Lecuona reminds White Plains Democrats, request Absentee Ballots Tuesday. Also Announces Salsa Fundraiser

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WPCNR THE LETTER TICKER. From the Lecuona Campaign. September 4, 2017:

First things first, if you need an absentee ballot application, you can request one here.  Just fill out the form, mail it by Tuesday, September 5 and you will be sent a ballot.  The ballot needs to be postmarked by September 11 or can hand deliver it to your polling place or the Board of Elections on primary day.

There are less than ten days left until the Democratic Primary and as the clock quickly winds down we need your help now more than ever.  We have one last fundraiser before the 12th, our Salsa and Fuego event on Wednesday, September 6.  One $25 ticket includes a salsa dancing lesson at the event, a glass of wine, and a night of fun. 

Purchase tickets here to support my campaign and have a little fun too.

The next night, Thursday, September 7 is the League of Women Voters debate.  It will be held at Rochambeau School’s Auditorium at 228 Fisher Avenue.  It begins at 7pm. I hope you can join.

I want to share so many new ideas I have for White Plains such as:

  1. A new comprehensive plan for White Plains that encompasses sustainable economic development in all of our city’s neighborhoods.
  2. New legislation regarding transparency and good governance in city government.
  3. Community benefit agreements that include 10% affordable housing citywide.

If you support these ideas, donate to my campaign today.

As I talk to voters all around this city I hear their frustration but I believe we can build a better White Plains together.  It won’t happen without your help and a lot of hard work.  We’ve already reached out to thousands of voters.  There are just a few days left to make the commitment to vote and encourage others to do so. 

Sign up here to volunteer today.

Looking forward to seeing you at one of the events this week and on Tuesday, September 12 for the Democratic Primary.

Sincerely,

Milagros

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Here’s to Eugene V. Debs and John Mitchell–Heroes of Labor– LABOR DAY Celebrates Those Who Struggled and Died to Fight Inhumane Management, Millionaire Murderers, Exploitative Owners. Now in 2017, American Business Needs “Help?” Against Labor Excesses? Please!

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WPCNR NEWS AND COMMENT. By John F. Bailey. September 4, 2017 Reprinted from the CitizeNetReporter Archives:

It is Labor Day 2017.

Teachers throughout the state continue to be under fire for not teaching effectively. Teacher union leaders protest against calls for change and possible elimination of tenure.

Yet corporate and bureaucratic advocates of the Common Core are not held accountable for the inexplicable test results of 2017 that still show 60% of New York State students are unable to read or write English effectively entering high school. It cannot be all the teachers’ faults.

Perhaps it is the poor local grade by grade tests used in every school district in the state?

Don’t our state senators and assemblypersons and hands-on governor want to find out what the assessment problem is? No. They do not.

Why is it our State Senators and Assemblypersons and the Governor opted out of finding out why Johnny and Jane can’t read after 8 years of elementary and middle School? That is irresponsible. Buck-passing. Kicking the can down the road.

Public enmity against unions is popular, especially the practice of jacking pensions by getting more overtime in the years just before retirements. I say it’s time to look at the city leadership and the state leadership and hold them accountable. They are the leaders and they do not lead. (Let me, rephrase that, Mr. Cuomo leads more than any other elected official in the nation, but he has to lead more on this education problem).

No politicians talk about the offensive practice  of decrying  union pensions, while accepting political jobs after a politician leaves office  or is defeated, that politicians and political parasites have to get waivers for to retain their pensions, and they are routinely able to acquire such waivers to get 6-figure jobs in the private or public sector and still collect their pension, and do very little for those taxpayer dollars.

How about stopping that very nice perk? Money for nothing. And politicians cry about labor contracts? Please.

Look back at the history of the labor movement, workers have always had to fight an, yes,  die to make progress.

Because management is not fair, equitable, or humane.

Management works for themselves, always. Their “internships” today are a nice word for slavery without whips.

Labor Day first made its appearance when low wages and long hours were protested against in the mid-nineteenth century during the American Industrial Revolution.

Oregon instituted the first Labor Day in the 1870s, and New York in the 1880s.

The National Labor Day Holiday came about because of national outrage over two violent strikes that were ended by armed intervention by the military and private detectives, the notorious “Pinkertons.”

Let’s go back to the 1890s and learn what Labor Day is all about. It’s not about a day off. It is a memorial day. It’s not about “good job.”

