SAVE ON OUT OF COUNTY COMMUNITY COUNTY COLLEGE TUITION BY APPLYING FOR WESTCHESTER CERTIFICATES OF RESIDENCE

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From the Westchester County Department of Communications. December 12, 2018:

Westchester residents can reduce their cost of tuition at community colleges outside of the County.

Certificates of Residence, which can be obtained from the Department of Finance, qualify students for residential rates at two-year SUNY and CUNY colleges. Applications can be found on the Department of Finance’s website and must be submitted by mail.

So far, 1,742 certificates have been issued in 2018. That number is expected to be closer to 2,000 as students begin to submit applications for the Spring 2019 semester.

Commissioner of Finance Ann Marie Berg said the department has seen an increase in the number of applications over the last few years.

Berg said: “with online classes it’s even more popular because people can easily take classes outside of the County.”

“There is no cost involved to get the certificate,” said Berg. “If you meet the resident requirement for Westchester and New York State and are attending a community college outside of Westchester County you’ll get the financial benefit.”

Students who have lived in Westchester for 6 months, and New York State for 1 year, qualify for the Program.

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ALL MOZART ALL THE TIME DOWNTOWN MUSIC CONCERT TODAY AT GRACE CHURCH 12 NOON

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Today, at 12 Noon, Karen Marie Marmer, violin and Dongsok Shin fortepiano, principals of the internationally acclaimed REBEL Ensemble for Baroque Music, play an all Mozart program featuring sonatas for violin and fortepiano and a work for keyboard solo. This concert is made possible, in part, with the generous support of Dagher Engineering, PLLC.

Upcoming concerts:

 

December 19       Angelica – A visit from this wonderful chamber choir, directed by Marie Caruso, has become a seasonal tradition for our Downtown Music audience. This year’s program will feature medieval and renaissance Yuletide selections plus Joshua Himes’s stunning contemporary setting of There Is No Rose as well as seasonal favorites. Joining Angelica is percussionist Rex BenincasaThis concert is made possible, in part, with the generous support of NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital.

JANUARY 9         Internationally acclaimed mezzo-soprano MaryAnn McCormick has performed at La Scala, with the opera companies of Rome and Turin, the Lyric Opera of Chicago and, for 25 seasons, with the Metropolitan Opera. She has appeared in concert with the New York Philharmonic, the Philadelphia Orchestra, and the Academy of St. Martin in the Fields.

She is joined by the celebrated American pianist Kayo Iwama, who has been heard in concert at the Walter Reade Theater at Lincoln Center, Weill Recital Hall, the Morgan Library, Boston’s Jordan Hall, the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Seiji Ozawa Hall at Tanglewood, and the Kennedy Center. Together, they will offer Schubertiade – A program of Selected Lieder of Franz Schubert. A Downtown Music debut.This concert is made possible, in part, with the generous support of Dagher Engineering, PLLC.

 

JANUARY 16       The musicians of the Westchester Philharmonic return for one of their exciting chamber music concerts. Please consult our website, www.DTMusic.org, for details. This concert is made possible with the generous support of the Brian Wallach Agency, White Plains, New York.  Personal and Commercial Insurance since 1949.

 

JANUARY 23       Pianist Anastasia Dedik, cellist Rubin Kodheli, and flutist Jessica Taskov offer a program of virtuosic works from around the globe including music of Beethoven and Villa Lobos. A Downtown Music debut. This concert is made possible, in part, with the generous support of Beverley and Sabin Streeter.

JANUARY 30       The Manhattan Saxophone Quartet has performed in concert at the Bruno Walter Auditorium at Lincoln Center, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Symphony Space, and Yale University. Jordan Smith, Aaron Patterson, Daniel Kochersberger, and Jay Rattman offer a survey of 150 years of music for this unique combination of instruments including, from 1857, the first music ever composed for saxophone quartet. A Downtown Music debut. This concert is made possible, in part, with the generous support of Ridgeway Garden Center, White Plains, and Lago Ristorante, West Harrison.

