Dr. Martin Luther King: An American Value

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WPCNR Daily Mirror. By John F. Bailey.  January 15, 2007:  I wrote this column in 2004. It still stands relevant today, Monday morning at 8 A.M. at the Crowne Plaza Hotel in White Plains, the man, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. will be remembered. I am not that familiar with Dr. King’s life, but I do know that he, like other great men of America who have their days, Dr. King’s name stands for a value that America holds dear.



 
George Washington stands for honesty.


 


Abraham Lincoln for freedom


 


Columbus for discovery,


 


Dr. King’s name stands for Opportunity.


When I think of Dr. King, I think of the Selma marches, I think of Birmingham, I think of Little Rock, Arkansas, where he lead the African-American community in demonstrations asking for the right of equal opportunity in America: a seat on a bus wherever they chose; a restaurant or hotel of their choice; the right to apply for a job without being turned down because you were black. Blatant in-your-face- discrimination was publicized by Dr. King and America was shown it was not right.


 


It took fearlessness to do that. Who today has that fearlessness that Dr. King and his followers showed all of America?


 


Today, subtle discrimination denying equal opportunity, and guaranteeing less opportunity are the evils that Dr. King, had he lived,  would be attacking today. 


 


When I write those sentences I just wrote, it seems incomprehensible to me that someone would deny another person that. When you think about it, it is an awful situation to think about. In the 38 years since Dr. King was murdered, the nation has come a long way in breaking down the visible barriers of racism based on creed and the color of one’s skin.


 


Today the barriers to Equal Opportunity are more subtle and just as effective.


 


Barriers still exist: in the classroom. There is reluctance to deliver quality education to the black and Hispanic populations in America today. This year, for the first time, the White Plains City School District has agreed to a pilot program of teaching English speaking and Spanish speaking students together in Kindergarten and the grades going forward. It is about time.


The only reason there is a concentrated effort to do so are the state achievement tests which showed the shame of our education programs for minorities. The Superintendent of Schools Timothy Connors is to be commended for pushing this program.


 


 


On the other hand, there is the perception elsewhere that because your name and skin color are different, you automatically need help and are slow-tracked into remedial classes; the inclusion of the slower (read minority) children in one corner of a classroom so you can deal with the “problem children” all at once; the notion that it is all right to use millions of dollars meant for rebuilding poor performing schools with better buildings, better teachers, but is used to create educational  bureaucracies for the politically connected instead.


 


In the last ten years the products of this subtle unequal educational opportunity have been well documented and given a name: The Achievement Gap. The educational establishment invests millions in studies to fine solutions to it and they have learned a lot about it. It takes more School District heads to stand up and say like Dr. King, “we simply are not going to educate half the population any more.”  Timothy Connors, to his credit, did that this year.


 


The lagging of minority youth is blamed on the home and family breakdown. Well then you have to bring more attention to the family unit and those youngsters’ home environment, putting the education in there. It’s expensive but if you want to solve the Achievement Gap you have to do that. The City of White Plains and the School District are reaching out to do that with the Family Excell program reported on this month in WPCNR (the only media to do so).


 


The argument that you have to speak English in the schools and learn through English is  racial superiority. Of course you have to learn to speak English, but really, Bilingual education is how we English-speakers learn another language.


 


Why not have teachers educate children in their own language with English simultaneously? It is proven to work in Port Chester and New Rochelle. It is time to stop the subtle prejudice that we do not want non-English speaking children in our towns and schools because they are too hard to educate and will cost us money to do that. They are children, you simply cannot throw them away because they do not speak English.


 


This discrimination Dr. Martin Luther King would find hard to take. He would bristle at lowering standards for minorities, because he would see right through that argument, saying:  when are you going to raise the standards for my people because you don’t have to work any harder at educating them if you do not raise your expectations for them.


 


I think Dr. King would look around today and appreciate how Blacks and Whites, Hispanics and Jews, Catholics and Protestants, Muslims and  other races mingle together in today’s America.


 


I think he’d observe we are all becoming more appreciative and respectful of each other. But, I do not think he would like today’s buzz word :”diversity” and our smugness about our diversity.


 


He would say that’s nice, but let’s keep our eye on the prize, to borrow the wonderful motto of the White Plains Department of Public Safety, let us treat all with integrity, professionalism, respect, and to that add opportunity.