The gay 90s were not so gay if you were a union worker. They were a time when the so-called robber barons thought nothing of bringing out private security forces to shoot strikers. They  lowered wages with no mercy. It was all about them, their mansions, their fortunes, their tax-free profits. (No income tax before 1913, folks).

In the Homestead, Pennsylvania steel factory strike in 1892, Andrew Carnegie, the steel baron, wanted to lower wages to make the Homestead factory  more profitable. (Instead of pulling down statues, they should change the name of the Carnegie Institute. Mr. Carnegie was no saint.)

Steelworkers in Homestead Pennsylvania, made $10 a week, working 12 hours a day, 6 days a week, as much as  84 hours a week.

Carnegie’s Deputy  Chairman Henry Frick wanted to pay them less, and attempted to bring in non-union laborers to replace them.

Two thousand union workers barricaded the plant.

Frick hired Pinkerton Detectives to disperse them. On June 29, 1892, “Pinkertons” killed 7 union workers with gunfire, and injured “countless” others and three Pinkertons were killed.

The Governor called in the National Guard to restore order. The armed intervention broke the Amalgamated Association union.

After this, according to “Steelworkers in America” by David Brody, wages of steelworkers at Homestead declined 20% from 1892 to 1907 and workshifts went up from 8 hours to 12 hours (96 hours a week). 

What a great fellow, Carnegie. What a humanitarian! That’s your robber baron. He’d fit right in with today’s Wolves of Wall Street, wouldn’t he? He’d be in the Trump cabinet.

This union-killing in Pennysylvania was followed by the 1894 Pullman Strike in Pullman Illinois.

George M. Pullman, the creator of the sleeper car, housed his workers in Pullman City, Illinois, and charged them rent. 

In the depression of the early 1890s, in 1893 wages at the Pullman Palace Factory fell  25%, but Pullman did not lower his rents to his workers.

The rent, if not met, was deducted from worker pay.Pullman was a garbage person.

A nice guy, George Pullman.  He could run a bank today, couldn’t he?

On May 11, 1894 workers with the American Railroad Union under the leadership of the great  Eugene V.  Debs, started a wildcat (unauthorized) strike in protest of Pullman’s policies.

On June 26, 1894, union members refused to service trains with Pullman Cars in their consist, to leave Chicago, delaying the U.S. Mail.

Twenty-four railroads in an organization called the General Managers Association announced that any switchman who refused to move rail cars would be fired.

Mr. Debs and his union stood their ground.

Debs said if any switchman was fired for not moving Pullman Cars, the union would walk off their jobs. On June 29, 50,000 union men quit.

Union supporters stopped trains on rails West of Chicago.

President Grover Cleveland was asked by the railroads to use federal troops to stop the strike.

Railroad management began characterizing the union as violent and lawless, calling Debs “a radical.”

When Debs went to Blue Island to ask railroad workers there to support the strike, rioting broke out, tracks were torn up. Railroad cars were burned.

The Attorney General of the United States Richard Olney, at the urging of the railroad owners, obtained an injunction July 2 that declared the strike illegal.

When Debs’ union members did not return to work, when they did not return to work—-

President Cleveland sent federal troops into Chicago.

Strikers stopped trains, destroyed switches and burned railroad cars.

Troops opened fire on strikers  attempting to stop a train traveling through downtown Chicago.

Debs and his union leaders were arrested for disrupting the delivery of mail.

Twenty-six civilians were killed.

Because the mail could not be delivered. Because the mail could not be delivered…how pathetic.

Debs, the union leader, stopped the strike.

Debs was sentenced to six months in jail and the union was disbanded. To my knowledge no federal troops who killed civilians were prosecuted.

A number of railroad workers were black listed and could not get a job on a railroad in the United States.

It was the first time federal troops were used to break up a strike.

Pullman workers were forced to sign a pledge they would never strike again.

The threat of the federal government stopping strikes lead to an end of strikes for at least 8 years.

President Cleveland, though, was facing reelection in 1894.

And, here’s how Labor Day became a national holiday.

Union leaders and citizens were alarmed at his handling of the strike.

As PBS put it in a documentary in 2001: “But now, protests against President Cleveland’s harsh methods made the appeasement of the nation’s workers a top political priority. In the immediate wake of the strike, legislation was rushed unanimously through both houses of Congress, and the bill arrived on President Cleveland’s desk just six days after his troops had broken the Pullman strike.