 

 

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COUNTY LEGISLATURE PASSES 1.94 BILLION BUDGET FOR 2019. COUNTY EXECUTIVE LATIMER SIGNS IT. DONE DEAL.

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From the Westchester County Department of Communications. December 10, 2018 (EDITED):

The Westchester County Board of Legislators passed the $1.94 billion operating budget by a vote of 13-4, Monday morning. The vote, according to the Board,  begins the process of restoring the County perhaps  to financial stability, and is the first step in a long-term process of resolving structural imbalances, rebuilding the County’s fund balance.  Previous votes by the very same legislators voting for the budget were responsible  for creating  the “imbalances” through 7 years of approving former County Executive Robert Astorino’s budgets.  The budget increases funding for essential social services.

After two years of deficits that resulted in the County drawing down rainy day funds by more than $70 million, the 2019 operating budget does not require the use of the fund balance.

(Editor’s Observation: It is unclear at this time whether the $25 Million surplus in sales tax revenues (through October), which presently if November December numbers rebound to the 6% increase they had shown the first six months of this year, the county will have a $555 Million sales tax handle, $30 Million more than last year. It is unclear in the  Board of Legislators news release on the budget where that sales tax revenue surplus is going.)

The budget provides increased funding for nonprofits, whose work saves the County money by providing services that keep people working, keep people in their homes and train the next generation of businesses leaders. The budget restores funding for additional daycare slots that help parents keep working and give youngsters access to important early childhood development programs.

Importantly, the budget ensures that the County will continue to provide crucial funding for public safety, health and mental health, consumer protection, parks, seniors and youth; and the 2019 capital budget makes sure we continue to invest in upgrading our infrastructure, which is so important to the quality of life for Westchester residents and helps make Westchester attractive to businesses.

The County number of employees remains essentially flat in the new budget, and the County now has contracts with all its unions for the first time in seven years.

In order to address structural imbalances, the County must increase its recurring revenue.  This budget includes a 2% property tax increase. Although no one wants to have their taxes increased, we have tried to minimize the impact on taxpayers.

Some one-shot revenues are used to balance the operating budget. In the past, legislators have criticized the use of one-shots as not sustainable, but given the County’s short term financial position — including the need to pay for contract settlements that were not budgeted for over seven years – the County must resort to some one-shots now.

The biggest one-shot is the transfer of the County Center parking lots from one government entity to another.  This $23 million deal will allow the County to monetize in 2019 future revenue at the lots.  It will not change the use of the land in any way.

The Board of Legislators will continue to work with the County Executive to seek new revenue sources from the state legislature and the governor as we build a bridge to a better financial future for Westchester County.

Board Chair Ben Boykin, (D- White Plains, Scarsdale, Harrison), said, “This begins the process of stabilizing our finances and lays the groundwork for a brighter financial future for Westchester County. With the budgets we passed today – operating, capital and special districts —  we are able to protect the health and safety of our residents and provide funding to rebuild our aging infrastructure.”

Legislator Catherine Borgia (D – Briarcliff Manor, Cortlandt, Croton-on-Hudson, Ossining, Peekskill), chair of the Board’s Budget and Appropriations Committee, said, “This budget is not perfect, but it begins to turn the ship around after years of short-sighted financial decisions by the prior administration.  I’m especially happy that we could budget more money for not-for-profits and daycare – these things save the County money in the long term, and make Westchester more livable.”

Board Vice Chair Alfreda Williams (D – Elmsford, Greenburgh, Sleepy Hollow, Tarrytown) said, “This 2019 budget allows us to continue to provide the important health, public safety, child care, consumer protection and other services for Westchester families, seniors and youth while we begin to address structural financial problems inherited from the administration of the prior County Executive. I’m particularly pleased that the budget process has moved forward with a new spirit of transparency and cooperation.”

Majority Leader Catherine Parker (D – Harrison, Larchmont, Mamaroneck, New Rochelle, Rye) said, “I’m proud that our new leadership has begun putting the County’s finances back on track.  I’m also particularly happy that we’ve been able to reduce the aggregate sewer district tax levy to 2% from 2.9% after a thoughtful analysis by Citizens Budget Advisory Committee member Rodman Reef.”

