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AUGUST 16 — LEONARD LOLIS “FACES” THE CITY STARTS CAMPAIGN FOR MAYOR ON FACEBOOK

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WPCNR CAMPAIGN 2025. By John F. Bailey. August 16, 2025:

Leonard Lolis, 20 year employee of the city of white plains started his campaign for the 2026 mayorality yesterday on  Facebook  introducing himself with an introductory video.

IssueGraphs supplemented the intro video  highlighting issues he is going to fix as Mayor

  • City parking fees and aggressive ticketing enforcement
  • City deciding development policy behind closed doors
  • Crumbling infrastructure
  • Failure to listen to residents’ sentiments

 

On the website https://www.lennyformayor.com, Mr. Lolis expresses his qualifications, career and contributions to the city while he was an employee and offers to answer questions about his policies

HERE ARE HIS POLICIES  OUTLINED ON THE WEBSITE

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TAKE BACK THE GRID

They didn’t ask your permission. They just enrolled you.

Thousands of White Plains residents were automatically signed up for Westchester Power, a government-backed energy program run by Sustainable Westchester, without clear consent. Unless residents opted out between June 24 and July 24, 2024, they were enrolled-and since November 2022, Westchester Power rates have consistently been higher than ConEd’s.

Lenny Lolis calls this what it is: bureaucratic overreach disguised as environmental virtue-signaling that’s costing residents real money. This isn’t clean energy-it’s clean trickery.

As Mayor, Lenny Will:

  • End forced enrollment in utility programs without explicit, informed consent. No more opt-out traps or fine print games-residents decide what’s on their bills.

  • Demand transparency and accountability in utility billing to protect working families, seniors, and first responders from unfair charges.

  • Scrutinize ConEd’s delivery rate hikes, which fund costly infrastructure upgrades passed directly to consumers and disproportionately impact low-income households and small businesses.

  • Fight for protections that require clear justification of infrastructure spending and limit rate increases affecting residents.

  • Promote and support assistance programs like the Energy Affordability Program and Budget Billing to help residents manage energy costs.

READ MORE UNDER TAKE BACK THE GRID.

FIX THE PARKING

White Plains has a parking problem – and it’s not just about cost. Our parking structures are crumbling, enforcement is aggressive, and broken infrastructure like the city center escalators has been ignored for years. Meanwhile, city officials are entertaining the idea of selling the Galleria garage to private developers, jeopardizing public access and long-term affordability.

Parking is a public good, not a cash grab. The city needs functioning, fair parking to support local business, reduce stress, and make downtown accessible for all.

As Mayor, Lenny Will:

  • Make parking more resident-friendly by extending – and actually honoring – the grace period.

  • End excessive ticketing for minor infractions, like touching a line. A single slip shouldn’t lead to multiple fines.

  • Expand capacity by upgrading and enlarging existing parking structures.

  • Offer residential discounts through a simple registration process.

  • Fix neglected infrastructure, including long-broken escalators in key pedestrian zones.

Parking should be a courteous, commonsense experience – not a daily battle with the meter maid. Lenny will bring balance, accountability, and service back to the curb.

SAFETY YOU CAN SEE

“Safe streets. Visible policing. A downtown families can count on.”

Lenny Lolis is committed to restoring a sense of safety and trust across White Plains-starting with a return to visible, community-based policing that connects officers to the people they protect.

He remembers a White Plains where officers walked the beat, patrolled on bicycles, and engaged directly with residents. He believes it’s time to bring that back.

As Mayor, Lenny will:

  • Reinvest in community-oriented policing strategies, increasing foot patrols and bike officers-especially in and around downtown.

  • Explore bringing back mounted and motorcycle units, as part of a broader effort to make police more present, accessible, and engaged with residents.

  • Strengthen community ties by supporting programs like the Youth Police Initiative and National Night Out, helping build trust between law enforcement and the next generation.

  • Leverage the city’s existing force of 203 officers-a strong ratio of 3.5 per 1,000 residents, above state and national averages-to maintain a consistent and visible public safety presence.

  • Align public safety efforts with downtown revitalization, ensuring families feel safe walking, biking, and participating in community life.

  • Use the 2024 $10 million Downtown Revitalization Initiative (DRI) grant to improve pedestrian and bicycle infrastructure, supporting safety through smarter design and stronger presence.

Lenny’s approach to public safety isn’t just about policing-it’s about reviving pride in our public spaces, making downtown a welcoming, vibrant place for all who live, work, and raise families here.

