Floods Close Target Store, Public Library. City Hall Springs Leak.

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WPCNR MAIN STREET JOURNAL. July 19, 2005, UPDATED 5:30 P.M. E.D.T.: The Target Store in the City Center reopened this morning on schedule, after being forced to close due to flooding of their first level (below Main Street) due to what  is described as a “25 year storm” that engulfed White Plains Monday afternoon at approximately 4 PM. The store manager of Target said he did not have an explanation of why the flooding entered his store at this time. The Target store switchboard advised WPCNR portions of the lower level of the store were cordoned off, but the store was open for business.


WPCNR also has learned from a CitizeNetReporter attempting to visit the Library on Martine Avenue that the White Plains Public Library sustained flooding causing it to be closed all day. This was not announced to the media. A Reference Clerk told WPCNR this afternoon that the Library sustained “some leakage,” causing it to be closed and that the library would reopen tomorrow. She said no books or library material had been damaged. Another CitizeNetReporter noted to us that the library’s Trove construction suffered water damage but that has yet to be confirmed.


Another CitizeNetReporter checked in this afternoon, reporting that the Crowne Plaza Hotel (located off Maple Avenue), also sustained “severe water damage” from the storm.


The White Plains Hospital Center experienced flooding at their old emergency entrance and had pumps removing the runoff.


Meanwhile across the street from the City Center  in city hall, the lower level also experienced flooding Monday afternoon through the Budget Department. It is reported that fans are being used to dry out the carpeting on the lower level of city hall.


WPCNR has placed a call to Cappelli Enterprises for an explanation of why the flooding occurred, other than, of course, the rain. The hearsay around city hall is that this was a 25 year storm and the storm water drains are not equipped to handle a storm where so much rain fell in such a short period of time.


 

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Spano Calls Gov and FAA Tighten General Aviation Security Like Westchester’s

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WPCNR AIR NEWS. From Westchester County Department of Communications and WPCNR. (EDITED) July 18, 2005:  County Executive Andy Spano Monday sent a letter to the nation’s Homeland Security Chief urging the federal government to require standardized security measures at airports nationwide.


Spano announced that the Westchester County  Airport planned to spend an additional $4 million within the next four months on a wide-area computerized surveillance system to help detect intruders, such as the young man who stole a Cessna from Danbury Airport last month and flew it into Westchester County Airport (as reported by WPCNR) undetected by New York Radar Approach Control. The County Executive’s announcement today joins a chorus of suggestions by United States Senators and Representatives to exact fines as high as $100,000 for incursions into Washington, D.C. airspace.



Danbury Municipal Airport, Connecticut, site of The Case of the Purloined Cessna. The young man who stole the Cessna was familiar with both the plane and the airport, having been acquainted with the flight school which owned the airplane. Photo by WPCNR News.


                                                  


In light of the June plane heist, the County Executive called on the  Department of Homeland Security and the FAA to implement measures at general aviation airports nationwide. He demanded the FAA institute the following.


ü      Require 24 hour security at airports serving light general aviation only (such as the Danbury Municipal Airport).  Many of these small airports close at night and have no security systems or manpower in place, Spano said.


ü      Require every aircraft to have a transponder no matter what its size.  This will ensure that contact is able to be made with every aircraft.


ü      Implement a uniform national photo ID system for light general aviation pilots. Currently, GA pilot licenses do not include a photo. Pilot licenses should be at least as good for personal identification as driver’s licenses.  (The FAA already is implementing a program to achieve this.)


 


          Spano said the case of a joy-riding 20-year-old who stole a small aircraft from Danbury Airport and landed at Westchester County airport last month is proof that general aviation security is lax. Writing to Homeland Security Chief Michael Chertoff and the Federal Aviation Administration, Spano said the stunt pulled by an alleged drunken Philippe Patricio and two young friends on June 22 could have been deadly. 


       “The ease with which this student pilot was able to take the plane raises serious concerns about the current security regulations governing general aviation and the vulnerabilities of the general aviation sector,’’ wrote Spano. “It is my understanding that Danbury Municipal Airport holds a Class IV Airport Operating Certificate under FAA regulations and that airport operators holding Class IV certificates must provide safeguards to prevent inadvertent entry to aircraft movement and safety areas. If the Danbury airport complies with your regulations, then obviously your regulations need to be strengthened, given this recent incident.’’


 


White Plains Aviator Comments


 


WPCNR contacted Peter Katz, publisher of “Aviation Monthly” and safety columnist for “Plane&Pilot” magazine for comment about the County Executive’s news release.


 


“Much of what Mr. Spano proposes already is being done,” Katz said. “The FAA and homeland security have been working with aviation organizations to enhance security efforts at small airports. Typical is the nationwide Airport Watch program. The FAA is phasing in new pilot certificates with enhanced security features. In the interim, regulations require pilots to carry government-issued photo identification. Pilots even have to produce a government issued photo i.d. for such routine things as being examined by an FAA-approved doctor for renewal of their medical certificate which is required to fly,” Katz said.