Majority Whip MaryJane Shimsky (D – Ardsley, Dobbs Ferry, Edgemont, Hartsdale, Hastings-on-Hudson, Irvington), chair of the Board’s Public Works Committee, said, “We have much to do in this County to put things right after years of irresponsible decisions left us with extensive maintenance needs for which money had never been budgeted; and with a backlog of capital projects the County desperately needs.  I’m happy to say that with our 2019 budgets we’re able to begin climbing out of our fiscal and operational hole. While there’s more to be done, this is a start.”

To see the County budget documents and records of the Board’s budget deliberations, visit the FY2019 Budget Dashboard on our website: https://www.westchesterlegislators.com/fy-2019-budget-dashboard.

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Paul Feiner Raises Issue of the “Unaffordable Cost” of Assisted Living Facilities. Wants 10% of new Assisted Living Units to be Required to Be Made Affordable in Greenburgh. Calls for Responses from persons on What They Pay for Assisted Living Care

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WPCNR THE FEINER REPORT. Special to WPCNR from Paul Feiner, Town of Greenburgh Supervisor. December 9, 2018:

Your help is wanted.  I am planning to introduce legislation that would require 10% of all new beds in future assisted living facilities that have not yet been approved by the town to be affordable.  A few months ago I was speaking to a woman who told me that during the last months of her mom’s life she was paying up to $22,000 a month for all services at an assisted living facility. Is that the norm or unusual? I’d like to know.

There are many luxury assisted living facilities in the area but am not aware of moderately priced facilities.  Most Greenburgh residents cannot afford the assisted living facilities located in our area.

If  any family member lives at an assisted living facility -how much do you pay each month? What is the base fee?  What about extras? How much does it quickly add up to each month?  Please identify the facilities and the locations (municipality, county, state).

Assisted living facilities pay significant taxes to local governments –they are for profit businesses. They have a right as a business to market their facilities to people who can pay for the services they offer.  The school districts receive a few hundred thousand dollars a year in taxes from these facilities and it costs them nothing–no additional children.   And, assisted living facilities usually generate little traffic.

I will compile the responses I receive and share them with the community  and Town Board in advance of the January  9th public hearing.

I will also share your comments with other municipal, county, state and federal officials from around the county –hoping to encourage all officials to address this problem. We have a  growing aging population and most people cannot afford the assisted living facilities that are being built around the county.  Your thoughts welcome.  I also welcome any other suggestions —what can we do to encourage the development of less expensive assisted living?

 

CL 2 – 12/12/18
Resolution scheduling a Public Hearing for 7:30 PM, Wednesday, January 9, 2019, to consider a Local Law amending Chapter 285-10A(4)(f) of the Code of the Town of Greenburgh, entitled “Assisted Living Facilities,” to require that all new Assisted Living Facilities developed in the Town provide a minimum of 10% of living units for persons whose annual incomes meet Westchester County’s Affordable Housing Guidelines and comply with Westchester County’s Model Fair Housing Ordinance
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TONIGHT WHITE PLAINS WEEK ARCHIVE INTERVIEW WITH MAYOR ALFRED DEL VECCHIO. 7:30 PM EST ON CH. 45 FIOS, CH 76 ALTICE AND THE INTERNET

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For 12-7 has been posted  the youtube link is
the whiteplainsweek.com link is

JIM BENEROFE AND PETER KATZ

REMEMBER

MAYOR ALFRED DEL VECCHIO

with WHITE PLAINS WEEK ARCHIVE INTERVIEW

WITH  MAYOR DEL VECCHIO CONDUCTED JULY 20, 2001

PLUS

U.S. NAVY VIDEO REPORT ON

PRESIDENT GEORGE H.W. BUSH’S

183 WORLD WAR II MISSIONS

THE COUNTY’S GROWING AT RISK POPULATION

NON PROFIT ORGANIZATIONS AID INCREASED

THE SLOWING OF THE WESTCHESTER COUNTY ECONOMY

THE PLANET VENUS GLEAMS IN THE PRE-DAWN SKIES

TONIGHT AT 7:30 on WHITE PLAINS TV CH. 45 FIOS CH. 76 ALTICE

AND

www.wpcommunitymedia.org

www.whiteplainsweek.com

and YOUTUBE.

