President Biden Comes to Valhalla. Governor Hochul, Representatives Jamaal Bowman, Mike Lawler, Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, join him. Biden says Republican stance on Debt Ceiling Must Changed to avoid crisis of confidence in USA “Devastating,” he says.

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President Biden speaking at Westchester Community College Wednesday morning.

Governor Kathy Hochul, flanked by Senator Kirsten Gillibrand and U.S. Representative Jamaal Bowman

President Joe Biden in his 15-minute address to educators and local Westchester politcians took Republicans to task for putting the U.S.at risk of defaulting on its world debt for refusing to raise the debt ceiling unless the President agreed to spending cuts. He said Republican efforts to cut spending would hurt education and veterans. He assured Americans that inflation was coming down, pointing to 12.7 million jobs added was a sign of economic turnaround. He said no negotiations could start until the debt ceiling was raised.The President also took the occasion to advocate for junior college educations, and said how much he admired educators.

“It’s important for the American people to know what’s at stake. This isn’t just a theoretical debate going on in Washington. The decisions we make are going to have real impact on real people’s lives,” Biden said.

“They’re literally, not figuratively, holding the economy hostage,”

Governor Kathy Hochul in the text of her speech reinforced the President’s message:

“I am so delighted to be here once again with some extraordinary individuals, my partners in government. And you’ll be hearing from someone that we’re so proud is the President of the United States, and that is President Joe Biden  Our Senator, Kirsten Gillibrand has joined us. Congressman Jamaal Bowman has joined us as well.

 

We are also so fortunate to have the Majority Leader of the New York State Senate, Andrea Stewart-Cousins. I believe that we also have Congressman Mike Lawler in the house. County Executive George Latimer is here. The Mayor of White Plains, Tom Roach is here. Mayor of Mount Vernon, Shawyn Patterson-Howard is here. Brian Sullivan, teacher at Highlands Middle School  (White Plains) is here. (Editor’s Note: Mr. Sullivan addressed the gathering, introducing the President .) I want to thank Dr. Belinda Miles for hosting us here today. Thank you.

We also know that the Majority Leader of the United States Senate, Chuck Schumer is working right now – working right now with the future Speaker of the House Representatives, so that would be our very own, from Brooklyn as well, Hakeem Jeffries. 

They’re both working together, working with our President – working being the operative word here. You get elected, you work together to do the job. And having to encounter a lot of opposition – from guess who? Republicans don’t want us to work together. They don’t want us to do what we’re required to do, and that’s called paying your bills.

I’m sure a lot of you would like the chance to like, run up some debt, pay for things you need. You’ve got to pay for your house, you’ve got to pay for your electric bill, you’ve got to pay for the diapers, and tuition, all these other things.

And if you could walk away from paying your bills after just having a couple of fights, probably be interesting wouldn’t it? But we don’t do that. We’re responsible. We do what we’re supposed to do.

And so, you come to New York, New York is the beating heart of the U.S. economy. So, you mess around with the debt ceiling, you’re hurting New York. You’re hitting us hard. And not just the state in general, but let’s think about who. How about the students right here at SUNY Westchester who will have their financial assistance unavailable to them.

 

It’ll put us closer to a recession, cause unemployment to go up. It’ll be devastating. It also shakes the confidence of the rest of the world in the United States of America. And we don’t need that at this time. We need friends. We don’t want people to question our ability to govern.

 

And brinkmanship is their attempt, Republicans attempt, to just bring it right to the edge. Make everybody all anxious – affect the stock market because they don’t care. They don’t care. This is going to play out in their political games. And I’ve got a message for them, it doesn’t work.

 

In 2011, I was elected as a Democrat in the most Republican district in the State of New York. Clearly there were a lot more Republicans than Democrats in that district. How did I do that? I talked about issues that people cared about regardless of their party.

 

Because here’s the message to Republicans, when you think you have a great political strategy, I’m telling you now it’s going to backfire. There actually are Republican seniors who don’t want you to mess with Medicare and Social Security. There are Republican veterans who don’t want you to affect their benefits. There are Republican students who don’t want you to mess with their student loans. There are Republican businesspeople in particular who aren’t real excited about you playing around with this.

 

So the message is, you might think it’s a political strategy, I’m here to tell you it is going to backfire because the people in this nation and in this state, Democrats and Republicans, want you go and do the job you’re elected to do. And that’s exactly what President Biden wants to do.

 

Let’s get this done. What’s the big deal? This is what we’re supposed to do. And so, this is an attempt to focus attention, to say ‘You have to do what we want you to do.’ But it’s going to fail. It’s going to be a cataclysmic failure because the longer this plays out, the more uncertainty, the more volatility, the more anxiety – not just in the markets, not just around the world, but in people’s houses, at their kitchen table. Because they need to know that the confidence that their government is actually going to work together.