 


Now, let’s think how Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. would handle the present homeless situation in White Plains. Where souls are being used for political posturing and to appeal to the fears of the citizens and not their sense of fairness and justice.


 


I believe Dr. Martin Luther King if he were in White Plains today would bring the homeless 40 or so  spending short nights at 85 Court Street to breakfast with him.


 


He’d introduce the “feared 40” all around to the rich and the powerful and the well-connected and show them the people whom they are treating like cruel political pawns by our leaders on the county and the city level – all over this county.


 


He’d ask each  to tell their stories at that breakfast tomorrow. He’d prey for compassion from us the wealthy, the powerful and the decent, and the respectable to have compassion for the weak, the misdirected, the addicted and disturbed.


 


He’d ask White Plains leaders to accept the responsibility of leadership and by reaching out personally to the homeless to provide them meals and, perhaps jobs during the day, to welcome them in to White Plains somehow. To help them make a new start in White Plains in a firehouse, a church, or a vacant hospital. To challenge businesses to weave these persons into the fabric of the downtown, instead of telling them they are not welcome.


 


He’d challenge us  to step up our humanity,  as Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. did when no one else would 38 years ago.


 


He’d shame  the two governments, county and city, for not treating the homeless with simple human respect and adhering to the constitution, which prohibits you from being jailed for no reason – a policy incredulously being pushed by politicians who should read the constitution just once in awhile to reset their minds.


 


He’d ridicule the county decision to make homeless wait in damp, cold conditions up to a half hour or more for vans to drive them one block — apparently to keep the homeless, black, Hispanic and old — from offending the well-heeled diners at a posh restaurant next door to 85 Court Street.


 


Why cannot the homeless simply show up at DSS instead of vanning, Dr. King would ask?


 


He’d wither the geniuses at the Department of Social Services  with scorn for taking up to 30 minutes to unload vans, then  locking them into a gated compound with two bathrooms for 30 people, no food, no midnight snack,  no television, no showers; herding them in like cattle, and out like cattle at 6 in the morning when they have schedule. No one wonder, Dr. King would say, why a lot are too tired to function during the day.


 


He’d ask White Plains to rise up and forgive the persons with the prison records who have done their time, and find jobs for them and through forgiveness, and respect for them,  melt away the homeless persons’ suspicions and resentments,  alleged by our “leaders.” 


 


And about our gangs: Dr. Martin Luther King would go out to the streets of Yonkers, Mount Vernon, Port Chester, New Rochelle, Peekskill – the cities where gang activity has been reported – and  speak to them about where they are going. (Perhaps he’d simply speak to White Plains youths, since we have been assured by our officials there are no gangs in White Plains.) It is difficult to say Dr. King would say to the gang members of our area. But, I assure you he’d be in their midst confronting this problem and admitting it exists.


 


As we honor Dr. Martin Luther King Monday. Ask ourselves what Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. would think of the way we have treated the homeless this week. What he would think about how we have “reached out?” Would he approve of the way we are working with our youth, our Hispanic population, about how dollars are being used for affordable housing and why it cannot be built faster, about how dollars are being spent in school districts whether on educating people or creating buildings or stadiums; how dollars are being spent by organizations supposedly helping the afflicted, and how they are really doing, and what are they doing with the dollars.


 


Would Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. approve?


  


He’d remind us that Jesus Christ chose to minister to the “hardcore” of his time. He went into their midst. He  healed them and made them fishers of men.


 


The way to honor Dr. King tomorrow is to honor the afflicted, help the troubled with dignity, not humiliate them, not shun them, not “throw them out.”


 

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Fire Department Fast Response Saves Homes of 50-60 on Mamaroneck Ave Block

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WPCNR FIRE REPORT. January 14, 2007: The fast response of the White Plains Fire Department to a fully invloved fire at the Cards and Things gift shop at 37 Mamaroneck Avenue early Sunday morning saving the homes of some 50 to 60 persons living above the stricken store. 



