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![]() ![]() ARE YOU READY TO VOTE?GENERAL ELECTION ON NOVEMBER 8 Early Voting is October 29 – November 6 HEAR FROM THE CANDIDATES! U.S. Congressional District 16Virtual Candidate Forum October 11, 2022 / 7:00pm Jamaal Bowman (D, W) Miriam L. Flisser (R)REGISTER TO WATCH CD16 FORUM HERESUBMIT QUESTION U.S. Congressional District 17Virtual Candidate ForumOctober 12, 2022 / 7:00pm Mike Lawler (R, C) Sean Patrick Maloney (D, W)REGISTER TO WATCH CD17 FORUM HERE SUBMIT QUESTION Registration is required. The Zoom login link will be sent in your confirmation email. Disability Rights New York is our partner for these events.ASL and Closed Captioning in English and Spanish will be available.Need to know your voting districts? They could be newly redistricted. CLICK HERE TO FIND YOUR DISTRICTS YOUR SUPPORT OF LWVW IS APPRECIATED VISIT THE LWVW WEBSITE HERE |
| League of Women Voters of Westchester | 520 White Plains Rd, Suite 500, Tarrytown, NY 10591 |
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WHERE IS THE RESPONSIBILITY? WHAT WOULD JESUS DO?
COULD WE ASSEMBLE A ONE -DAY CONFERENCE OF POLITICIANS, LEADERS, BILLIONAIRE PHILANTHROPISTS. WALK THE WALK.
STOP THE GALAS. HOUSE THE HOMELESS, OPPRESSED AND HUDDLED MASSES.
ACT!
WPCNR THE SUNDAY BAILEY. News & Comment by John F. Bailey. October 9, 2022:
It has been a week since Mayor Eric Adams of New York (under disgraceful pressure) moved the Texas refugees from Orchard Beach, blaming flooding.
But Mayor Adams could have housed those refugees temporarily in the Egyptian colossal pavilion on the Beach, (a higher ground positioned building), and much more secure. But he did not.
I suspect because of the protests from New Rochelle and the County Government of Westchester that Orchard Beach was not appropriate place to house them.
So Mayor Adams sent them to Randall’s Island and so far no real information on whether they were going into tents or into Icahn Stadium, or whatever or how they were going to be housed there.
I see no pictures of the thousands of poor souls, because that would be actually showing the ENTIRE metropolitan area outside New York City has not stepped up to help.
Mayor Adams declared a state of emergency Friday when I believe Texas sent another 9,000 into New York Friday. And of course, no public official, no President, Governor, Senator, Congressperson, or County Executive stepped up and said —
“We will help.”
I have heard of no church organizations opening their virtually empty churches in either Nassau, Suffolk or Westchester Counties exploring with Mayor Adams how they could help.
I have heard of no housing organizations step up to find facilities. I have no reports of Counties with facilities not filled to capacity, that are not filled up as being places where the refugees could be housed.(After all, they all have water fountains, a prerequisite.)
All towns and cities in Westchester have restaurants that could be paid to feed them. Schools could house the refugees after school and they have cafeterias that could be expanded to evening operations.
The federal government has not announced whether it is a policy to keep these poor souls in some form of high security incarceration, and keep records of them and who they are.
No editorials from the papers of record about how America should help these people, whether they are Latino,Russian, Ukrainian, Iranian, Indian, whatever.
They need help.
The Statue of Liberty is shedding tears in the rain last week. We should send the Statue of Liberty back to France, if we do not help these people New York.
For God’s Sake, Ellis Island could be used as it was 150 years ago. It was built for classification of immigrants streaming in in the 19th century. The military could build barracks. Mobile home builders could build housing.
Now Nassau County and Suffolk Counties can also chip in using some of their parks, schools.
Mayor Adams NEEDS to call a conference to house these people streaming in from the irresponsibly cruel and UnAmerican grandstanders like Governor Greg Abbott and Ron DeSantis who have created this burden on New York and Martha’s Vineyard. Abbot could not heat his state in the winter or electrify his state after the freeze. DeSantis has no plan to fix the Florida West Coast. What Governors!
However, kudos for Martha’s Vineyard, they did not complain. They did not complain like New Rochelle and Westchester did. I know no details on how the Vineyard is doing this, but they are quietly coping.Not complaining.
Coping. That is something New Yorkers are known for doing. We are not now outside of New York City. The 9 counties are washing their hands. Not our problem. Really?
Meanwhile, Connecticut and New Jersey and New York need to conference up in one day—How about Monday? This would give the politicians who have said nothing about this terrible problem for refugees coming here of all ages and backgrounds – a tremendous workforce ready to do the jobs and do good in the big hope country, the United States of America.
If persons are willing to house immigrants in their homes, this has to be set up. A reader chastised me for my not opening my home to an immigrant family. Well how do persons with homes do that legally? Does the state want to keep track of them? The state has to decide and really they have to know who they are. Do the immigrants have any documents and vaccinations given them in Texas and Florida. (Hell we are behind in even vaccinating our own school children as of two weeks ago.)