Katz noted that the County Executive’s proposal regarding transponders (electronic devices onboard aircraft which help ground controllers identify aircraft on their radar scopes) could require a major restructuring of the air traffic control system, including replacement of radar and computer systems, and the hiring of hundreds of additional air traffic controllers.

Katz, who is a pilot and flys out of Westchester County Airport, said that the upgraded security in place at the airport has been effective and is accepted by the pilot community. “However, recent events have proven that vulnerability exists in modes of transportation other than aviation,” Katz noted.


 


        Spano, who on June 22 promised to lobby for tighter airport security, said that he has already contacted  federal representatives to urge that security measures that exist in Westchester be adopted across the board. 
        
Westchester, according to Spano,  has spent millions of dollars to upgrade airport security and has worked cooperatively with fixed based operators at its airport to raise the level of security for small aircraft. Tie downs, wheel locks, chains and a common employee ID system are all being used successfully to improve security in Westchester

                                                                               


“The potential terrorist targets in the county, as well as the county’s proximity to New York City, have heightened our own awareness and have led to some significant security improvements at the airport,’’ said Spano. “All of the controls we have put in place were done in cooperation with the fixed-based operators that use the airport. The FBOs have been willing partners in our mutual efforts to make sure no one can steal a plane from the Westchester County Airport,’’ said Spano.


    

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Bradley Cites Real Reform Real Results From Albany this Session. A Review

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WPCNR’S ADAM IN ALBANY. By Assemblyman Adam T. Bradley. July 18, 2005:  Many people have said that this year’s legislative session was one of the most productive in decades. In addition to passing the first on-time budget in 21 years, several bipartisan reforms were signed into law. The Assembly also passed historic rules changes opening up state government and making it more accountable to the public. Here are some other examples of major achievements from this legislative session.

 


 


Making government more accountable and open


 


Legislation I supported passed the Legislature to improve oversight of the state’s public authorities and public benefit corporations. The measure has the support of the state Senate and governor. Scandals and fiscal mismanagement continue to plague public authorities. Authorities need to be reined in and made accountable, and this legislation (A.9007) will do so by:


 


·        creating an inspector general with jurisdiction over authorities to make sure they are given the kind of oversight they’ve been lacking;


·        creating the Authority Budget Office to review authority budgets;


·        mandating training for authority board members, strengthening ethics and prohibiting authority executives from sitting on authority boards;


·        improving standards for independent audits of authority spending; and


·        establishing new rules to regulate the sale of authority property


 


Another bill to open government was signed into law clarifying existing FOIL provisions and streamlining the request process (Ch. 22 of 2005).  The law has the support of government watchdog groups and the New York State Newspaper Publishers Association.


 


Under the legislation, the FOIL law would also:


 


·        require timely responses to FOIL requests;


·        require in writing an agency’s inability to grant a request within 20 business days; and


·        take into consideration special circumstances in granting a request, such as large number of records that must be collected.


 


The legislation helps close one of the biggest loopholes, which has allowed government offices to simply ignore a FOIL request. The public and press will now have a legal recourse if an agency fails to respond. Failing to respond will be treated as a “denial,” which opens an appeal process.


 


 Curtailing special interest lobbying


 


Billions of taxpayer dollars are spent every year on state and local government contracts. Often, there is little or no oversight of behind-the-scenes lobbying efforts to obtain these contracts. This year, the Assembly, Senate and governor reached an agreement to limit the influence of lobbying on the awarding of state and local government contracts.


 


The three-way agreement reforms the procurement process by:


 


·        creating a restricted contact period in which all communication for negotiating contracts will be made by designated contact officers;


·        raising the threshold of allowable expenditures and compensation to require lobbyist registration from $2,000 to $5,000 annually; and


·        prohibiting payments to lobbyists contingent on the acceptance of a bid or contract by any governmental entity, or other procurement-related decisions


 


Stopping taxpayer-funded Viagra for sex offenders


 


Providing sex offenders with Viagra is like giving dental insurance to sharks. It is simply unacceptable for taxpayer dollars to go toward sexual performance-enhancing drugs or procedures for convicted sex offenders.


 


The three-way agreement between the Assembly, Senate and governor will ban the use of public funds to cover Viagra and other medical techniques intended to enhance sexual performance for registered sex offenders (A.8999). This legislation is a common sense response to disturbing revelations involving sexual predators. We are taking tough, aggressive steps to prevent, punish and monitor sexual predators who stalk our streets, playgrounds and neighborhood.


 


I authored a bill which passed both houses of the Legislature to create a new crime called compelling prostitution. A person would be guilty of compelling prostitution when, being twenty-one years of age or more, he or she knowingly advances prostitution by compelling a person less than sixteen years old, by force or intimidation, to engage in prostitution (A.6723). The crime would be considered a class B felony and an individual found guilty under the law could serve up to 25 years in prison


 


Another bill which passed the Legislature would ban sexual predators from working on ice cream trucks (A.2550). Ice creams trucks attract young children as customers, especially in the summer. The only thing a child should have to worry about is what flavor to choose, not who is serving the ice cream. We must prevent sexual predators from taking jobs that bring them in close contact with youngsters.


