic New York Daily News Golden Gloves to be Contested at Empire City Casino at Yonkers YONKERS, NY -- The iconic New York Daily News Golden Gloves returns to Empire City Casino at Yonkers Raceway for the second straight year. The 2012 semi-finals of the fabled amateur boxing tournament will be hosted on the Casino’s fourth floor, it was announced jointly by Casino President Timothy J. Rooney and Daily News Senior Vice President John Campi. General Admission tickets will be priced at $25; senior citizens, college students (with proper ID) and children under 14 priced at $15. For more information logo onto www.nydailynews. com/Golden Gloves; or call Brian Adams at the Daily News at 212-210-1908 (badams@nydailynews.com) or Clare Galterio at Empire City at 914-457-2609, (crgalterio@ yonkersraceway.com). Doors open at 6:15 PM, and first bell is at 7:30 PM sharp. Tickets will be sold at the door only on fight night. Last year, for the first time in the storied history of Yonkers Raceway, hundreds of fans flocked to the raceway to attend the Golden Gloves. The oldest and most esteemed amateur event in the U.S.A., celebrating its 85th anniversary this season, has produced generations of legendary boxers including Sugar Ray Robinson, Emile Griffith, Floyd Patterson, Riddick Bowe, Gerry Cooney, Mark Breland, Jose Torres, and Zab Judah. Yonkers Raceway first opened its doors in 1899, and in over 100 years of its history has been the home to harness racing’s Triple Crown events such as the Yonkers Trot, Cane Pace and Messenger Stakes, as well as such premier stakes races as the Art Rooney Pace. Profes- AM to 4:00 AM For more information call 914.968.4200 or log onto www.empirecitycasino.com. sional boxing had been held in the Old Glory Horse Pavilion, and many major fights shown on closed circuit television. But the Daily News Golden Gloves, the most elite Golden Gloves tournament in the country for 85 years, became a “first-time starter” in 2011. “We are delighted to again bring the Daily News Golden Gloves to Yonkers Raceway,” said Rooney. “Two New York institutions are teaming for a spectacular evening of boxing for fight fans.” “It will be another historic night for the Daily News Golden Gloves,” said Campi. “Our rich history grows even richer, and we are looking forward to making the return of the Golden Gloves another memorable night at the casino. Empire City Casino at Yonkers Raceway is located at 810 Yonkers Avenue (at Central Avenue) in Yonkers, New York, Westchester County, (I-87 to Exit 2). Empire City Casino is open seven days a week, every day from 9:00 Standing up for our schools and families Fighting for good paying jobs Charting a new course for Yonkers Paid for by Friends of Shelley Mayer THURSDAY MARCH 8, 2012 The Wr ters Collection Denn gran is Sheeha d n res i South children. http://www.TheWritersCollection.com He h des in We Ame as tra stche succe rica a v s s gues s and his nd Africa eled exte ter with h t n . s is w H o siv e n We i c Nancy B. Brewer stche ond thril s first nov ely and h ife, four child ler; G ster o as wo el Pu re re r n the r Denn Leve en to Re chased Po ked in Ch n and fou d wil i l w ina, R r s w Nancy B. Brewer is an e S i r h t l h He gran eeh Nan zi Ar be out so has been ussia an award winning author, cy B.Sou dchildre an reside i d a s o h . n. He Br th s in W n. 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M A wave of defenders rushed after f s – by the explosion of an unknown spacecraft i s y v t t r e l g ca e a 3rd o . attackers, and they crashedepinto henone al a few paces uphill when Dennis Sheehan resides 18 m re endwavekeof stro re D wood She had onlyemoved on that fitful spring day in 1897. o k n e nt where the two met. fian e, I w nianother d n )attacking soldier grabbed her by the leg and in Westchester with his later ra a 2nto ha screst grarnite! s Sh aefetehrising Dr. Kraus carefully swept his metal de, I d n r on re in mortal d top of soldiers began to drag her back down. hildr piled wife, four children and South cSoldiers tector across the caliche face of the knoll en. 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B canopy feet, thriller; Green to Red will be out soon. Hekn . He i a hback uge onto so Iflood to w rewe unabated, and they piled kupe like Yellow Stone wildflowers, he was determined own . Bwaters t s o o a rscrambled ok up grabbed r as load, and is ana basin behind a dam. Foragers egula the rest of is a regular guest on Westchester on the stori for her rfilling a pain k her to find it. awa r s e o t s into rd w the way top of the hill. , suchspreadfin directions, each looking for a way t sall Level with Hezi Aris. g. the o N i u n Dr. Kraus, possessed by the affliction o t a n h w s: "the i er s Above None of the, soldiers or the other foragCarbattle past uthoother tyle a ng athem, olinato nsafety. that cursed most university professors, simr , n s Rain " and d passion torytelle r and for w "Bey p ond S e As a andy aving his oetess. S d he is Ridg toric Crim etective, ally e" e S in THE TOPIC OF THE WEEK: THE HILL The Hill The Hill THURSDAY MARCH 8, 2012 The Wr ters Collection http://www.TheWritersCollection.com Stephen Woodfin t (h Stephen Woodfin is an attorney/author who has written five legal thrillers. He blogs on Venture Galleries (http://venturegalleries. com/author/stephenwoodfin ) ply wanted to know the truth about the fire and thunder that lit up the skies of Aurora. He would either prove that a man from outer space had crashed into the hill on Judge Proctor’s farmstead, or he would separate fact from fiction and leave the myth to wither and die away like the sunflowers that huddled between the shale and limestone scars of a barren earth. The metal detector hummed with the enthusiasm of a bored bumblebee. In the distance, just on the far side of the turn in the road, Aurora lay dying. Or maybe it was already gone. Aurora had been built back in the 1870s on a promise. Some day the railroad would be headed its way. So fifteen businesses and a few more than 450 good, honest, hardworking farmers and merchants settled down around the trading post. The Dallas, Pacific & Southwest Railroad even charted and graded a right-of-way through the little town. But, alas, twenty people suddenly died from a strange disease that would later be diagnosed as spotted fever, and the railroad, just as suddenly, abandoned its plans to link Aurora with the rest of Texas. The town squared its shoulders and grew in spite of being shunned. In 1897, the quiet streets of Aurora were echoing the gossip and rumors about those “strange and mysterious airships” that had been seen in the skies above Forney, Tioga, Mansfield, and Waxahachie. Some said with quivering lips that the silver ship were at least two hundred feet long. Some couldn’t forget the powerful headlights that beamed down from their snub noses. Others reported that two gasoline engines turned the propellers that kept each craft aloft. A few even swore that the vessels were piloted by creatures who wore blue sailor suits. And one claimed that three beings climbed down from a ship, sang Nearer My God to Thee, and passed out temperance tracts. Repeated once, passed on twice and printed in a God-fearing newspaper heralded any gossip as gospel. Aurora was undaunted. The town’s three hundred good, honest, hard-working farmers and merchants didn’t pay any attention at all to such wild tales, regarding them only as the frenzied results of alcoholic tongues or maybe religious hysteria. They went to bed on the night of April 16, and at three minutes past dawn the next morning, a silver cigar-shaped vessel appeared above the southern horizon. It didn’t stay long, lasting only until it hovered at last beside those rusty, complaining blades of Judge Proctor’s windmill. Dr. Krause opened the yellowed clipping and again read the account that S. E. Hayden, an Aurora cotton buyer, had written seventy years ago for a Dallas newspaper: About 6 o’clock this morning, the early risers of Aurora were astonished at the sudden appearance of the airship which has been sailing throughout the country. It sailed directly over the public square and when it reached the north part of town collided with the tower of Judge Proctor’s windmill and went to pieces with a terrific explosion scattering debris over several acres of ground, wrecking the windmill and water tank and destroying the judge’s flower garden. The pilot of the ship is supposed to have been the only one on board, and while his remains are badly disfigured, enough of the original has been picked up to show that he was not an inhabitant of this world. T. J. Weems, the U.S. Signal Service Officer at this place and an authority on astronomy gave it as his opinion that he (the pilot) was a native of Mars. Papers found on his person – evidently the records of his travels – are written in some unknown hieroglyphics, and cannot be deciphered. The ship was too badly wrecked to form conclusions as to the construction or motive power … The pilot’s funeral will take place tomorrow. For the next several years, there was gossip that the fragmented metal had been suddenly and unceremoniously confiscated by the military and never returned. Maybe. Probably. Probably not. It sounded reasonable anyway. Maybe those left with empty hands should have asked the military to sign a document or something.Then again, those wearing starched uniforms and possessing starched faces did not look as though they would have been willing to sign anything. They just took the scattered pieces from the wreckage and left. No hello. No goodbyes. No good riddance. Nothing at all. So Dr. Krause stood on the hill, the mute witness to the crash, and gazed out across the shale and limestone rise as the earth began to bite off the sun. He had heard the words of the unbelievers. Judge Proctor never even owned a windmill, some said. T. J. Weems, the so-called authority on astronomy, was nothing more than a blacksmith. Yet the rumor persisted that the remains of the man from outer space had been given a Christian burial in the community cemetery. And there at the foot of an unknown grave he had found a hand-hewn marker with no name. Instead, it had been carved with the outline of a cigar-shaped object, maybe even a flying machine. All day, Dr. Krause had scoured the hill with his metal detector, searching for remnants of the mysterious airship. Some believed it came from outer space. Some didn’t. Dr. Alfred Krause could only base his scientific judgment on the merit of those antique relics that he himself had uncovered among the rocks and shale and Yellow Stone wildflowers. And he walked back down from the lonely and mysterious hill of Aurora with old stove lids, horse bridle rings, and a 1932 license plate. If there was anything else, the hill kept it quiet. A different topic is addressed weekly on www. TheWritersCollection.com. Each participant author, as well, as guest bloggers, are encouraged to write on the chosen topic. The intriguing aspect of each of their efforts is that by infusing their specific mood and / or genre, we can better appreciate the complexity, frivolity, or seriousness of the issue they are challenged to distill for all our readers to celebrate, critique, or be cajoled to delve in the joy of writing. At 30 polic , e after m a 3 Philip Catshill At 30, I had a massive stroke. 