WHAT MY FATHER GAVE ME. CHARLES F. BAILEY OF PLEASANTVILLE NY. A FATHER’S DAY MEMORY

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MY PARENTS: CHARLES F. BAILEY AND MILDRED PINNEO BAILEY

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

This week celebrates a great American Father, mine and the other fathers across time who provide an eternal legacy their sons and daughters rely on every day and think about their fathers every day.

Charles F. Bailey.

He is my father. He was born November 17, 1918.

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

And, oh yes, don’t sit in traffic. Take the next exit and wing it.

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 OF PLEASANTVILLE, NY 1918-1986

He was not an emotional man. He was a banker and always wore suits crisp white shirts with French Cuffs to work. Starched.  To work.

I have fond memories of going to meet him in the days of steam engines in Pleasantville – when train tracks were at grade with Manville Road at the old stone station.

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. You always heard those steam engines coming. Chuffing doing serious work.

You could see them coming around the bend but you heard them first.

Bell ringing ,chuffing, puffing : Clouds of very busy, inspiring industrious black smoke streaming at the horizon down the line. The steam engines of the past were living things to me, always moving.

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. “G & T’s” in the summer, martinis with George and Howard two close friends. He smoked Chesterfield, Philip Morris, Marlboros, Kents with the micronite filter.

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 Margie greet me at Grand Central Terminal which still is a very big and scary place to me .

He would take me to lunch at Jack’s Monte Rosa Restaurant on 49th Street – which I thought was a very great place. Hub bub, tinkling glasses. Sharp-dressed waiters in white jackets black bow ties.

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.

“Hi, Mr. Bailey. How are you doing?”

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 at $90 a week.)

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. At least I was.

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. No watching from the warm press box for him.

Another time he impressed was when I lost a job where I was working at the television station that I was being considered for. 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.

It was one of my first lessons in how telling the truth puts situations in perspective. You know the truth, should we recognize it when it is told to us is a way to stop feeling sorry for yourself, that whatever event happened to you it happened not because you handled it wrong, but because others were weak.

Then later in my career, I 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.

It taught me then, when bad things are done to you, the person doing them was a coward and took the easy way out.

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.

I really needed that. It started my career, working for myself. If I did not like a client or they treated me badly or they stiffed me (common behavior in the advertising business). I did not take a job with them again, and with new clients I took half the fee upfront. When I asked for upfront money, the possible clients simpered “don’t you trust me?” I would simply answer “It’s not that I don’t trust you. It’s my policy.”

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. Always — when you really really really need it. 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 anyway in hopes it will sink into 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 or that often.

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. I married that.

As you grow into your 30s and 40s, little things they say to you you begin to understand.

My father never struck me.

He 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,” “Don’t stand close to the edge  of a severe drop.” In hopes that when I am not with them, they will remember it when they need to remember what you said.

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.

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. Because in his mind, I was.

He took responsibility. He did what had to be done.

You never outgrow your need for Dad.

The good ones are immortal, alive and with you in your head when you need them.

They are the  ghosts that comfort always. Haunt you in memory. You’re always  glad when they drop in on you.

You feel them warmly when you do good.

You feel their sympathy when you have done wrong. They are your conscience. They are the God of Judgement in your head. Your trusted advisor.

Immortality is leaving a good memory of you with the ones who knew you.

Because what you give them, lives on for generations.

Your children will talk of you because of the good things and behaviors you gave them when you needed them and you never lose those tools Dad and mom (it is a team effort) gave you.

I miss my Dad and Mom. They probably have discussions over me to this day.

Charles Bailey. He died in 1986.

His legacy and my mother’s to me keeps me going every day.

I also remember my wife’s parents who welcomed me into their family when I married and who raised an extraordinary woman.

I think there should be another holiday.

Parents’ Day.

Don’t you?