 


I am encouraged by what we were able to accomplish during this legislative session. Our work is far from over and I look forward to working together in a bipartisan manner to find solutions to the unresolved problems facing New Yorkers.


 

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Hispanic Coalition Schedules Conference on Day Laborers Issue

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WPCNR MR. & MRS. & MS. WHITE PLAINS VOICE. July 18, 2005: A reader passes along this news of an attempt to come to grips with the issues of day labor in Westchester County.


Greetings!


 Through my work with the Westchester Hispanic Coalition, I’ve become more aware of the polarizing that seems to take place in communities centered around immigration issues, day laborers and related things.


Because of some good luck and hard work, the Westchester Hispanic Coalition has been able to bring together some excellent resources and experts in the field into our region on Friday, July 29 to share best practices, and  hopefully, to illustrate some solutions that have worked in other communities.


See below — please feel welcome to join us, and to invite folks from towns and villages that you interact with who you think may have an interest in learning more about this subject.


 The Westchester Hispanic Coalition in collaboration with the Institute of  Policy Alternatives at Sarah Lawrence College and the National Day Laborer  Organizing Network are pleased to announce the presentation of an educational forum on Day Laborers on July 29th from 10 am to 11:30 am at  Titsworth Lecture Hall, Sarah Lawrence College.  The forum will focus on political and economic sources of the upsurge in immigration to the U.S.,  and will highlight the efforts of people in cities around the country to constructively address issues presented by the presence of immigrant day laborers. The workshop will help illustrate “best practice” models from other areas, and explore some of the aspects faced by individuals who come here to work, as well as the effects on local communities.



Participants in the program include Pablo Alvarado, National Coordinator  for the National Day Laborer Organizing Network; Dean Hubbard, Joan Woodward Chair in Public Policy and Advocacy & Director, Institute for Policy Alternatives, Sarah Lawrence College; and Abel Valenzuela, Director of the Center for the Study of Urban Poverty at UCLA.  The forum will also feature presentations from local day laborers.

 Please save the date and join us for this important event!

 Sarah Lawrence College is located in the City of Yonkers at the border of Bronxville ­ only 15 miles north of midtown Manhattan & just a 30-minute  train ride from Grand Central to the Bronxville station on the MetroNorth Harlem line.
Mailing address:  1 Mead Way, Bronxville, NY 10708  For more information on the forum, please call Dana Weimar at the Westchester Hispanic Coalition: (914) 948-8466.

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Still the Top! Anything Goes is “Neat-0s!” Price a Blockbusterette!

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WPCNR IN THE BALCONY. Review By John F. Bailey. July 15, 2005: If Westchester County has one venue where you can put on the ritz, go back in time when white tie was sublime and love trouble, money trouble, and crime trouble could be tapped-danced and sung away, it is Westchester Broadway Theatre.


 


Cue the flashy blonde belterress, Paige Price driving the imcomparable Cole Porter lyrics of You’re The Top, Blow, Gabriel Blow,  and Friendship cue a company that pours vintage Broadway wine like Anything Goes, into sparkling seltzer, smartly delivering the tasteful, still-funny-after-all-these-years one liners and Marx Brothers high-jinks that make Desperate Housewives and Sopranos fans and 20-somethings laugh,  you’ve got Westchester’s summer hit, Anything Goes.


 



 


PAIGE PRICE and her Angels, reprises Ethel Merman’s Reno Sweeney role with gusto, style, panache and sex appeal, intricately building the end of the first act show shopper title tune that brought down the bravos with applause ringing into intermission. Photo by John Vecchiola, Courtesy Westchester Broadway Theatre





Anything Goes, WBT’s summer escapade,  sends you back to when going to a show was your turn to paint the town red, your time to dine at a little bit of the old Stork Club, too, before you take a cruise on the SS America, stroll the decks, tap your feet to the dancing feet and listen to the lyrical cocktails of the immortal Cole Porter.


 


As WPCNR has noted in past reviews, WBT lives on bringing back proven Golden Oldies of Broadway recreating the escape of yesteryear and AG is no exception.


 



 


Robert Bartley as lovestruck Wall Street whiz kid, loving up Cristin Boyle, playing high faluting heiress, Hope Harcourt, singing to her It’s Delovely in an intriguing duet that Cole would have loved. Photo by John Vecchiola, Courtesy Westchester Broadway Theatre.


 


I tell you folks you see a show like AG and you start to cook up your own musical as you watch. Can you imagine how Anything Goes might have been created? Excuse me while I light up a Cuban cigar and tilt back my fedora.


