Assessor Goes to Bat for Schools as NY Axes = Rate, Raises Tax Rate to 7.8%

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. By John F. Bailey. April 23, 2003: Eyde McCarthy, City Assessor will be testifying in Albany today in attempt to get the state to raise their “Equalization Rate,” which has within the last two days derailed the smooth path to adoption of a City School Budget. Richard Lasselle, Assistant Superintendent for Business announced this bit of unpleasantness last night at the Board of Education meeting at Education House , saying the school tax rate on the proposed budget would rise from 7.3% to 7.8% under the new Equalization Rate imposed by the state.

This would raise the school tax of the average White Plains home accessed at $15,000 from $358 to $376 (per $1,000 of accessed valuation).



A LETTER FROM THE ASSESSOR made public at Tuesday evening’s meeting, confirmed to the School District Tuesday what Ms. McCarthy had previously anticipated that the state would lower the Equalization Rate.
Photo by WPCNR NEWSLAB


McCarthy, Lasselle said, would be pleading the city’s case to raise the equalization rate back up closer to 6.47%, the 2002 rate. The drop in Equalization Rate to 4.67%, Lasselle said, was due to the fact that the state claims the city accessed the city’s Special Franchises (utilities and city infrastructure) at too low a value. McCarthy, Lasselle reported is going before the state Office of Real Property Services to argue that the vast majority of utility and infrastructured properties are accessed at a rate closer to 6% than 4.67% which the state has set.

In a letter to the School District received Tuesday, Ms. McCarthy confirmed to the district that the lowering of $1,000,000 in Special Franchise values, reduced the final Assessment Roll by $2,600,000. McCarthy’s letter said “the City is arduously working to challenge the Equalization Rate with the intent of correcting the measure of our municipalities’ full value.” McCarthy notes in her letter, that “Despite the fact that the Office of Real Property Services took into consideration new inventory and depreciation when establishing the 2003 full value ($214,216,124), the considerable drop in the equalization rate served to substantially reduce the Special Franchise assessment that appears on the (city’s) final Assessment Roll.”

School District Holds Off Fixing the Tax Rate at 7.8% Until Albany Veto Override Vote

Lasselle reported that both houses of the state legislature appear ready to override Governor George Pataki’s veto of the legislature proposal to move up the date for statewide school budget elections to June 3. The legislature vote to override, according to Lasselle is Monday, April 28. Lasselle said he is also hopeful the district may receive more school aid, which could lower the tax rate as well. Therefore, his recommendation is to wait before the district fixes the levy at 7.8%.

The Assistant Superintendent for Business added that the district is holding off printing required budget notifications until the tax rate is finally fixed.

Election may move up.

The possible moving up of the school budget election to the third of June would also move up the Board of Education Elections. Currently, according to Michelle Schoenfeld, Clerk to the Board, have five persons interested in running for the four seats: incumbents Donna McLaughlin, Michelle Tratoros, and Peter Bassano, and first-time challengers, Nancy Brady and Terence McGuire. Other interested challengers have until April 30 to put in their petitions of 100 signatures.

The Equalization Rate is a percentage assigned by New York State to equalize assessed value and actual market value.

The proposed School Budget for 2003-04, remains the same: $134,632,632, a year-to-year increase of 6.1%. However, unless Ms. McCarthy can make a convincing case for the city’s Equalization Rate, the School District will be forced to raise the tax rate to 7.8%.

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News Bites: Comptroller Visits; New Phase III Plan; City to Answer CCOS

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WPCNR CITY HALL PRESS ROOM. April 22, 2003: The Mayor’s Office announced today that for the first time in eleven years, the State Comptroller’s office will undertake a Performance Management and Best Practices Review of specific White Plains departments as part of an overall effort by State Comptroller Allan Havesi to identify procedures that can benefit other municipalities. Auditors from Albany will be arriving Wednesday at City Hall to meet with city officials, and decide which departments they feel they want to review.

A City Hall spokesman said the review was routine, and was not initiated by any wrongdoing.