Deputy Public Safety Commissioner Daniel Jackson reports the Fire Department contained the fire to the store.  “Police and Fire evacuated 50-60 residents from apartments over the fire location. One woman was transported to the hospital as a precaution for stress. The store was gutted. The residents should be allowed back in. Possible smoke damage to a couple of apartments above, but fortunately nothing structural,” the Commissioner reported to WPCNR. Photo, WPCNR




“The Fire Bureau did a great job keeping it contained to the store. Upon their arrival the flames were pushing out the front of the store and threatening the above apartments.  The Cause and Origin team is investigating, no determination as of yet,” Commissioner Jackson reported. Photo by WPCNR



Aftermath. Photo by Don Hughes

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How Should White Plains Remember Ron Jackson?

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS POLL. January 13, 2007:


It’s real quiet without him.


The Last Activist, Ron Jackson, is here no more to speak truth to power, “afflict the comfortable and comfort the afflicted.”



The CitizeNetReporter, John Bailey, left with Ron Jackson, 2004, on the set of WINBROOK LIKE IT IS.


 In the silence marking the lacklustre public hearings on controversial issues recently, the straight talk he used to expose the  ugly issues behind the issues is missing. Not only has an advocate for the meek and a puncturer of the pompous left us, but no one’s advocating and no one’s puncturing. How is Mr. Jackson going to be remembered? WPCNR suggests some ways at the right.  Here’s why:


 


Monday, the nation and White Plains stops to laud praises on the man credited with galvanizing the civil rights movement, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. But on that day, at the Dr. Martin Luther King breakfast at the Crowne Plaza, perhaps our thoughts should go out just a little to how White Plains might honor its most vocal and effective activist. Ron Jackson fought hard for the Slater Center programs all his life in White Plains. He fought when the Center was going to be shortchanged in budget, or allowed to decline in disrepair.



Ron Jackson, 2005, when a stroke had made unable to walk. Yet he still did his show. So far no one has expressed interest in taking over Winbrook Like It Is — his WPPA-TV show that is now off the cable.


He spoke out.on minority hiring. He founded the Tenants Council at Winbrook, was elected to the Housing Authority and did much in his younger years to improve conditions for the residents there. For this alone he deserves remembrance.


In recent years he concerned himself with development, he advocated behind the scenes for education and made consciences in power respond. He was the lone voice in the White Plains political landscape that prompted black citizens to involve themselves, while smoothing the way for minorities in positions to do things to advocate for them with success.


In an indirect way, his lobbying support against the Housing Authority Building proposed adjacent to Bethel Baptist Church, created the White Plains Housing Authority Headquarters White Plains has today that is part of the community it serves and not an imposing government edifice. Jackson’s lobbying pointed the way to get a project done that had lagged for twenty years.


 A victim of poor education, he nevertheless swallowed his pride and delivered his strong message as best he could without fear.  


He was made to pay dearly for his activism when he wrote a Housing Authority check using bad judgment for a few hundred dollars that he should not have done.


He was often the lone minority voice in council hearings who came out to speak.


Mr. Jackson even forced the Democratic Party to run Dennis Power for Mayor in 2005, by volunteering to run himself when no one else stepped up, until he expressed interest. It was  his last confrontation with injustice.


Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., I’m sure  would have liked his style.


I think Dr. King would be pleased to have Ron Jackson on the dais with him Monday in spirit. So how is White Plains going to remember him? WPCNR has suggested some ways at the right.

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Sasha and The Skyliners Skate Manhattan

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WPNCR PRESS BOX. By “Edge” Bailey. January 13, 2007: Could the Skyliners, New York-New Jersey and Connecticut’s synchronized skating team come through with a fourth great skate in a row under pressure of skating with the best woman skater in the country, the Olympic Silver Medalist – the divine Sasha Cohen?


 



 


It was a Skyliners’ Night to Remember: Sasha (Cohen), the reigning United States Women’s Champion (in red)  and The Skyliners hanging out at The Pond in Bryant Park  right after the show. Photo by Kelsey Loveday.


 



 


The Skyliners Opening “The Sasha Show”  at The Pond  in Bryant Park, NYC, Tuesday. Photo, WPCNR Sports


 


That was the question at least the parents’ minds (The Skyliners skate with icewater in their veins)  when The Pond, the cheery, fashionable rink at Bryant Park invited The Skyliners back to perform on their ice for the Skyliners’ second public exhibition skate there in a month.



The Skyliners arriving at Grand Central Terminal.