1894 was an election year.

President Cleveland seized the chance at conciliation, and Labor Day was born. William Jennings Bryant ran for the Democratic Party and the Populist Party in 1896, losing to  Republican William McKinley.

Then came a sea change in the great coal strike of 1902, when another “exemplary” capitalist J. P. Morgan fought the coal workers.

It happened in the coal fields of Easton, Pennsylvania, when the United Mine Workers headed by John Mitchell struck the coal operators  pushing for an 8-hour day.

The coal operators employed private police and the Pennsylvania National Guard to protect non-union workers.

President Theodore Roosevelt summoned the parties to the White House to bring settlement of the dispute by arbitration. After 6 months, the coal miners won a 9-hour day and a 10% increase in wages.

T.R.’s personal intervention lead to Selig Perlman, economist and labor historian at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, saying “this was perhaps the first time in history a labor organization tied up for months a strategic industry without being condemned as a revolutionary menace.’

The 1902 leadership of Teddy Roosevelt resulted in elimination of private police forces long used  by management to combat workers, when Governor Samuel Pennypacker became Governor of Pennsylvania. He created the Pennsylvania State Police in 1903, the first in the nation to supplant the independent organizations hired by management that were little more than strong-arm men.

The lesson of Labor Day is to remember the bravery of the union leaders who put their members first, did not make deals, did not sell out their members,(and I might add, succomb to politicians’ whining) and held out for the good against managements that were neither kind, humane, fair, or appreciative of their workers’ contribution to their corporate success.

Management never  is. They talk a good game but it’s all talk.

So American workers should remember the struggles and the leadership of Debs and Mitchell. And the strikers and civilians who were shot down in the street.

They introduced a new era of workers’ rights at the cost of their lives.

The statement below by Mr. Figueroa of the SEIU on President Trump’s vindictive effort to deport the hundreds of thousands of “Dreamers” because of his obvious hatred of immigrants and persons who are not “white,” one of the few local labor leaders to speak up and speak out is in the Debs-Mitchell fearless tradition.

The battle against worker exploitation never ends.

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LOCAL SEIU ISSUES STATEMENT ON PRESIDENT TRUMP’S DACA POLICY

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WPCNR LABOR LAW. From Local 32BJ of the Service Employees International Union.Labor Day, September 4, 2017:

The following statement is attributable to Hector Figueroa, President of 32BJ SEIU:
“Ending DACA would fly in the face of American values and further divide our nation. The young men and women helped by DACA have contributed greatly to this country and are among the finest and best our country can offer. Dreamers go on to serve in our military, contribute significantly to the economy, attend our schools and churches, and are part of our communities. Ending DACA would be an act of expulsion that reaches levels of medieval cruelty. Not only would ending DACA jeopardize the lives of 800,000 Dreamers, it is out of step with the vast majority of Americans who support extending the program.
Congress still has opportunity to give peace of mind to million young Americans and pass a clean bill. On September 5, we will join thousands of allies who are mobilizing across the nation to defend DACA.”
DACA NO ESTÁ ACABADO, PERO INFORMES SEÑALAN QUE PUEDE IR EN DIRECCIÓN INCORRECTA 
La siguiente declaración es atribuible a Héctor Figueroa, Presidente de 32BJ SEIU:
 “Finalizar el DACA volaría frente a los valores estadounidenses y dividirá aún más a nuestra nación. Los jóvenes y mujeres ayudados por DACA han contribuido en gran medida a este país y están entre los mejores y mejores que nuestro país puede ofrecer. Los soñadores pasan a servir en nuestras fuerzas armadas, contribuyen significativamente a la economía, asisten a nuestras escuelas e iglesias, y son parte de nuestras comunidades. La finalización de DACA sería, histórica y factualmente, un acto de expulsión que alcanza niveles de crueldad medieval. No sólo terminaría DACA sería cruel por poner en peligro la vida de 800.000 soñadores, está contra la gran mayoría de los estadounidenses que apoyan extender DACA.
 El Congreso todavía tiene la oportunidad de dar tranquilidad a millones de jóvenes estadounidenses y aprobar una ley limpia. El 5 de septiembre, nos uniremos a miles de aliados que se están movilizando en toda la nación para defender DACA”.
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WHITE PLAINS WEEK THE LABOR DAY EDITION OF SEPT. 1 ON THE INTERNET NOW