 


So, listen here, Pallie. I got this great idea for a show. Wall Street boy loves uptown girl, see, she’s engaged to an English blueblood.  The quail and English swell are going on a transatlantic cruise, see. But Wall Street boy just can’t get her out of his head, even though this slick show biz dame who’s a knockout – I’m seeing that lemontop Paige Price for the part, baby — is nuts for him.


 


Wall Street boy’s tipsy boss tells him to sell Amalgamated stock before boss sails. Wall street whiz kid goes to the ship to see his boss off, sees the girl he’s ga-ga about, and he can’t let her marry the swell.  With me, Pallie? Two gangsters on the lam talk Wall Street boy  to stowing away using their buddy Public Enemy Number One-who’s-a-no-show’s  passport.


 


Meanwhile, the showbiz looker and high stepper is on the cruise. The heiress dame is on the cruise and Wall Street Boy decides to win her back, while he and the gangsters hide out aboard ship. I can get Paige Price for the part,  we get Cole Porter to do the songs! Whaddaya say?


 


So you want to cruise the lifestyle of the rich and decadent of the 30s? Everybody wanted to back in the 30s.  They longed for the life of the easy money, the tuxedo evening, the lure of the gangster. Cole Porter’s Anything Goes captures that and WBT brings it back.


 


The Way it Was Is Again.


 


Plot sound contrived? Sound difficult to follow? That was musicals in the 30s folks and you know what? It still works like a double shot Manhattan straight up with a shot of soda!


 


Setting that plot all up makes the first 10 minutes a little slow, but then the SS America’s big whistle blows,  the company sings Bon Voyage and you know this is the start of something big because the Cole Porter standards just keep on coming.


 


The Beltin, Tough Talking, Good Lookin Angel Paige Price.


 


Paige Price as Reno Sweeney eased into the Merman role in the performance I saw. She is just a little tentative articulating all the fancy-schmancy Porter lyrics in You’re the Top, her first big number  with the eager Robert Bartley in the Bing Crosby role of Billy Crocker, Reno Sweeney’s foil.


 


Mr. Bartley handles his singing well with Ms. Price. She dominates him, toys with him as those Merman songs were written for her to do. But the game, boyish Mr. Bartley saves himself and comes on strong in this classic answer song that has just got to be God-awful to sing.


 


 It’s fast, requires explicit lyrical articulation of Mr. Porter’s $5.00 words. Bartley and Price will get better and better at their interplay. Hang in there, Mr. Bartley!  May the syntax be with you. The couple are electric together and hey, Ms. Price is genuinely attractive, and they’ll conquer this most difficult of Porter songs.


 



 


 


Paige Price leading a revival on deck as Reno Sweeney, singing Blow, Gabriel Blow in Act II. Photo by John Vecchiola, Courtesy, Westchester Broadway Theatre.


 


The show’s a visual knockout like Ms. Price. You see it in the glamour gowns of Ms. Paige, Ms. Boyle and their bevy of dancers who make up the passengers on the S.S. America. Costume designer Brian Hemesath makes the women dazzling scene after scene, legs in stunning display,  the leading men crisp, the sailors in impeccable whites. It’s the original “Love Boat.”  The color of the costumes just works in visual harmony and pleasure  with Andrew Gmoser’s lighting design that creates dawns and starry nights on the silvery sea.


 


The ocean liner set with its shimmer of sea on its cych and all-business smoke stack works. Even the whistle is genuine Pier 42.  The clever creation of cabins appearing out of a wall and the transformation of the little stage into a promenade deck is believably created by  Set Designer George Puello.


 


It’s all about the atmosphere, see?


I know the jokes are corny, but everybody laughs!


 


The book puts together absurd situations to  set up songs, a Cole Porter musical trademark, which he used to explore the anxieties of the upper classes. Their major anxieties: money and love.


 


Throw in a gangster, the comic genius, Bob Arnold as Moonface Martin, a couple of Chinese guys, a moll with a heart of gold Erma, played by Linda Gabler, (who does a saucy delivery of Buddie, Beware), are the wranglers of the plot who pull off the sight gags, the absurd ruses that moved musicals along in the 30s. (The musical moves like that last sentence!)


 


Arnold as the gangster Moonface and Ms. Price’s Reno Sweeney really engage the audience with the buddy song, Friendship, another high moment.


 


And, Pallie, did I mention the dancing?


 


I gotta tip my fedora to that master of staged mayhem Michael O’Steen who with Director Charles Repole show Mr. and Mrs. Weschester what tap dancing is all about. When Ms. Price and the whole company come out to do the big blockbusta windup of Act I, Anything Goes, the whole stage is clattering with a staccato extravanganza of tapping, clicking flashing legs that brought out bravos, roars and spontaneous clapping from sophisticated Mr. and Mrs. Westchester.


 


The foist act, I’m telling you, Pallie,  just knocked over the house. They applauded a minute into the intermission. Ya gotta see these kids do this material, Pal.


 


The slick sleight of shoe comes into play on Ms. Price’s other bigtime blow, Blow, Gabriel, Blow and their dancing makes the little stage of WBT look bigger than it is.


