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WPCNR PHOTOGRAPH OF THE DAY. By the WPCNR Flying Photographer. October 10, 2006: Today’s POTD zeros in on the White Plains Downtown:

Downtown White Plains Looking North. Photo by the WPCNR Flying Photographer
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WPCNR PHOTOGRAPH OF THE DAY. By the WPCNR Flying Photographer. October 10, 2006: Today’s POTD zeros in on the White Plains Downtown:

Downtown White Plains Looking North. Photo by the WPCNR Flying Photographer
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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. October 10, 2006: White Plains High School will dismiss early Thursday afternoon at 2:20 P.M. as the school stages a “lockdown drill” and Early Dismissal Drill, according to a letter sent parents this week by WPHS Principal, Ivan Toper.
During the Lockdown Drill school staff will “secure their classrooms.” Students will be instructed “to remain quiet and follow teacher’s instructions,” will not be allowed to leave the classroom and all cellphone communication will be prohibited while the mock “Lockdown” is in effect.
The Lockdown, according to the letter, “is a procedure used when there is an immediate and imminent threat to the school building population. The letter also announces a Crisis Response Safety Plan is being prepared for the school by the White Plains High School Safety Team.
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WPCNR THE POWER NEWS. From Westchester County Department of Communications. October 9, 2006: The public will have a chance this week – at four meetings in New Rochelle, Yonkers, Greenburgh and Port Chester to tell the state Public Service Commission what it thinks of Con Edison’s response during this summer’s storms that left tens of thousands of Westchester residents in the dark for days.
Responding to County Executive Andy Spano’s call for a state investigation of the utility’s preparedness and response and for public hearings in
There are three other ways for the public to give input:
“We in
Specifically, the PSC is soliciting input on the following:
· How were you affected by the outages?
· Do you think you received timely, accurate and adequate information from Con Ed or otherwise about what was happening before, during and after the service outages?
· Did you attempt to contact the company for information or assistance immediately before, during or after the outages and did you get what you were requesting?
· What are your overall impressions about how Con Ed responded under all of the circumstances related to the outages and your reasons for those impressions?
· What are your recommendations about actions you believe Con Ed should or should not have taken before, during and after the outages?
· What actions do you recommend the commission take in light of all that you know about these events?
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WPCNR PHOTOGRAPH OF THE DAY. By the WPCNR Flying Photographer. October 9, 2006: Today’s view is of the New York Presbyterian Hospital property in White Plains, looking South towards Long Island Sound. The area viewed for possible subdivision by the City of White Plains is the yellowish green strips in the background to the right of the United Methodist Church spire.

WPCNR Photograph of the Day: What a Subdivision! Photo by The WPCNR Flying Photographer
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WPCNR VIEW FROM THE UPPER DECK. By John Baseball Bailey. October 9, 2006: As The Bronx wallows in the gloom of the Yankee failure this last week, and reports of Joe Torre being fired after managing the Yankees to the most successful decade in their history, it is time to put things in perspective.

A different Game. Photo, WPCNR Sports.