I also want to see the business organizations of Westchester first to pat themselves on the back as vital to Westchester do something really vital: set up a clearing house of vacancies in office buildings and owned facilities that could be used for housing these people and and securing semi employment. If business does not think once in awhile nothing good happens. (Raising prices to maintain profit margins is an example of selfish not thinking.)
Bottom Line: If no county leaders, borough leaders and upstate counties respond to Mayor Adams’ call for help, then Governor Hochul has to sacrifice the ire of counties and organizations everywhere in the state to do this humanitarian thing which the 9 counties surrounding New York City do not want to do and—
GOVERNOR HOCHUL — CALL – THE 2022 REFUGEE RELIEF AND RENAISSANCE CONFERENCE. HOLD IT IN THE JAVITTS CENTER—ALL COUNTY EXECUTIVES, POLITICAL CONTRIBUTORS, MAYORS, BUSINESS OWNERS, COMMUNCATIONS EXECUTIVES. MEDICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND MAKE A PLAN.
MAKE A PLAN.
Westchester particularly prides itself on doing good and treating people well. This is a real test. We have to get a good grade. Right now you have an “F”
Please do it.
You’re not talking. So may I suggest strongly that you do it.
Save the refugees.
Make them Americans for life to rebuild this country as still the shining beacon of the world of hope and possibility and responsibility.
Send in the SEABEES, the National Guard.
Whatever it takes.
Take over the hotels. Motels.
Say “We will help.”
“What can we do? We’ll do it.”
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One of our biggest public health challenges is to decrease the rate of severe COVID-19 disease in the face of pandemic fatigue, dried up funding, misinformation, and a changing virus. Paxlovid—an antiviral medication—is a tool we still have left.
However, recent data shows concerning trends of Paxlovid use. For example, less than 30% of 80-85 year-olds with COVID are getting a prescription for Paxlovid. This is a major problem. This group is at the highest risk for severe disease and death, even if vaccinated. Improving knowledge, confidence, and thus prescriptions and use should be a priority.
Here is the latest data on effectiveness, rebounding, and drug interactions with Paxlovid. (To see how Paxlovid works, go here.)
As with vaccines, we rely on two types of data: clinical trials data and “real world” data. Both have limitations, so looking at them together gives us the best picture.
Clinical trials
Real world data
COVID-19 rebound occurs when a person takes the drug for a few days, tests negative, and then tests positive again several days later. Since my last update, we still don’t know the “true” frequency in which this happens after Paxlovid. But we have discovered other important pieces to the rebounding puzzle:
One limitation to Paxlovid is that it can interact with other medications. The older the person, the more comorbidities, and the more medications. This may explain suboptimal uptake. The good news is there aren’t too many drug-to-drug interactions. The Infectious Disease Society of America released a report summarizing the the top 200 prescribed drugs and their interactions with Paxlovid. They found only 2 drugs have interactions so severe that Paxlovid should be avoided:
With the help of a clinician, other medications can be managed so Paxlovid remains an option. Be sure to get advice from a clinician.
Severe disease is not COVID-19’s only outcome, so a comprehensive assessment of Paxlovid is beneficial, especially if we are considering populations outside of 65+:
Vaccination is the safest and most effective way to stay out of the hospital.
Paxlovid acts as a fantastic second line of defense among unvaccinated people and vaccinated older adults. This is the case even if they rebound.
We are entering winter with limited tools, so Paxlovid needs to be top of mind.
We’re simply missing too many opportunities to use it among high risk people.
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8,800 COVID HOSPITALIZATIONS IN NEW YORK CITY IN THREE MONTHS.
CDC: MONKEY POX DECLINING NEXT FEW MONTHS DEPENDING ON BEHAVIOR.
3,984 MONKEY POX CASES IN NEW YORK STATE LEAD NATION.
WPCNR COVID SURVEILLANCE. Statistics from New York State Covid-19 Tracker. Observation and Analysis by John F. Bailey. October 8, 2022:
Westchester County 2022 Covid-19 infections spread at double the rate they spread one year ago, averaging 180 new cases a day through Thursday compared to 98 a day the first week in October in 2021.

County Executive George Latimer and Dr. Sherlita Amler held a news conference at the County Board of Health Tuesday starting a drive to encourage vaccinations for covid and the flu. Mr. Latimer received his fourth Covid shot, and a flu shot at the same time. and Dr. Amler emphasized Westchester residents should return to get all their first vaccination series if they have not already done so. Dr. Amler said it has been the county experience that in the fall infections of covid rise due to increased social gatherings.
WPCNR notes that the Labor Day Weekend and unknown covid infections in the first week of school rose September cases 2022 to 5,205, 133 less than the September 2021 cases of 5,338.

However Westchester this September and first week in October are spreading at an 8% of those lab-verified tested being positive compared to 2% infection rate last September when the fall. Remember that was a time when we had no vaccine, but had strict social distancing and gathering rules and masking was in effect. This is why folks should listen to Mr. Latimer and Dr. Amler and just get it.