 


Corny Jokes? Yeah, Pal, but you gotta hear the way the audience laughs.


 


I mean, they have sight gags. Nobody laughs at sight gags anymore, right? They do! Pallie, they do!


 


Give you an example: guy and gal drop a bottle over the side of the ship. Then they go over to the rail in a few seconds. A splash is heard and the audience breaks up. A cartoon gag. I tell ya, the old jokes work, you gotta see it.


 


This guy who plays the Wall Street tycoon,  Don Bovingloh as Elisha Whitney, he does a great drunk, and the audience laughs. His Eli Yale routines on old Yale songs yuk the audience up, and you know, he even gets laughs out of a stuffed bulldog.  Who have I forgotten? The mother of course, Lorraine Serabian as Hope’s mother, milks great laughs from her hilarious pursuit of a rich husband for Hope.


 


Bob Arnold the veteran WBT performer gets more mileage out the Moonface Martin gangster role than any actor has the right to expect. He makes a machine gun funny. (Ya gotta see this gag.)


I tell you, Pal, you know the jokes that are coming, but you still laugh. I can’t believe it. This company really loves the material, you can tell.


 


Everybody works in this cast.


 


What’s there not to love? You got Paige Price the Harlowesque sweetheart in the Reno Sweeney role who plays that wisecracking showbiz broad to perfection. No man makes a fool out of her. She commands the stage,  is just right for the sheaths and slinky gowns (I long for the days of the sheath dress!) that define her as the show goes by. Not every woman can wear a sheath like Paige Price can.


 


Price is good even when she’s not singing. She is particularly believable at showing piqued sensual interest and intrigued foil to Lord Evelyn Oakleigh’s transformation into a man she could love in Act II. (Hint: It’s “The Gypsy” in him!). She delivers the demanding Blow, Gabriel Blow,  cruising with her lusty contralto on the chorus over the accompaniment of the entire cast. What a joyous delivery she gives this classic!


 


Two Swell Young Lovers


 


You got handsome leading man, Bob Bartley, conveying that puppy dog infatuation with the untouchable Christin Boyle as Hope Harcourt. Ms. Boyle’s beautiful soprano shimmers with Mr. Bartley on It’s DeLovely which has a great comic bit introducing it.


 


The two combine beautifully too on All Through the Night. Now I never have liked this song, but the way in which Mr. Bartley and Ms. Boyle make this an airy earthy dreamy sequence set against twinkling stars made me listen and feel the longing. They sung me into it.


 


Ms. Boyle’s little solo, Goodbye Little Dream Goodbye is another gem from the tiara of this jeweled crown of Broadway  in this classic. (I think Walter got his start writing like that). Ms. Boyle’s pathos and command of this little short piece has just the right echo of regret, “love is not all peaches and cream,” she sings.


 


The Cole Porter lyrics and original book by P.G. Wodehouse & Guy Bolton supplemented by Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse,  deliver great satire of their time that works just as well today. They feature a couple of fedora-d reporters stalking celebrities. They spoof the rich’s fascination with celebrity even Public Enemies. (For those time-warp challenged there used to be, before “America’s Most Wanted,” a “Public Enemies” list, which enjoyed great romantic fascination in the 1930s.)


 


Juicy Bits


 


There’s an hilarious ship’s brig scene when the gangster and Crocker plot to get out. A sendup of 1930s revival meetings is an extravanganza with Ms. Paige ready to revive you in a knockout ministerial robe that she drops to the stage with electrifying results.


 


One of the most demanding scores you can play in theatre (a Cole Porter score) is played live flawlessly by Musical Director John Bowen leading his seven players through the complex Porter music never overplaying, simply projecting under the singers.


 


So have you got it Mr. and Mrs. White Plains?


 


Anything Goes,  is 71 years old and is “Still the Top.” It plays Wednesdays Through Sundays through September 2. You get dinner at WBT’s own “Stork Club” included in the price of a ticket. Forget Broadway, pal, who needs the hassle when you can see what Broadway used to be as good as new, and the parking is free.


 



Your own Stork Club. Photo, WPCNR StageCam


 



 


 


 


With WBT emcee Steve Callaran personally welcoming you to the show with his patter and elegant official jive, it’s a little like the Stork Club, your table/seat tastefully lit, and the expectation of something big. Cole would love it. Photo by WPCNR StageCam


 


 For Ticket Information contact, 914-592-2222, or get full information at the theatre’s website, www.broadwaytheatre.com.


 


Just one of those things.


 


As my companion and I schmoozed at the after-the-show party, a tradition at every WBT Press Night Performance, we got to thinking about really good Anything Goes  still is.


 



Press Agents, Actors, Actresses, Cast, Damon Runyan Characters and Mr. & Mrs. Westchester mingle at Opening Night Party. Photo by WPCNR StageCam


 


We agreed on how the old jokes, the barebones book and screwball musical plot of rich persons, lowlifes, and charmers, gorgeous legs and elegant costumes still plays and wins hearts today. Is it the Cole Porter songs, is this the real turtle soup or merely the mock, or simply critic shock?