Yankee Stadium, 2003 World Series. Photo, WPCNR Sports
Good pitching always beats great hitting. Great hitting kills lousy pitching. Let’s face it, the Yankee rotation was not reliable this year. When your number 1 starter just happens to turn up and take over the number 1 spot because he’s the only consistent starter, (C.M. Wang), when two over-the-hill pitchers (Randy Johnson and Mike Mussina) are relied on, and your only consistent pitcher pitches one inning a game (Manuel Rivera), you do not have a pitching staff.
You certainly do not have five strong starters which is what the Yankees ran into this last week against
And, let’s be fair – the Yankee infield is not a strong fielding infield. They have A-Rod at third who has no range – and has strange mental lapses – like failing to play close to the line in the lates. They have a shaky first base position which forces Robbie Cano to play two positions. Over a regular season, the bats fatten up and can win you 2 of every 3, but in a short 5-game series, your pitching has to be solid, and you have to scout the opposition well.
Moreover, you cannot let games get out of hand. Perhaps Joe Torre’s greatest flaw is his management of pitching in big games. How can you pitch Jared Wright in the biggest game of the season? How can you leave him in to choke up four runs?????
Then compound the felony by bringing in mop-up guys in a game you have to have?????
But, hey – Wang should have started – what was Joe saving him for? Then of course there was the leaving Mussina in to cough up the lead in Thursday afternoon’s turnkey game. Johnson getting hammered Friday night was no surprise. The Yankee middle relief the last two years has no ability to get out of jams. Johnson has not won a big game for us since he got here. The soft under belly of the Yankee pitching staff – inconsistent all season – was not equal to the task.
You have got to bring back Wang to start Saturday’s game. He had three days rest! You got to win Saturday before he gets to pitch Sunday – then roll Mussina and Johnson in for Game 5 on Sunday. Torre is incredibly uncreative when the wheels come off. He has confidence in all his players to a fault. But occasionally his pitching moves mystify.
He lost the Marlin World Series in 2003 when he conceded the fourth game in the 12th inning by inexplicably bringing in Jeff Weaver in the 12th instead of Rivera. I remember that game, too.
When the Yankee rotation gets discombobulated, Torre is slow to adjust. In the infamous
Sadly, the Torre managing job this last week recalls the managing of Casey Stengel in the 1960 World Series which cost Casey his job. Casey’s Yankees killed
The Yankees rallied in the 8th to go ahead of the Bucs 7-4 with Little Bobby Shantz of the Yankees having pitched 5 innings of terrific relief into the 8th. Gino Cimoli singled off Bobby to start the bottom of the 8th. Next Virdon hit a smash to short that hit a stone and bad-hopped Tony Kubek in the throat putting runners at first and second. Next Dick Groat singled, scoring Cimoli. 7-5 NY. And Casey’s out of the dugout. Now, mind you Shantz has not been hit hard. But Casey brings in Jim Coates – a starting pitcher without relief experience most of the season. He could have brought in Ryne Duren, Duke Maas or Luis Arroyo – all experienced firemen. But, nooooooo, he brings in Coates.
He throws gasoline on the fire. Coates induces Bob Skinner to sacrifice and the runners move up. 2nd and 3rd one out. Rocky Nelson flies to right. 2 out. Instead of walking Roberto Clemente, Casey and Coates pitch to him. The Great Roberto, as Bob Prince used to call him, chops a ball to first and beats it out for a hit and it is 7-6. Still Casey leaves Coates in. He has the flamethrower
But the Yankees rally. Tie it in the 9th. Who comes out to pitch the bottom of the 9th. Ralph Terry – a pitcher prone to the homerun ball. Mind you Casey could have brought the experience reliever Maas or the experienced reliever
Stengel also outsmarted himself in this series by starting off the series with Art Ditmar instead of Whitey Ford. Ditmar lost two games in the series. Ford won two. Just a quibble.
Stengel was fired at age 70. Something I never thought should have happened. Now today we hear rumors that Lou Piniella is going to take over for Joe Torre. I hope not. The Yankees have to go back to the winning formula of 4 starting pitchers who are consistently good. Remember Pettite, Rogers, Key, Gooden and Cone of 1996 – and Pettitte, Clemens, Hernandez in 2000 – and reaching back in time – how about Figueroa, Hunter, Ellis, Alexander and Hotlzman in 1976 – and Guidry, Figueroa, Gullet, Torrez and Tidrow in 1977. You have to have five solid starters.
The Yankees overestimated their pitching this year. But against the Tigers, the starters fell apart – early.
If Torre is fired Monday, GM Brian Cashman needs to go with him. Cashman had to know his pitching was weak and he did not deal for a big pitcher to shore up the Yankee staff down the stretch! He made the Abreu deal – but that was not what the Yanks needed. But perhaps he was prevented from doing that.
That is a trademark of previous Yankee pennant winning drives of the past. You do not need hitting in the shorts – you need pitching.
And speaking of managers who should go—How can Grady Little bring in an unknown quantity pitcher in Penny in the 7th of game one with the 5-4 lead? You don’t experiment when you have the lead, Grady. So what happens, Penny with the questionable back walks two Mets. Grady still leaves him in. You can’t hope for outs! You gotta make a move! And he had no bullpen heating to back up Penny. Game Over. Mets feast. Dodgers dead for good. Bad pitching management.
And Bruce Bochy of
As the Mets go into the series against
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WPCNR STAT. From American Cancer Society. October 8, 2006: Hope starts here on Sunday, October 15th as thousands of Westchester residents – moms, dads, children, grandparents, co-workers, breast cancer survivors and their loved ones – will join the fight against breast cancer by walking in the American Cancer Society’s Making Strides Against Breast Cancer event at Manhattanville College.
Making Strides Against Breast Cancer is a fun, memorable experience and a great way to get actively involved in the fight. Since 1993, Making Strides has been the American Cancer Society’s premier event dedicated to raising awareness and dollars in support of breast cancer research, education, advocacy and patient services. The success of the event has enabled the American Cancer Society to fund more than $295 million for breast cancer research projects since 1972. Dollars raised at Making Strides also help spread lifesaving breast cancer awareness messages; fund advocacy efforts for screening opportunities for all people; and help to ease the cancer burden for people facing the disease.
The American Cancer Society’s Making Strides Against Breast Cancer is a rallying cry for awareness, the venue to remember those who fought and continue to fight breast cancer, and an opportunity for us all to make a difference in the lives of people with breast cancer. It is also a chance to educate women about the importance of early detection and help change the alarming decline in the number of women going for their potentially lifesaving annual mammogram.
This year, there will be more than 110 Making Strides Against Breast Cancer walks taking place throughout the country in October. An estimated 400,000 walkers are expected to participate. Last year, 400,000 participants nationwide helped to raise more than $34 million for breast cancer research, education, advocacy, and services.
For additional information about Making Strides Against Breast Cancer or for general cancer information, contact the American Cancer Society at 800-ACS-2345 or visit www.cancer.org/stridesonline.
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WPCNR Press Box. THE UPPER DECK GUY By John Baseball Bailey. October 15, 2002. UPDATED October 8, 2006: WPCNR’s Upper Deck Guy wrote this article in October, 2002, and based on the Detroit Tiger tanking the last week of the season allowing the Minnesota Twins to win the AL Central, it is fitting to revive this column. I hate the Wild Card because it compromises the integrity of the game. By all rights the Tigers should be sitting home drinking Stroh’s instead of Dom Perignon tonight, because they dogged it for a month because they could thanks to the Wild Card booby prize.