TRUE AFFORDABILITY

Lenny Lolis knows the rising cost of living—sky-high taxes, utility hikes, and overpriced housing—is pushing too many White Plains residents to the brink. As Mayor, he’ll cut waste, lower costs, and protect your paycheck—because no one should be priced out of their own city.

As Mayor, Lenny will:

  • Slash Wasteful Spending: Conduct a full audit of city finances and eliminate unnecessary expenses that drain your tax dollars without benefiting residents.

  • Challenge Utility Abuse: Confront providers like Con Edison over shady billing practices and forced enrollment in overpriced plans. Demand transparency and fairness.

  • Protect Your Wallet: Lower the financial pressure on working families and seniors through smart budgeting and targeted cost reduction.

  • Build Real Affordability: Support genuinely affordable housing—not just market-rate rebrands—and prioritize homes for our workforce: cops, teachers, firefighters, and city staff.

  • Keep People Rooted: Fight property tax hikes and housing instability to help seniors and young families stay and thrive in White Plains—not get pushed out.

  • Stabilize Our Workforce: Address high housing costs that lead to staff turnover, retraining expenses, and community disruption.

Lenny Lolis isn’t just talking affordability—he’s got a plan to make it real. He’ll ensure White Plains is a city where people don’t just survive the present—they build a future.

BRING BACK TRUST & TRANSPARENCY

You can fight City Hall-and under Mayor Lolis, you won’t have to.

Lenny Lolis emphasizes transparency and resident involvement in White Plains’ city planning and development. He believes city government should work with the people-not around them—and that no resident should feel shut out of decisions shaping their community.

Lenny is committed to:

  • Ensuring balanced representation in the planning process so no community is overlooked.

  • Communicating project costs clearly and publicly, including long-term implications for taxpayers.

  • Involving residents early and often, creating an inclusive process where community voices influence decisions before deals are finalized.

  • Rejecting the old idea that “you can’t fight City Hall”-and actively working to remove the barriers that discourage resident participation.

  • Empowering residents to hold their government accountable, so city leadership is open, accessible, and responsive.

As Mayor, Lenny will make City Hall work for the people of White Plains-restoring transparency, rebuilding trust, and ensuring every development reflects the community’s priorities.

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AUGUST 15– WHITE PLAINS WEEK AUGUST 15 REPORT ON WWW.WPCOMMUNITYMEDIA.ORG ANYTIME. ON FIOS CH 45 AT 7:30 WPTV CH 76 TONIGHT

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THIS WEEK!

COMMISSIONER CHONG STATEMENT ON THE GARDELLA POST GAME MELEE

THE NEW YORK DOSE: WEST NILE DISEASE SPREADS IN METRO NY AREA

THE LATEST COVID ACTIVITY IN WESTCHESTER COUNTY– CASES RISE 6 OF LAST 9 WEEKS

ASSEMBLYMAN BURDICK EXPLAINS THE NEW YORK ASSEMBLY SITUATION ON PASSING PUBLIC UTILITY RELIEF — NOTES NEGOTIATIONS WITH CON EDISON HAVE STARTED IN INTERVENTION BY COUNTY SUITS– INCLUDING HIS. RELIEF BILLS ON RATE PRACTICES MAY NOT HAPPEN UNTIL 2027

JOHN BAILEY ON PROFESSIONAL SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT SHOWING YOUTH AND ADULTS NEGATIVE ROLE MODELS CREATING GUN VIOLENCE, BELLIGERENT BEHAVIOR?

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AUGUST 14– HAMILTON GREEN OPENS UP LEASING AT 5 COTTAGE PLACE 2ND TOWER

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 Sister Tower 25 Cottage Exceeds 85 Percent Leased

 

With increasing demand for elevated residential living in White Plains, 5 Cottage joins its sister residential tower in setting a new standard with spacious residences, state-of-the-art amenities, award-winning, high-touch service, and personalized lifestyle programming

Images of both towers can be found here

RXR, a leading real estate owner, operator and developer, in partnership with Korman Communities, a 100+-year-old real estate investment and property management company, has announced the launch of leasing at 5 Cottage, the second phase of AVE Hamilton Green, its state-of-the-art residential and mixed-use modern high-rise raising the bar for luxury living in Westchester County.

Offering larger apartment layouts, a plethora of amenities and penthouse homes with their own amenity floor, 5 Cottage comprises 307 residences, including flexible-stay furnished options. The announcement occurs on the heels of 5 Cottage’s sister tower, 25 Cottage, achieving 85 percent leased in just six months.