In other happenings…

The Mayor’s Office advised the media today that Mayor Joseph M. Delfino would release Phase III of his citywide Revitalization Plan tomorrow after it is presented to the Common Council. Copies, it said, would be available to the public after it was in the hands of the Council.

NYPH Hospital Article 78 Procedure

Seven months after it was filed, the Article 78 filed by CCOS is beginning to come to a head. A spokesman for the White Plains Legal Department said that the CCOS attorney, Thomas Whyatt had filed his papers after three months of adjournments in the Concerned Citizens for Open Space Article 78 action in New York Supreme Court. The suit seeks to have the Common Council approval of a biotech-proton accelerator research and cancer treatment facility on the New York Presbyterian Hospital property.

The Legal Department source said the Legal Department is now working on its response to Mr. Whyatt’s argument for overturning the approval, and they expected the City’s rebuttal would be filed within two weeks.

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County Moves Targetted County Police to Airport to Save Their Jobs.

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From Westchester County Department of Communications. (EDITED) April 22, 2003:Saying this is not the time for the county to be losing police officers, County Executive Andy Spano has proposed using overtime savings to restore 30 police jobs that were slated to be cut because of a loss of state funding. The plan is to shift the 30 police officers to Westchester County Airport and county parks to fill needs there, saving the County overtime costs they will otherwise have to pay.

Spano proposed that the county use $1.2 million in funds budgeted for regularly scheduled police overtime to pay the officers who will be shifted off the parkway to other locations such as county parks and the airport. New security requirements at the airport have forced the county to pay more overtime to make sure shifts are covered there and elsewhere. The added officers will eliminate the need to pay others overtime. The Board of Legislators will meet on April 28 and is expected to approve the proposal at that time.
If the Jing Returns

The County Executive said if the state does restore the funds, the officers would be shifted back to patrols on the Bronx River, Hutchinson River and Saw Mill River parkways – all state-owned roads. In the meantime, state police will take over those patrols as of April 30.

The police jobs were originally scheduled to be eliminated March 30, but Spano asked the Board of Legislators for $215,000 to keep the 30 officers on the payroll for another month in the hopes that the state would come up with the funding, but that did not happen.

“I am still hopeful that we can work something out with Albany, but I do not want to see us lose these officers,’’ he said.

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School District Appoints Dr. Fred Smith to Head Post Road School

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WPCNR School Days. April 21, 2003: At its Board of Education meeting Tuesday evening at 7:30 PM, the City School District will approve Dr. Fred Smith as Principal of Post Road Elementary School. He is expected to take on the duties as May 20, 2003. The Board of Education is also expected to discuss the latest School Report Cards issued by the Department of Education.

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Public Safety Department Appoints Eve Monroe Intelligence Specialist

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WPCNR White Plains Police Gazette. April 21, 2003: Commissioner Dr. Frank Straub announced to WPCNR that the Public Safety Department has appointed Eve Monroe to perform the duties of Confidential Intelligence Specialist.

In her position, according to the Department of Public Safety job description, Ms. Monroe, will be responsible for making assessments on counter terrorism and threat evaluation and bringing them to the Commissioners’ attention. She will advise on new technologies to assure the WPPD will be equipped with the best intelligence, policing and fire protection.

Will Conduct Investigations.

In her assignment, Ms. Monroe will be called upon to conduct or take charge of “highly confidential investigations” in the field of intelligence gathering and “integrity issues” involving the police department. She is expected to be the Police and Fire Department’s first legal resource in analysing intelligence data, analyzing published legal opinions involving police procedures and new and existing legislation to “identify critical implications (for the PD), underlying causes and impact on operational objecties.”
On the Job

Ms. Monroe came on board April 7, and is a lawyer, previously in private practice. Prior to that, she was with the New York Police Department Legal Bureau, the arm that advises the NYPD on investigations,legal positions, procedures, responsibilities, and liabilities. She has also served according to Dr.Straub with the Orange County District Attorney’s office.