Howie Rose, the New York Mets broadcaster was horrified too, remarking on the air how he always thought you wanted to finish first, and grousing about Detroit’s celebrating denigrating first place. Howie is right, and we hope he’s back after uttering that blasphemy. Tom McCarthy his sidekick tried to save Howie from himself with some comments about Minnesota’s great run. But, the damage had been done. Howie Rose spoke the truth. Now I don’t always agree with Howie, but he’s really right.
As far as the 2006 Yankees go, they prove why you cannot have playoffs in baseball involving mediocre teams. All you need is some hot bats and two hot pitchers and you can beat anybody. Let alone that the Yankee pitching was spotty all year, as was their fielding. Now let’s revive my old column written 5 years ago when two Wild Cards got hot and left better-constructed teams in the dust:
The laughing stock of baseball is about to begin. The losers will be playing for the World Championship as the San Francisco Giants and the Anaheim Angels, the two teams who finished second in their respective divisions in baseball ambushed the Atlanta Braves and St. Louis Cardinals, and the New York Yankees and Minnesota Twins, respectively to make it to the World Series.
The Fall Classic is about to become the Fall Basic, and establishment, politically correct sports authorities are touting this as good for the game.
I don’t think so.
The New York Times and the executives of baseball are already trotting out the virtues of the Wild Card, giving us those bromides today’s society uses to excuse poor performance, bad behavior, less than satisfactory standards. We are already hearing that the Wild Card is good for baseball because “It gives more teams a chance,” “It shows that low payroll teams can win,” “It’s good to see some new teams in there for a change.”
I say, “Bush!”
The results of the last two weeks show conclusively why baseball must contract to an even number of divisions, so only first place teams play to get in the series. For integrity’s sake.
Anything can happen in a short series.
And, what happened? You saw the Angels cannonade a Yankee pitching staff that either was given an overconfident scouting report on the Angels hitters, or could not execute when they had too. Why? Perhaps the Yankee management was overconfident. Though the Angels blasted Yankee pitching in the regular season, too. Not a good matchup.
However, this was also the same Angel team that kept pace with the Oakland A’s dramatically, but still fell short of the Oakland A’s pace in their own division, while winning just enough to hold off Seattle for the Wild Card.
Did the Bombers underestimate the Angels, or underscout them? But, the Angels should not have had a shot at the Bombers in the first place.
First Place Means Nothing in a Wild Card Setup.
The Bombers on the other hand made the major effort to oust the Boston Red Sox and win their own division. The Angels though keeping pace with the A’s, could not beat them head-to-head, to take the West Division of the American League. They should be out of there . But they are not, thanks to the notorious wild card.
Lest we take the Angel run as a great testimony to their worthiness, I suggest they were simply assuring themselves of the Wild Card over the Red Sox, and Seattle, not trying to overtake the A’s. They were trying to stay ahead of the Mariners.
And it did.
The same, “win just enough to get in” philosophy, applies to the San Francisco Giants. The Giants won just enough to overtake the Dodgers, who faltered miserably in the stretch, with the Giants not being able to handle the bigger challenge of overtaking the Diamondbacks, who though without Luis Gonzalez, and Greg Counsell (read, if they were the Yankees, Derek Jeter and Alfonso Soriano, comparable losses), held on to win first, because they thought it was meaningful.
The Wild Card gives teams an excuse not to leave it on the field.
Nature of Baseball and Softball: Form is Very Hard to Establish.
Now we have the prospect of watching a series between teams that finished second, whose management and players were not good enough to out-general-manage clubs that could be the best over a long haul, but are good enough and dangerous enough to give better teams trouble in one series.
The Giants and Angels could be accused of “backing in” to the Wild Card, because they knew all they had to do to reach postseason was to beat out the Dodgers and Mariners-Red Sox, respectively.
Getting the Wild Card is no big deal or great achievement. You just have to do well enough to finish second. The regular season performance becomes a joke.
