BRONX BOROUGH PRESIDENT DIAZ: REFORM THE NY STATE LOTTERY TO MITIGATE ITS EFFECT ON THE POOR. CALLS FOR AUDIT OF CHECK CASHING SALES OF LOTTERY TICKETS. 28% OF LOTTERY SALES PURCHASED BY THOSE MAKING UNDER $30,000. CALLS FOR MORE DISTRIBUTION OF LOTTERY FUNDS TO SCHOOLS IN POOR AREAS

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BOROUGH PRESIDENT DIAZ ISSUES REPORTCALLING FOR NEW YORK STATE LOTTERY REFORM

WPCNR ALBANY ROUNDS. From the Office of the Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. November 18, 2019:

Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. has issued a new report
outlining a set of recommendations aimed at reforming the New York
State Lottery to minimize its adverse effects on low-income communities.

The report, titled “Re-Orienting the Lottery: A Better Lotto for the Poor,”
provides four recommendations that aim to prevent the lottery from
further disadvantaging the poor and to instead help these communities
see the most benefit from the state’s lottery system.

“The lottery has grown exponentially since its establishment and the
state regulations overseeing that sector must be adapted to how it exists
today. We can’t turn a blind eye to state lotteries targeting low-income
and minority communities, and the systems should be changed to help
limit the harm that vulnerable people experience because of them,” said Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr.

The full report can be read at https://on.nyc.gov/330OJF5.
Recommendations discussed in the report include :

1. Changing the allocation of lottery funds to further support students
living in or near poverty.


2. Banning check cashers from selling lottery games.

3. Requiring the state to collect information about check cashers’
sales of lottery games.

4. Educating the public about the benefits of engaging with the
traditional banking system.

Nationally, lower income individuals are more likely to play the lottery
than higher income individuals, with some statistics finding that 28% of
individuals earning under $30,000 per year play the lottery at least
weekly as compared with 18 percent of those earning over $75,000.

Additionally, low-income individuals spend a disproportionate proportion of their incomes on the lottery.

“Low income communities generate much of the lottery’s revenue but
they don’t receive benefits proportionate to their patronage of the
system,” said Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr.

“That money should be spent to support low-income students with
specific programs in schools that are aimed at the alleviation of poverty
in both the short and long terms.”
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Today is Charles F. Bailey’s Birthday

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WPCNR THE SUNDAY  BAILEY. By John F. Bailey. Republished from The CitizeNetReporter of June 17, 2007:

Today celebrates the birthday of a great American

Charles F. Bailey.

He is my father. He was born November 17, 2018.

My father gave me four pieces of advice in life: Always drive an air-conditioned car. Always centrally air-condition your home. Stay out of court.

And don’t sit in traffic.

Always take the service road on the Long Island Expressway. (He would have loved a Garmin.)

In retrospect, his advice has served me well.  I am always comfortable. I sit out traffic delays in comfort. I have not made lawyers rich.

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Charles F. Bailey

My Dad

Pleasantville, NY

1918-1986

He was not an emotional man. He was a banker and always wore suits to work. I have fond memories of going to meet him when he go Stean Engine train in Pleasantville – when  the train tracks were at grade with Manville Road.

I was most impressed as a young child by how he always smelled of coal cinders when he got off the train – like commuter’s cologne.

Sadly on today’s electric trains you do not get that. And you always heard those steam engines coming. You could see them: Clouds of very busy and inspiring industrious black smoke streaming at the horizon down the line. He’d get off the train.

My mother would move over and he’d drive the old Hudson Hornet home. He always spoke quietly. Never raised his voice. Drank scotch and soda in the winter. Gin and Tonics in the summer and he smoked Philip Morris’s, Marlboros, then Kents.

He set up a Lionel train set in our basement – perhaps our unspoken connection. When I was sent in by train for the first time to meet him at the office during Christmas time, He’d have his secretary greet me at Grand Central Terminal which still is a very big and scary place.

He would take me to lunch at Jack’s Monte Rosa restaurant on 49th Street – which I thought was a very great place. When I first went to it with him, I was a little disappointed that it was not more glamorous but I was really impressed that Jack the owner greeted him by name. I thought that was great that my Dad was greeted with respect.