 


It’s because Westchester Broadway Theatre works on every little detail of the show, delivering a different look and experience on its very tiny stage every show and reverently treating their great material.


 


They even have a recording of the great Cole Porter himself singing Anything Goes at the overture. That’s WBT style all the way, giving the theatre lover what you want, magic.


 



 


 


 


 

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City Worries About Its Bond Rating.

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WPCNR QUILL & EYESHADE. July 14, 2005: With roughly $2.5 Million in City Bonds authorized by the Common Council in the last two months to fund capitol projects, city hall is considering putting out the bonds to market. If they wish to enjoy the best interest rates available, the city needs to have the issues rated again by Moodys Investors Service. The last time the city went to bond in January, Moody’s dropped the city bond rating to Aa-1 Negative, and told the city to bring expenses in line with revenues. Contingent on bringing expenses more in line with revenues was continued robust sales tax collections, of which the final figures for the last quarter of 2004-05 (ended June 30) are due any day now, if they have not already been obtained.



Ann Reasoner, Budget Director, standing in center of photo at the City Budget Meetings in April, 2005. Photo, WPCNR News Archive.


WPCNR’s query as to what the final sales tax collections were for June has not been answered by either Ann Reasoner, the city Budget Director, or Mr. Wood, the city executive officer. Not even a preliminary end of fiscal year status report has been delivered to the Common Council, to WPCNR knowledge.  The Common Council which one would presume would be most interested in the city budget condition at  several public meetings has failed to even raise the question of “how are we doin”.


A WPCNR call to the Executive Officer Paul Wood yesterday inquiring when the city was going to go out for the new bonds, whether they would try private placement (calling for higher interest rates), or whether they were going to invite Moody’s back for another dog-and-pony show by White Plains officials to convince Moody’s to raise the bond rating, or “keep it where it is” have not been returned. A WPCNR call to the Budget Director Ann Reasoner’s office asking if the city sales tax figures were in yet for the last quarter of 2004-2005, was not returned and WPCNR was informed that all my inquiries had to be directed to the Mayor’s Office. So we’re directing, but they are not returning calls in a timely and earnest manner.


 

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Mayor Endorses Day Hotel for Homeless Again in Rebuke to Paper

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Mayor Joseph Delfino Conducting a Common Council Meeting. Photo, WPCNR News Archive.


WPCNR CITY HALL CIRCUIT. July 14, 2005: Mayor Joseph Delfino, in a letter to The Journal News, appears to call for a daily holdover hotel for the city’s wandering homeless, complete with “food, something to do and supervision.” The Mayor clarifies a policy first announced to WPCNR last week when WPCNR raised the issue with Mayor Delfino’s Executive Officer, Paul Wood, on whether the Mayor endorsed a possible daycare headquarters for the homeless during daylight hours from 6 A.M. when they are let loose by the County in downtown White Plains. His letter stops short of saying whether he would support establishment of such a center in the city and where it might be located and who would supervise it.


In an indignant letter to The Journal News, protesting the recent JN editorial supporting present county busing and dropoff policy of the homeless, while accusing Mayor Delfino and Andy Spano’s opponent for County Executive, Robert Astorino of playing politics with the homeless issue the Mayor writes, “the county…must provide some service or supervision during the day instead of simply warehousing the individuals on our streets for 16 hours a day without access to food, restrooms and something to occupy their time.”


The Mayor closes his letter with “There has to be a better way to both ensure the safety of our cities’ populations and provide the much-needed services that these individuals require. Waiting for Albany to act isn’t the answer. These are issues that must be addressed — locally and immediately.”


Meanwhile, County District Attorney candidates Tony Castro and Janet DiFiore got on board to support the civil commitment drive  that would authorize the state to continue incarcerating violent criminals in mental institutions after they have served their sentences.


 

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Police Increase Patrols at 7 City Municipal Garages

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WPCNR POLICE GAZETTE. July 14, 2005: As first reported as in the planning stages last week by WPCNR, White Plains Police have moved to increase security patrols in the seven municipal garagesof White Plains. Commissioner of Public Safety Dr. Frank Straub, in an exclusive interview with Richard Liebson, The Journal News reporter, the Commissioner is quoted as saying, “We’ve looked at security issues there and believe it’s appropriate to make our presence more visible and more accessible to the public.”


Liebson’s story, appearing in today’s issue of the paper, quotes Straub as saying patrols were immediately increased after the June 29 killing of Concetta Russo-Carriero. The killing brought to light the security conditions existing in the Galleria garage when the police interrogation revealed that Ms. Russo-Carriero’s suspected assailant had been wandering in the garage for over two hours before the murder. Liebson reports the increased patrols will include bicycle police, motorcyle, foot and patrol cars.