The success of leasing at 25 Cottage, comprised of 170 total units, has played a pivotal role in setting the stage for the next phase of leasing and completion of 5 Cottage.

Demand to date has been primarily driven by locals and those commuting to New York City seeking an elevated and convenient lifestyle.

Across the sister towers, residents are drawn to the array of options available that ensure comfort and flexibility including fully furnished, flexible stay residences (98 apartments across both towers); studio to three-bedroom floor plans; penthouses and live/work loft apartments.

Once complete, Hamilton Green will house 477 residences between 25 and 5 Cottage, 515 underground parking spaces, 55,000 square feet of open space and 26,000 square feet of commercial and entertainment retail space.

“On the heels of our tremendous success in the first AVE Hamilton Green tower, we are pleased to present 5 Cottage, the pinnacle White Plains residential experience. Offering AVE’s 5-star, award-winning services, 5 Cottage caters to today’s renters who continue to experience limited available inventory in the high-quality for sale market as well as limited inventory in larger, two- and three-bedroom rental opportunities within fully amenitized properties,” said Whitney Arcaro, Chief Revenue Officer, Residential, at RXR. “We’re confident that our delivery at 5 Cottage will stand apart as one of the best addresses in Westchester County.”

“White Plains is a vibrant, growing community, where people want to live and work, making it an ideal location for AVE,” said Lea Anne Welsh, president of AVE; COO of Korman Communities. “We specialize in delivering a discerning lifestyle for renters who desire the modern conveniences of space, flexibility, high-touch service, and a strong community environment.”

Located just three blocks from the newly renovated White Plains Metro-North Train Station and one block from the Central Business District, AVE Hamilton Green offers unprecedented convenience. AVE Hamilton Green is a short walk to Downtown White Plains, which features endless shopping, dining, and nightlife. It’s set on the former White Plains Mall site, which RXR purchased in 2021 as part of a $650 million mall-to-housing conversion.

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AUGUST 14—SOUTH CAROLINA MAN CHARGED WITH HATE CRIME OVER ALLEGED ASSAULT AT MAMARONECK GAS STATION

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The defendant is accused of telling the victim, a Hispanic man, to “go back to your country”
 

WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. –

Westchester County District Attorney Susan Cacace announced that Carl Jones, 57, of Spartanburg, S.C., was arrested and charged with a felony for allegedly attacking a Hispanic man while they were both waiting in line at a Mamaroneck gas station.

On Sunday, Jones was arraigned on one count each of Assault in the Third Degree as a Hate Crime, a class E felony, and Criminal Obstruction of Breathing or Blood Circulation, a class A misdemeanor.

Mamaroneck Village Court Justice Christie Derrico issued a temporary order of protection on behalf of the victim. Jones is due back in court on Aug. 28.

At a bail hearing Wednesday before Westchester County Court Judge Melissa Loehr, prosecutors requested that the defendant be held on bail in the amount of $20,000 cash/$50,000 fully secured bond/$75,000 partially secured bond at 10%.

Judge Loehr denied the bail application, instead releasing Jones on his own recognizance and requiring him to meet with a social worker to determine whether he needs any services.

DA Cacace said: “It is unconscionable that anyone would be targeted for assault because of who they are or where they come from. Westchester is home to one of the most diverse populations in New York State, and hate will never be allowed to take root here.
 
“I urge anyone victimized by an act of hate to make a report to our dedicated Hate Crimes Unit at (914) 995-TIPS (8477).”

As alleged in charging documents and statements made on the record in court, at approximately 9:30 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 9, Jones attacked the victim in this case, a Hispanic man, while they were both waiting in line at a Mamaroneck gas station. Jones is accused of targeting the victim because of his identity, telling him, “Go back to your country” and asking the victim if he had a green card.

At a court hearing, prosecutors alleged that at the time of the incident, the defendant admitted to police that he had made a joke to the victim about Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

Jones is further accused of grabbing the victim’s throat and squeezing it.

The case was investigated by the Village of Mamaroneck Police Department.

The case is being prosecuted by Assistant District Attorney Brittany J. Burk, of the Hate Crimes Unit.

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AUGUST 14– SOUTH SHORE BEACH CLOSINGS DUE TO HEAVY RAINS LAST NIGHT

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BEACH CLOSURES DUE TO RAIN IN MAMARONECK, NEW ROCHELLE AND RYE

(White Plains, NY) – The following beaches have been preemptively closed for today August 14, 2025 and tomorrow August 15, 2025 due to 1.16 inches of rainfall over the last 24 hours.