 


All 16 Skyliners spent a full day in school,  arriving by train or “chaufeurred  limo” (parent-driven) from all over the metro area to meet at 42nd Street and Bryant Park at 4:30 for their 7:15 skate. When they arrived, they encountered the diminutive delight of the great white ice stage,  Sasha Cohen, practicing her routine.


 



Sasha Performing her Ena Bauer practicing up for her 7:30 Skate. Photos, WPCNR Sports


 



Skyliners warmup with their “Skyline” of the Empire State Building and the Bryant Park Hotel as their set.


 


But to call Sasha Cohen’s programs routines is like calling Sarah Brightman’s performances songs. Sasha performs sublimely, demonstrating body control and human flight more than any ballerina or dancer ever could


 


The Skyliners to a lady watched and watched.


 


There the champion was, performing 90 degree spirals (leg above the head) you could not believe: double axels about 5 feet off the ice, Russian Splits 10 feet in the air, and the dread Sasha swoon spiral with confidence and smoothness. She was concentrating intensely. There was religious silence across the rink as public skaters young and old who had stopped skating for Ms. Cohen to work out, watched the champion. Polite applause—respect with wonder —  greeted Sasha’s every execution. It seemed as if the rink crowd was observing a religious ceremony.


 



The Skyliners Do Homework, Waiting to Take the Ice at the 7:15 Show — Just like Champions on Ice


 


Well, The Skyliners watched “The Little Champ” up close. Perhaps watching the incomparable Cohen fly across the ice – smooth out her moves —  work at a nuance to get it right was responsible for the great skate the Skyliners put on when they took the ice to introduce the star pairs, Putnam and Wirtz, and the Supreme Sasha. Though interviews with individual Skyliners said skating with Sasha on the same ice did not make them skate better, they still skated to show they belonged. The Skyliners are professional that way.


 



Skyliners begin their Proud Mary skate.


 


The Skyliner performance was not that of teens skating to get things started, but a powerful prelude to the three stars to come, displaying all the elements that make synchronized skating exciting, dangerous, impressive and the highest demand of  teamwork in sports.


 



Coming at you in the shadow of the New York Public Library.


 



Check out that footwork as Skyliners skate backwards like Rockettes on Ice.


 



The Skyliners moving in their “Block” all bending the right leg and on their deep edges at a good 10 miles an hour.


 


The Skyliners received the invitation to keynote the show featuring America’s best lady skater on the strength of their flawless trooper performances at The Pond live on the Japan Fuji Network in 2005, last month’s holiday show, their skate in Albany at the Spitzer Inauguration and their 4th place finish in the Junior World Qualifier last Saturday. The young ladies turned in a hot, fast, spectacular skate to Tina Turner’s Rolling on the River


 



Rolling on the River: Skyliners coolly with attitude, ” Spread Eagle”  to a stop setting the ice stage for the Canadian Pairs Bronze Medalists and Ms. Cohen. The Skyliner choreography is  the only Synchronized Skating team  to execute a finish like this one:  Coach Babb’s daring high speed to slow, coming to a full controlled stop at the end of their Short program in the Junior division.


 



Take a Bow Girls!


 


Cheers, shrieks, sustained applause of a minute echoed across ice when The Skyliners smoothly executed their clever full spread eagle stop (with all 16 skaters in 40 degree spread eagle backward leans, ending their 2-1/2 minute program. For the fourth week in a row, The Skyliners had stepped up — at The Pond in December, at the Spitzer Inauguration, at the Colonial Classic rising to 4th in the nation — and again Tuesday night.


 


 They stunned the audience of about 1,000 hanging on the sideboards 15-deep,  with their 45 degree angle sharp edges, confident speed, speedy circles and block spirals,  precise footwork and close-in formations entered at 15-20 miles per hour. Josh Babb, their coach was very complimentary of The Skyliners, saying it was their best performance of the Proud Mary program to date.


 


 


 


The high school skaters aged 14 to 19, captured the attention 15-deep around-the rink audience.  Sustained applause and whoops greeted the spectacular, 16 spread-eagle conclusion of The Skyliners number. Skyliner Coach Josh Babb was ecstatic about the teens turning in another “step up” performance worthy of introducing Canadian Bronze Medal Pairs Champions, Elizabeth Putnam and Sean Krantz who burst on the ice and started flying.