18 months later, I returned to work as a policeman. My career ended after a 2nd stroke so I took up painting. Now, after a 3rd stroke, I write! p af Jack Durish Jack Durish was born in Baltimore, Maryland, in 1943. He is a soldier and a J sailor, a decorated veteran an of Vietnam, a husband, Ve father, and grandfather. Jack is the author of Rebels on the Mountain, available at all eBook retailers, and a blogger at JackDurish.com, TheWritersCollection.com, Cale and VentureGalleries.com. b scree n South e Caleb Pirtle, III Caleb Pirtle III is the author of more than 55 published books, the screenwriter for three made for TV movies, and a former travel editor of Southern Living Magazine A mo t time her o ". Krystal Wade A mother of three who works fifty miles from home and writes in her ”spare time” Krystal’s debut novel “Wilde’s Fire” has been accepted for publication and should be available in 2012 A m time " Page 16 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY March 8, 2012 BOOKS The Retired (Try To) Strike Back Chapter 41 – The TV Interview By ALLAN LUKS Myron has been waiting alone in the TV station’s waiting area—and then recognizes the show’s host, Frank, a tall man, especially compared to Myron’s height, who quickly enters the room and gives Myron a strong handshake and large smile. Myron notices the heavy makeup on his face, no visible age lines, while Myron let the makeup person just do a few light pats, wanting to look natural. Had heavy makeup become a natural face to Frank? Myron wonders. “Your candidacy wants to be a model for seniors becoming public leaders to help the country. It’s an interesting idea to look at today. And don’t forget, I’m a senior too. So let’s get into the studio.” In the very large and cold studio, the sound technician quickly puts a small mike on Myron’s jacket, as he sits across from Frank, no other props. The bright overhead lights come on, the cameraman says he’s ready, and Frank welcomes Myron to Voters’ Voice and then asks, “You and your opponent disagree on a number of major issues, like housing, schools, crime. How do you explain who’s right?” “I’ve said in all my interviews,” replies Myron, “that candidates should not say they have the right answers—although I know candidates believe they need to say they do—but instead state what they think are the better choices at the present time. And, most important, then add that, if elected, they’re ready to work to find compromise choices to break the present freeze in our government where no one wants to cooperate. Problem is today’s politicians have made voters believe there’s only one answer for an issue so they can’t change their position and little gets done.” “Can a candidate win with a not-sure-whatwill-happen platform? Your opponent, in her interview with me yesterday and in her TV campaign commercial, emphasizes that real leadership is being an advocate for the right position and not compromising.” “At my age I’ve learned what’s considered right to do constantly changes. With my own family, after I’m gone, what I want to leave them with are not specific answers about how to live life but the feeling that they have the ability to find answers—if our family stays united. Society, to me, as a senior candidate, follows the rules of the family.” Frank holds eye contact with Myron, who isn’t sure if this stare is to let viewers know if Frank’s supportive of his family thinking or finds it too far from professional political reasoning. “Let’s go to the question of the shortage of organ donors in this nation,” says Frank. “I’ve read about the death of your long-time friend because he couldn’t get a liver transplant in time and you’re putting this issue at the top of your agenda—“ Myron suddenly sees on a studio monitor behind the camera words under his name: “He’d Make You Feel Guilty If You’re Not An Organ Donor—“ “ . . . and if elected, even though it’d go beyond your City Council role, you’d be calling on all seniors, throughout the country, to register now as organ donors when they die. If enough do, you believe the majority of the rest of the population will feel uncomfortable unless they also register. But is it the role of an elected official to make people feel guilty?” Myron tries to think of a response: My organ donor idea isn’t based on spreading guilt but a feeling of cooperation. But to again discuss a need for a stronger family sense—I’ll sound like I understand society through only one viewpoint. Which sounds too limited for voters. Although isn’t that what I really believe? Myron stays quiet, hoping to resemble the experienced politicians who when interviewed don’t reply at times to show that the answer to the last question is obvious. But as a first-time candidate, is his silence confusing viewers--? “Seniors have so many experiences, which produce their special viewpoints, I agree,” says Frank. “But I believe the public recognizes in which areas these views can be helpful. That’s why they have me here, I guess,” and Frank smiles— “Maybe guilt in society and a strong family feeling in society are linked,” Myron suddenly manages. “If a society doesn’t have one it’s more likely to have the other.” Frank nods though not really to Myron, as he says, “I’ve really enjoyed today’s interview but time is about gone,” and Myron listens to Frank describe tomorrow’s guest. Myron leaves the building and walks out into the crowded street and sees passersby pausing to look at the TV station’s large headquarters. No one recognizes him—he’s just in a City Council race, but still a few could be voters from his district. Myron watches them continuing to stop and admire the headquarters. He thinks about their need to feel better connected in order to have a society that produces more programs to help them, and their need to have the support of seniors as public leaders who naturally want to spread this feeling. He wonders if more people knew this, and knew who he was, would they just continue passing by, pausing only to look at the TV station’s headquarters? Allan Luks is anationally recognized social works leader and advocate for volunteerism. He is currently a visiting professor at Fordham university, where he teaches several courses in nonprofit leadership.Learn more at http://allanluks.com. Direct email to allan@ allanluks.com. No Guarantees: One Man’s Road Through the Darkness of Depression Chapter 27 – Being and Nothingness By BOB MARRONE Up until now I have focused on those aspects of my anxiety / depression characterized by strange, horror inducing symptoms, agitation filled obsessions and intense self-loathing. Together, they are one aspect, let’s call this fire, of the two headed beast that is, for many, how depression is experienced. The other, and for some this is the primary way they suffer, is the absolute vacancy of internal life, hope, motivation and energy. Let’s call this darkness. I experienced some of this, bit by bit, leading up to that April night when it all mushroomed. I had begun to lose interest in things; my work, sex, reading and so forth. But, now, following the first few months of the illness and in the midst of my worsening condition, something more profound was going on deep inside my soul. It was as if someone had attached a vacuum cleaner to my body and sucked out all of the life force, feeling and drive. I could not feel myself to such an extent that I felt I would implode. It was a feeling so unsettling that it induced a different kind of anxiety, if indeed you could call it that. I wanted to pace, but I had no real energy to pace. I felt myself withdraw to such an extent that eye contact with others was near impossible, and I learned, I think, what it was that extremely shy persons must feel when approached by another; or what the roach must feel when someone turns on a light in a completely dark room. My instinct, some powerful inner drive, was to curl into a fetal position. I felt naked, alone and empty. These moments would inevitably take either of two paths. One was a slowly building anxiety attack that culminated in full-fledged panic fixation. The odd thing is that in episodes of this type, I would actually welcome the post anxiety phase, even in the presence of newborn obsessions, because they left me with at least the energy generated by fear. So great had my deficits become, so low had my expectations evolved, that I was grateful to feel anything. The other outcome, which soon became an underlying, coexisting state along with all the anxiety fire, was the certain conviction that my condition, indeed my life, was irretrievably lost. How, I thought, can I get well when the very thing I need to get back to normal, my brain / my mind, could no longer be trusted? How, I won- dered further, could a man of so little account, so little character… a coward and a punk… overcome something so nightmarish and surreal? My abilities as a writer are inadequate to the task of explaining hopelessness on such a scale. All I can offer is this: That my life was over was certain and without question. I knew… it was not something that I thought, or believed, or surmised, or assessed… that I was finished. I ‘knew’ that I would never be free of what was now constant torment. A summary of my life at that time: I could not sleep and when I did, there were nightmares. When I awakened, I was greeted by sleep paralysis or the more common curse of “early morning awakening,” a circumstance in which anxiety kept me from returning to sleep and then ushered in the demons of the day. I could not concentrate, relax, read, watch TV, eat or sit still. I was agoraphobic, claustrophobic, manic and fearful of meeting people. I was experiencing perpetual obsessions about my failures in life and as a human being, and was endlessly unable to stop the mental self abuse and mantra of calling myself a coward, again, again and again. I weighed 129 pounds, down from the 172 when this started, and lived on a diet of cigarettes and Instant Breakfast drinks. I also ‘knew’ that I was supposed to kill myself. I know it sounds odd. It is odd to write about this all these years later. But that is what I believed. The thought itself petrified me, as much as it was yet another symptom, a symptom I did not recognize at the time. It was kind of the ultimate hypochondria. When I was obsessing, the tangled and circuitous web that is depression ended up with my obsessing about depression itself, along with all its frills. Thus, here I was obsessed with killing myself, or believing I was supposed to. As a result of all of these things, as well as an instinct I suspect is a survival mechanism to help us escape reality, I was losing my sense of self and descending into an almost trancelike state. It is an icy cold place. It is a state of mind in which, at least for me, one learns that we are indeed alone in this world: alone, isolated, vulnerable and infantile. There is nothing that anyone can say or do, nor is there anything that you yourself can do to change the feeling or establish a meaningful connection with the outside world. Continued on page 17 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY March 8, 2012 BOOKS No Guarantees: One Man’s Road Through the Darkness of Depression Continued from page 16 Only sheer will, the minimalist abilities to put one foot in front of the other and to breathe, got me through, and to the point where I could keep my next appointment with John Casarino. And it was on that day, described in chapter one, that I learned the most important lesson of my life; that there are no guarantees. It was time for choices. I had to decide whether to kill myself, or not; to accept my lot, or not; to commit myself to years of therapy with no assurance that I would get better or even emerge only somewhat broken, or not. The biggest decision I had to make was whether to commit to this psychiatrist who was to tell me years later, correctly so, that he determined early on that I would benefit best by hanging on by my fingernails. Those first months were hard. Our time together, the patient doctor relation- ship, was not warm; indeed it was almost distant, at times contentious. I wanted sympathy and encouragement, not guidance and compartmentalization. I wanted a mother and a father, not someone who placed the responsibility on me. I wanted someone to tell me it would all be okay, not that I had to work and be patient. But something about him and his cool focus and commitment said that he was