Police statistics presented in The Journal News story showed that 74 serious crimes were committed in the seven city garages over the last two years. A total of  67 property crimes and 7 crimes against people were committed. Five of those people crimes were committed in The Galleria. In addition a suicide of a homeless person was reported in March of 2004.


Albert Moroni, Director of Parking in White Plains is reported in the story as saying security cameras are in fixed positions allowing them only to monitor traffic (not sweep the garages), and he also reports camera monitors are located within the elevators at The Galleria Garage.

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Council Approves Scoping for Pinnacle. Considers Higher BuyOuts for Condos

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WPCNR COMMON COUNCIL CHRONICLE-EXAMINER. By John F. Bailey. July 13, 2005: The Common Council adopted the Scoping Outline for the Martin Ginsburg Pinnacle project Wednesday evening, and entertained requests from JPI, owners of The Jefferson, condo-wanna-be on 300 Mamaroneck Avenue, and tentatively agreed to a sharply racheted up series of buyout payments based on unit size for future condominium builders in the city. JPI and The Pinnable will be effected by these new buyout payments ranging from $30,000 for a Studio Condo unit, to $155,000 for a 3 bedroom condominium unit, according to Councilman Thomas Roach who briefed WPCNR on the proposal. Roach said the new “step buyout” policy would be on the council agenda of August 1.


 


 


In the matter of The Pinnacle scoping, Rita Malmud, according to a WPCNR observer at the meeting said there was no reason not to adopt The Pinnacle scoping document because the city had received no further comments.


JPI representative Paul Chrisalli presented a situation report on where they stood with their plans to transform 300 Mamaroneck Avenue into condominiums. JPI said they were hoping to receive New York State Attorney General’s Office approval of their condominium plan sometime in August so they could begin selling units to buyers September 1. They told the council they would “like to pay in 15% of the purchase price of 16 units, the number of units they were required to set aside for affordable housing,” This amounted to appoximately $500,000, according to WPCNR’s man on the scene. Chrisalli said that they wanted to pay in on “whatever the market will bear.” He said the one-bedroom units would go for the high 300’s and the 2 bedroom units for about the mid 600s.


This would contrast sharply with the Common Council plan presented immediately following. According to this complex plan, copies of which were not passed out to the press, and still in need of some “tweaking” according to Mr. Roach, future condominium developers would pay $30,000 for each studio unit buyout, $67,000 for each one-bedroom unit, $115,000 for each two-bedroom unit and $155,000 for each 3-bedroom unit. There would be a bonus upfront buyout plan discount, Roach said of  10% off. These rates are up sharply for the maximum rate of approximately $50,000 previously proposed. Roach said the plan would be put up for a vote on August 1.


 

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Filling a Possible Vacancy on the Common Council.

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WPCNR News & Comment. By John F. Bailey. July 13, 2005: Observers of the Tuesday evening special meeting of the Common Council noted to this reporter that the veteran Councilman Robert Greer is now in a wheelchair with a full time aide at his side. Our observers said that Mr. Greer had trouble accessing the Mayor’s Conference Room and the Mayor’s aids had to be summoned from the perpetually locked-down inner sanctum of the Mayor’s office to move a reception desk in order that Mr. Greer could be wheeled into the conference room.


 


 On a longer term issue, there is a question of what will happen if Mr. Greer resigns from the Council. Mr. Greer is suffering from the debilitating effects of Arterial Lateral Sclerosis which is depriving him of movement, and impaired the clarity  of his speech. But as he has said very bravely, it is not affecting his mind. He is still able to serve, attend meetings, thoughtfully consider the issues and function as elected.


 


But what will happen in the future is not clear.


According to the City Charter, the Common Council may appoint a member of the public to serve out the term of any councilperson who leaves office. This has happened twice before in the past. The Council appointed Bill Waterman Councilman in 1990, when none other than Joseph Delfino was elected to County Legislator and he resigned from the Council.


 


Then the Council appointed John Martin to the Common Council to replace Councilman Sy Schulman, in January 1994 when Councilman Schulman was elected Mayor in 1993.


 


With five Democrats to two Republicans on the Common Council, the Democratic party has the whip hand in deciding who might fill any possible Council vacancy. Mr. Greer continues to serve and fulfill his responsibilities, and has given no indication he will vacate his office any time soon.


 


How to Get on the Common Council Without Really Trying.


 


One of the possibilities to replace any vacancy is Glen Hockley,  (if he is not elected in his own right in November), who has council experience, though of a bogus nature, since he was occupying a council seat as a usurper. Mr. Hockley served after a disputed election result, and was found to have not been officially elected to that position, due to a jammed voting machine in 2001. Hockley was quo warranto-ed out of that office in July 2004, as a result of the Attorney General’s successful quo warranto action brought on behalf of Larry Delgado.


 


Another potential candidate for the council to replace Mr. Greer should the need arise,  would be Dennis Power, the current candidate for Mayor who has been conspicuous by his lack of campaigning, and here it is mid-July. Mr. Power resigned his job to run for Mayor, it appears, to bail the Democrats out of having to run Ron Jackson for Mayor.