 



Canadian Bronze Pairs Medalists, Elizabeth Putnam and SeanWirtz, skating to Sing Sing Sing, executing a Pair Combination Spin below.


 


 



 



Putnam & Wirtz spiraling.


 


 


Then it was time for Sasha Cohen to wow New York. In a silky smooth performance, the moves Sasha is famous for — unfolded in flawless symetry.


 



Sasha Cohen in her ultimate spiral.


 



Air Sasha Becomes Airborne! Faster than the speed of light. Photo by Kelsey Loveday


 



Ms. Cohen–Silk on Ice — Showing her incredible mastery,  executing the Catch Foot Spin. Photo by Kelsey Loveday


 



Saying So long to the Crowd. Ms. Cohen leads Putnam and Wirtz and The Skyliners in a skatearound at the conclusion of the ice show. For one night in their lives, The Skyliners enjoyed the thrill of a Champion on Ice.


 



The Skyliners are on a 16-20 hour a week practice schedule sharpening up their splices, closing up their blocs, straightening their lines, honing their footwork, this, on top of their school work, preparing for the Eastern Synchronized Skating Junior Championship in Providence, Rhode Island, coming up  January 26 and 27.


 


The Skyliners, by virtue of finishing 4th in the World Qualifier last Saturday in Lowell, Massachussetts gained the distinction of being introduced as “Second Alternate” (Team Braemar of Minnesota is the first alternate) to replace one of the teams in the World Championships in England in March – if for some reason The Chicago Jazz and The Colonials cannot compete.


 


The Skyliners have come a long way, baby, this season —  all the way to 4th ranking nationally, and are skating four days a week in preparation for the Easterns coming up,  to move on up. In skating, there is no limit on how good you can get. It’s up to you.


 


 



Racing to catch the 8:22 back to White Plains where tomorrow morning they’ll be “Sweet Sixteen and back in class again. “

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Knights Deliver a Knockout, Beat White Plains 91-68

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WPCNR SPORTSWIRE. Special to WPCNR. January 12, 2007: In the long anticipated matchup between undefeated Mount Vernon High and White Plains High this afternoon, the Knights prevailed over the Tigers, 91-68. A fan report notes that White Plains was still without defensive igniter, Spencer Smith, but that the Tigers did not play well. It was the fourth game in seven days for White Plains, who slid to 10-2 on the year. Fans can see the game for themselves Sunday morning on MSG.

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Nick Spano Grants to Greenburgh Lifted After Senator Loses.

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WPCNR’S THE FEINER REPORT. By Greenburgh Town Supervisor Paul Feiner. January 12, 2007: My office received a disturbing call from Kim Conklin of the Department of State. Last year Senator Nick Spano awarded the town $126,000 for a generator and a music lab at the Theodore Young Community Center. In November the Senator lost his re-election campaign. What happened? We were advised that all grants that were awarded in 2006 by the Senator’s office prior to the election were withdrawn.

The town relied on receiving this grant to fund both programs.  Two years ago – immediately after the Senate election was disputed – I received a call from a non profit organization in Ardsley that had received a substantial pre-election day grant from the Senator. The grant was in jeopardy. After the election was certified the grant was awarded.


This is politics at its worst. This highlights the need to reform the way Albany does business. I am hopeful that Senator Andrea Stewart Cousins office will be able to help. I am confident that she will be an important voice for government reform.

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Are You Ready for Some Commentary? Jim Benerofe Is Back on Monday Night.

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS WEEK NEWS. January 12, 2007: The Dean of Journalism in White Plains, Jim Benerofe returns to the White Plains Week News Team Monday evening at 7 PM on Cable Channel 76. WPPA-TV. Benerofe reunites with John Bailey, The CitizeNetReporter, and Peter Katz, “The Anchor for All Seasons,” to discuss the city hall cast of acting commissioners, the Schools Strategic Plan, Assessments, and the school budget. The show will be cablecast Monday at 7 PM on “The Spirit of 76”.


 



Former National Network Correspondent, Peter Katz, welcomes “The Old News Ranger,” Jim Benerofe back on White Plains Week Monday night for his take on the business and development scene in town.