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77 YEARS AGO TODAY AT NOON EST. JAPAN ATTACKED PEARL HARBOR

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Out of the Sun

A Memorial 

Attack_on_Pearl_Harbor_Japanese_planes_view

Out of the sun on quiet Sunday morning they came

Birds of death blazened with red suns raining fiery havoc on Battleship Row.

One by one, ruthless planes dove, destroyed wantonly to their nation’s eternal shame.

Thunderous explosions scattered fiery death in Sunday dawn’s glow.

Flames belched from bowels of stricken Arizona, America’s pride,

The_USS_Arizona_(BB-39)_burning_after_the_Japanese_attack_on_Pearl_Harbor_-_NARA_195617_-_Edit

On Hickam Field pilots raced to planes to defend 

As their birds were crippled on ground by Zeros’ glide

Gunners in turrets on ships floundering filled skies with flack’s din.

In search of aircraft carriers, marauders could not find

Ruthlessly strafed and bombed leaving Pearl

 Smoking ruin. Ships sunk, burning as raiders flew  back into the Sun

 

The day of infamy had been ignited in the Zeros’ swirl.

 America listened a world away, somber FDR

Spoke of this day that will live in infamy.

America must never forget that Pearl Harbor Scar

When an unsuspecting America slept in complacency.

To the 2,403 perishing that day under merciless bombs

Hails of bullets,terror of torpedos out of nowhere

America must remember forces against our freedoms

Relentlessly work always to  remain aware of surprise of deadly bombs’ glare.

Vigilence is the price of freedom always to be defended

Against those who would destroy our republic from within

By dark forces in far off places we have offended.

 

The answer is not curtailing freedom at home rather it to champion.

d53d2ad690d4db89d7fa291342339e17

The USS Arizona lies today  in Pearl’s waters, bleeding lives

Of her men through the eerie eternal slick marking the rusting hulk.

Beneath Pearl’s waters, the blood of free people oozes from the shadowy bulk,

Bleeding forever, freedom’s spirit living eternally in lost lives remembered.

The Arizona never rests.

 Note: The Pearl Harbor attack took place 77 years ago today at 7 A.M. Honolulu time –just about 12 noon Eastern Standard Time.  Its aftermath is dramatically depicted at

http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/events/wwii-pac/pearlhbr/pearlhbr.htm

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County Will Build Mount Vernon Field. Will Be Bid Out in August

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From the Westchester County Department of Communications.  December 7, 2018:

County Executive George Latimer said: “For over 10 years, the prospective repair and re-opening of Memorial Field in Mount Vernon has laid fallow for a number of different reasons. While I have only been on this job for almost 12 months, I know Memorial Field well – it was where I had my High School graduation. Earlier this year, we held a meeting with City officials, after which we made the decision to make the offer through an inter-municipal agreement that the County will take the lead on the completion of this project – and solely for its completion – not its management. The Mount Vernon City Council approved the agreement, on Monday night the County Board of Legislators approved the amended agreement and I am signing it here today.”

Now that the amended IMA has been signed, the County has hired the design firm Woodard & Curran, the same firm who had completed the design plans roughly 10 years ago, to revisit the original design of Memorial Field. The first step will be to have a surveyor go and survey the property since so much time has passed since it was originally done – this is slated to happen December 17. Once the survey is done, Woodard & Curran can work on the preliminary design and then finalize the design. While the design will not start from scratch, the amended IMA requires we use the original plans. Final design is expected by the end of the summer – at which point the project will go out to bid.

ther, while this is happening, on a parallel path, the City of Mount Vernon needs to have a site remediation plan approved by the State Department of Environmental Conservation (“DEC”) to remove the construction debris that was dumped there. The City’s approved plan will outline the work that needs to be done for construction to happen. This issue is solely Mount Vernon’s responsibility.