the right person. That decision saved my life, or at minimum, allowed me later on to live a wonderfully fulfilling one. This, the birth of my daughter and a chance trip to the house of an uncle, were the small but fortunate lifelines that would begin the long and painful road to recovery. C M Y CM MY CY CMY - RICHARD MARINO, MD EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT Bob Marrone is the host of the Good Morning Westchester with Bob Marrone, heard from Monday to Friday, from 6 – 8:30 a.m., on WVOX-1460 AM. K SPORTSSCENE Sports Scene By MARK JEFFERS Welcome to this week’s action packed edition of “Sports Scene,” where we take a look at the sports results here in Westchester County… Let’s start off this week on the slopes…where New Rochelle freshman Jonathan Yudell finished 14th in the State Skiing Championships in the slalom and then took 20th spot in the giant slalom. Turning from snow to ice, sure sounds funny since we’ve had none this winter, in high school ice hockey Section 1 Division 1 Championship game, it was Suffern beating Eastchester/ Tuckahoe 6 to 1 for their third straight state crown. In the Division II title game; it was Pelham skating by Scarsdale by the final score of 3-2. Congratulations and good luck to Friedrich Eder as he has been named the new general manager for Brynwood Golf & Country Club in Armonk. It’s been quite a year for the Iona Gaels; they just clinched the regular season Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference title...and their nation leading assist leader guard Scott Machado has won the MAAC player of the year award, great job Scott! I’m thinking the New Rochelle based Gaels might even get an at-large bid to the March Madness Dance, if they don’t just win the MAAC Championship playoffs this week…stay tuned. Three cheers go out to the Realbuto Brothers of Somers as Brian and Dylan both came home state champions at the 2012 New York State Public State High School Athletic Association Wrestling Championships at the Times Union Center in Albany. Let’s head to the County Center in White Plains for some high school hoops results, Irvington defeated Kennedy in the Class B girls semi-finals 56-35 and in the other semi-final game Blind Brook edged Dobbs Ferry 69-66 in overtime. On the boys’ side, it was the top seeded Tuckahoe Tigers crushing Haldane 70 to 44 in Class C semi-final action. Hamden Hall just got by Rye Country Day 64-63 to capture the Fairchester Athletic Association Championship. In track and field, good luck to White Plains junior Thomas “Primetime” Johnson as he heads to the State finals in the long jump and the triple jump and to Lexus Harney of Mount Vernon who will run in the hurdles at the state championships. The Westchester Hawks AAU basketball tryouts are being held March 10 – 11 at Hooperstown in Mt. Vernon, call 917682-4200 for more information. Super Bowl MVP and New York Giants QB Eli Manning will return as spokesman for Guiding Eyes for the Blind’s 35th Annual Golf Classic to be held June 10th and 11th at the Mount Kisco Country Club. I have attended Continued on page 18 AFFILIATED WITH THE MOUNT SINAI HOSPITAL HOME OF THE COCHRAN SCHOOL OF NURSING 914.964.4DOC | RiversideHealth.org 967 North Broadway | Yonkers | NY | 10701 ©2011 St. John’s Riverside Hospital | All Rights Reserved. Page 17 Page 18 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY March 8, 2012 SPORTSSCENE Sports Scene Continued from page 17 this event in the past, it is top notch, for a good cause, and hanging out with Eli is not so bad either… And you don’t want to miss Westchester’s ladies Roller Derby team, Suburban Brawl in action, as they take on New Hampshire’s Skate Free or Die All-Stars. Last time around, The Brawl took the All-Stars to task, 254 - 21, but the All-Stars have been working hard & will be looking for revenge. Catch all the action on March 31st at the Yonkers P.A.L. Don’t forget to stop by the Westchester County Center for the Westchester Golf Show March 10 and 11 and catch us on “The Clubhouse” sports radio show both days noon to 2pm. NY State Championships are happening, good luck to all our Westchester participants... see you next week. As president he has seen rapid growth of the company with the signing of numerous clients. He resides in Bedford Hills, New York, with his wife Sarah, and three daughters, Kate, Amanda, and Claire. Mark Jeffers successfully spearheaded the launch of MAR$AR Sports & Entertainment LLC in 2008. TECHNOLOGY Give a Green Light to Backup Camera Rules By LARRY M. ELKIN Sometimes, you just can’t find a good government regulator when you need one. I have been among those complaining that the Obama administration seems determined to micromanage everything that moves, but I have to admit I was wrong. Just as the administration seemed on the verge of issuing a regulation that makes absolute sense for both economic and safety reasons, it has backed off. If this seems hard to understand, remember that this is an election year. President Obama is fighting to carry Michigan and other Midwestern states, and the federal government continues to hold a big stake in two of the three U.S.-based auto makers. Against that backdrop, it is not so surprising that Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood this week put the brakes on rules that would soon require rearview video camera systems on new cars and trucks. LaHood told lawmakers his department needs more time to gather and analyze data before proceeding with the new regulation. “I believe it is important to allot additional time to ensure that the final rule is appropriate and the underlying analysis is robust,” he explained in a letter on Tuesday. The regulation was supposed to be announced this week, despite opposition from automakers, who argued that visibility could be improved with better mirrors and that requiring a video system would be too expensive (about $160 to $200 per vehicle, according to The New York Times). Regulators countered that “95 to 112 deaths and as many as 8,374 injuries could be avoided each year by eliminating the wide blind spot behind a vehicle.” A 2008 federal law called for the Transportation Department to issue its rule on rear visibility standards by February 2011. Last year the department gave itself another 12 months. Now a statement issued by LaHood’s office has promised a rule by the end of 2012, some 22 months after the original deadline (and, not inconsequentially, after the upcoming election). Nearly half of all new cars already have backup cameras. Just like other safety features, from antilock brakes to stability systems, they will eventually make their way into most cars on the road, even without a federal mandate, because of a combination of consumer demand and automakers’ fears of liability suits. But sometimes car makers need a nudge. Their arguments against requiring backup cameras today are the same ones that were leveled against mandating seat belts and padded dashboards when I was growing up in the 1960s. Back then, a lot of kids died when they rode alongside their parents and were hurled into metal dashboards during relatively minor collisions. Today, it’s hard to even imagine a car without seat belts. We had a similar debate in the 1980s and 1990s about requiring air bags. Now cars without frontal airbags are rare, as they have been required in new vehicles since 1999. Automakers argue that extra-wide side mirrors, the cheaper alternative to rear cameras, would be equally effective in increasing rear visibility. That makes no sense. It is implausible that a side mirror could effectively match a rearmounted camera coupled with an audible alert to warn a driver of a child sitting immediately behind a vehicle. In addition, those wide mirrors will tend to get bashed into garage doorways and other obstacles unless drivers keep them folded flat against the side of the car. You can’t see anything at all out of a folded mirror. Safety ought to come standard in every car. Vehicles purchased off dealers’ lots a couple of years from now will be the “new” used cars families of modest means purchase a decade later. Those families will have kids, too, and they’ll need just as much protection. Technology has made backup cameras practical and affordable on every new vehicle. For the price of some silly dealer-provided “extra” such as undercoating or nitrogen-filled tires, we can save kids’ lives, not to mention a few bumpers, and prevent thousands of injuries. Yet when we finally need a government regulator to act the part, he decides instead to act like the very worst example of an American auto executive. That’s disappointing, but it does not come as a shock when the government and the automakers are one and the same. Larry M. Elkin, CPA, CFP®, is president of Palisades Hudson Financial Group a fee-only financial planning firm headquartered in Scarsdale, NY. The firm offers estate planning, insurance consulting, trust planning, cross-border planning, business valuation, family office and business management, executive financial planning, and tax services. Its sister firm, Palisades Hudson Asset Management, is an independent investment advisor with about $950 million under management. Branch offices are in Atlanta and Ft. Lauderdale. Website:www. palisadeshudson.com. EYE ON THEATRE O’Neill’s First Pulitzer By JOHN SIMON A curious playwright, Eugene O’Neill. His early plays, now seldom performed, are gripping; his last ones, terrific. In between, there is trouble. It’s like a middle-aged man whose chest and hips are in good shape, but in the waist there is middleaged spread. Those central plays, with a couple of notable exceptions, tend to be overstuffed and flabbily verbose, in a language variously inadequate to their ambitious matter. But what about the early ones? Several are about the sea and merchant ships, such as young Eugene worked on. But there is also, for example, “The Straw,” a highly effective tearjerker set in a pulmonary sanatorium. And there is “Beyond the Horizon,” now laudably mounted by The Irish Repertory Theatre. It, too, contains the autobiographical lung disease from which young O’Neill suffered, and which makes its final affecting appearance in O’Neill’s supreme ultimate masterwork, “Long Day’s Journey Into Night.” Do not be put off by some unfavorable reviews of this 1920 Pulitzer Prize-winning play. Today’s reviewers cannot deal with naturalism and poeticism; they show off their putative modernity by favoring weird avant-gardism, and their supposititious enlightenment, by fervidly plugging minority playwrights. Continued on page 19 Wrenn Schmidt and Lucas Hall. THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY March 8, 2012 EYE ON THEATRE Page 19 Rdg Plyhs Westchester Guardian_Layout 1 2 THE RIDGEFIELD PLAYHOUSE O’Neill’s First Pulitzer THURS, MARCH 15 @ 8 JEFFERSON STARSHIP With Paul Kantner, David Freigberg, Cathy Richardson, Slick Aguilar, Nona Hendryx, Mimi Page and more! With rock classics Somebody To Love, Jane, White Rabbit and more! ROCK SERIES FRI, M ARC H 16 @ 8 NITTY GRITTY DIRT BAND Wrenn Schmidt. Continued from page 18 “Beyond the Horizon” is a typically youthful work in which heightened realism borders on melodrama, and love of poetry leads to almost baroque poeticism. But those features, properly understood, have their appeal--like, in their different way, Kipling’s novels and stories about youths. The thing O’Neill arguably lacked is a stronger sense of humor, although here the character of Mrs. Atkins, the infuriating mother-in-law, does have her garishly comic aspect. This is the story of Robert Mayo, a young Massachusetts farm boy with scant use for farming. Instead, his head is in the clouds of Edwardian and Georgian poetry; a passage from his volume of poems by Arthur Symons is reproachfully read out by brother Andy, who, like their dour father, is single-mindedly devoted to farming. Robert, Andy