When I first started working in Washington, D.C. in 1968 I ate regularly at a restaurant below the television station WMAL-TV where I worked, it was called Marty’s Italian Village.  Marty, the owner (who looked like Humphrey Bogart, the only thing missing was the white sport coat) started calling me when I came in around 7 PM, ‘Hi John, how are you?” People would look at me. They thought I was big.  I liked that. Feeling big in my small world.

When my father came to visit me in Washington where I worked. I took him around town. I told him when he got off the plane. “Hi, Dad, welcome to my town.” I wanted to impress him. We’re always trying to impress our fathers.

Another Father time was when my Dad came out for Dad’s Day at college. I mean this was a big thing to me. He watched me do play-by-play of a football game from atop the press box in 15 degree weather. It was cold. But he watched. Acted impressed. He hated cold weather.

Another time he impressed when I lost a job where I was working at the television station that I had been being considered for. And I told him how unfair it was, he put things in perspective: “Puggy, he said,  “The film manager wasn’t going to put you in as his Assistant if you were going to be bucking him all the time.” It put things in perspective. No false sentiment. No making me feel better, he was tough enough to teach by being realistic while telling me not to feel sorry for myself.

Then later in my careerI was fired out of a job completely blindsided. He again intervened, saying to me he thought what the agency head had done was a terrible thing. I needed that at the time.

He also, in a very supportive move, told me if I could make $1,000 a night writing a free lance direct mail package, I should keep trying to do that.

Dads are there to say the right things to you at the right time. Sometimes it is not always the right thing, but they try. Often, if you’re lucky, as I was, they say the right thing. And not the wrong thing.

With my father, who was not really my father, since I was an adopted child, it was never all about him, it was all about you. Making me better, even when it hurt him to say things that were the truth.

When I bought my first house in White Plains. He never criticized the house. But when I sold it, he complimented me, “I think it’s great how you came out of it (the crummy first house).” He was a personal trainer.

The good ones  train you to run a race. If you stumble, no one hurts more than they do. When you succeed, no one is prouder. The good ones push you in front of the cameras, they say interview her or him. They did it.

They know what you should do, but they can’t tell you, because you won’t do it if you’re a kid.

But the more subtler of them tell you any way in hopes it will sink in to the rebellious offspring mind. My dad was subtle.

Another fond memory: My father took me camping once at a friend’s cabin in Pennsylvania. Funny thing was there was such a great comic collection we wound up sleeping in sleeping bags on the porch of the cabin. That was funny.

Another time when I was being threatened in college over a position at the radio station, I asked him if I should just abdicate and assign a play-by-play position to the person who was being forced on me. He advised me to “stick to your guns,” so I reported the threat to the Dean.

The position was compromised, but I was never threatened again.  He never shared my love for baseball and sports. In fact he never played catch with me all that well.

I mean I could have made the big leagues (pipe dream) if he played catch with me more. But that’s a small criticism.  I wish I had more of his financial acumen. But I do not.

As you grow into your 30s and 40s, little things they say to you you begin to understand. My father never struck me, but always disciplined me with quiet words. I have not always been that way as a parent myself, being somewhat volatile. I wish I had his even temperament. He always asked me to take care of my mother. And the only time he really got mad at me was when I had made my mother upset with me.

He was a little like Humphrey Bogart in movie roles in the way he disciplined, I remember he would say admonitions quietly. Such as when I got an F in an English course at college. He told me, that was the last F I would get at Ohio Wesleyan, because the next one he would stop paying my tuition.

That had an effect. And that was when tuition was only $3,000 a year.

I have taken to after my children have grown, telling them always “Be careful,” “Don’t do anything stupid because someone suggests it,” “Do not go anywhere alone without telling people where you are going,” “Don’t lose your temper,” “Don’t tailgate.” In hopes that when I am not with them, they will remember it when they need it.

I think of him every day of my life. I become more like him every day. He is always lingering in the background of my thoughts. I do not know what he would think of what I am doing now.  But, he’d say — “If that’s what you want to do. Do it.” He also would say, “You have to make yourself happy.”

I also think, even today of what advice (laconic as always) he’d give me in a situation. And I wish I could discuss property taxes with him. Banking today and how it has become a predator system.

I especially have to salute him, because I am an adopted child.

That alone makes me appreciate his love and acceptance with a sense of awe to this day. He loved me like his own son.

You never outgrow your need for Dad. The good ones are immortal, alive and with you in your head when you need them.