Photo, White Plains Week

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North Broadway Civic Association to Rethink Variance for 35 Orchard Street

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WPCNR NORTH BROADWAY BEACON-SENTINEL. By John F. Bailey. January 11, 2007: Lively jawboning by Councilpersons Rita Malmud, Tom Roach (who lives in the North Broadway area), Benjamin Boykin and Arnold Bernstein swayed the North Broadway Civic Association away from endorsing  a zoning variance requested by a developer that would allow him to convert 35 Orchard Street to office use. The property formerly the home of the American Lung Association was purchased recently for $800,000 by the developer, Angelo Monaco.  



Location of American Lung Association house that is proposed to be turned into a commercial office. The developer has promised upgrading the reported deteriorated building and $10,000 of landscaping for Orchard Street. Google Capture by WPCNR.


Rita Malmud said this was the first time in her seventeen years on the Common Council that any neighborhood had supported turning residential property into commercial property, noting it was a “slippery slope,”  that could set precedent throughout the city for similar conversions. Benjamin Boykin echoed Councilperson Malmud’s sentiments, remembering how the council had voted down a similar rezoning on North Broadway adjacent a bank several months ago. Arnold Bernstein, the Councilman, voiced his concern for maintaining the quality of the neighborhoods.


Tom Roach, who lives in the immediate area was most concerned, calling the request for a variance before the ZBA “an end run,” noting that the developer going to the Zoning Board of Appeals without endorsement from the neighbors would have to prove he had not created a “self-handicapping situation,” as well as being subject to the ZBA’s challenge to grant a variance with the least impact on the neighborhood.  



Beil said the committee that had reviewed the developer’s proposal felt that the property was deteriorated and by allowing the variance with a prohibition on medical use, the neighborhood would be improved. Beil said the committee was afraid of what might happen to the property if it was simply rented to a residential tenant.  Beil attempted to call the vote, but after the Councilmembers spoke strongly against the variance approval, the auditorium of about 35 residents seemed very cool to the idea. Beil said at the close of the discussion, the Board and the committee would look more into the issue and not decision would be made that evening. Photo, WPCNR News


 

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DOT Promises Citizen Role Landscaping Exits 7 & 8 Devastation.Bradley Steps In.

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WPCNR BUMPER TO BUMPER  By John F. Bailey. January 11, 2007, UPDATED 12:16 PM EST: Nicholas Choubah, Regional Structures Supervisor for the Department of Transportation promised the North Broadway Civic Association tonight a role in planning how the devastated Cross Westchester Expressway- Central Westchester Parkway-Grant Avenue, Ebersole Rink corridor will be reforested after construction of the  entrance and exit at Exits 7  Westbound and Exit 8 Eastbound is completed.


It was also disclosed to WPCNR by Mark Triano of the DOT  that the work once completed had no built-in adaptibility to any possible Tappan Zee Bridge, Cross Westchester Expressway expansion to include light rail, it would all have to be done again to fit Tappan Zee expansion plans for the Cross Westchester corridor.



“Deforestation” of Exit 7-8 Northside of I-287. WPCNR believes this is adjacent the Ebersole Ice Rink. DOT promises landscaping will begin 2009. North Broadway Civic Association was promised a role in contributing to the relandscaping with a preliminary plan tentatively promised for their review within two months. 


Photo by Don Hughes for WPCNR



Adam Bradley, Assemblyman of the 89th District, brought Nicholas Chouba, center and Mark Triano of the New York State Department of Transportation to address the devastation of the North Broadway corridor above the DOT I-287 Construction. Photo, WPCNR News




State Assemblyman Adam Bradley facilitated the meeting between residents shocked at the naked earth surrounding both banks adjacent I-287, where there used to be trees, forest and cliffs and the DOT. A DOT official agreed that within two months he’d ask a DOT landscape design team for a preliminary plan, which the North Broadway Citizens Association would be given the opportunity to  review.

At first Choubah and Mark Triano of the DOT said residents would not see a plan for landscaping the area surrounding the Cross Westchester Expressway West and Eastbound in the vicinity of Ebersole Rink until September of 2009. Choubah said about $500,000 to $800,000 would be earmarked for replanting the slopes now bare of trees which were “deforested” by construction of the aerial-visible Tennessee Valley gas pipeline and the new entrance and exit ramp construction undertaken by the DOT. Assemblyman Bradley said that it was not a matter of money, but rather what the final project would look like that would determine the landscaping plan. He insisted the residents be given input in how their neighborhood would be restored.