and Ruth, the daughter from the neighboring Atkins farm, have grown up as affectionate comrades. Shy Andy never spoke his secret love for Ruth, nor did Robert, or Ruth that for him. On the eve of Robert’s departure for the South Seas on the ship of Captain Dick Scott, an uncle, Ruth confesses her love to the young man. Overwhelmed, Robert decides to stay and marry her. Heartbroken, Andy chooses to escape by taking Robert’s place, though he has no love of the sea and the world beyond the horizon. When, after some years, Andy returns in naval uniform, he finds the Mayo farm in dangerous decline through Robert’s mismanagement, and Ruth and Robert’s marriage turned sour through dissimilarity. There is trouble with widow Atkins, a plaguing scold, and with hired help quitting for too deferred salary. Andy, who seems to have gotten over Ruth, helps out financially, though he intends to return to Argentina for what looks like a lucrative business venture. Johanna Lesiter, Wrenn Schmidt, Patricia Conolly and Aimee Laurence. So much for the story, which turns proConnolly is perfect as Mrs. Atkins, and little gressively more tragic, even as the language Aimee Laurence is savvy beyond her age as becomes more succinct and powerful. Menconflicted daughter Mary. John Thomas Waite tion must be made also of little Mary, the tiny is good as the Captain, though perhaps not daughter of infighting parents, of Ruth’s now different enough later as a medical specialist. unrequited longing for Andy, and of brotherly But if Robert has every right to his cough, love as the only kind that remains mutual. the audience with which I attended was not This sizable and somewhat prolix play entitled to its profuse coughing. This deeply demands the fine production it gets under moving play--especially in its last, riveting Ciaran O’Reilly’s sound direction. First let me phase—deserves better than that. recommend Hugh Landwehr’s apt setting, Photos by and courtesy of Carol Rosegg. which bears striking resemblance to Edvard John Simon has written for over 50 years on theMunch’s famous painting, “The Scream,” only atre, film, literature, music and fine arts for the without the screaming figure. The flamingly Hudson Review, New Leader, New Criterion, colorful and fiercely striated background corNational Review,New York Magazine, Opera roborates the anguished proceedings, what with Brian Nason’s canny lighting modifying News, Weekly Standard, Broadway.com and colors in keeping with the darkening plot. Bloomberg News. Mr. Simon holds a PhD from Lucas Hall’s haunted Robert gets better Harvard University in Comparative Literature and better as his life deteriorates and his longand has taught at MIT, Harvard University, ing for the world beyond the farm increases. Bard College and Marymount Manhattan ColRod Brogan is unfailingly fine as the decent lege. Andy, and there is solid work from David Sitler and Johanna Leister as the older Mayo To learn more, visit the JohnSimon-Uncensored. couple. Wrenn Schmidt is a flawless Ruth, com whose descent into misery and eventual souldeath she immaculately conveys. Patricia TICKET PRICES INCLUDE A COMPLETE MEAL & SHOW SPECIAL GUEST ROGER SPRUNG & HIS PROGRESSIVE BLUEGRASSERS With hits "Fishin' In The Dark", "Mr. Bojangles" and More! ROCK SERIES FRI , M ARCH 23 @ 8 A Great Night of Comedy! PAULA POUNDSTONE Author, comedian and featured on NPR’s Wait, Wait…Don’t Tell Me SAT, MARCH 31 @ 8 THOMAS DOLBY With hits, She Blinded Me With Science, Hyperactive and More! Audience members can leave messages for the future! WED, APRIL 4 @ 8 MULTI GRAMMY AWARD WINNERS LOS LOBOS With Special Guest The Statesman THE NEW GERSHWIN MUSICAL ROCK SERIES TUE S, APRIL 10 @ 8 KEVIN COSTNER “I GOT RHYTHM” • “SOMEONE TO WATCH OVER ME” “LET’S CALL THE WHOLE THING OFF” • “EMBRACEABLE YOU” ON STAGE THRU MARCH 25 & MODERN WEST Oscar Winning Actor and FriendsWith their new album From Where I Stand. FRI, APRI L 1 3 @ 8 GRATEFUL DEAD DRUMMER! MICKEY HART BAND Westchester Broadway Theatre Group Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Inductee WBT_theatre THE WORLDWIDE CONCERT PHENOMENON RETURNS TO WBT! MON., MARCH 12 ALL THE HITS! Stayin’ Alive • Night Fever Lonely Days • Grease To Love Somebody ROCK SERIES 80 East Ridge • Ridgefield, CT 203.438.5795 Page 20 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY March 8, 2012 TREES Spring is in the Air or they will be replaced free of charge. Arbor Day Foundation members also receive a subscription to Arbor Day, the Foundation’s bimonthly publication, and The Tree Book, which contains information about tree planting and care. To become a member of the Foundation and receive the free trees, send a $10 contribution to TEN FREE DOGWOOD TREES, Arbor Day Foundation, 100 Arbor Avenue, Nebraska City, NE 68410, by March 30, 2012. Or join online at arborday.org/March. Join the Arbor Day Foundation in March and Receive 10 Free Trees The Arbor Day Foundation is making it easier for everyone to celebrate the arrival of spring through planting trees. Join the Arbor Day Foundation in March 2012 and receive 10 free white flowering dogwood trees. “White flowering dogwoods will add yearround beauty to your home and neighborhood,” said John Rosenow, chief executive and founder of the Arbor Day Foundation. “Dogwoods have showy spring flowers, scarlet autumn foliage and red berries that will attract songbirds all winter.” The free trees are part of the nonprofit Foundation’s Trees for America campaign. The trees will be shipped postpaid at the right time for planting, between March 1 and May 31, with enclosed planting instructions. The 6- to 12-inch trees are guaranteed to grow GovernmentSection MAYOR Marvin’s COLUMN “I Didn’t Know That!” By MARY C. MARVIN As I approach my 7th anniversary as Mayor, not a day goes by that I do not learn something new about the operations of our Village. That is what keeps the job so stimulating and me on my toes. Since the last month my column has been quite dour bringing to mind the Saturday Night Live character, “Debbie the Downer.” I thought a change of pace was in order. The following were knowledge bits that for me evoked an “I did not know that” and hope it will do the same for you. It is also a great cache of information should we ever have a Bronxville Jeopardy. I am the Village’s 36th Mayor and the fourth woman. Marcia Lee was the first female Mayor taking office in 1977. The first 17 Mayors were called Presidents of the Village and a photo is only hung in Village Hall upon one’s retirement. There are 1,114 parking meters throughout the Village, which generated $1,101,560.45 in revenues in the last fiscal year. Last fiscal year,our Parking Enforcement Officers issued 29,858 tickets generating $786,928 in ticket revenue. Believe it or not, this number GOVERNMENT has decreased in recent years due to our attempt to have a gentler more merchant sensitive approach. Several high school students shared a very valid idea with me. They felt `a la the Bronxville School Foundation’s Donate a Brick Program that they had more than donated a brick to the Village Hall renovation project via their traffic ticket contributions and the bricks should be named accordingly! Last fiscal year, the Village Police Department issued Vehicle and Traffic tickets that generated $246,895 as reported by our Court, for which the Village retained 52.7% or $116,680.84. The remaining amount of money is forwarded to the State government. Last year, the Village issued 153 Paddle Tennis permits, which generated $35,507, and 122 Tennis Permits that produced $24,424 in revenue. There are 1,678 parcels of property that make-up the geographic boundaries of the Village. Of that number, 1,595 are classified as taxable and are responsible for the Village and School tax levies ($7,912,956 and $38,261,184 respectively for 2011/2012). There are 192 fire hydrants located within the Village and maintained by United Water at a cost to the Village of $84,245. Quite unfairly, the entire cost of hydrant maintenance fees legally falls on only the taxpaying entities. The cost is not included as a user fee in water bills which would spread the cost out to all water users, not just taxpayers. As a Registrar of Vital Statistics for Lawrence Hospital, the Village issued 3,068 birth certificates and 2,980 death certificates during calendar year 2011. Our police cars are turned over after approximately 100,000 miles due to major wear and tear caused by 24/7 operation. Due to heavy usage, major repairs such as new transmissions and engines are often needed at this juncture making it more cost effective to sell the cars at auction slightly before this threshold. Our police officers wear Kevlar vests at all times while in uniform. The vests need to be replaced every five years as Kevlar deteriorates with age. Our officers also carry Glock .40 caliber handguns and train at least twice per year to maintain proficiency. Approximately 1,400 properties have alarm permits at a cost of $50 yearly. Village Hall has geo-thermal heating and cooling which has proven cost and energy efficient. Two dozen wells were dug on the Village Hall lawn. Water from these wells is circulated throughout the building to water cooled heat pumps, which cool the building in the summer and heat it in the winter through a series of 18 pumps located throughout Village Hall. The Village has no County roads and only one State owned road – Route 22 – which was built by the State with no storm sewers or drainage system. Scout Field is actually County owned property, over 90% of which is in the cities of Mount Vernon and Yonkers. The Village of Bronxville’s boundary only extends several feet adjacent to Alden Place. Each year the Village purchases approximately 700 tons of salt under a State contract for approximately $53/ton. We have to place our order a full year in advance and estimate need. The salt is trucked in from a depot in Port Newark where it arrives on barges from throughout the country. The Village has 65 full time employees including all police, Department of Public Works and library staff as well as a coterie of part-time staff. Part-time staffers are paid anywhere between $10 and $14 per hour. The Village is an interesting place and the Mayor’s chair offers a great perspective of all things great and small that come together to create the Village of Bronxville. operation to ending at 2 a.m. He expressed concern about a cabaret’s outdoor area where people can congregate and disturb residential neighborhoods. The main use of a cabaret establishment in Councilman’s Tarantino’s view should be the restaurant. However, it was Councilwoman Shari Rackman who appeared the most displeased with the proposed change. She did not like the 2 a.m. closing time for the cabarets and felt such establishments should be allowed in residential neighborhoods. In her view, if a restaurant can’t survive without the cabaret, a cabaret would enhance the business. One resident, Vince Malfetano, had questioned why an established Pelham Road restaurant and bar did not seek a cabaret license before they opened a short time ago. He reiterated, “Why would you invest upwards of a million dollars or so in renovations? Why didn’t they seek approval before they opened the cabaret? He continued, “Why doesn’t the City Council have an ethics law which would prevent the taking of campaign contributions from developers that come before the Council?” A neighbor living very close to the restaurant, Adeline Doria, Continued on page 21 Mary C. Marvin is the mayor of the Village of Bronxville, New York. If you have a suggestion or comment, consider directing your perspective by email to: mayor@vobny.com. ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT City Council Decisions in New Rochelle By PEGGY GODFREY New Rochelle’s vision of economic development has been reflected in discussion and in several resolutions that were revealed in February. Councilmembers were not asked to vote on an MOU (memorandum of understanding) for the highly dense Albanese proposal for the downtown because information was still necessary for making an intelligent decision. Discussion at the February 21 City Council meeting focused on two items: the Cabaret License proposal; and bonding for the design for the new City Yard on Beechwood Avenue. Councilman Ivar Hyden explained that the cabaret license proposal would limit a restaurant’s THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY March 8, 2012 Page 21 ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT City Council in New Rochelle Continued from page 20 reinforced the general feeling that she was not against these businesses provided they are run properly. However, when a business encroaches on a neighborhood, the residents are faced with the consequences: “Our home values will be destroyed. We have enough in the south end.” Thomas Lang, another resident in the area and member of the Residence Park Neighborhood Association, took exception to the way the restaurant has a cabaret without a cabaret license. He totally supports the proposed Council legislation. Another resident had a sharper reply to Rack- man’s comments by suggesting a cabaret be built in the ample parking lot next to Cosi’s on Quaker Ridge Road. But it was the approval of the $600,000 bonding to create a design for a new City Yard facility at Beechwood Avenue that has set off a rash of citizen complaints. The sole City Council dissenter, Councilman Lou Trangucci, maintained his previous opinion that this money should not be allotted until Forest City Residential, the developer who has an MOU on the present City Yard for development, has presented a development plan for this area. Councilman Al Tarantino who originally wanted to table the bonding until Forest City Residential presented their plan, clarified af- ter the meeting that he had voted in favor because originally, several years ago, the design plan was estimated at a cost of $2.5 million dollars and this new estimate is so much lower. The cost of moving the City Yard was originally projected at over $25 million, but in these hard economic times the cost has been diminished to $13 million. While deplorable conditions at the present City Yard are cited as reasons for the move, there is plenty of evidence residents do not agree. One who did not want to be named cited the high cost of remediating the pollution at the present City Yard that is now being considered. Others have complained about the access streets for the new City Yard, calling them inadequate. Warming trucks inside a new garage, instead of the open area that is being used now, is seen as a positive move by City officials, but they neglect to mention how starting trucks inside the proposed garage will contribute to air pollution and possibly require large fans to remove the polluted air. Analyzing this City Yard vote in relation to a person’s finances, Lorraine Pierce stated, “Interest rates may be low. However, if you don’t have enough revenue to meet your payments you don’t then go ahead and spend the money. If your credit is maxed out you don’t go ahead and buy a car or house because interest rates are low. It defies logic as does this bonding for the design phase of a new City Yard.” CAMPAIGN TRAIL Labor Backs Mayer SEIU 1199, 32BJ, and Local 704 Rally for Shelley Mayer YONKERS, NY -- Shelley Mayer, candidate for State Assembly, last week received the endorsement of the major unions representing hundreds of thousands of workers affiliated with SEIU: 1199 United Healthcare Workers East, 32BJ Property Service Workers, and Local 704 Civil Service Employees of Yonkers. Mayer is running for the 93rd Assembly District in a March 20th special election. “Healthcare and hospital workers spend their lives caring for our families and loved ones when they are elderly or ill. They depend on allies like Shelley Mayer who understand the health care system to make sure that our hospitals and nursing homes can survive these tough times, and that health care workers are treated fairly. Shelley Mayer has the legislative experience and the health care experience we need in Albany. We are confident she will be a strong progressive voice for health care in Albany,” said Kevin Finnegan, Political Director, 1199 SEIU United Healthcare Workers East. For over seven years, Mayer was Vice President of Government and Community Affairs at Continuum Health Partners, one of New York City’s largest teaching hospital systems. “Shelley Mayer has a record of advocating for the rights of everyday, working New Yorkers, “ said John Santos, Hudson Valley Regional Director for 32BJ. “We are committed to supporting candidates like Shelley who will make New York a state that works for working people” “We need Shelley Mayer in Albany fighting for Yonkers librarians, clerical inspectors, and civil service workers. Shelley has a long track record of supporting working people, and the experience to get things done, which is why we’re proud to support her,” said Dominick Savarese, President of Local 704. “I am proud to stand up for the rights of working families who represent the core of our communities. New York cannot grow without growing the middle class too, which means good jobs, fair pay, and long-term economic growth. We need someone who understands these issues and won’t back down from a fight, that’s why I’m running for State Assembly,” said Shelley Mayer. FUNDING Republican Plan to Save Underfunded Childcare Subsidy Program By SHEILA MARCOTTE and MICHAEL SMITH WHITE PLAINS, NY – We, Legislator Sheila Marcotte (R-Eastchester) and Legislator Michael Smith (RMt. Pleasant), have crafted a plan that would immediately help fund Westchester County’s child care subsidy program. The program as currently funded is expected to run out of its appropriated funding this summer. Republican Legislators are proposing a budget amendment to transfer more than a million dollars that was placed into a slush fund created by the Democrats in the 2012 county budget. The slush fund is comprised of budget lines that are not dedicated to any specific program or entity. The slush fund budget lines carry vague titles like BoL-Youth and Education, BoL-Environment, BoL-Advocacy and BoL-Arts and Culture. County Executive Rob Astorino vetoed the slush fund budget lines with Republican Legislators voting to uphold the vetoes for well over Continued on page 22 Shelley Mayer stands with supporters from 1199 SEIU United Healthcare Workers East, 32BJ Property Service Workers, and Local 704 Civil Service Employees of Yonkers. Westchester Regional Conference On The Establishment of “Tobacco-Free” College Campuses A Joint Conference of the American Lung Association in New York, POW’R Against Tobacco, The American Cancer Society and Westchester Community College. Thursday, March 8, 2012 from 2-5PM Westchester Community College 75 Grasslands Rd. Valhalla, NY The “Classroom Building”, Lecture Hall: Room C-200 Featured Speaker Ty Patterson, Director National Center for Tobacco Policy Nationally acclaimed expert on transition to “Tobacco-Free College Campuses. Ty will discuss: :K\FROOHJHFDPSXVHVVKRXOGDGRSWWREDFFRIUHHSROLFLHV .H\VWHSVIRULPSOHPHQWLQJDVXFFHVVIXOSROLF\ +RZWRLQYROYHVWXGHQWVIDFXOW\DQGDGPLQLVWUDWLRQLQ VXVWDLQLQJDQGPDLQWDLQLQJDVXFFHVVIXOWREDFFRIUHHFDPSXVSROLF\ 3OHDVH56930DXUHHQ.HQQH\(PDLOPNHQQH\#DODRUJ Page 22 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY March 8, 2012 FUNDING Republican Plan to Save Underfunded Childcare Subsidy Program Continued from page 21 a million dollars in spending of “pork.” Legislators Marcotte and Smith call for those funds to be transferred through a budget amendment to the Department of Social Services to provide the funding to continue the childcare subsidy program. In the proposed 2012 budget plan presented to the Board of Legislators, the family share portion of the childcare costs was established at 35%. The Democrats on the Board of Legislators changed that amount to 20% without fully understanding the fiscal impact of their decision. DSS Commissioner Kevin McGuire told the Budget Committee during his Department’s presentation that by reducing from 35% to 20%, the parent share portion for the daycare program, it would not be properly funded. The amount of money that the Democrats appropriated for the program in their budget will now run out of money this summer. Legislator Marcotte is a member of the Budget and Appropriations Committee. “It is very clear that the warnings we heard from the Department of Social Services in December were well founded.” Marcotte said. “The million or so dollars that the Democrats set aside to spend on pork could go a long way to help- ing make up the shortfall of this underfunded program.” Marcotte concluded, “As a working mother of four, I understand that childcare is a significant expense. This is not a question about the merit of this important program, it is a question of simple mathematics. As currently funded and at the current contribution level from those that use the program, it will not be sustainable beyond this summer. It’s time for the Democrats to transfer their million dollar slush fund to the hard working families of Westchester County.” Freshman Legislator Michael Smith, who sits on the Community Services Committee said, “I understand that the approximately $6 a day increase in the family share rate that was proposed in the County Executive’s budget is a hardship for the families that we serve, but it was critically essential to keep the program solvent and to allow us to help the optimum number of families.” Smith went on to say, “As a member of the Community Services Committee, I and my fellow Legislators on the committee are dedicated to ensuring that those in need in Westchester are given the support they deserve to go to work each day and know that their children are being cared for in safe and affordable child care programs. Good intentions, however, do not pay our childcare providers. We have to provide actual dollars to keep social services programs operational.These children should not be held hostage by political partisanship.” Court Justice Joseph Alessandro, Jeff Buss, Esq., of the Yonkers law firm of Smith, Buss & Jacobs LLP, Sam Zherka, publisher of The Westchester Guardian, and Delfim Heusler, publisher of the online Yonkers Insider. The integrity expressed in words would soon dissipate due to a lack of deeds and vitriole and infighting among the “reformers.” Before the exchange of any money took place, Mssrs Zherka and Heusler excised themselves from further involvement with the Westchester Integrity Committee. The unexpressed tenets of the Westchester Integrity Committee was to cause the collapse of Dr. Cavallo’s hold on the Westchester Independence Party so that those who maintained their political challenge and focus could wrestle control of the reigns of power from Dr Cavallo and deliver the party to Senator Nick Spano. But that was hush hush. Mr Mangone admitted in court that he asked Milio Management through son Franco Milio, and with full knowledge of founder and father to Franco, Antonio Milio, that cash was required to satisfy the alleged desire of Sandy Annabi and Zehy Jereis to develop the Longfellow Junior High School, Walgreens, School 6 properties as “designated developers” for their behalf. Mr Antonio Milio, who delivered four rubber band bundled stacks of $100 bills amounting to $10,000 per bundle, to Mr Mangone, then an attorney, instead used some of the money he garnered, that from the Milio’s, from gambling wins, from client payments made in cash and never reported, but divided among the law firm’s partners, and client escrow accounts, intended to thwart the Westchester County Independence Party from being overthrown by Dr Sayegh winning a challenge against Dr Cavallo. Before an intended $10,000 cash payment could be given to “bribe” and dissuade the Westchester integrity Committee to discontinue their challenge, Dr Sayegh dropped out of the race. Dr Sayegh was played by Nader Sayegh who was engaged in getting petitions for placing the Westchester integrity Committee in contention to challenge Dr Cavallo’s Westchester Independence Party. The petitions garnered where chanllenged and found to be fraudulent and were disallowed. Recognizing Dr. Sayegh was no longer a viable threat, Mr Mangone figured he could pay off Mr Khader $5,000, though it was said in those days to have been as much as $15,000. Nevertheless, Mr Mangone gave Mr Khader $5,000 in cash, and kept the balance for himself. The $5,000 payment received by Mr Khader would unravel the supposedly close-knit political wannabees of the Westchester integrity Committee. Each individual, to some degree or another, were obsessed with accusing each other of theft of the money they expected to share equally. Mr Mangone got most of the cash and Mr Khader some of it, and Senator Nick Spano lost the political challenge to Andrea Stewart-Cousins, the present incumbent senator of the district. LEGAL Yonkers Corruption Trial Mangone Reveals the Lack of Integrity in the Westchester Integrity Committee By HEZI ARIS Cash Exchanged; Feathers Ruffled; A New Political Reality NEW YORK, NY and YONKERS, NY -- Anthony Mangone, the one-time attorney, disbarred since the Spring of 2011, took to the witness stand in Judge Colleen McMahon’s courtroom today as part of the government’s alleged charges of corruption and bribery against defendants Sandy Annabi, former Yonkers City Councilwoman, and Zehy Jereis, former Yonkers Republican Chairman. Of the many issues covered in the early interrogation of Mr Mangone by Anthony Siano, Mr Jereis’ legal counsel, was the episode in which in the year 2006, then Senator Nick Spano was running as the incumbent for New York State Senate against Andrea Stewart-Cousins. Senator Nick Spano needed to gain the support of minor party lines in order to enhance his chances for winning in a New York State Senate District that was regarded to have an overwhelming roster of registered voters who saw themselves more closely affiliated with the Democratic Party line. The only way to reign in the imbalance of voters registered to the one party, was for then Senator Nick Spano to seek support from the other minority party lines. He sought out the Conservative Party, the Independence Party, the Working Families Party, the Right to Life party, and any other party lines that may have existed. As the election campaign efforts from every facet of the political spectrum would heat up, it was recognized that forces involved in the Westchester County Independence Party were undergoing internal strife. An internal hierarchy of protagonists were plotting a coup d’état in order to wrestle the party chair, Dr. Giulio Cavallo, from continuing to maintain political control. The “mutineers,” who considered themselves reformers to the alleged “corruption” of Dr Cavallo, coalesced around the well-known, and well-respected educator Nader Sayegh, in a reorganization effort that had the likes of John Khader, owner of Top Class Limousine, Joseph Spezio III, a Yonkers developer, Michael Gianatasio, one-time candidate challenging Suzie Oppenheimer in a NYS Senate race, Steven Sacripanti, an ally who had been Administrative Judge Francis Nicolai’s principal court reporter, Dyalma Vasquez, a political supporter and confidante, Irma Drace, secretary to State Supreme Raging Lawsuits in Yorktown By ABBY LUBY YORKTOWN HEIGHTS, NY -- Long time Yorktown adversaries Bill LaPierre and Yorktown Highway Superintendent Eric DiBartolo will face off in the courtroom. After a 15-year feud, both parties have formally filed lawsuits against one another claiming personal and public wrongdoings. The Westchester Guardian has been covering issues concerning DiBartolo since February, 2011. Bill LaPierre, owner of the Clark Funeral Home in Yorktown, has for years been compiling what he claims is evidence of what he believes is DiBartolo’s allegedly dishonest business deals that he claims illegally used taxpayer monies. Last year, LaPierre, and his friend Fred Gulitz, are said to have allegedly slandered DiBartolo at a few town board meetings. DeBartolo sued both Gulitz and LaPierre on defamation of character but the suit was dismissed on a statute of limitations technicality. DiBartolo has now hired a new attorney, Superintendent Eric DiBartolo in his office. Amy Bellantoni of The Bellantoni Law Firm in Scarsdale. Bellantoni has renewed the lawsuit. “We filed a complaint for defamation and served Mr LaPierre and Mr Gulitz on February 1st,” said Bellantoni. “Instead of answering that complaint, Mr LaPierre filed a SLAPP lawsuit – the sole purpose being to harass and maliciously injure Mr. DiBartolo and to take away from the false and defamatory statements Mr LaPierre made about Mr DiBartolo and another town worker. It has no basis in fact,” emphasized Ms Bellantoni. (SLAPP is designated a Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation and is generally used to censor, intimidate, and silence Continued on page 23 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY March 8, 2012 Page 23 LEGAL Raging Lawsuits in Yorktown Continued from page 22 critics by burdening them with the cost of a legal defense until they abandon their criticism or opposition). DiBartolo has worked for the town since 1989 when he first started as a laborer for the Yorktown Parks and Recreation Department. In 1995 the then highway superintendent retired and DiBartolo was approached by the Republican Party to run for the job. Today, after 20 plus years of working for the town, DiBartolo has not only built up his department but at one point he took on a second post, Director of Labor, where he headed up multiple departments with a total of 147 employees under his watch, a powerful position he held for over two years. DiBartolo has garnered admiration from employees and town residents over many years but has angered many, as well. DiBartolo’s lawsuit claims that he suffered from defamation by LaPierre, irreparable injury to his professional reputation, emotional upset, stress, public humiliation and public embarrassment, among other claims Representing LaPierre is attorney David Wright of Yorktown who counters that as a public and elected official, DiBartolo is suing taxpay- ers who have expressed their opinion. “The fact that those opinions were critical doesn’t make it defamation. Why should people who want to express themselves at a town board meeting fear that they are exposing themselves, as citizens, to a lawsuit?” Wright said he had papers served not only on DiBartolo, but to Envirostar and Yorktown Funeral Home. In March, 2009, Yorktown town officials were informed that DiBartolo hired Envirostar – a company owned by DiBartolo’s brother Frank, (now deceased) to clean up contaminated soil. The job, which cost the town $73,000, was never formally put out to bid and the town approved the payment retroactively. LaPierre also believes that DiBartolo allegedly partnered with the owner of the Yorktown Funeral Home, which opened in January, 2011, as retaliation, and to compete with LaPierre’s Clark Funeral Home, which used to be the sole funeral home in Yorktown. In December, 2010, LaPierre took out two full page ads in the Yorktown Examiner condemning DiBartolo for fraudulent practices. The dispute escalated and regularly surfaced at town board meetings where LaPierre alleged that DiBartolo falsified paperwork for purchases, fudged time sheets and accepted political favors from contractors hired by the highway department. (L-R)- Bill LaPierre, Fred Gulitz, Stephan Gardner. Last year, LaPierre pleaded his case to State Comptroller DiNapoli’s Office to investigate alleged corrupt financial practices in Yorktown, specifically implicating the town comptroller, Joan Goldberg and DiBartolo. In the resulting audit report by the State Comptroller the state never clearly cited DiBartolo as carrying out fraudulent actions but said,“…we were unable to ascertain whether the Superintendent received a direct or indirect monetary or material benefit as a result of the contracts with the Town.” The report, which can only make recommendations and not take legal action, went on to say “Nonetheless, to avoid even an appearance of self-interest or partiality, the Superintendent should have recused himself from any involvement he may have had in transactions with this corporation.” “Mr. LaPierre’s lawsuit is based on the audit report,” said Bellantoni. “The audit report has a lot of accusations but no clear evidence.” Even though the state made recommendations on corrective actions that involved DiBartolo, the town never did. Wright contends that LaPierre’s lawsuit is a legal action similar to one that the town should have taken long ago. The lawsuit is following a little known municipal law where a tax payer can bring a lawsuit in the name of the municipality if someone from the town has wrongfully used town funds. “This is a procedure that is a tax payer’s right,” said Wright. “If we do recover monies from DeBartolo and Envirostar, I can be reimbursed for legal fees and the rest goes back to the town. The good part is this suit is not going to cost the town a penny.” Abby Luby is a Westchester based, freelance journalist who writes local news, about environmental issues, art, entertainment and food. Her debut novel, “Nuclear Romance” was recently published. Visit the book’s website, http://nuclearromance.word- press.com/. LEGISLATION Senate Passes Klein’s Legislation to Ban Caffeinated Alcoholic Beverages ALBANY, NY -- The State Senate today passed legislation by Senator Jeffrey D. Klein, (The Bronx / Westchester), that would have New York formally ban the sale of caffeinated alcoholic beverages. The legislation, (S.3889A), was introduced as a response to the public health danger posed by Four Loko and similar super-sweetened beverages that mixed high levels of alcohol with caffeine and other stimulants. Under this measure, selling this product would be an E felony punishable by 1 to 3 years in prison. The FDA has deemed the addition of caffeine to high alcohol flavored malt beverages as “unsafe.” As a result, the four companies that manufactured these caffeinated alcoholic beverages agreed to stop selling them in New York. However, during the last year, reports emerged that these products were still being sold in some New York City convenience stores. Additionally, the recent death of a 13-year-old Maryland teen who has reportedly consumed Four Loko, highlights the danger that this type of caffeinated alcopop poses. Additionally, Phusion Projects, the makers of Four Loko, said it would seek to resume these sales if “emerging science, regulatory developments or other relevant changes in circumstances arise,” or if other companies start to sell similar caffeinated alcoholic beverages. “It’s clear that we need more than a simple gentlemen’s agreement to keep these dangerous beverage off the shelves and out of the reach of minors in New York,” Senator Klein said. “My legislation will accomplish this goal and, once on for all shut the door to these products in this state.” Research has shown that these high alcohol flavored malt beverages (FMBs), are most popular with underage drinkers. According to the Johns Hopkins Center on Alcohol Marketing and Youth, which submitted testimony to an April 2011 committee hearing that Senator Klein, as Chairman of the Senate Alcoholism & Drug Abuse, held on this topic: • 78% of current 8th grade drinkers drank FMBs in the past 30 days; • 71% of current 10th grade drinkers drank FMBs in the past 30 days; • 65% of current 12th grade drinkers drank FMBs in the past 30 days; • 42% of current drinkers, age 19 to 30, drank FMBs in