Now that these plans are in place and signed, without any unforeseen issues – construction will begin in 2019 and Mount Vernon residents will soon have a new – and still historic – Memorial Field to enjoy for generations to come.

Latimer concluded: “We want to show people that reasonable people can work together, that we can work together across party lines, that we can work together across different levels of government in order to actually get things done and solve a problem.”

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FALL SHOPPING DECLINES. 6% SALES TAX TREND NOT SUSTAINED. 35% INCREASE IN NOV DEC NEEDED TO MEET $578 MILLION COUNTY PREDICTION.

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WPCNR QUILL & EYESHADEBy John F. Bailey. Based on NY State Dept. of Taxation & Finance Statistics. December 4, 2018:

Westchester County Sale Tax Receipts experienced a lackluster October that was expected to be bolstered by start of school and consumer returns from vacation.

As the County Legislature prepares to approve the county budget, the approximate 6% increase in sales tax receipts has failed to continue into the fall.

The  County sales tax dollar momentum in July started to slow with a 4.7% increase over 2017  after demonstrating a strong 6% trending through the first six months.

In August  the county had its first decline compared to 2017—declining $400,000 from 2017 figures. In September, there was a ½% increase.

The figures for October,  from the State of New York  put in doubt whether the County Budget Department  estimate of $578 Million in sales tax dollars 4 weeks ago will be met.

WPCNR previously estimated that the county would hit the $550 Million level, (if 6% were sustained the last four months of the year.

Now with a very soft  2018 October of $41,374,329 , (1.5% more than October 2017), the trend of softer retail activity has to be of some concern.

The Department of Taxation and Finance does hold out hope that figures are not reconciled until the final month of the quarter, and there may be some  dollar lag.

  • The Westchester economy would have to generate a 35% lift over sales tax dollars received in November and December of 2017 ($95 MILLION in the two months of Nov-Dec in 2017 with 33.3 Million above that $95 Million) to break over the $578 Million figure estimated by the county in early November.
  • More realistically, a 12% Gain (returning to the growth sustained through the first 7 months of the year over the Nov-Dec totals last year)would create $106 Million(over last year’s final two month total of $95 Million  ) would generate a handle of $556.5  Million way off $578 Million
  • A 15% gain would create an additional $14 Million more plus the $95 Million and put the county at $559 Milion.
  • A 20% gain would mean $19 Million more over the 95 Million over the next two months and  $564.2 Million.
  • A 25% gain over last year’s $95 Million would add $23.8 Million and we’d be getting close: $569 Million
  • A 30% gain over $95 Million would add $28.5 Million and get County Sales Tax dollars to $573.7 Million
  • A 35% gain over $95 Million would add $33.3 Million (a total of $128 Million) and hit the target $578.4 Million

 

(Note: the above calculations start from the sales taxes generated so far this year $449,943,467. To that figure WPCNR figured what a 12%, 15%, 20%, 25%, 30%, and 35%  increase in the $95.2 Million collected in November and December last year would bring in  then added those % increases to $95.2 Million and added the sum to $449,943,467 to figure roughly what the county needs to come close to their projection of $578 Million)

How likely is it that the receipts are way late in coming in in October?

Is it plausible the $95 Million generated the last two months of 2017 will grow by  $33.3 Million more generating the $128,511,517 needed to hit the $578 Million?

That  requires a lot of consumer buying, about $16 Million more in sales tax dollars each month over last year.

I  hope there is just a big delay in reporting in October to account for that anemic growth of 1.5%

The gruesome October figure of 1.5% was unfortunate had October rebounded to the 6% level of growth, the October handle would have been $2,446,437 more for the kitty.

A 15% Gain would put the county at $559 Million;  20% Gain in Nov-Dec would generate $564.2 Million. A 25% gain, had October been a rebound month.

The County Legislature may be wrestling with devoting the $25 Million surplus generated so far fully to fund balance to stabilize the county’s bond rating which the rating agencies lowered slightly. Or they could devote the surplus to cover the $35 Million existing at the end of 2018.

However the bigger picture that fall numbers are flat with last year’s pace is more sobering looking to county revenues in 2019. The county will definitely need an increase in the sales tax rate, or a BnB tax or an Uber/Lyft tax to keep pace.