Gutted Cliff at Entrance to I-287 Eastbound off North Broadway.


 Dec. 24 Photo  by Don Hughes for WPCNR 




Choubah said the DOT procedure in the past is to complete the project then commission an outside landscape contractor to relandscape the bare slopes. When Terry Conroy stood up and asked incredulously that the DOT honestly had no idea how they would relandscape the area when they have construction-designed every other aspect of the project, Mr. Choubah changed his tune and agreed to go back to the DOT and ask permission to have the DOT design department develop a preliminary plan.

Adam Bradley mediated between the two sides, and asked residents to call his office and report their concerns as the relandscaping plan developed.

Residents described the construction as a “deforestation.”  Part of this, Choubah blamed on the Tennessee Valley Authority relocation of their gas pipeline which, in order to be visible from the air, he said, had to clear the area surrounding the new pipeline route. Joseph Nicoletti, White Plains Commissioner of Public Works, commented that the Tennessee Valley Authority, the pipeline company, had told him they planned to replant the area around the pipeline right of way with shrubbery.

Choubah committed to a preliminary landscape plan within “a couple of months,” provided he got permission.


 



View of North Broadway Neighborhood looking South at the Entrance to I-287 Eastbound.


Dec. 24 Photo by Don Hughes for WPCNR


Citizens, numbering about 40, (including six Common Councilmembers, Mr. Bradley, and County Legislator Bill Ryan), said that a number of mature trees had been cut down, and replacing them with saplings and small shrubs would not compensate. Choubah said it has been the DOT experience that large trees did not plant well in relandscaping projects of the past.


What came out of the meeting was a commitment by Choubah to neighborhood involvement and approval of reforestation efforts, but that the area would remain in its defoiliated state for at least two and a half years, the relandscaping not expected to begin until fall of 2009.


Mark Triano, Mr. Choubah’s construction manager for the project told WPCNR after the meeting that the Exit sequence when completed would eliminate the weaving pattern of westbound traffic exiting across entering traffic at the entrance to I-287 at the city’ s eastern gateway.



The offending Entrance/Exit Combination began construction last September with this ghastly traffic pattern first pointed out by WPCNR. Photo,  WPCNR News Archive





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Ryan Appoints Pinto Legislative Chair

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From Legislator Bill Ryan’s Office. January 11, 2007: Westchester County Board Chair Bill Ryan (D-I-WF, White Plains) appointed County Legislator Vito Pinto (D-I-WF, Eastchester) Chair of the Board’s Legislation Committee, effective January 10.  Pinto has given up his current position as Majority Whip to assume the position. He replaces Legislation Committee Chair County Legislator Clinton I. Young, Jr. (D-I, Mt. Vernon) who was elected the Board’s Vice Chair at Monday’s Board meeting.

“We have a great deal of important work ahead but right now, the most pressing task at hand is the legislative package we’re putting together to bring to Albany,”  said Pinto. “We have many important issues on the table, including significant public safety measures as well as several initiatives that would lead toward critically needed property tax relief. I’m hopeful that with the new governor, we will have a very productive year.”


Pinto, a Tuckahoe native, was the first Democrat to be elected by the 10th District. Prior to his election as County Legislator in 1997, Mr. Pinto served on the Tuckahoe Village Board from 1983-1985 and the Eastchester Town Council from 1985-1997. He enjoyed a 32-year career in education, retiring from the Tuckahoe School District in June 2002.


During his tenure on the Board, Pinto has chaired the Committee on County Officers and Departments, the Public Works Committee and the Parks Committee.  A Vietnam War veteran, he is an outspoken advocate for veterans’ issues. He’s a staunch supporter of issues related to senior citizens, youth, the disabled, the County’s parks and public safety. Pinto sponsored legislation to keep guns out of the hands of kids and has successfully urged the County to upgrade its emergency response services. He is the Board’s liaison to the Westchester County Parks, Recreation and Conservation Board.


Legislator Pinto is a 1958 graduate of Tuckahoe High School. He earned his BS Degree in Industrial Arts Education from SUNY Oswego and a Masters in Guidance and Counseling from New York University.

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