the past 30 days. A link to the report can be found here: http://www.nysenate.gov/files/pdfs/ FMB%20Plelim%20Report%20Final.pdf. If made law, New York would join five other states with an outright ban of caffeinated malt beverages. The bill is pending in the Assembly. Page 24 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY March 8, 2012 PERMITS Mamaroneck Beach and Yacht Club’s Building Permit Revoked Last Thursday evening the Village’s (Zoning) Board of Appeals revoked the Mamaroneck Beach & Yacht Club’s Building Permit for seasonal housing. Previously the Board of Appeals had found that the site plan used for the approvals was found not to be in compliance with the Village’s Zoning Code. The action by the Board of Appeals was on an appeal by the Shore Acres Property Owners Association and the Bennett Golub family.This matter is also being litigated and has not been determined. On a separate Appeal having to do with the Village’s changing of the Zoning Map to include the ½+ acres that Mamaroneck Beach and OP EDSection Yacht Club claims they own and which the Sate of NY says that the State owns, the Board of Appeals took the position that they do not have jurisdiction on this matter. Mamaroneck Beach & Yacht Club has made an application to NYS Office of General Services (NYSOGS) to purchase the ½+ acres and that application, which The Annoying ERT Buzz of Mindless Talk and Chatter By DR. ED U. CATOR It’s that time again in the City of Yonkers; when a new mayor, Mike Spano, decides to tackle a long standing issue, the Board of Education, also a campaign highlight, by forming a 15 member committee to “study” the problem. I thought, as did many other Yonkers residents, that the new Spano regime at City Hall had already devised a game plan to hit the ground running. So much for new beginnings. Mayor Mike Spano just announced his new “crew” on TV. Yes, Spano referred to these selected volunteers by using the term “crew.” One would have thought a brand new gang formed in Yonkers. The mayor called this group his Education Redesign Team (ERT). The chosen 15, along with the mayor’s special assistant on education will help guide Mayor Mike Spano through several phases of Yonkers Board of Education (YBoE) reform. This first phase is to be completed by June 2012. Not only are there no Trustees of the Yonkers Board of Education, or members of the Yonkers Federation of Teachers (YFT) on this committee, but nearly half of the appointees are directly connected to the mayor’s brother, Nick Spano, and politically compliant. The remaining members all have entanglements; either through relatives or the gravy train of government dollars, which sustain their respective enterprises. The ERT is entrusted with a two-phase mission. It is to deliver on a “heavy” agenda al- ready articulated by the mayor; and tasked to do so within 90 to 100 days. Yet it has no discernable funding stream or staff. There is no one on the ERT who can or will dedicate the time necessary for such a bold task. Personal responsibilities will allow for only “bull” sessions to demonstrate public attendance. This idea was first pursed by former Yonkers Mayor Terry Zaleski and has been an on-going concept since by other administrations for a total of 20 years. The irony here is that Terry Zaleski was, like Mike Spano, a former New York State Assemblyman who would each in turn become Mayors of Yonkers. What is it that this ERT “crew” will do now that two decades of City Hill – Board of Education interaction has not been able to accomplish with many of the same people involved? Yonkersites believed Mayor Mike Spano had some plan to present regarding the YBoE? Yet, here we are, entering the third month of this administration, and all there is to show is a new committee. How is it Yonkers Superintendent Bernard Pierorazio “appears” to be in the mix, yet there is not one Trustee? Is it not the Trustees who are responsible for overseeing the Yonkers Board of Education; and no one else? Are they cooperating? And if so, why do you need a new “crew” called ERT? Upon some reflection, is it a stretch to imagine that had these same ideas and concepts worked over 20 years of talking about them with three previous mayors and just as many superintendents it would have been implemented by now? How many administrations has Pier- orazio been through? The options are clear, the way to facilitate the issues revolving about the Yonkers Board of Education is to either take over the YBoE, putting it directly under mayoral control, or have the Trustees held responsible for their actions or inactions. As its presently conceptualized, the Trustees can await the ERT report and do absolutely nothing once they receive it. City Hall, the mayor, the City Council, and the Educational Redesign Team can all do the dance of the Bumble Bee and all we will ever hear; is the buzz. By the time ERT completes phase 1, the 2012-2013 budget will be in print. By the second phase, and the mayor’s team of ERT participants will have evolved and the 2013-2014 Budget will be in print. We will thereafter be at the 2014-2015 Budget and at the end of Mayor Spano’s term. There are no guarantees; only promises. The turn around time is too short for studying and distilling such a complex system. This is all about repositioning old ideas with no new analysis as to whether it will work or not. Unfortunately, this committee method is a legislative stall or cover, or both. Without cooperation of the Yonkers Board of Education Trustees or the YFT/CSEA, the ERT will not be able to negotiate any solutions. Stop with the dress rehearsal! Get people with real insight, brainstorm the issues, and avoid feel-good committee placements. is being opposed by numerous environmental groups including The Nature Conservancy, Federated Conservationists of Westchester County, Audubon New York and the New York League of Conservation Voters as well as individuals within the Village, the State and elsewhere, is still pending before the NYSOGS. Sexual Assault an Overlooked Epidemic in the Church, Part II By SALOME THOMPSON Given most churches’ nonchalant attitude towards sexual assault, innocent lives have been ruined at it’s cruel hands; and if it were to be calculated, would surmount that of Mass Murderers Josef Stalin and Adolf Hitler combined. The invisibility and subtleness of sexual assault has contributed to the moral decay in society. This massacre can be attributed to the misdirection and misguidance from the authoritarian figures within most churches. Their unearned privilege permits them access to innocent, defenseless children and the brainwashed parents who unknowingly volunteer their children to be harmed. Unable to deal or cope with the trauma and atrocity of sexual assault, innocent victims, as adults, indulge in self destructive behaviors and display somatic disorders such as: drug & alcohol addiction, prostitution, anxiety, depression, eating disorder, sleeping disorder, difficulty learning, suicide, the contraction and spread of STD and HIV. Despite the carnage of sexual assault, most churches continue to turn a “blind eye” to the epidemic. The panacea for sexual assault is to pray, regurgitate and distort scriptures and do NOTHING. Very little emphasis is placed on practical problem solving solutions, instead, the Continued on page 25 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR The Green Revolution Ah, the electric car. The greening of America. Green jobs.The antidote to high gas prices. I am so excited I just can’t wait to get behind the wheel. It will be the panacea for all our environmental problems. It will create massive green jobs and end our dependence on foreign oil. I will be laughing as I pass by each gas station. My own green car will be sitting quietly in the garage plugged into my very own magic green plug. Pure environmental perfection. But, as Kermit the Frog says “It’s not easy being green”. We don’t want the facts to get in the way of being green. The fact is that right now 45% of the electricity produced in the U.S. comes from coal. If we begin to produce and use more electric cars where is all that electricity going to come from? In addition, I would like to hear a scientific discussion comparing the efficiencies of burning oil in a car as opposed to burning oil to produce the electricity for the car. If we don’t burn the oil to produce the electricity, then will it be more coal, natural gas, nuclear or a nice green dam? After we have done that analysis then we need to create an energy policy that will help produce all that electricity. That should be the starting point of the discussion before we put the green carts before the green horses. Sincerely, Gary Ajello, Esq. Yorktown, NY THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY March 8, 2012 Page 25 OPED Sexual Assault an Overlooked Epidemic in the Church, Part II Continued from page 24 members or parishioners are given the hope and assurance that the perpetrator will be punished and judged when Jesus returns. This ambiguous and imbecile approach to problem solving has perpetuated the incessant cycle of this depravity. The unearned privilege given to authority figures within the hierarchy of the Church, has seemingly exonerated them of the responsibility and accountability for their actions. If a member of society commits a crime of sexual assault and it is reported to law enforcement, there will be a consequence for the perpetrator’s action. Most Churches exonerate protagonists of authority and church members of being responsible for their actions without any consequence and rehabilitation. The excuse given and learned for helplessness is blamed on sin. Authority figures within many churches often use guile and bullying tactics to discourage members or pa- rishioners from reporting sexual assault to law enforcement officials. The common tactics used are bribery and dogmatic and cataclysmic theology. The frightened and dis-empowered victims succumb to the deceit, facing insidious trauma after trauma. Most figures of authority within the church are not trained Clinicians or Psychotherapist, yet they make decisions that have altered the lives of innocent victims. They often discourage members from seeking counseling services outside the Church as a way of concealing crime being committed against the innocent. It’s very disheartening that greater value is placed on the money received from tithe and offering, than on that of human life. The carnage of sexual assault by cruel hands of the church have derailed and imperiled the lives of countless. As we have seen their unorthodox and harmful practices have served to diminish the vulnerable and defenseless among us. More needs to be done to hold the Church accountable for their past actions. NEW YORK CIVIC Apathy is Dangerous Deputy Mayor Holloway Tells Columbia Students to Keep Government Focused on Environment By HENRY J. STERN At a February 23 speech at Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs, Deputy Mayor for Operations Caswell Holloway described his role in the administration and highlighted, among his many tasks, the expansion of green infrastructure and how to treat the one billion gallons of wastewater the city produces daily. While the entire talk by Holloway, who previously served in the Bloomberg Administration as Commissioner of the New York City Department of Environmental Protection, is well worth your while to watch on YouTube, we refer you specifically to the final question of the evening, which we posed to Deputy Mayor Holloway at 1 hour, 9 minutes, and 47 seconds into the talk. The transcript of the ensuing exchange is posted below: Henry Stern: The city has elections every four years and what assurance is there that the next administration will have the attitude that this one did? I’ve been through a dozen DEP commissioners in my time in city government; some of them are better, some