Last week, Ms. Monroe was not available at the Police News Conference because she was attending a conference on terrorism in New York. She also observed the Evacuation Drill conducted involving Indian Point last week.

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WPW on “Operation Safe Streets,” Theatre Update, Hotel Hassel Friday.

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS VARIETY. April 21, 2003: The city news roundup show, White Plains Week showcases the White Plains Police Department “Operation Safe Streets” Friday evening at 7:30 PM on WPPA-TV, Public Access Channel 76, “The Spirit of 76.” Jim Benerofe and John Bailey will also update the multitudes on the Cappelli-Bland Hotel situation on Main Street, the financing of the fountain and theatre, the city budget and more.

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Wildfire Torch Dawgs, 110-100 in Run, Gun and Stun Win.

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WPCNR PRESS BOX. By John F. Bailey. April 19, 2003: The Westchester Wildfire brought United States Basketball League Pro Basketball to White Plains Saturday night and made it an artistic though sloppy success, 110-100 over the Pennsylvania ValleyDawgs before 2,435 fans. An electrifying 3-pointer from the corner by Reggie Jessie with a second remaining in the Third Quarter took the bark out of the ValleyDawgs, giving John Starks club a 9 point lead after three stanzas that took the energy out of the Pennsylvania Club.



SPINNING TURNING IN THE PAINT, Lance Williams launches two of his 24 points to lead the Wildfire in a key stretch in the Third Quarter Saturday night at the County Center. Number 3 is Zach Marbury. Number 42, Kris Hunter.
Photo by WPCNR Sports


Following Jesse’s shot, the ValleyDawgs played as if in a stupor, allowing the better conditioned Wifldfire to run the floor at will and build an 18-point lead in the first 6 minutes of the third quarter.

The Wildfire held a 77-71 lead with 11 seconds to go in third quarter, when Wildfire Head Coach John Starks, looking like a dynamic sartorial mix of Lennie Wilkins and Pat Reilly, his former mentor, drew up a play. The Fire inbounded swung the ball swiftly around the perimeter into the top of the key to Zach Marbury and as the Dawgs moved to stop Zach’s shot he slung the ball to Reggie Jessie in the far corner with a second left and Jessie drained it for an 80-71 lead, it was the dagger in the heart.

The play was vintage John Starks from his Knickerbocker glory days, when Starks had that ability to drill one to turn around a game. And Mr. Starks looked just like Pat Reilly when he was drawing it up in the huddle.



MUSCLING INSIDE IN THE PAINT, Kitwana Rymer challenges for two in the first half at the Center Saturday night. The Wildfire front line of Lance Williams, Kevin Freeman and Rhymer outmugged and outbounded the Dawgs all evening, pouring in 48 of their 110 points in the paint, and outbounded the Dawgs, 59-48.
Photo by WPCNR Sports


Run, Gun, Turn it Over.

The Turnovers were atrocious in this game with the Wildfire losing the ball 28 times to Pennsylvania’s 22, according to the official stats, and they must have been being generous. It seemed to this reporter that each team lost the ball about 10 times each, each quarter, that’s how wild the play was.

There were few set plays, no such thing as a slow down, and frankly, when the Wildfire turned on the defense in the first 5 minutes of the game and for 10 minutes in the last 5 minutes of the third quarter and first 5 minutes of the 4th, Pennsylvania was outmatched.

Starting like Wildfire

The Wildfire started well, like Wildfire, running, swatting and pestering the Dawgs out of their sneakers to a 15-5 lead in the first five minutes, mostly with that swarming muscling churning defense in the lane I was talking about. Reggie Jessie, Vonteego Cummings used their quickness to great advantage.

The Dawgs regained their poise and the Wildfire lead by 2 at the half, 47-45.

In the Third Quarter, Williams, Freeman and Rhymer had their way inside (the Wildfire scored 27 “second chance points” the entire game) and built a 6 point lead during the last half of the third period, sealed by Reggie Jessie’s “Starks Dagger.”