MAMARONECK: Harbor Island, Beach Point Club, Orienta Beach Club, & Mamaroneck Beach and Yacht Club

 

RYE: Coveleigh Club

NEW ROCHELLE: Hudson Park Beach, Davenport Club, Greentree Club, & Surf Club

Patrons are advised to avoid the water at these beaches due to bacterial contamination from road runoff into drainage outfalls near these beaches. Beaches may reopen on Saturday, August 16.

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AUGUST 15–NEW ASSISTANT SUPERINTENDENT FOR SPECIAL EDUCATION AND PUPIL SERVICES IN WHITE PLAINS

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Board of Education appoints Dr. Karen Tesik as assistant superintendent for special education and pupil services

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FREE! SHAKESPEARE IN TURNURE PARK TONIGHT 7 PM

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TONIGHT Free Outdoor Theater – Under the Stars at Turnure Park – August 14

shakespeare in the park purple

Join us, Thursday, August 14, 7 pm, for an unforgettable evening of drama, romance, and laughter as the Rivertowns Playhouse Presents Ian McKellen’s “Acting Shakespeare,” Adapted & Performed by Kamran Saliani

Bring a blanket or lawn chair, pack a picnic, and enjoy a magical night of theatre under the open sky. All ages welcome!

Turnure Park is located on Canfield Avenue between Main Street and Lake Street.

Click here to learn more about Turnure Park.

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AUGUST 14– YOUR NEW YORK DOSE FROM DR. MARISA DONNELLEY

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This week’s dose is heavier than usual. I’ll cover the typical summer health updates (West Nile Virus, Covid, and algal blooms) but am also sharing some reflections on the tragedy at CDC last week: a mass shooting. As a former CDC employee, this one shook me.

But before we jump in, we’re hiring! If you are someone you know is passionate about public health communication, apply here for our Managing Editor position.


West Nile Virus is being detected across New York state

We continue to see West Nile Virus pick up across New York, which is typical for this time of year. This week, mosquitoes tested positive in Erie, Nassau, Onondaga, Rockland, Suffolk, and Westchester counties. In NYC, mosquitoes carrying the virus were found in all five boroughs. New York, Richmond, Bronx, Queens, and Kings counties also reported positive mosquitoes. A small number tested positive for Eastern Equine Encephalitis (EEE) virus, which is rare but more dangerous than WNV.

West Nile Virus detections. Figure from the New York State Department of Health. Annotations by YLE.

NY counties are ramping up mosquito control. Many have conducted or plan to conduct aerial insecticide spraying, where a plane disperses chemicals to kill mosquitoes or prevent breeding. (You can check your local health department website for local schedules.) Recent or upcoming events include Cattaraugus County (Aug 17–23), Onondaga County (last week), and NYC (Brooklyn and Queens this week).

If spraying is scheduled in your community, you can reduce exposure to chemicals by:

  • Staying indoors
  • Bringing pets inside
  • Closing windows

COVID continues to increase, though slowly

Due to delays on the CDC wastewater dashboard, most New York sites aren’t reporting public wastewater data, so I’m focusing on clinical data to understand trends in COVID activity.

All regions of New York, except for Mohawk Valley and North Country, show that COVID hospitalizations are increasing. Hospitalizations are still substantially lower than they were this time last year.

New York State Covid-19 hospitalizations. Figure from the New York State Department of Health. Annotations by YLE.

If you are feeling sick and take an at-home rapid test, make sure to check the expiration date. Many tests had their expiration dates extended, but they are now approaching those dates. This guide by the North Carolina Department of Health has good instructions on how to check.


Reflections on the tragic CDC shooting

It was the last day of the summer course. The culmination of a month of daily, intensive training for this year’s class of Epidemic Intelligence Service (EIS) Officers, a program I went through myself. EIS Officers are CDC disease detectives, trained to investigate and respond to outbreaks and other urgent public health threats in the U.S. and around the world. Instead of celebrating, they spent hours sheltering in place on the CDC’s campus as a single shooter sent over 180 rounds of bullets into the windows of four buildings. Many are now afraid to even display their CDC parking decals on their cars for fear of being targeted in public.

There have been more than 260 mass shootings so far this year in the U.S., nine of them in New York, and the effects of each one ripple across individual lives and entire communities. This week, I’m worrying about the long reach of this attack on my friends and colleagues at the CDC and on our entire public health system.