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WHITE PLAINS WEEK ON YOUTUBE AND ANYTIME AT www.wpcommunitymedia.org

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JOHN BAILEY AND JIM BENEROFE
TWO FOR TRUTH, JUSTICE AND THE AMERICAN WAY FOR 19 YEARS THIS WEEK EVERY WEEK THIS WEEK:

The link to wpweek for 11-15 ON YOUTUBE… https://youtu.be/b44s4hhYEqo

GANNETT PAPERS ARE BEING ACQUIRED

AMY PAULIN ENDORSES DAVID BUCHWALD FOR CONGRESS

THE SINKING OF VENICE

LATEST ON FASNY–WILL WHITE PLAINS BUY BACK THE PROPERTY?

SEIU 32BJ PROTESTS REAL ESTATE OWNERS DISRESPECT

SUMMER SAYS FAIRWELL

BRINGING NATIVE PLANTS TO WHITE PLAINS

THE WINBROOK REBUILD STARTED IN 2007 CONTINUES

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NEW MEDIA INVESTMENT GROUP FINALIZES DEAL TO BUY USA TODAY GANNETT FOR $1.13 BILLION. SHAREHOLDERS OF BOTH COMPANIES APPROVE. DEAL TO CLOSE NOV 19. JUSTICE DEPARTMENT APPROVED

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WPCNR MEDIA GO-ROUND. From New Media AND GANNETT NEWS RELEASES. November 15, 2019:

Shareholders on Thursday approved the merger of USA Today owner Gannett and GateHouse Media parent New Media Investment Group, creating the largest U.S. newspaper publisher by print circulation, the companies announced Thursday according to a press relation from both companies.

GateHouse Media’s $1.13 billion acquisition, first announced in August, will pave the way for massive cuts across the 260 daily papers now controlled by the new conglomerate. “The new Gannett aims to cut $275 million to $300 million in costs per year within 18 to 24 months in a variety of areas, including facilities, corporate functions and news operations,” according to USA Today

The deal is expected to close Nov. 19, “subject to the satisfaction of customary closing conditions,” New Media said in a statement. The new combined company will be called Gannett. It will own more than 260 dailies — including Gannett flagship USA Today, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and the Indianapolis Star — as well as hundreds of weeklies.

Also Read:GateHouse Media Acquires USA Today Owner Gannett for $1.4 Billion

Under the terms of the merger agreement announced in August, shareholders of Gannett will receive $6.25 in cash and 0.5427 of a New Media share for each Gannett share they hold, representing total consideration of $12.06 per Gannett common share based on New Media’s closing stock price as of August 2, 2019, and a premium of approximately 18% to the five-day volume-weighted average price of Gannett shares as of that date.

After the close of the transaction, Gannett shareholders will hold approximately 49.5% of the combined company and New Media shareholders will hold approximately 50.5%.

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SATURDAY NIGHT ON “PEOPLE TO BE HEARD” 7 PM CH 45, CH 76:THE ANNUAL COMPUTER SCAM UPDATE WITH AARON WOODIN, PC VENTURES

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JOHN BAILEY AND JIM BENEROFE INTERVIEW
AARON WOODIN
COMPUTER EXPERT IN WHITE PLAINS FOR 17 YEARS

ON SCAMS, SWINDLES, TECH PROBLEMS, WHAT’S VICTIMIZING PERSONAL COMPUTERS TODAY AND HOW YOU CAN PROTECT YOUR IDENTITY, YOUR INFORMATION, YOUR COMPUTER YOUR COMPANY UP TO THE MINUTE

7 PM ON WHITE PLAINS TV SATURDAY, FIOS CH 45 COUNTYWIDE, CABLEVISION CH 76 AND RIGHT NOW ON

www.wpcommunitymedia.org

CLICK THIS LINK AND SCROLL DOWN THE PROGRAM WALL TO WHITE PLAINS WEEK PEOPLE TO BE HEARD TO VIEW THIS PROGRAM NOW

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ASSEMBLYWOMAN PAULIN ENDORSES DAVID BUCHWALD FOR THE LOWEY SEAT

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WPCNR CAMPAIGN 2020. November 13, 2019:  

Democratic Assemblywoman Amy Paulin endorsed her NY Assembly colleague, David Buchwald as her choice for candidate to run for retiring Representative Nita Lowey’s seat yesterday. Ms. Lowey is retiring at the end of her term in December, 2020/