A Calmer, Gentler Low Key John Starks

How did John Starks coach? He barked at his players, watched the game intently, called few timeouts, but when he did the team responded. He was not animated and gesticulating like Pat Reilly, but more like Lennie Wilkins, the Atlanta Hawks coach. His players seem to like him, and the players seem to like each other.

Starks substituted well, and has instilled a swarming, pestering defense of very quick-handed, brutal big men, with outstanding athleticism, when they wish to play hard dee, they can and the Dawgs were not prepared for it.

Team Starks

You can see a lot of the personality of John Starks the player in this team. A fire for the basket, an urge to shoot, and the ability to be absolute pests on defense. But they are big and quick.

The Wildfire can score, too. They had six men in doublefigures. Lance Williams poured in 24 with 11 bounds, Kevin Freeman, 23, and Von Cummings, 18. Cummings and Zach Marbury give Starksfquick, run-the-floor, coast-to-coast gunners who can find the open man and work to whip it to him, when they are denied.

Winning Madly

There were not a lot of set plays. The Wildfire is to put it tastefully, an “improvising team.” They create plays off the defensive boards firing and pushing the ball up at every opportunity, But unlike the Knickerbockers’ sorry experiment at this several years ago, they have the ability to get back and play dee when they have to. And they do not get tired. They are well-conditioned, too. So be prepared for the turnovers, gang. Itt was very entertaining, fierce basketball, the trademark of John Starks as a player — perhaps the most passionate Knickerbocker ever — when the Knicks were “Da Knicks.”



JOHN STARKS NOTCHES FIRST WIN AS A HEAD COACH: Mr. Starks, with back slightly turned in pearl gray suit, partially hidden to the left of Zach Marbury, after just receiving congrats and a win-hug, leaves the court. Ed Pinkney in the black turtleneck is facing the camera.
Photo by WPCNR Sports


Embers

The Wildfire’s next game at the County Center is Friday night at 7 PM against Texas…The Wildfire shot 40% from the floor, canning 37 of 84 shots…A testimony to the bang ’em, slam ’em board play was the 70 fouls called, a number of them charges…The Dawgs manufactured 23 points off Wildfire turnovers…The Wildfire bench lead by Zach Marbury with 13, Reggie Jessie with 10 and Rod Grizzard with 11 doubled the output of the Pennsylvania bench, 34-16…a key factor in the Dawgs tiring in the opening of the fourth quarter…Great postgame stats were provided instantaneously by the Wildfire Sports Information Team…The Wildfire Dancers from the White Plains City Center Dance on East Post Road made the New York Knicks City Dancers look slow, old and out of energy…of course the Wildfire Dancers are all under 12 years old and really entertaining…they got the biggest hand of the night with their appearances in each of the four quarters. These kids can really shake a tail feather…so can the Wildfire.



THEY LIKE TO MOVE IT, MOVE IT: The Wildfire Dancers, from City Center Dance, perform during a timeout, and dazzle the crowd.

Photo by WPCNR Sports

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WESTCHESTER STEELERS TRYOUTS

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The Westchester Steelers semi-pro football team, entering our eighth season in the United Football League, will be conducting open tryouts every Sunday afternoon at 3:00 PM, beginning April 26. Our season begins July 27 and pre-season games begin in mid-June. Players should have college or high school experience but all athletes are welcome. Only hard working, disciplined, team oriented players will be considered. There are also a few coaching positons still available. For more information call us (914) 969-4136 or e-mail steeler1@msn.com. Register online at http://eteamz.com/mtvernonsteelers.

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Adam In Albany:Tour of Northern West Hosp Demos Need to Restore Funding.

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WPCNR’S ADAM IN ALBANY, By District 89 Assemblyman Adam T. Bradley. April 18, 2003:Recently I had the privilege to tour Northern Westchester Hospital’s brand new Interventional Radiology Suite and I was amazed with what I saw. This facility – which specializes in innovative diagnostic and angiography procedures – not only revolutionizes vascular surgery, but also proves Westchester is a leader in progressive, high-tech medical treatment.
But we can only remain a leader if we continue investing in our hospitals and health care system. The governor’s proposed $2 billion cut to health care jeopardizes hospitals – like Northern Westchester – and other health-related industries already burdened with new technology costs, disaster preparedness, caring for the uninsured, and workforce shortages.