I have more questions than answers. Who will pick up the torch in the next pandemic if our front line people burn out or leave? Where does this leave us in 10 or 20 years, or in the wake of another health emergency? Why is health leadership so silent on this? What does it say about our country if our government employees are afraid to go to work?

For those in public health here in New York, or elsewhere, I see you. You aren’t alone. Feel free to drop a comment or directly reply to this email; let’s process it together. For everyone else, check in on your people in public health. Thank them for their service.

I’m also donating to the fund for the family of the officer who lost his life protecting the CDC from the shooting. You can join me here: https://give.cdcfoundation.org/give/715122#!/donation/checkout


What else you need to know this week

Algal blooms: Some New York freshwater beaches—like Sylvan Beach, Verona Beach Park, and Oneida Shores—were closed this week due to harmful algal blooms. These blooms, caused by overgrowth of blue-green algae (cyanobacteria), can cause skin rashes, stomach upset, or more serious illness if swallowed or inhaled. Before swimming at lakes or ponds, check local advisories and pay attention to posted signs. If you or your pet were exposed, rinse off really well and seek medical care if symptoms develop.

Rabies vaccine campaign in Erie County: From August 13-23, the U.S. Department of Agriculture will be dropping fish-scented bait packets containing oral rabies vaccine across Erie County by helicopter. When raccoons and other animals eat the bait, they become immunized against rabies. If you find a packet, don’t touch it. If you must handle it, wash your hands immediately. Keep an eye on kids and pets when outdoors during distribution, and keep pets leashed to keep them from eating the bait. See the distribution map here.

Rabies vaccine bait. Image from USDA.

Hand, foot, and mouth disease in New York: Some doctors in New York are reporting that this year is an exceptionally bad year for hand, foot, and mouth disease. So if you feel like this is tearing through your kid’s daycare or preschool, you aren’t alone. HFM is a super common and very contagious virus that mainly affects children under five. It’s usually mild, but symptoms can include fever, mouth sores, and skin rash. There isn’t a ton to be done about it. The best things to do are to keep things clean (wash hands and surfaces) and talk to your child’s healthcare provider if they develop symptoms.


Bottom line

This week we’re reminded of how vulnerable public health can be, and how much it relies on people who care about it deeply. If you are in public health, know that we are with you and are so so grateful for your work. If you’re not in public health, it’s a good time to check in on those who are.

Love,

Your NY Epi


Dr. Marisa Donnelly, PhD, is an epidemiologist, science communicator, and public health expert. This newsletter exists to translate complex public health data into actionable insights, empowering New Yorkers to make informed and evidence-based health decisions.

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August 13— VIOLENCE AND WHAT YOU CAN DO ABOUT IT FROM 3 LOCAL EPIDEMIOLOGISTS

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public_health_in_the_face_of_trauma_and_violence.mp4

It’s been a struggle to process what happened at the CDC just a few days ago. The facts are coming in: one officer died, 500 rounds fired, 200 bullets made contact with 6 CDC buildings, hundreds of staff sheltered in place for hours. The intention is undeniable: this was an attempted massacre.

The state of the world feels unrecognizable. We are living headline to headline, tragedy to tragedy. The bar for shock has been set so high that there are ten other stories deemed more urgent, more outrageous, than hundreds of bullets hitting a federal building. So many people don’t even know this happened. That’s not normal. Our world is swallowed whole by the endless churn of violence and crisis we’ve come to accept as ordinary. We are drowning in the abnormal, yet forced to carry on our “normal” lives, living in a constant state of cognitive dissonance.

It feels deeply unfair. Unfair as members of the public who feel completely powerless over the systems that continue to fail us and, at times, betray us. As parents trying to navigate through the noise and uncertainty, as concerned citizens watching our nation go numb to violence and death, as workers mourning both a loss of life in the case of Officer Rose and a loss of any semblance of safety at work.

It’s exhausting. The public health field has been the punching bag for six straight years, yet some of us are the very ones who are trying to change and reimagine the systems. Many of us are choosing listening over judgment—seeking to build bridges and understand those who have felt marginalized by health policies. To extend empathy and then be met with bullets feels demoralizing, to put it mildly.

It’s deeply angering. Watching those who fan the flames ignore the consequences when hostile rhetoric turns to physical violence. Words matter. From statements from public officials to casual posts on Facebook, language of hate, vitriol, and the vilification of an entire professional field have contributed to this moment.

And it’s lonely. The silence. The absence. The indifference. Without genuine acknowledgment or visible solidarity from federal leadership, the weight of this moment feels even heavier and, at times, permissive.