 

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THE MINNESOTA ASSASSINATIONS

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WESTCHESTER COUNTY EXECUTIVE KEN JENKINS STATEMENT ON POLITICAL VIOLENCE IN MINNESOTA

“I, along with Westchester County residents and Americans, am outraged by the horrific and senseless assassination of State Representative Melissa Hortman and her husband, and the brutal attack on State Senator John Hoffman and his wife. These acts of political violence are an attack not only on these devoted public servants and their families, but on the very foundation of our democracy.

“In moments like this, we are reminded how critical it is to safeguard stability, competence and civility in public life. We must recommit ourselves to respectful dialogue, to protecting our democratic institutions, and to building a future grounded in decency and peace.

 

“Let us honor Representative Hortman’s legacy by upholding these values in everything we do.”

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JUNE 14—-DA CACACE STATEMENT ON PROPOSAL TO CLOSE “VOLUNTARY INTOXICATION” LOOPHOLE BILL– ELIMINATES INTOXICATION AS RAPE DEFENSE STRATEGY

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District Attorney Seal

SUSAN CACACE
WESTCHESTER COUNTY DISTRICT ATTORNEY

 

WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. – Westchester County District Attorney Susan Cacace released the following statement urging passage of A.101-A, a bill pending before the New York State Assembly that would close the so-called ‘voluntary intoxication’ loophole.

DA Cacace said: “Under current law, survivors of sexual abuse are penalized for being assaulted if they consume alcohol or other intoxicants before their assault.

This status quo relies on outdated notions of consent and victimhood that have rightfully been relegated to the dustbin of history.

“New York is sometimes slow to modernize its laws in the face of obvious injustice. But on certain subjects, such as bail and discovery reform, New York lawmakers worked quickly to address a perceived need. Survivors of sexual abuse are no less deserving of justice than these other constituencies. We should consider their needs, too.

“Other states, including Michigan and Minnesota, have recognized the need to eliminate this archaic penalty on survivors in recent years. New York should lead this growing coalition rather than stand in its way.

“In the strongest possible terms, I urge Speaker Heastie to bring A.101-A to the floor for a full vote before the Assembly. Survivors can’t wait another minute. Let’s not leave them behind.”

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JUNE 13 — ATTORNEY CHARGED WITH HARASSMENT OF WESTCHESTER COUNTY JUDGE

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WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. –
Westchester County District Attorney Susan Cacace announced TODAY that a Yonkers man was arrested and charged with Aggravated Harassment of a Judge, a class E felony, for allegedly sending threatening communications to acting state Supreme Court Justice Susan M. Capeci.

Nicholas Leo, 57, of Yonkers, was arraigned Friday afternoon before White Plains City Court Judge John P. Collins Jr. He was remanded to the Westchester County Jail pending further proceedings. Judge Collins further issued a temporary order of protection on behalf of Justice Capeci.

DA Cacace said: “At a time of increasing threats to members of the judiciary, the defendant’s alleged conduct is especially alarming.

“As U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts observed in his 2024 report on the federal judiciary, ‘violence, intimidation, and defiance directed at judges because of their work undermine our Republic, and are wholly unacceptable.’

“We must never allow this type of conduct to become normalized. The sanctity of our legal process demands nothing less.”

Leo, a litigant before Justice Capeci in criminal and matrimonial proceedings, is accused of sending her electronic messages containing threatening communications. Justice Capeci presides over Westchester County’s Integrated Domestic Violence court.

In one message dated May 27, as alleged in a felony complaint, Leo told her, “I’m going to beat you.” In another message, dated May 30, he is accused of saying, “I wish you die tonight in a car fire.”

And on June 11, Leo stated in yet another message, “I warned you month after month after month. If you take my kids from me for no reason, which you did, it’s not gonna go well,” and “I hope you die,” according to the felony complaint.

Leo is a Yonkers-based attorney with an active registration status. He is scheduled to return to court on June 18.

The investigation was conducted by the Westchester County District Attorney’s Office.

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JUNE 14– WHITE PLAINS WEEK MONDAY AT 7 PM SHARP EDT THE FRIDAY THE 13TH REPORT– WESTCHESTER WIDE CH 45 FIOS, WP OPTIMUM CH 76 AND WORLDWIDE ANYTIME ON WWW.WPCOMMUNITYMEDIA.ORG

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ARCHITECT WALKS YOU THROUGH THE GALLERIA NEW SITE PLAN–SHARPLY REVISED– 3,000 UNITS 800 AFORDABLE UNITS. 