 


Another possibility is Mr. Jackson himself, who speaks out more often, with more insight and candor than any one else in White Plains. His would certainly be a lively appointment, and the party would show him the gratitude it should show him for saving them from the ludricous propsect of running nobody for Mayor.


 


There is John Martin. There is Candyce Corcoran, there are any one of a number of lesser lights. But, I would say Mr. Power is the frontrunner.


 


Will the Democrats Bow to America’s Favorite Mayor?


 


Who else might be available to appoint? More to the point, would the Democrat-dominated Common Council take it upon themselves to select a Greer successor, without listening to Mayor Joseph Delfino?


 


Would they accept a Mayoral suggestion in another sickening display of Democrat usual stalwart spirit of bipartisan cooperation with “America’s Favorite Mayor?”  Would the Mayor appoint Frank Cantatore for example, or  Isabel Villar, or Tim Sheehan, or any one of his strong supporters. Perhaps, if Louis Cappelli, the Super Developer established a residence in White Plains, in addition to the business,  he could even be appointed, and perhaps serve for $1 a year.


 


The Democratic Party may well listen to the Mayor’s “nomination” for a possible Greer replacement,  since the Democratic Party did as little as possible to prepare for the Mayoral Campaign, and nominated no one of strength to make a strong run at the Mayorality. They had 4 years to plan and groom a candidate.


 


They did not fundraise for a Mayoral run. (The Party had $7,000 in their till as of January of 2005, a disgrace for a party that outregisters Republicans, 2 to 1.) Meanwhile, Mayor Joseph Delfino has raised, by conservative estimate a half million dollars to spend on his campaign.


 


When you know you’re going to be running against a big buck, developer-supported candidate, you have to fundraise. The White Plains Democrats did not, allowing County Executive Andy Spano to loot the lucrative Democratic donors and keep them all to himself. Hopefully County Executive Spano faced with an equally weak candidate, Rob Astorino can send a little “Power-Aid” Dennis’s way.


 


 But, wait, at least Mr. Astorino is campaigning, though campaigning on closing Playland which was his major issue last year is particularly dumb. Playland is the one thing the County does well. They do a lousy job of running medical centers.


 


Why No Loyal Opposition? 


 


If I were Elliot Spitzer, I’d take a look at the circumstances surrounding the White Plains Mayoralty election: why did the Democrats not fundraise aggressively for a Mayoral campaign? Why did Ryan choose not to run – if he was indeed showing well? Why did no one of experience throw their hats in the ring? Why did the party not accept Ron Jackson’s generous offer to run? Why did Dennis Power resign his job to run when he did not have to? Was this one-tent government? Was this deal-making?


 


Right now, if I were the Democratic council I’d nominate Dennis Power to the council seat, if Greer possibibly resigns sooner than later,  though there is no indication as yet that he plans to.


 


Why Power? It would give him a chance to campaign publicly on the council, raise issues, get a presence at three televised council meetings (September, October, November, maybe even August if Greer leaves within the next two weeks.) It would give him some money (the council salary).


 


Should Power lose the Mayoralty race in November, he would still be on the council completing the rest of Mr. Greer’s unexpired term  for the next two years staying on the Council through 2006. He’d be there filling the role of old reliable, earnest, don’t make waves Democrat, with the ability to say and do the right things, and stand for the right causes, and give the impression of two-party government.


 


Moreover, it sets Mr. Power up for taking another job in addition to his Common Council responsibilities, and helps out a loyal Democrat.


 


My bet is on Dennis Power. And, if I am Dennis Power and am not appointed to the council. I have to wonder why.


 


Accessible City Hall? 


 


The observation of Mr. Greer’s attempts to access the Mayor’s Conference Room  raises the issue of why the Mayor’s Conference Room is not more disabled-accessible than it is, or why Special Meetings and Works Sessions cannot be held in the Common Council Chamber, especially when it is so difficult for Mr. Greer to negotiate his way into the conference room.


 


The Common Council Chamber is accessible to the handicapped, has wider aisles and only a door, and the swinging balustrade gate have to be held open for the wheelchair-confined. However, if you’re handicapped and have no one to open a council door for you, even the Common Council Chamber is inaccessible to the handicapped.


 


A reporter for the White Plains Watch is confined to a wheelchair. Ron Jackson, “The Last Activist,” is confined to a mobile wheelchair.  Now a Common Councilman, Mr. Greer is confined to a wheelchair, and serving ably I might add, with great bravery,  the city has to look at this problem of accessibility.


 


 


One of the possible answers to why America’s Favorite Mayor continues to cram his stuffy conference room, sometimes with  up to 30 persons spilling out the hall is if work sessions and special meetings were held in the Common Council Chambers they could (and should), be televised since so much debate on city issues is waged in work sessions  and Special Meetings on short notice (6 hours is the average time the media gets of these Special Meetings) that the majority of the public never sees.

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