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THE SEPTEMBER 1 WHITE PLAINS WEEK

ON THE INTERNET NOW

RKOTower

AT www.wpcommunitymedia.org

(SCROLL DOWN THE LIST OF SHOWS TO “WHITE PLAINS WEEK” SEPT. 1 AND PUNCH IT UP)

JOHN BAILEY JIM BENEROFE  PETER KATZ

on

THE FIRST CAR TO CROSS THE MARIO M CUOMO BRIDGE WESTBOUND

1-OPENER

THE DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY RUNUP TO SEPTEMBER 12 BEGINS

BROCHURES AND LETTERS POUND THE VOTERS

5-LATIMER JENKINS

IS THE TRUMP STRATEGY ENOUGH TO DEFEAT COUNTY EXECUTIVE ASTORINO?

THE FIRST WHITE PLAINS WEEK “SIGN POLL”

11-SHOCKER OF WEEK

THE CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS STATUE 

THE WHITE PLAINS SALES TAX RECEIPTS THREE YEAR DECLINE.

7-TRUMP THE PRESIDENT

A TRUMP IN TEXAS TRUMP THE PRESIDENT REPORT FROM PETER KATZ

INTERVIEW: ROCCO COMMISSO,

CEO OF MEDIACOM CABLE CORPORATION

TALKS ON HOW CABLE IS DEALING WITH PROGRAMMING COMPETITION–FUTURE OF PRICING

 

 

 

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SATURDAY NIGHT ON PEOPLE TO BE HEARD AT 7:MODERATOR OF AUGUST 22 FORUM–WHAT REALLY HAPPENED.

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TONIGHT ON PEOPLE TO BE HEARD

7 PM ON FIOS CH. 45 AND ALTICE-CABLEVISION CHANNEL 76

YOU’VE GOT

WP_20170829_09_55_55_Pro

ALLEN FLISSLER

PRESIDENT NORTH STREET AREA CIVIC ASSOCIATION

ON

THE AUGUST 22  FORUM WHERE ONLY ONE SIDE SHOWED UP

WHAT REALLY HAPPENED

WHY IT WAS HELD

OUTER NEIGHBORHOOD ISSUES

WHAT MILAGROS LECUONA SAID

AND MORE

AT 7 PM ON TELEVISION SATURDAY NIGHT

RKOTower

AND VIEWABLE INSTANTLY ON THE INTERNET 

www.wpcommunitymedia.org

SCROLL DOWN TO “WHITE PLAINS WEEK PEOPLE TO BE HEARD” AND TUNE IN THE AUGUST 31 FLISSLER PROGRAM

 

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Milagros Lecuona Posts Video on YouTube of Her Answers to Questions at August 22 Candidates Forum

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Milagros Lecuona (left) Answers Forum Questions at August 22 Candidates 

Forum in exclusive video available on YOUTUBE at 

(Copy above link into your browser and click)

WPCNR CAMPAIGN 2017. From the Lecuona Campaign for Mayor. August 30, 2017:

On August 22 a Candidates Forum introducing candidates contesting in the September 12 Democratic Primary was held at The Womans Club of White Plains, sponsored by the Rosedale Residential Association, the Gedney Association and the North Street Area Civic Association.

On the Friday before the scheduled debate, the campaign manager for Mayor Tom Roach, Justin Brasch, John Martin, and James Kirkpatrick informed the organizations they would not participate in the forum.

The forum was held anyway with Mayoral challenger Milagros Lecuona, council candidates Allen Goldman, Michael Kraver and Saad Siddiqui facing 4 empty seats.

During the course of the debate Mayor candidate Milagros Lecuona answered a number of questions devised by the leadership of the three sponsoring neighborhood associations.

An edited video was made and it has been posted on YouTube and her answers to those questions may be seen by copying this link and putting it in your browser:

 

 

 

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A Call for the Man Who Made the Calls. Jack Lim, Umpire’s Umpire Heads to Elysian Fields

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Jack Lim, behind the plate in the June, 2007 Sectional Championship. Jack passed away Monday.

WPCNR Scorecard. By John F. Bailey. August 29, 2017A portion of this profile originally appeared in WPCNR November 11, 2008:

The Westchester Putnam Softball Umpires announced today that Jack Lim, former Chairperson of the Westchester-Putnam Softball Umpires passed away Monday, after a long illness.