INTRODUCING THE WHITE PLAINS OF THE FUTURE VISION ZERO ACTION PLAN APPROVED BY THE COMMON COUNCIL 132 PAGES. HOW TO ANALYZE IT

MUST SEE “SUGGGESTIONS” FOR BRINGING SAFER DRIVING, WALKING BIKING TO THE MOST DANGEROUS ACCIDENT PRONE AREAS IN THE  CITY– WHY EVERY WHITE PLAINS RESIDENT SHOULD REVIEW EACH HIGHLIGHT SECTION TO SEE THE WHITE PLAINS OF THE FUTURE.

 

THE ALL NEW SHARPLY SCALED BACK GALLERIA CITY. 800 AFFORDABLE HOUSING UNITS

 

WASHINGTON’S IMPACT ON NORTHEAST AMTRAK– COUNTY EXECUTIVE FURIOUS AT CUTS, CONGRESSMAN LATIMER SAYS NO WAY HE CAN VOTE FOR THE CUT

GOVERNOR HOCHUL SPEAKS TRUTH TO CONGRESS  ON NY IMMIGRATION ENFORCEMENT COOPERATION AND CONGRESS FAILING TO AGREE ON IMMIGRATION POLICY

THE RIDGEWAY 100 HOUSE SUBDIVISION– NO HEARING UNTIL SEPT 2 — NO DETAILS EITHER — LOTS OF QUESTIONS STILL NOT CLEARLY ANSWERED

JOHN BAILEY ON MAYORAL REFORM–NO MATTER WHO WINS  THE MAYORALTY, HERE IS WHAT THE NEW MAYOR HAS TO DO FOR THE PEOPLE TO CREATE A WHITE PLAINS FOR THE PEOPLE, FOR THE NEIGHBORHOODS FOR THE PEOPLE WANTING  TO COME TO WHITE PLAINS AND BUSINESSES THAT WANT TO SUCCEED.

JOHN  BAILEY ON THE NEW MINDSET TO CHOOSE YOUR NEXT  DISTRICT 5 COUNTY LEGISLATOR

JOHN BAILEY  THE CITIZENETREPORTER AT CITY LIMITS

 THE NEWS 

THIS WEEK EVERY WEEK ON

WHITE PLAINS WEEK EVERY WEEK

SINCE 2001 A.D.

BLACK COFFEE AND NEWSREALITY

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JUNE 12—GOVERNOR HOCHUL SPEAKS TRUTH TO CONGRESS

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REMARKS AS PREPARED: GOVERNOR KATHY HOCHUL’S OPENING STATEMENT TO THE UNITED STATES HOUSE COMMITTEE ON OVERSIGHT AND GOVERNMENT REFORM

Additional Written Testimony Provided to the Committee Available Here

Chairman Comer, Ranking Member Lynch, and Members of the Committee, as we speak the streets of an American City have been militarized over the objections of the Governor. This is nothing short of a flagrant abuse of power, an assault on our American values.

My views on immigration are simple and direct — our nation needs secure borders. Our nation needs comprehensive immigration reform from this Congress. Our state laws dictate that we cooperate with ICE in criminal cases. And our values dictate that we treat all law-abiding families with dignity and respect.

The America I believe in is a nation of laws and a nation of immigrants — abandoning either threatens the very foundation on which our great country was built. For 400 years New York has prospered from hard-working newcomers — people like my grandparents who fled poverty in Ireland — they had the same American Dream that immigrant families have today. They’re not here for handouts. They want to work, earn their place and raise their families.

Yet every day we see another story of children ripped from the arms of their mothers. Wives separated from their husbands. Families arrested while attending legal immigration appointments. Not long ago, in the small town of Sackets Harbor, New York masked and armed ICE agents stormed into a home before dawn, abducted a mother and three children — including a third grader. They were cast into a living hell in a detention facility in Texas. I immediately contacted Border Czar Tom Homan and demanded their release.