of them are worse. In my opinion this is the golden age for your agency, but they are often followed by brass ages or stone ages. So where do you go from here after somebody cuts a deal with the Brooklyn district leader not to put a facility in their neighborhood? Caswell Holloway: Well, I think that this is probably the most important question of rd the moment: how do we ensure - and by the way there’s a lot I haven’t talked about here as far as public safety and education and all of those things and they are critically important, and it is a balancing of resources, but this question of how do we ensure that this stuff - it’s very easy to undo things, cut deals, pay lip service to something and then go do something else. I think the only way that that is going to be avoided is if the next mayor, our successors and then even their successors, know that it’s not going to be politically tenable to stop or backtrack on this and it’s fundamentally a political question. “The technology is there, the brainpower is there, the possibility of making the investments - and by the way in most cases - and this is what I focused on; whether its green infrastructure or recycling, the economics case is there to make these investments and in this time that’s probably the most important argument to make because dollars are scarce - but unless there is sustained action and unless it becomes something - the candidates in the upcoming election have to be asked point blank and address “what are you going to do to continue this or that?” then I think you’re right, I think it’s a huge risk and that’s why apathy, I think, is really dangerous and that’s why maybe we are - I would say right now in a fairly good place, even though I wouldn’t characterize things as good, certainly financially, but don’t be complacent, don’t think that because the way things are and because the focus of the administration is what it is that that’s the way it’s always been. “The city hasn’t always had historically low crime, we haven’t always had control of the schools and we certainly haven’t always had what some people think of as a fairly enlightened public policy toward these issues: looking at these investments as good economics as well. That just means get involved and be engaged and listen to what the candidates are saying because it’s going to be very easy if there’s only...there’s going to be...you can be assured there’s going to be a small, narrow group of people who have a fairly narrow set of interests who are going to be very, very engaged in who the next mayor is.The question is: will you be engaged? Does that include you? It should. I think that it’s fundamentally a political question. Henry Stern: Yes. And for example, in the last administration I was free to go to schools throughout the country and hire the finest young people we were able to reach and try to persuade them to go into city government and many of them did. The most prominent: Deputy Mayor Skyler, who came before your advent, but even he was very helpful because he was the one who got you to come back into government after you’d been in the private sector for a little while. But it’s an attitude, it’s the idea, that this is possible, that these are wonderful places to work, if you’re doing a good job, that this is the most important public business that can be undertaken and you almost need a campaign to get people to do it because I don’t think you’re going to have anybody in this election who is going to be spending $100 million in order to get the most qualified candidates to run for any office. Deputy Mayor Holloway is absolutely correct. Apathy is the greatest danger we face. Elections have far greater consequences than we often credit them with. Whoever will be our next Mayor will select the leadership and chart the direction of every department of our government for the next four years. The choice of Mayor is not just between personalities and platitudes - as the media often seems to suggest; at its core, the choice is between policies and philosophy. This is not a choice to be taken lightly. What is at risk is not just the future progress of our city, but the very real possibility of regression in many areas where the city simply cannot afford to fall backwards. Henry J. Stern writes as StarQuest. Direct email to him at StarQuest@NYCivic.org. Peruse Mr. Stern’s writing at New York Civic. Page 26 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN The WesTchesTer Guardian ThursdaY, FeBruarY 23, 2012March 8, 2012 THURSDAY L E G A LNOTICES NOTICE LEGAL CLASSIFIED ADS Office Space Available- Prime Location, Yorktown Heights 1,000 Sq. Ft.: $1800. Contact Wilca: 914.632.1230 Prime Retail - Westchester County Best Location in Yorktown Heights 1100 Sq. Ft. Store $3100; 1266 Sq. Ft. store $2800 and 450 Sq. Ft. Store $1200. Suitable for any type of business. Contact Wilca: 914.632.1230 HELP WANTED A non profit Performing Arts Center is seeking two job positions- 1) Director of Development- FT-must have a background in development or experience fundraising, knowledge of what development entails and experience working with sponsors/donors; 2) Operations Manager- must have a good knowledge of computers/software/ticketing systems, duties include overseeing all box office, concessions, movie staffing, day of show lobby staffing such as Merchandise seller, bar sales. Must be familiar with POS system and willing to organize concessions. Full time plus hours. Call (203) 438-5795 and ask for Julie or Allison FAMILY COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF WESTCHESTER In the Matter of ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE SUMMONS AND INQUEST NOTICE Chelsea Thomas (d.o.b. 7/14/94), A Child Under 21 Years of Age Dkt Nos. NN-10514/15/16-10/12C Adjudicated to be Neglected by NN-2695/96-10/12B FU No.: 22303 Tiffany Ray and Kenneth Thomas, Respondents. X NOTICE: PLACEMENT OF YOUR CHILD IN FOSTER CARE MAY RESULT IN YOUR LOSS OF YOUR RIGHTS TO YOUR CHILD. IF YOUR CHILD STAYS IN FOSTER CARE FOR 15 OF THE MOST RECENT 22 MONTHS, THE AGENCY MAY BE REQUIRED BY LAW TO FILE A PETITION TO TERMINATE YOUR PARENTAL RIGHTS AND COMMITMENT OF GUARDIANSHIP AND CUSTODY OF THE CHILD FOR THE PURPOSES OF ADOPTION, AND MAY FILE BEFORE THE END OF THE 15-MONTH PERIOD. UPON GOOD CAUSE, THE COURT MAY ORDER AN INVESTIGATION TO DETERMINE WHETHER THE NON-RESPONSENT PARENT(s) SHOULD BE CONSIDERED AS A RESPONDENT; IF THE COURT DETERMINES THE CHILD SHOULD BE REMOVED FROM HIS/HER HOME, THE COURT MAY ORDER AN INVESTIGATION TO DETERMINE WHETHER THE NON-RESPONDENT PARENT(s) SHOULD BE SUITABLE CUSTODIANS FOR THE CHILD; IF THE CHILD IS PLACED AND REMAINS IN FOSTER CARE FOR FIFTEEN OF THE MOST RECENT TWENTY-TWO MONTHS, THE AGENCY MAY BE REQUIRED TO FILE A PETITION FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS OF THE PARENT(s) AND COMMITMENT OF GUARDIANSHIP AND CUSTODY OF THE CHILD FOR THE PURPOSES OF ADOPTION, EVEN IF THE PARENT(s) WERE NOT NAMED AS RESPONDENTS IN THE CHILD NEGLECT OR ABUSE PROCEEDING. A NON-CUSTODIAL PARENT HAS THE RIGHT TO REQUEST TEMPORARY OR PERMANENT CUSTODY OF THE CHILD AND TO SEEK ENFORCEMENT OF VISITATION RIGHTS WITH THE CHILD. BY ORDER OF THE FAMILY COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK TO THE ABOVE-NAMED RESPONDENT(S) WHO RESIDE(S) OR IS FOUND AT [specify address(es)]: Last known addresses: TIFFANY RAY: 24 Garfield Street, #3, Yonkers, NY 10701 Last known addresses: KENNETH THOMAS: 24 Garfield Street, #3, Yonkers, NY 10701 An Order to Show Cause under Article 10 of the Family Court Act having been filed with this Court seeking to modify the placement for the above-named child. YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to appear before this Court at Yonkers Family Court located at 53 So. Broadway, Yonkers, New York, on the 28th day of March, 2012 at 2;15 pm in the afternoon of said day to answer the petition and to show cause why said child should not be adjudicated to be a neglected child and why you should not be dealt with in accordance with the provisions of Article 10 of the Family Court Act. PLEASE TAKE FURTHER NOTICE, that you have the right to be represented by a lawyer, and if the Court finds you are unable to pay for a lawyer, you have the right to have a lawyer assigned by the Court. PLEASE TAKE FURTHER NOTICE, that if you fail to appear at the time and place noted above, the Court will hear and determine the petition as provided by law. Dated: January 30, 2012 BY ORDER OF THE COURT CLERK1 column OF THE COURT 2 column Get Get Noticed NoticedADS CLASSIFIED Office Space AvailablePrime Location, Yorktown Heights 914-562-0834 Prime Retail - Westchester County Contact Wilca: 914.632.1230 Situation Wanted WHYTeditor@gmail.com Best Location in Yorktown Heights 1,000 Sq. Ft.: $1800. Contact Wilca: 1100 Sq. Ft. Store $3100; 1266 Sq. Ft. store $2800 450 Sq. Ft. Legaland Notices, 914.632.1230 Advertise Today Store $1200. Legal Notices, Advertise Today Suitable for any type of business. Before speaking to the police... call George Weinbaum ATTORNEY AT LAW FREE CONSULTATION: Criminal, Medicaid, Medicare Situation Wanted: Lic. LPN will care for sick or elderly in your home day or nite. Exper Excell.Ref. 845.440.7454 or 845.417.5687. THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN Notice of Formation The Development Team of NY LLC Arts. of Org. filed with SSNY 1/20/2012. Off. Loc.: Westchester Cnty. SSNY designated as agent of LLC whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: c/o The LLC, P.O. Box 305, Lincolndale, NY 10540. Purpose: all lawful activities. JPANY, LLC Articles of Org. filed NY Sec. of State (SSNY) 12/21/2011. Office in Westchester Co. SSNY design. Agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of C/O Stern Keiser & Panken, LLP 1025 Westchester Ave. Ste. 305 White Plains, NY 10604. Purpose: Any lawful activity. THE FARM FOODIE, LLC Articles of Org. filed NY Sec. of State (SSNY) 11/28/2011. Office in Westchester Co. SSNY design. Agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process C/O Stern Keiser & Panken, LLP 1025 Westchester Ave. Ste. 305 White Plains, NY 10604. Purpose: Any lawful activity. 1250 PELHAM PARKWAY SOUTH, LLC Articles of Org. filed NY Sec. of State (SSNY) 1/23/2012. Office in Westchester Co. SSNY design. Agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of The LLC 20 Black Hawk Rd. Scarsdale, NY 10583. Purpose: Any lawful activity. ALBERT E. ALEXANDER ENTERPRISES, LLC Articles of Org. filed NY Sec. of State (SSNY) 12/21/2011. Office in Westchester Co. SSNY design. Agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of C/O Stern Keiser & Panken, LLP Ste. 305 1025 Westchester Ave. White Plains, NY 10604. Purpose: Any lawful activity.” GEORGIO FAMILY LIMITED PARTNERSHIP II Articles of Org. filed NY Sec. of State (SSNY) 12/6/2011. Office in Westchester Co. SSNY design. Agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of C/O Patricia G. Micek Esq. 2180 Boston Post Rd. Larchmont, NY 10538. Purpose: Any lawful activity BIG JAY’S DISTRIBUTORS LLC Articles of Org. filed NY Sec. of State (SSNY) 10/25/2011. Office in Westchester Co. SSNY design. Agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of C/O John P. Recchia 201 Tarrytown Rd. White Plains, NY 10607. Purpose: Any lawful activity. THURSDAY March 8, 2012 Page 27 LEGAL NOTICE SIGNATURE PUBLIC RELATIONS, LLC Articles of Org. filed NY Sec. of State (SSNY) 10/27/2011. Office in Westchester Co. SSNY design. Agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process C/O Randal B. Hayes 101 Ellwood Ave. 1E Mt. Vernon, NY 10552. Purpose: Any lawful activity. GEORGIO FAMILY III LLC Articles of Org. filed NY Sec. of State (SSNY) 12/5/2011. Office in Westchester Co. SSNY design. Agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process C/O Patricia G. Micek, Esq. 2180 Boston Post Rd. 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