The governor’s proposed $1.6 billion cut to Medicaid and his desire to impose a “sick tax” on hospitals and other health care providers will seriously jeopardize quality health care. Furthermore, hospitals and nursing homes will be forced to lay off workers to make ends meet. Additionally, the governor seeks to raise Elderly Pharmaceutical Insurance Coverage (EPIC) fees 10 percent and cut reimbursements to pharmacies by 5 percent. These initiatives, if enacted, will truly affect quality health care.

In Westchester County, the governor’s budget would cost public health services almost $9 million. This could lead to the elimination of vital services such as disease prevention, mosquito control, and air and water testing. What’s more, crucial health inspection programs – including the inspection of 1,200 x-ray units in local hospitals and doctor’s offices – will also be lost if the wrong budget choices are made.

Eliminating health care services, laying off hospital staff, and raising prescription drug costs are all wrong choices.

New York’s unprecedented fiscal crisis will call on everyone to make sacrifices. When it comes to our health and the health of our loved ones, we can’t afford to make wrong choices that compromise the medical care our families need.

Adam T. Bradley, Assemblyman, The 89th District

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Week Two: The Dennis Alvarez-Hernandez Capital Punishment Murder Case

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS LAW JOURNAL. By WPCNR Legal Affairs Correspondent, S. Richard Blassberg. April 18, 2003: Week Two of the Dennis-Alvarez-Hernandez trial (which ended last week, the trial was in recess this week), brought no surprises, either in content or direction.



WPCNR LEGAL CORRESPONDENT
S. RICHARD BLASSBERG
Photo by WPCNR News

Prosecutors Patricia Murphy and George Bolen presented witnesses whose testimony firstly, confirmed what the Defense has stipulated from the start, that it was the Defendant who stabbed the victims, and secondly exposed the extent of the injuries and carnage encountered at the scene. To drive home the horror, for the benefit of the jurors, prosecutors employed a 4×8 foot model of Patricia Torres’ apartment. The model reportedly cost $6,000 and was admittedly not to scale.

Using the model, Yonkers Police Officer Elizabeth Wagner of the Criminal Identification Unit, a veteran of 18 years on the force, went from room to room describing for the jury what she found at the scene. Although she claimed to have examined “thousands of crime scenes” in her tenure with the department, she managed to become visibly choked-up before the intent jurors. Officer Wagner’s testimony on Friday morning followed two days of direct and cross-examination of Yonkers Police Detective Kraft.

Kraft, the lead detective in the case was questioned extensively by the Prosecution in an attempt to establish that the Defendant had sufficient presence of mind, several hours after the killings, to try to deny responsibility.

“The baby, she killed the baby. My wife she killed the baby,” Kraft quoted the Defendant as having told him upon their first contact. Additionally, prosecutors tried to elicit statements from the detective suggesting that the Defendant really wasn’t “out of it” following the incident.

The final witness of Week Two was Vincent Santiago, the 11-year-old who survived the stabbing, and whose eyewitness account placed the knife in Dennis Alvarez-Hernandez’ hand. However strategically timed before a one-week adjournment of the trial, and emotionally compelling as Vincent’s testimony may have been, nothing he said, in this observer’s opinion, cast any doubt on Defense assertions that the Defendant was simply too drunk to be capable of forming the intent necessary to have committed Murder One.

The role of the jury is to be the determiner of fact. The only real issue of fact to be determined is whether the Defendant was capable, in light of his intoxication, of forming the necessary intent. All of the evidence presented by the District Attorney’s Office through two weeks of trial has thus far failed, in this reporter’s analysis, to overturn the Defense position. However, that is not to say that the effort has failed to reach the emotions and sensibilities of the jury.

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