Just as the Florida Marlins stole a trip to the series in 1997 by ousting the Atlanta Braves, as did the Mets in 1999, thanks to dumb managing of the Arizona Diamondbacks by Buck Showalter in Game 3, the maddening inconsistency of playing baseball illustrates why you simply cannot have a wild card system.
Last Hurrahs for Bravos and Bombers.
What the last two weeks also showed, was the fatal flaws in the Atlanta Braves, who put out the best pitching staff and best starting lineup in baseball year-in, year-out, but fail to get a good bench together to put up that strong pinch hitter up in the lates.
The end of the New York Yankees run: The Yankee pitching staff showed its flaws. It is old, and not as fast and effective as it used to be. The club forgot to play “D.”
All season, we saw a Yankee defense compromised by a slow moving outfield and a first baseman who cannot move to his left or right. We should also not forget that the Red Sox did not have Pedro Martinez the entire season.
This year’s Yankees looked vaguely like the 1964 Yankees on their last run before fading to oblivion for some time to come.
Congratulations to the Wild Cards.
The Giants and Angels sucked it up and played over their heads for 10 games and outperformed their opponents head-to-head, something they could not do during the regular season. Any team can do that, to borrow the NFL’s bromide, “on any given day.”
The results the last two weeks are very reminiscent of the Chicago White Sox (“The Hitless Wonders”of 1906), who beat the winningest major league team ever (116 wins), the Chicago Cubs in six games. It is tough to beat a team playing over their heads once you have already beaten them.
Bonds no Aaron or Ruth or Musial.
I resent the deification of Barry Bonds as another Babe Ruth. Bonds, a .292 lifetime hitter, Sammy Sosa, a .277 hitter and a host of .250 hitters are jacking homeruns off juiced-up baseballs and raw pitching.
Ruth hit .342 lifetime. Aaron hit .306 lifetime. Stan the Man hit .331 lifetime.
We should also not forget that Barry is a free agent attracted to San Francisco for the money, so much for the poor teams getting a chance.
The Angels and Giants are two of the richer franchises, though the Angels do have a lower payroll.
Can More Wild Cards Be Coming?
Bet on it.
America’s penchant for giving second chances just makes sense. This year, I’m sure New England Fans would have liked the Red Sox to have a Shot, and how about those sadsack Montreal Expos. Soon, the “competition” committee will have the first two clubs in each division make the postseason, I will bet, after the interest in this “Season of the Wild Card.”
Then how about the third place team with the best record in each league?
It will be an excellent solution to leveling payrolls. If all you have to do is finish at .500 to make the playoffs, why spend to improve? Why spend money on scouting to set up a good farm system?
Remember, the main interest now in the baseball season, is not who is going to finish first, but what teams are going to be the wild cards. A very similar situation exists in the National Football League.
Pretty soon, we may even see the handicapping schedule, an insidious device invented by the National Football League that allows lousy managed football teams like the New York Football Giants and the New York Jets to continue to have one good year, one bad year, and still give fans hope each year that they can win the super bowl.
When the Giants and Jets get the loser’s schedule, they finish over .500 and make the playoffs. When the next year the Giants play the winner’s schedule, they LOSE A LOT. But, that’s another column. Look for baseball to consider this.
The Roman Empire Syndrome
As baseball’s moguls and businessmen make baseball more like the other sports, pro basketball, pro football, and pro hockey, with everyone having a chance to win, they discourage the pursuit of excellence. The fact that the owner of the Minnesota Twins wanted to fold his team, which actually won its division this year, shows you just how much baseball owners care about the fans, great baseball, or doing what it takes to win.
The overwhelming majority of owners do the least amount possible, especially their commissioner, who since he took over the Milwaukee Brewers as provided that city with the flat beer of mediocrity, which is what we can expect to see in the next two weeks. Mediocrity on display: The greatest of the mediocre, to be sure.
I for one, will not watch one pitch of it.
Remember, the Tampa Bay Devil Rays beat the Yankees 4 out of 6 in the last two weeks of the season. Perhaps the Devil Rays were just making their stretch run, and maybe deserve a crack at the Giants or the Angels.
Believe me, some owner in the major leagues is going to read this last paragraph and take me seriously.