Paulin said in a news release from the Buchwald campaign:

“The next member of Congress for Westchester and Rockland Counties needs to be someone who is hard-working and focused on delivering for his constituents, deeply intelligent to get to the root of the serious challenges our nation faces, brave to take on the hard fights, and has deep integrity….Having worked on issue after issue with him in the New York State Assembly, I am fully confident that David Buchwald will bring his talents and tenacity to bear on the issues we care passionately about as Democrats—from protecting women’s rights to preserving our environment, from defending Israel, to repealing the attack on New York represented by the limits on the SALT deduction. I am proud to endorse my friend and colleague, David Buchwald for Congress.”

Buchwald, was enthusiastic: “It means so much to have Assemblymember Paulin’s support as I run for congress. Together we have fought for transparency, women’s rights, improving Metro North and taking on the harmful Trump/Republican ‘tax reform’ bill—issues that continue to be at stake on the national level. I am committed to fighting for our Democratic values.”

If Buchwald is challenged for the nomination, the primary for rivals is scheduled for June 23, 2020.

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TUESDAY NIGHT AT 9:30 PM BILL WELD, REPUBLICAN CALLING FOR IMPEACHMENT OF PRESIDENT INTERVIEWED ON WPTV’S “BEYOND THE GAME” FIOS CH. 45, CABLEVISION CH. 76 AND RIGHT NOW ON WWW.WPCOMMUNITYMEDIA.ORG

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WHITE PLAINS TV’S JOHN VORPERIAN CONDUCTS A 28-MINUTE TELEPHONE INTERVIEW WITH GOVERNOR WELD, RECORDED IMMEDIATELY AFTER THE GOVERNOR’S NEWS CONFERENCE IN BOSTON WHERE GOV WELD CALLED FOR IMPEACHMENT OF PRESIDENT TRUMP LAST FRIDAY.

See this WPTV exclusive at 9:30pm Tuesday evening, 1:30pm Wednesday, Thursday at 5:30 pm and Friday at 9:00 PM Countywide on FIOS CH. 45 and ON CABLEVISION CH. 76 in White Plains and anytime on www.wpcommunitymedia.org

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Armistice Day Veterans Day Passes the Torch of Memory and Regret and Responsibility

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WPCNR News & Comment By John F. Bailey November 11,2019

I could not attend today’s Veterans Ceremony at City Hall because of a previous commitment. I am republishing this piece I wrote a number of years ago, commenting on the significance of Veterans Day:W

It is the 11th day of the 11th month, and it is 1918. Armistice Day the day when World War I “The Great War to end all Wars” officially ended. Sadly, the way “The Great War” ended and subsequent reparations penalties on Germany, set the stage for a century of war:  World War II, the Holocaust, the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the 6-Day War,  the first Iraq War, the Afghan War..

It was sunny on the steps of City Hall today in White Plains this morning , not at all like the trenchs of the Somme in that “Great War.” I wrote the piece that follows in 2013 that delivers some of the feelings of all Armistice Days

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I attended the Veterans Day Ceremony in White Plains Rural Cemetery in 2013.  I met Ross Marsico,(above) the 90 year old  veteran of World War II who fought with the Third Army in France, Belgium and Germany. He was wounded by shrapnel, spent 45 days in a hospital THEN returned to active duty.

Mr. Marsico returned to the USA and spent 30 years as an active policeman in Harrison. He was honored as the 2013 Veteran’s Day Honoree

Mr. Marsico is a native of White Plains, just turned 90 in 2013, is an outstanding person to have the honor to meet. When he was asked questions how he felt about being  honored, he said he just represented all the other veterans and every day people who had served, that it was not about him. Then he teared up.

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Veterans day makes you tear up.

Chaplain Bob Donnelly of American Legion Post 135 in the invocation observed that the gathering was there to honor persons who had written a “blank check to the United States of America, good for everything including their life in service to their country.”

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Adele Zucker(above , Past President of Jewish War Veterans Ladies Auxiliary, said  Veterans day was to honor the veterans who came back and have contributed so much to their hometowns in addition to their military service. 

Chaplain Bob Donnelly noted that when he returned from the Vietnam war he was spat upon by a woman in an airport and called a baby killer, and observed today’s veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan  conflicts are much more respected.