She implored Westchester residents who are fully vaccinated to go on the www.westchestergov.com website and click to the Department of Health and make an appointment to get the variant at the Board of Health.
(You can see that 2 minute segment on the White Plains Week report it’s right at the top of the program on www.wpcommunitymedia.org)
In Westchester County, here is what covid did this week: 1,085 new infections with Friday results due this afternoon and Saturday tomorrow.

Around Westchester, here are the areas that are responsible for the most infections (over 100):

Yonkers, Mr. Vernon, New Rochelle, White Plains, Yorktown, Greenburgh, Cortlandt, New Castle and North Castle, Mt.Pleasant-Pleasantville, and Tarrytown-Sleepy Hollow. As of October 6, those 13 towns and cities, accounted for 67% (2,075) of the 3,089 Westchester infections the last two weeks, and those 13 towns averaged an aggregate of 1,200 new daily infections daily.
What is more disappointing is in 5 weeks, those towns have not improved their covid fighting.
How is the Mid Hudson Region doing?
Orange and Westchester and Rockland and Dutchess Counties are infecting steadily. Overall in a week the Mid-Hudson region tested 5,684 and 445 were confirmed positive, an infection rate of 7%. Westchester was 5.6% with an average daily infection rate in 7days of 20.3 persons per 100,000 of population, that is 211 a week which times 4 weeks is 844 people which is a little shy of the 1,336 we actually recorded last week.
But here’s the twist: These are lab-test verified positives. With more infections than there should be then persons may not be quarantining after testing positive, let alone or worse, not confirming they are positive with a lab test, then getting sick spreading the disease and then the lab records the tests when persons catch the covid from non quarantiners, or socially mingling positives, that might explain why the infections are higher than the 20.3 spread rate.
This home testing started April 4 2022 is not working in giving us a true picture of the disease spread pattern.
In my opinion, it is spreading disease since April 4 creating this new wave in the making as Karelyn Jettelina, the epidemiologist writes in her Your Local Epidemiologist newsletter October 5, which you can read on this website.
On the Monkey pox disease, the Center for Disease Control says the disease is declining, and should continue to do so. There are 26,577 cases of Monkeypox in the U.S.
New York state has 3,984,second to California at 5,135. New Jersey has 723 and Connecticut, 131.
Florida has 2,572. Texas, 2,410. Georgia, 1,839.
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THIS WEEK EVERY WEEK ON
WHITE PLAINS WEEK
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WPCNR LAW JOURNAL. From the Westchester County District Attorney. October 8, 2022:
The Westchester County District Attorney’s Office has, for the first time, consented to the resentencing of a domestic violence survivor under New York State’s 2019 Domestic Violence Survivors Justice Act (DVSJA).
The DVSJA gives the court discretion to resentence defendants who suffered sexual, psychological or physical abuse that significantly contributed to their criminal conduct.
Westchester County District Attorney Miriam E. Rocah recommended a five-year resentence, the maximum under the DVSJA, for Jonitha Alston, who has been serving a 12-year sentence for her manslaughter conviction for the 2016 stabbing death of her boyfriend, Dennis Graham.
Judge Robert Neary vacated the original sentence, of which Alston served nearly five years, and granted our recommendation of a five-year resentence, with five years of post-release supervision, in Westchester County Court on October 7, 2022.
“I want to thank the court for its thoughtful consideration. After a careful review of the motion filed by Ms. Alston under the Domestic Violence Survivors Justice Act, and a recent examination by an expert psychologist, we concluded that Ms. Alston was subject to physical and psychological abuse at the time of her offense, and the history of this abuse, combined with the perceived threat to her daughter at the time of the offense, significantly contributed to her commission of the crime,” DA Rocah said.
“The Domestic Violence Survivors Justice Act is an important evolution in the way the criminal justice system views survivors of abuse. The legislation is narrowly crafted and requires a strict set of eligibility requirements, which we took into consideration during our careful and thorough evaluation of this request.”
“This is a life-changing result for Ms. Alston and her family, friends and community. This case shows what can be accomplished when the DVSJA is coupled with a prosecutor’s office that views domestic violence survivors through a compassionate, holistic and trauma-informed lens,” said Ross Kramer, Director of the Incarcerated Gender Violence Survivors Initiative at Sanctuary for Families, one of New York’s largest service providers and advocates for survivors of gender-based violence that played a lead role in the passage of the DVSJA.
“Pace Women’s Justice Center is so pleased to see the Westchester County DA’s Office use the Domestic Violence Survivors Justice Act for the first time to reduce the sentence of an incarcerated survivor of domestic violence. It is fitting that this type of action was taken during Domestic Violence Awareness Month, giving voice to survivors. It speaks loudly of the Office’s understanding of the complexity of domestic violence prosecutions within the criminal justice system,” said Cindy Kanusher, Executive Director for Pace Womens Justice Center, which provides free legal services to victims and survivors of domestic violence, sexual assault, and elder abuse.
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