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WPCNR PRESS BOX. By John F. Bailey. October 7, 2006 UPDATED WITH MORE PIX COACH INTERVIEW: Joe Petit’s 67 yard sweep to paydirt on the Tigers second play of the day set the tone Saturday afternoon at sunsplashed Tony DeMetteo Field in Yonkers, followed by his pickup of a blocked punt and subsequent return of the poached pigskin to gave the Tigers a 13-8 lead at the half.
Paul LaBarbera hit Ray Mitchell on a flying crossing pattern over the middle for a 56-yard scoring strike to take Roosevelt out of the game to start the second half, then added a 5 Yard pretty pitch to Savaughn Green at the close of the third quarter to cap a day of aggressive defense and Tiger gang tackling and notch their first win of the season, beating Roosevelt 26-8.

Like Jim Taylor! Joe Petit, (# 10) on Tigers’ second play from scrimmage in First Quarter in left of picture turns corner on the Jet Sweep, thanks to terrific block by Mike Howard (15) just like Vince Lombardi drew it up for Jim Taylor in the 1960s. Petit then high tailed it down the sideline outrunning three Roosevelt defenders.

THEY’RE NOT GONNA GET HIM! Petit (10) outruns the last outpost at the 20 yard stripe on his 67 yard touchdown run at 3 minutes into the first quarter Saturday afternoon. Photos, WPCNR Sports.
The White Plains Tigers played a swarming vicious defense today and made big plays on the arm of Quarterback Paul LaBarbera to rip apart the Roosevelt High Indians. The Tigers spent much of the afternoon in the

After the opening series in which the Tigers stopped the Indians three times and forced a punt. The Tigers ran one play from from their own 33 picking up a yard, then a second. The second play was a pitch to Joe Petit who got a block sprung by Mike Howard, turned on the jets and outran three Indians down the side line for a 67 yard touch down run, the way Spencer Ridenhour used to do. Mike Howard kicked the point and it was 7-0 Tigers with 3 minutes played.
Tiger D-Time!
A Save, 2 Sacks and a Block.
After an exchange of series, a promising
On the next play, the orange and black sent a pack of Tigers streaming through the
The snap for the punt came backon 4th and a mile. Thompson took too much time and Gino Gisondi blocked the punt. Joe Petit picked it up on a bounce and turned into a rhino with speed, heading straight to the far side line, turning the corner and outracing three pursuers for a 35 yard return of the blocked punt for a touchdown. The kick failed and the Tigers lead 13-0 after the first quarter.
The Tigers stopped Roosevelt on their next two series,
LaBarbera Lasers Light up 3rd Quarter.
White Plains took the kickoff to start the second half and with a 3rd and 4 on their own 38, Labarbera dropped straight back, got 3 seconds to pass while Ray Mitchell angled down the side line into a slant pattern over the middle, 5 yards in front of the deep safety. Paul zipped it in to Rumblin Ray on the letters! Ray turned gracefully at the