The wake for Jack is Wednesday, August 30, 7 to 9 PM and Thursday August 31, 2 to 4 PM and 7 to 9 PM. at Heritage Funeral Home, Morrissey Drive, Putnam Valley. A Mass of Christian Burial will be conducted Friday, September 1 at 11 AM at Elizabeth Seton Church, Shrub Oak.

Jack Lim helped me a great deal to help me become a fastpitch softball umpire. When he discovered he had a very unusual disease. When he first learned he had the disease he determined he would walk the New York City Marathon to draw attention to the existence of this little know disease.

I interviewed Jack on November 2, 2008. Here is a reprint of that interview which also tells you about the umpire’s umpire, Jack Lim.

 

“One of the thousands who are running the New York City Marathon today will not be running.  He’ll be walking all 26 miles in support of a little known condition that he has recently found he suffers from: Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis.

All the fastpitch coaches and players know him. He’s Jack Lim, the most good-natured, serious and conscientious umpire you’d ever want doing your game. He is past President of the Hudson Valley Chapter of the New York State Softball Officials Organization and has been a fixture behind the plate and in the field the 20 years in softball around the county.

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The Man Behind the Mask: Jack Lim,  the umpire who embodies “sportsmanship,” holding plaque, awarding Hudson Valley Umpires Sportsmanship Award to White Plains’s Sandra Mastrangelo in June, 2008, as White Plains Softball Coach, Ted O’Donnell looks on.

Jack wrote me and many he knows about his disease. He writes that he has decided to walk the marathon, “to bring some awareness to the lung disease known as Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis and to raise some funds for the Pulmonary Fibrosis Foundation. My goal is to complete the marathon before it gets too dark.”

Jack explains that idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, IPF, “is a slowly progressive lung disease that literally robs you of breath. There is no known cause and there is no cure.”

Jack though agreed to try some experimental treatments to help find not only a cure, but they also prolonged his life.

There is no cure.

“The disease,” Jack writes (in 2008), “generally occurs in individuals between the ages of 50 and 70 affecting about 250,000 persons annually in the United States. My primary doctor told me that I am the only patient whom he has come across in his 15-year medical practice with IPF. I am so lucky to have this honor. It is what it is. I got a medical all-clear for this past softball season and 2009 is looking good so far.”

How does he handle this spectre?

Like he handles beef from coaches over his calls:

“I try to take a positive attitude about life but don’t get over confident with anything I do. I sometimes have a great game, not perfect, behind the plate and then the next day, I am questioning myself over a call that I made on the bases. That’s life but it is still fun. Be well, and take care…see you in the spring. Play ball.”

All in the fastpitch softball community and the players who play know Jack.

His games are always a pleasure. He never shows anyone up, player or coach,  and is a hawk on every call and play, no matter what the score.

He shows tremendous energy in covering his position in the field, and his calls are emphatic without over-emphasis. He always has a smile and a quip.

But when he yells “Play Ball!” he is all business.

His strike zone is consistent, and in his games they move along and the game is the thing. He is so good at what he does that fans come away talking not about his strike zone or his calls, but what a great game it was. Players hit in the games he calls because he rarely is wrong on whether a pitch is a good pitch to hit (that is a strike).

The focus was never on Jack, which is what you want. There is such respect for his judgment he rarely gets arguments.

He is a model official who officiates to promote the greatest game and make it a better game

When I started out umpiring 10 years ago(2007) and in the first year lamented a couple of games I had, Jack put things in perspective for me:

“I’ve been umpiring for 7 years and I’ve never called a perfect game yet.”

That’s the kind of person Jack is. 

He has a way that puts you at ease and makes you feel good about yourself with a new resolve. He had a way of taking the burden off you and turning you forward to the future. He never praised lightly. I remember I filled in on a varsity game when I was first starting, taking the field position. I made a “banger” call on a close play at first. Jack said after I made that call when we were coming in, “that was a varsity call.”

A little thing, but it meant a lot. Every Jack did meant a lot to him.

Like the game of ball itself, it’s not the last play, the last pitch, the last at bat, it’s your next play, next pitch, next at bat that counts!

It is a game Plato would have loved because you’re always moving along on the dialectic.

I kept this memory in the present from the time when I first wrote it. Because that’s how I’ll remember Jack. Having coffee in a diner with him. Talking ball. Concentrating on the next pitch, the next play, the next situation.

He is a class guy.