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Then came brief  inspiration remarks by the Mayor, Tom Roach, who proclaimed Monday Veteran’s Day in White Plains  and U.S. Marine Corps Staff Sergeant Jason Freeland(below)

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Sergeant Freeland, in his most recent tour, was responsible for training Afghan army and police recruits. He is now head of recruiting for the Marines in White Plains. He mentioned how honored he was to be among the veterans attending, and how it was their and those like them whose service that make it possible for him and today’s servicemen and women to perform and live up to the veterans’ example. This  truth was echoed again how you serve matters and it is an inspiration to those who come after you.

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Mayor Roach with Commandant Jack Collins of American Legion Post 135  places the Mayor’s Veteran’s Day Board Wreath at the Soldiers and Sailors Monument.

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The Home Defense Wreathis placed by members of the White Plains Police and Fire Department

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Dennis Jones, left, places the White Plains Historical Society Wreath. Joan Steere , Regent of the Daughters of the American Revolution placed the final commemorative wreath.

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The White Plains Middle School Band played Anchors Aweigh, The Caissons Go Rolling Along, The Marines Hymn, Semper Fidelis (Coast Guard), and Off We Go Into the Wild Blue Yonder (Air Force).

Crisp. Inspiring, evoking the rich traditions and pride and sacrifice of the American armed forces.

As the gathering left, the tent was folded, and the crowd drifted away, until another Memorial Day another Veterans Day.

I remained and watched the tombstones of the Revolutionary War Dead…names no longer readable on the stones, they still spoke as one.

Cemeteries like the White Plains Rural Cemetery inspire by the testimony of the simple stones, the tiny flags denoting veterans and the stones too of every day people of long ago who lived well. As I read their stones I wonder what their lives were like their thoughts, their actions in that long ago time.

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Cemeteries are not places of regret, but, instead inspiration to ignite in us, with their  memories, to continue to work on our own lives and live up to the examples of persons like the veterans still with us and those who have departed.

Rifle Salute to the Departed Veterans by American Legion Post #135, was followed by Taps, played by Bob Freis

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The veterans are getting older.

James Dwyer of American Legion Post 135 was scheduled  to read Flanders Field. He could not  due to illness according to Commander Jack Collins. This is the touching poem penned in World War I, Mr. Dywer would have read. He could not, so I will publish it for him.

In Flanders fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses, row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.

We are the Dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie
In Flanders fields.

Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders field

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This has been a reminiscence of a Veterans Day event of the past in 2013, that I wrote that year. It is not a report on today’s Veterans Day ceremony, but I am sure that many of the same sentiments were said.

May we shake the hand active soldiers we meet in airports and railroad stations today to recognize their service and just thank them. You do not have to say a word. A handshake. A respectfiul nod of the head is all that is necessary to recognize what serving your country as a soldier means.

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Pollination in White Plains Initiative Propagates at WP Council of Neighborhood Assocations Tuesday Night at 7:30 at Ed House. Neighborhoods Requested to Appoint representative to

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V
T

November Meeting:

How Pollinators and Native Plants Play a Role in White Plains


The November Meeting will be held on Tuesday, November 12, 2019 at
7:30 pm at the Education House, 5 Homeside Lane, White Plains, NY.

The meeting will be a discussion on pollinators and native plants, and how they play a role in White Plains.

The WPCNA has invited subject matter experts to speak about some of
the things that  have happened regarding pollinators/native plants in
White Plains since they were there earlier (the library plaza filled with
native plants that the  White Plains Beautification Foundation, Pollinators of White Plains, awarded the first “This property is   on the
pathway sign” in White Plains, for example,  and other properties that the The Pollinators of White Plains has become aware of with native
plant/pollinator gardens; inside the library a   display and many more
books).

The Pollinators of White Plains will also touch a bit on invasives – why
they are unwelcome, identification and how to get rid of them; new
recommendations for getting the garden ready for winter.

The Pollinators of White Plains will be reaching out Tuesday to each
neighborhood, during the meeting, to appoint a representative to the
Pollinators of White Plains group so that they can be an ambassador

to their own neighborhoods. No knowledge required to start.

 The meeting will be a discussion for WPCNA delegates, residents and the public. We hope to facilitate a healthy dialog to better understand the
issues, opinions and ideas coming out of our neighborhoods. We all look forward to your input.
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