The Tigers added another big play TD on their only sustained drive of the afternoon. After Petit recovered his second blocked punt of the afternoon at the

Shifty Shakes Loose: The big play came with a 4th and 6 on the
The Tigers controlled the ball the rest of the way for a solid 26-8 victory.
Coach Praises Dedication.
The Tigers had lost three games in a row, but Coach Skip Stevens had this to say about the Tiger commitment when asked how he keeped them focused and up:
“It’s a testament to our kids,” Stevens said, “We don’t have a lot of numbers and we’re very, very young. But there’s one thing that this team does. They get along and they work hard and they don’t give anybody a hard time. So when we say we have practice, they’re there. When we say we’re working hard they work hard. When we say practice is over, they go home. When we say we’re just going to get better every week, or every day, they don’t question what we’re trying to do, which I think is great. They just get better every single day. I think that’s self-motivation for them. They know how young they are, they know inexperienced we are, they start putting it together, and they keep their own morale up.”
Tuning the D
“The defense was better today based on condifence. We just simplied things,” Stevens said. “We played two different defenses today. Two different coverages. That was it. We knew they had a great back in Hogue (Douglas), and when he went down early (in the 2nd quarter), that made it a little easier for us, not that we let up, but it made it easier in the fact, that you’re not stopping a division one kid.”
On the Petit big play, Stevens described it as “the Jet Sweep,” “Great start. It’s called the Jet Sweep, we try to get the timing from the snap to the quarterback as fast as possible. Joe (Petit) was able to break one tackle because he’s so strong and he outran everybody.”

On the blocked punt that Petit scooped up and ran in for the 13-0 lead, Stevens said the Tigers try to pressure the offensive line, the snapper and the punter. “We just missed it early (when
Petit also saved a touchdown taking down Jeremiah Sanchez at the
Paul LaBarbera deserves kudos for his three excellent passes, for touchdowns to Rumblin Ray Mitchell (55 yards) and Savaughn “Shifty” Green for a 4th and 5 conversion and a touchdown. LaBarbera used the pocket, and threw perfect passes today to seal the first V.