 

So that’s what we’re just saying. That’s what President Biden is saying. Come on. Let’s roll up our sleeves, we can get this done. It’s not complicated and there’s no reason to play these games at this time.

 

So here we go. My message is: Stop playing games with the American people. Stop playing games with the American economy. Stop playing games with our farmers. Stop playing games with our citizens. Stop playing games with our small businesses and just do your jobs. Thank you, President Biden for being our leader. Thank you very much.

 

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End of Public Health Emergency: A SHIFT IN DATA– WHAT TO EXPECT FROM YOUR LOCAL EPIDEMIOLOGIST

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This week the Public Health Emergency (PHE) for COVID-19 is ending in the U.S. This means many things, but one major shift will be the data—the dashboards and updates we’ve grown accustomed to.

Why the change? 

The public health system in the U.S. is complicated. But, essentially it’s decentralized. In other words, the federal government (i.e., CDC or HHS) is not the “center” of the public health universe. Public health is local. What “local” means depends on the state—driven by state health departments (like in Vermont) or by counties within a State (like in Texas).

On one hand, this decentralized system is a good thing. Flexibility allows health departments to focus on problems relevant to their population in their specific context. The approach to a public health problem in Texas, for example, is different from in Vermont. This also means health departments have full autonomy to decide how data is collected, what data is collected, and what is communicated.

During a national emergency, this decentralized system became a massive problem, though. It was impossible to get a national picture of what the hell was going on in a timely, comprehensive, and consistent manner: who’s at risk, how is the virus changing, and how are vaccines working?  

Slowly the PHE stepped in: mandate health departments to feed data to the CDC. This meant that COVID-19 data (eventually) traveled from county → state→ CDC→ national dashboards.

Blue dots= county health departments; red dots= state health departments; blue arrows= data flow. Figure by Katelyn Jetelina/YLE

As you can imagine, there were a lot of places where this flow broke down:

  1. CDC had to literally create and sign data use agreements (i.e. contracts) with every county- or state-level entity for certain data.
  2. The majority of health departments didn’t have the resources, manpower, infrastructure, or technical knowledge to collect or report data due to complexity. Some counties were sending case reports via fax.
  3. There was a problem with data consistency within and between states. Is El Paso collecting, measuring, and reporting the same data as Massachusetts? In short, no. 
  4. Then there were politics. Even if health departments had the data, some states didn’t report it. 

Over time, most problems were smoothed out.

But it took an incredible amount of time, resources, coordination, and manpower to get where we are today.

The PHE ending means that data flow, from county → nation, is no longer required. But this doesn’t mean that everything is disappearing:

  1. Health departments may still update locally;
  2. Some health departments are still willing to report data to CDC, even if not required;
  3. The CDC has sentinel surveillance programs— a set of locations chosen for intensive surveillance. This will allow us to see trends but not counts.

What is changing?

No change: 

  1. Wastewater and genomic surveillance, which will allow us to track variants and transmission.
  2. Emergency room data, which is one of the best early indicators of state-level transmission.

Changing a little:

  1. Hospitalization data will remain through April 2024, but frequency of reporting will change. This will help us track severe disease.
  2. Death data will remain, but the data source is changing.

Changing a lot:

  1. Test positivity rates —one of our earliest metrics of transmission—will no longer be national, state, or county-wide. Negative tests no longer have to be reported. But, some pharmacies will still report.
  2. Cases will be dropped. This makes sense given at-home antigen tests.
  3. Vaccination coverage will be spotty. The frequency of updates will also change. 

What to do on an individual level? 

The CDC transmission levels data is going away. Starting today, the CDC recommends using hospitalization data to guide behavior. If numbers go up, put on a mask.

I don’t really agree with this for several reasons. I suggest following wastewater trends either locally or regionally. (If it’s going up, put on a mask.)

What to do on a national level? 

Moving forward, the key is to prepare so this data problem doesn’t happen again during an emergency or every winter. We do that by changing how we fund, plan, and coordinate our public health system.

The CDC is giving states money to modernize their data infrastructure (move away from faxes, for example). This may sound simple, but it is incredibly complex, technical, and expensive. Unfortunately, there are already a few bumps:

  1. Funding is going to the states, leaving some local health departments with no money to modernize.
  2. Little to no coordination. Even if states or local health departments are modernizing, they are doing so using their own priorities and with no guidance.

Bottom line

On Thursday there will be a shift in data. We won’t be flying blind but it’s not the best we can do. We need to figure out how to sustain our top notch work when we are not in an emergency.