Trauma doesn’t move at the same pace for everyone. For those closest to it, the moment freezes in time—every sound, every detail etched in memory. A step further out, people feel the shock and recognize the pain, but find words clumsy and insufficient. Beyond that, the world either moves on quickly or never even realizes it happened. That dissonance—between the depth of the experience and how fast it fades from public consciousness—can make the loss feel even heavier, the isolation even sharper. The sheer volume of trauma is such that everyone cannot fully empathize with every event. Never in human history have we had so much real-time access to tragedy, and it overloads people. People can only bear so much.

For us in public health, where do we go from here?

Those of us in public health signed up for one overarching mission: to help people. We show up every day to analyze data, predict disease patterns, inform policy, or treat patients to improve the health of our communities—not to figure out how to respond to violent attacks on our workplaces. It’s absolutely not fair. And it’s not normal.

But it’s also the time we find ourselves in, and we all have to decide how we’re going to respond. (Gandalf said it better here.) The first step is to pause, grieve, and process. That’s what we did on Sunday night here on Substack Live (see recording above). It’s ok to not be ok, and it’s critical that we take the time to process what is happening. And then, in solidarity with our community, we act—with each other, for each other.

To the public, what can you do?

We received a lot of comments during this Substack Live, and the most common question was ‘what can we do to help?’ We partnered with Nelba Marquez Greene (licensed therapist, Yale scholar, and mother of Sandy Hook victim) and put our heads together for you, and this is where we landed:

  1. Support the family of the fallen officer.
    A law enforcement officer gave his life protecting CDC employees that day. If you’re able, contribute directly to his family through the CDC Foundation.
  2. Write in to support public health workers.
    For this post, we turned on the comments section for everyone. Drop a note in there, and I will compile for CDC employees. Another option is a handwritten note or heartfelt email. It can mean more than you think. We created a template to make it easy—you can adapt it, sign it, and send it to someone who has shown up for your community.
  3. Understand and acknowledge secondhand trauma.

    Learn the steps you can take as an individual and/or in the workplace to mitigate the impact of secondary trauma.

  4. Humanize healthcare workers, public health workers, and scientists.
    Share a story of a public health success in your community, or highlight the person behind it. Maybe we even need someone to jumpstart a campaign like Hero and Human to highlight the fact that health workers are both, while demanding systems change.
  5. Learn the warning signs and tools for crisis prevention.

    Educate yourself about Extreme Risk Protection Orders (ERPOs) and other tools to intervene when someone poses a danger to themselves or others.

  6. Resist dehumanizing the “other side.”
    There’s nothing quite as dehumanizing as violence—actions that say “your life doesn’t matter.” As humans, when we’re under attack, it’s so easy to respond by treating our attackers as a two-dimensional villain. This may feel justified in the moment, but ultimately, it can continue the cycle that drives polarization and violence even more. Refusing to dehumanize our attackers (both physical and verbal) breaks the cycle. This doesn’t mean pretending things are ok, tolerating mistreatment, or not responding—but it does mean treating people with dignity in our responses, even when they aren’t affording us the same treatment. This does two things: 1. It stops escalation, and 2. It shines a brighter light on the reality of their mistreatment, because it’s contrasted with our response demanding dignity and respect for all humans.

Even in the middle of this grief and exhaustion, resilience is everywhere. We’ve seen colleagues show up for each other in ways that matter. Some outside of the “public health bubble” have also spoken out, including a grassroots leader of the MAHA Movement and a former U.S. Surgeon General (from the first Trump administration). These may feel like small acts and certainly haven’t been a chorus, but they are seeds. And history tells us that seeds can grow into movements. Every action, no matter how small, helps build a culture where violence has no place and the public’s health can thrive.

Bottom line

The 500 bullets that hit the CDC were aimed at more than buildings. It is heartbreaking, deeply angering, lonely, and, unfortunately, unsurprising. It will require all of us taking action so that the next generation inherits a country where directing bullets at health workers is unthinkable.

Love, YLE, KP, and MR


Your Local Epidemiologist (YLE) is founded and operated by Dr. Katelyn Jetelina, MPH PhD—an epidemiologist, wife. YLE is a public health newsletter that reaches over 380,000 people in more than 132 countries, with one goal: to translate the ever-evolving public health science so that people are well-equipped to make evidence-based decisions. This newsletter is free to everyone, thanks to the generous support of fellow YLE community members. To support the effort, subscribe or upgrade below:

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