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS NEWS & COMMENT. By Charles O. Lederman. October 6, 2006: On Thursday evening, the Council of Neighborhood Associations organized a presentation by Tim Connors and the Board of Education on their current bond proposal. The event was a disaster. Ken Werden, president of CNA and Mark Politzer, one of the organization’s long time leaders did not distribute announcements and advertisements as usual, or in time. The result was an embarrassment, maybe a dozen guests (about as many people as were sent by the schools) who mostly drifted over after a neighboring Reynal/RockeyDell Association meeting.
The District made its standard sales pitch, as it has at every opportunity (many open house nights at school included their presentation to the captive audiences). The District has also hired a marketing consultant to help them pass this bond issue, and has published some full-page and half-page advertisements in local “news” papers. This was my first time watching some new minions (for they are legion) of the school district, including the “construction manager” (the board’s latest feeble attempt to show that there is some impartial oversight).
One developer (whether he was an architect, financier, construction manager I cannot tell) stood before the audience and explained the complexity of the estimating process. They start with the overall cost of a “similar” project in Boondock County, then they inflate that project price for inflation since that project was completed, the extra cost of supplies in this area compared to the area where that previous project was, etc. In my own simple words it’s “Well, Boondock paid 20 million for a new school, you guys should pay 35 million because things are more expensive in
I asked if that is why there is a numerical common denominator to many of the line items I have been questioning since the Budget Committe meetings last winter. After all, that explains why we have so many line items costing multiples of 365, 730, 1460, 2920 etc. These guys started with the overall price they want (remember they are including whatever profit or excess was included in these prior “similar” contracts) then apportioned it among all of the line item jobs that they needed to be done. That’s how you end up with a $29,200 gas valve (that costs a few bucks in Home Depot).
You know how the lead architect answered me? “There is no numerical common denominator. It’s just coincidence.” Well I must be imagining the pages that they provided to me at the budget committee meetings, and all of the copies I have made and distributed. You all decide. I am still waiting for anyone to explain to me why any one of the line items is so extravagantly priced other than “oh, well, we might open a can of worms and have to do a whole lot more work.”
In the example of the $29,200 gas valve, one minion explained, “we might have to repipe the whole room.” My question to you all is, shouldn’t they know that before they estimate the job? This is all a smoke screen to keep you from understanding that IF THEY GOT YORKTOWN TO PAY THEM 30 MILLION, WHITE PLAINS CAN DISH OUT 40 MILLION, OR PLEASANTVILLE CAN DISH OUT 29 MILLION. THE DEVELOPERS ARE THE SMART ONES, BECAUSE THERE IS A BOARD OF EDUCATION THAT JUST ACCEPTS THIS PRACTICE WITH AN ARROGANT DEFENSIVENESS.
Dissent, Discussion Not Allowed.
Another man whose name I do not know posited that sinking millions of dollars into Mamaroneck Avenue School is a waste, because it is as old as Post Rd. School, and will likely have to be completely replaced by some other Board within a few years. Why build something just to tear it down? Again, Ken Werden said this was no place for opinion, ask a question or sit down.
One lady and another gentleman inquired as to why White Plains is the only district around that plans on building turf field stadiums solely at the taxpayers’ expense . . . all of the other towns have used grant writers and corporate donations as well as funds raised by civic organizations. I believe that the substance of Tim Connors’ answer was “That’s a good question.”
After each question was posed, and as the administration began it’s explanations, Mr. Werden pointed out audience members with hands raised saying “you’re next.” This had a terrible effect of interupting the flow of the answers, hurrying everyone along, discouraging follow up questions. There were also at least three warnings that argumentative questions and positions were not wanted. Three is my limit.
If the CNA forum is just a stage for a sales pitch, I’m not interested, so I left. Folks, this is the time for argument. If Werden wants peaceful meetings, he should join the girl scouts. Do any of you remember that there was a revolution fought over taxation without representation? Wake up and look around. You pay the highest taxes in the country already, and largely due to an ineffective (look at the scores) of inefficient (look at the numbers) school district. Now that school district wants to borrow 70 million dollars for you to pay back with taxes. For what?
So the school developers profit! I have met too many of you who blindly trust the bureaucrats and say “it’s for the kids,” or “they’re the experts.” Well, there were suckers in Roslyn,
And do you think you are represented? Do you even know when or where to vote on this issue, or that there is an election? Should the district be allowed to hire professional marketers to advertise for one side of an issue that is up to a vote? Is that fair when I, the opposition only have Bailey’s site (no offense John). By the way, the vote is on their machines, in their schools, collected by who? Counted by who? Overseen by who? You don’t know? Well neither do I. If you can find out, let me know. 55,000 voters in
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WPCNR POLICE GAZETTE. October 6, 2006 UPDATED October 7, 2006 12 Noon E.D.T.: White Plains Deputy Commissioner of Public Safety Daniel Jackson reports a 34 year old woman was attacked Thursday evening at approximately 11 P.M. while walking her dog on Old Mamaroneck Road. Police apprehended the same White Plains man who was charged for the robbery of a resident of 90 Bryant Avenue last week, and charged him in connection with the attempted sexual assault.
The official police statement from Commisioner Jackson: “Last night we arrested Elvis Mckenzie, a 20 year old from 115 Old Mamaroneck Rd. for attempted rape, assault, and sex abuse, for an incident that occurred on Old Mamaroneck Rd. at around 2250hrs. The incident occurred as a 34 year old woman was walking her dog on Old Mamaroneck Rd. She received minor injuries in the attack and the suspect was arrested at his Old Mamaroneck Rd. residence.
Mckenzie was also arrested on 9/29 for the robbery at 90 Bryant Ave. of another White Plains resident. He has been arraigned and remanded to the custody of the county jail. Both cases are now in the hands of the courts.”
Deputy Commissioner Jackson reports Saturday: “Mckenzie is currently being held at the county jail. We will certainly monitor his status due to his alleged connection to these serious incidents.”
Jackson said he could not comment on bail decisions of the court made in regard to the previous arrest.