Love, YLE


“Your Local Epidemiologist (YLE)” is written by Dr. Katelyn Jetelina, MPH Ph.D.—an epidemiologist, data scientist, wife. During the day she works at a nonpartisan health policy think tank and is a senior scientific consultant to a number of organizations, including the CDC. At night she writes this newsletter. Her main goal is to “translate” the ever-evolving public health science so that people will be well-equipped to make evidence-based decisions. This newsletter is free thanks to the generous support of fellow YLE community members. To support this effort, subscribe below.

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COUNTY EXECUTIVE GEORGE LATIMER’S COMPLETE WEEKLY UPDATE OF MONDAY AVAILABLE 24/7 RIGHT HERE AT WPCNR.COM

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WPCNR is pleased to introduce  the first prime time rebroadcast of the Westchester County Executive George Latimer’s Weekly Update. it debuted on WPCNR  MONDAY 8 PM last night.  He gives insights into the recovered funds New York State has given back to the taxpayers and delivers the status of the New York State budget. Click on the video “arrow” to see the complete telecast, including press questions. The Weekly Update will  be rebroadcast every week at 8 PM on WPCNR.COM as a public service and will remain all week! BULLETIN announcements at once!  You always know you can see the comprehensive, always eye-opening WESTCHESTER WEEKLY UPDATE on WPCNR.COM “Where the news that matters is–ALWAYS”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LjFHtWDApV0

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66 YEARS AGO IN 1957, FATE STALKED HERB SCORE AS IT STALKS ALL OF US. HE SHOWED US HOW TO DEAL WITH IT.

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 herb motion

herb in motion

WPCNR VIEW FROM THE UPPER DECK. By “Bull Allen” May 7, 2018:

It was a sultry night in Cleveland’s Municipal Stadium 1957 with baseball’s hottest pitching talent scheduled to pitch against the New York Yankees. I will never forget this night.

I was listening to the game on WINS which carried the Yankees that year and Herb Score was on the mound for the Tribe.

He was smoke. As a rookie he went 16-10 in 1955 as a rookie southpaw, fanning 245 batters in 227 innings pitched, a strikeout an inning,  and 20-9 in 1956, striking out 263 in 249 innings. His fastball was overpowering, curve devastating, changeup you were never ready for.  He was first pitcher in major league history to average a strikeout an inning. His 245 strikeouts as a rookie was broken by Dwight Gooden of the Mets.

Score’s pitching motion was electric, compact and swift, landing on both feet ready to field.

As an 12 year old I was tuned in as the baseball season had just been 3 weeks old. I like to think it was Mel Allen at the mike. Score got the first Yankee hitter, then Gil McDougald stepped to the plate. McDougald lined a pitch right back at Score that hit him in the face, squarely in the eye.

herb score

 

McDougald said he heard the thud of the ball he had hit as it struck Score in the face, saw the blood streaming out. McDougald started to go to the mound, shattered by what his hit had done. 

Score was 24 at the time with a great future in baseball. But in an instant, his career was shattered.  He took the mound again in 1958, but was not nearly as effective. Never winning more than 9 games in one year.  ,

The reason Score said was  that he tore a tendon in his arm while pitching on a damp night against the Washington Senators and sat out the rest of the season.

In 1959, he had shifted his pitching motion in a bid to avoid another, similar injury. “The reason my motion changed”, Score told the author of The Curse of Rocky  Colavito, “was because I hurt my elbow, and I overcompensated for it and ended up with some bad habits.”

herb score playbyplay

He stayed with the game he loved though, returning as play-by-play man for the Tribe (Cleveland Indians).

In 1964 he became a broadcaster for the Indians where he stayed behind the mike to 1998. His last broadcast was the 7th game of the 1997 World Series, the only Series the Indians had been in since 1954.

Score died in 2008. He is remembered as a reminder of how fate deals you a bad break, and Mr. Score showed fans how to accept one’s fate with grace and perseverance.

Score was a beloved figure in Cleveland, voted a member of the Cleveland Indians Hall of Fame.  

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WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION DECLARES COVID NO LONGER AN INTERNATIONAL EMERGENCY. DR.KATELYN JETELINA TELLS YOU WHAT THIS MEANS TO YOU AND THE WORLD

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NEW! INTRODUCING THE COUNTY EXECUTIVE’S WEEKLY UPDATE IN PRIME TIME ON WPCNR THE MAY 1 WEEKLY UPDATE

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WPCNR ACROSS THE EDITOR’S  DESK. By John Bailey Owner & Publisher, White Plains CitizeNetReporter Since 2000 A.D.:

I am going to run the entire  future County Executive Weekly Update on WPCNR.com in prime time on the day it is internetcast.