Unless of course the county has been promised $578 Million in sales tax already, and the county knows that figure is coming. It is a mystery how the county arrived at the $578 Million figure even when the 6% trend did not compute to that high a figure.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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The Mayor for All Seasons Has Passed Away

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ALFRED DEL VECCHIO

1923-2018

WPCNR MILESTONES. December 5, 2018 Updated December 6, 2018:

Mayor Alfred Del Vecchio, who served as Mayor of White Plains for 18 years from 1976 through 1993, died overnight Tuesday. He was 95 years of age.

The McMahon, Lyon and Hartnett funeral home has announced there will be a Visitation Sunday, December 9 from 3 PM to 8 PM at the McMahon funeral home,491 Mamaroneck Avenue, White Plains.

Mass will be held for the Mayor Monday, December 10 at 10 A.M. at Our Lady of Sorrows, 920 Mamaroneck Avenue, White Plains.

Mayor Del Vecchio brought White Plains into prominence during his years of service. He shaped the rebuilding of the White Plains urban renewal project which introduced The Galleria in 1980, and numerous office buildings that made White Plains a corporate center. He preserved the outer neighborhoods and created the “city in the middle of the neighborhood.” He was a strong leader negotiating development with an eye to improvements for the city in addition to success for developers.

He was a leader in every sense of the word. An engineer by profession, and a professor, he lead through expertise and intense involvement in negotiations, problem-solving, and his gregarious, but no nonsense personna.

He stood up for the city against outside political influences that only had their best interests, not the city in mind. He created the esprit de corp that made the Department of Public Works, Planning and management of the city, professional, dedicated and performance-oriented.

His financial management  made White Plains taxes the lowest and most attractive to homeowners for decades–a legacy White Plains still enjoys.

He left office in 1993 after losing a three-candidate race in 1993.

He was married to his wife, Claire for 73 years.

Early this afternoon, Mayor Tom Roach of White Plains issued this statement detailing more of Mayor Del Vecchio’s legacy:

“It is with sadness that I inform you of the passing of former Mayor of White Plains, Alfred Del Vecchio. Mayor Del Vecchio was our city’s longest serving mayor. He served 4 terms, from 1976 to 1993. During his tenure downtown White Plains saw significant change.

Mayor Del Vecchio guided the city through the process of urban renewal, which changed the face of the central business district.

As Mayor, he oversaw the modernization of land use regulation in the city.

Mayor Del Vecchio was an early advocate for the use of energy efficient technology. Under Mayor Del Vecchio the city first tested and utilized environmentally friendly alternative fuel vehicles.

He secured permanent, direct Community Development Block Grant Program funding for the city through special federal legislation. This funding continues to be used today for neighborhood and streetscape improvements.

Mayor Del Vecchio managed the complete reconstruction and expansion of the city’s Ebersole ice-skating rink, without the loss of any skating-season time.

He acquired the closed state armory on South Broadway and arranged for its conversion to senior citizen housing and a public senior citizens’ community center still in use today.

During Mayor Del Vecchio’s tenure, a new Public Safety/City Court building was constructed to house the police department and City Courts. This was also done on time and under budget.

He secured funding for the construction of the Bronx River Parkway exit ramp to Main Street, which permitted closing of the Woodlands Place exit, thus reducing traffic in the Fisher Hill residential neighborhood.

Mayor Del Vecchio negotiated the agreements under which the federal courthouse was constructed as well as the agreements under which the Galleria was built. He built the 2,800+ space municipal parking structure at the Galleria.

Mayor Del Vecchio was a Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Manhattan College. He was elected to the Common Council in 1972 and served for one term before becoming Mayor.

Mayor Del Vecchio had the honor of hosting President Gerald Ford in 1976, when the President visited White Plains for our country’s Bicentennial celebration.

Mayor Del Vecchio’s family has continued to serve White Plains in various city departments, including the Department of Public Safety, Department of Public Works, and Parking Department

We send our condolences to the Del Vecchio family and our gratitude for the years of dedicated service he gave to our city.”

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