 

 

 

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Biggest Threat to Our Democracy Is Not Showing Up–Lecuona.

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WPCNR THE LETTER TICKER. From a Fundraising Letter Circulated by Mayoral Candidate Milagros Lecuona. August 27, 2017:

 The biggest threat to democracy is not showing up

Dear John,

If you were one of the 200 or so folks packed into White Plains’ first debate last Tuesday at the Women’s Club, you know Roach and the rest of his slate were a no show. This is what the voters have to look forward to with his ticket.

Showing up matters.  Help fund my campaign today so I can continue to be a champion for White Plains voters.

https://act.myngp.com/el/1754849091472853504/-4862665015864849920

The fact that the mayor chose not to address WP voters was not surprising given he did not show up at all during the week and a half of court proceeding on a case that he brought to the court in the first place.

However, it gave me a great opportunity to share my vision for a thriving White Plains. I laid out my plans for creating a comprehensive plan for the city that is updated regularly.  I shared new ideas for a sustainable White Plains that go far beyond a few bike lanes. My Democratic slate mates and I talked about how to deal with the strict parking enforcement in our downtown area.https://act.myngp.com/el/1754849091472853504/-4862665015864849920

If given the opportunity to serve as your mayor, I will work with all White Plains residents to establish a system of transparency that has been missing for the past seven years. I will encourage public participation and collaboration and I will bring my experience as urban planner to building a better White Plains.

We have to get through a few hurdles first and with only three weeks left before the Democratic primary, we need boots on the ground.  Our is a grassroots campaign so we need your help TODAY.

Please volunteer to help get Milagros elected.

I hope to see you in the next three weeks before the Democratic primaries on September 12 but I also hope to see you long beyond that date as we build a better White Plains together.

Milagros Lecuona

Contender for the Democratic Party nomination for Mayor in the September 12 Primary

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The “No Show” Debate Last Week–Rosedale UPDATE

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Hi Neighbors,

Below is an update we wanted to share with you with regards to the democratic Primary Candidates’ Forum that we hosted with North Street Area Civic Association and Gedney Association @ the Woman’s club of White plains.

We had an excellent turnout Tuesday, August 22, for the Democratic Primary Candidates’ Forum co-sponsored by the three southside associations.  We were all disappointed that the Mayor and his team did not show up to present their position and views regarding the following major issues effecting the south side.

-Fire Protection

-Encroaching Institutional Uses in Residentially zoned neighborhoods

– Traffic Issues

– Infrastructure Capacity

– Ad-Hoc Zoning of many new projects not conforming with existing zoning (est. 5000 new apartments being built in downtown area,)

– Retail instability, School Capacity

-Transit District Plan

-Update of Comprehensive Plan

The late notification from the Mayor’s Team not being able to attend the event made it not possible to re-schedule to accommodate all the parties. Local media did not cover the event

The following are important dates to mark on your calendar:

  1. Rosedale Residential Association Executive board/Town Hall meeting | Wed, Sept 6 @ 7:30pm | Educational House @ 5 Homeside lane
  2. Democratic Primary debate, hosted by the League of Women Voters | Thur, Sep 7 @ 7:00pm | Rochambeau School (Only debate scheduled prior to primary)
  3. The Democratic Primary will be held on Tues,  September 12.
Posted in Uncategorized

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MORE REAL NEWS THAN REAL NEWS IS

WHITE PLAINS WEEK

THE AUGUST 26 PROGRAM

ON THE INTERNET NOW

RKOTower

wpweek for 8-25 has been posted  the youtube link is
 
 
the whiteplainsweek.com link is
 

JOHN BAILEY

JIM BENEROFE

PETER KATZ ON

1-OPENER

VIDEO COVERAGE OF MARIO CUOMO BRIDGE OPENING

3-SHOCKER OF THE WEEK

WINBROOK LAWSUIT SHOCKER OF THE WEEK

8-WP TEST SCORES ELA 8TH GRADE

LARGEST ADVANCE IN WHITE PLAINS SCHOOLS 8TH GRADE ENGLISH SCORES IN A DECADE

PLUS

NITA LOWEY DRAWS BUDGET LINE 

JERRY LEWIS VIDEO

DICK GREGORY COMMENTARY

THE ASTORINO-BORGIA DUSTUP

THE DEBATE WHERE THE CANDIDATES WERE NO SHOWS

AND TRUMP THE PRESIDENT

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