This morning, WPCNR.COM begins a new feature of Westchester County Executive George Latimer’s Weekly Update.

The Weekly Update  began in 2019, 5 years ago. It rapidly turned into the Covid Update over the last four years.

Week-in, week-out, Mr. Latimer kept our spirits up with covid figures, often trying to point out to viewers of his reporters what we needed to do to stop the relentless spread of the epidemic, and encouraging with relentless enthusiasm the need to get vaccinated once the vaccines came like the  Pfizer Calvary to the rescue in January 2021.

This  report is hard to put together every week.

After watching the covid reports and now the Weekly Updates and featuring local Mayors, leaders, County Commissioners Mr. Latimer, reports  good and disappointing  news in a stalwart “let’s get through it, the only way out is through” optimism that  mitigates disappointing news  moves on, injecting hope and encouragement.

Not since Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia’s  reading the comics on the radio in the 1930s, FDR’s Fireside Chats, has a leader in this area worked so tirelessly to inform the citizens he governs so effectively and believably.

He has a real ability to do that. He is a natural.

Mr. Latimer is also on the radio every Tues morning on WVOX 1460 Radio 7:10 A.M. live--no tapes for him– on the Dennis and Tonny Good Morning Westchester program.

His Weekly Updates continue faithfully every week, live and delivered without reading a script always looking at the camera. You get more information on the Weekly Update on the county than any other source.

Figures on covid activity are not as timely or informative as they used to be (by New York State decision) and the shadow of the disease seems to be almost under control. I am crossing my fingers.

Mr. Latimer’s Weekly Update has now turned even more informative,to trend-spotting facts, events and efforts that has made it must-viewing for citizens wanting to know what is happening to them

The trouble is the  internetcast at 2 in the afternoon  is  when not many have a chance to see it.

Watching Monday’s briefing last Monday was really packed with information everyone should have heard. It was newsworthy on the situation with the budget effect on Westchester, the impact on citizens’ mental health from a talk by the Commissioner of Mental Health, Michael Orfe and an inside analysis of why the Albany Budget is more of a political process than practical sound management.

I realized that Mr. Latimer will only be doing these 30 to  55 minute Weekly Updates for three more years.

He should get an Emmy for this report.

It is professionally produced by Catherine Cioffi, the Westchester Director of Communications and her  crack production staff. It has the always clear and compelling George Latimer “Voice of Reason” as the magnetic personality that sets it apart. It is government communication that is state of the art.

I was slapped up the side of the head after watching this week’s update:

Once his successor comes in as county executive in three years, press opportunities  like the Weekly Update will  disappear. You will be lucky to even see the next County Executive half  as much as you see Mr. Latimer.

The Latimer team assembles  Weekly Update over the weekend…for presentation on Monday (it really is an all-week job of scheduling guest appearances, and sorting out what the public needs to know in most often a positive manner.

This is unheard of. A weekly address by a leader revealing plans in advance to people who might be affected by them.

I have  had an epiphany. I have realized why these updates are so important and why it is that they be more timely when available.

So with the permission of Westchester County, I am going to run the entire Weekly Update on the WPCNR.com

website on Mondays at 8 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time.

Last Monday’s weekly update of May 1 will be the first such presentation and that is why

We hope you will take advantage weekly with  Mr. Latimer’s awesome communcation effort, the Weekly Update with this morning’s first Weekly Update (replay replay replay) of the May 1 report

 

John Bailey

Owner & Publisher

White Plains CitizeNetReporter

Founded 2000 A.D.

 

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WHITE PLAINS WEEK MAY 5 REPORT on www.wpcommunitymedia. org

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LWVW CHAPTERS PROTEST INDIAN POINT  HOT WATER–DEMAND TENTS OVER  DOME DEMOLITION.

COMMISSIONER OF MENTAL HEALTH, MICHAEL ORFE ON  STATE OF MENTAL HEALTH IN WESTCHESTER

SCHOOL BOARD MEMBER RANDY STEIN RESIGNS. ROSEMARIE ELLER VALERIE DANIELI AUTOMATICALL GO ON THE BOARD FOR THE 2 SEATS. LWV FORUM CANCELLED , NO CONTEST.

COUNTY EXECUTIVE GEORGE LATIMER ON STATE PLAN TO WITHHOLD FEDERAL MONEY FROM MEDICAID–COULD CREATE DEFICIT IN COUNTY PRESENT YEAR BUDGET

VACCINATION REPORT CARD– COVID AT THE CROSSROADS.

JOHN BAILEY AND THE NEWS

THIS WEEK EVERY WEEK

ON WHITE PLAINS WEEK

FOR 22 YEARS

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