In Jefferson County, where more than 60 percent of voters supported Donald Trump, people protested in the streets. Local Republican lawmakers, business owners, and school leaders all spoke out. Finally, after nearly two weeks the family was returned home.

In New York, we understand the difference between going after criminals and traumatizing law-abiding families.

Now some will use this hearing to stoke fear but I’m here to give you the facts. New York has managed an unprecedented influx of migrants because of a broken border.

And yet at the same time our state has become stronger and safer.

Today, New York State has the lowest homicide rate among the nation’s ten largest states. We’ve achieved this not with indiscriminate roundups, not by tearing apart innocent families, but by investing over $2.6 billion in public safety. By engaging in smart, targeted policing and by partnering with federal agencies to apprehend and deport serious criminals.

Since I became Governor we’ve cooperated in handing over more than 1,300 convicted criminals to ICE. What we don’t do is enforce civil immigration violations — that’s the federal government’s job.

New Yorkers need their State Troopers seizing guns and drugs and patrolling highways. States like mine are doing our part but we can’t be expected to fix this nation’s broken immigration system.

The very people who go on cable news to rail about ‘chaos at the border’ are the ones who torpedo bipartisan immigration reform each and every time it’s within reach.

So here’s my message: If you truly care about public safety — if you truly care about the economy — if you truly care about human dignity then sit down, negotiate and deliver real reform. Secure the border. Revive legal pathways. Let people work.

At the end of today, I’ll go home and do my job of keeping New Yorkers safe. I hope you’ll do yours too.

Thank you.

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JUNE 11 –NYPD,FBI AND CANADIAN BORDER PATROL FOIL MASS SHOOTING PLOT AIMED AT A BROOKLYN

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STATEMENT FROM GOVERNOR KATHY HOCHU ON APPREHENSION OF PERSON OF INTEREST

“In the weeks after the horrific October 7 Hamas attacks, I directed additional New York State Police resources towards the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force. This Task Force plays a critical role in our efforts to keep New Yorkers safe. 

“Today, it was announced that this Joint Terrorism Task Force conducted an investigation into a 20-year-old who attempted to carry out a mass shooting at a Jewish religious center in Brooklyn. The suspect, who was living in Canada at the time he was planning the attack, has been charged and arrested by federal law enforcement. State Police assigned to the Task Force played a critical role in the investigation of the subject and his movement toward the U.S. from Canada. Through partnership with colleagues at the FBI, CBP and Canadian law enforcement, he was ultimately arrested by Canadian authorities before he could get into the United States.

“This incident is a chilling reminder of why it was necessary for my Administration to take significant steps to protect our northern border. That includes $13 million to enhance security efforts, including the purchase of additional tools to support investigations into transnational criminal organizations. It also includes increased staff and technological capacity for New York State Police, including assigning additional members to the Joint Terrorism Task Force Office in Plattsburgh.

“Over the past two years we have seen a horrific increase in antisemitism and hate-fueled violence and threats. My top priority as Governor has always been to ensure the safety and security of every New Yorker, and I will use every tool at my disposal to keep New Yorkers safe by continuing to crack down on violent criminals or hate filled individuals that want to cause harm to my constituents.”

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JUNE 10–MOHEGAN LAKE CLOSED. ALLERGY BLOOM

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MOHEGAN LAKE BEACHES CLOSED DUE TO HARMFUL ALGAE BLOOM

(White Plains, NY) – The Westchester County Health Department has closed the following Mohegan Lake beaches until further notice to protect the public from contact with a Harmful Algae Bloom (HAB) in the swim areas:

  • Mohegan Colony Association – Mohegan Lake
  • Mohegan Beach Park District – Mohegan Lake

These are the only County regulated beaches on Mohegan Lake.

Westchester County Health Commissioner Dr. Sherlita Amler said: “The decision to close these beaches is a precautionary measure to ensure the safety and health of the public. Harmful Algae Blooms are more prevalent during hot days when water temperatures rise, leading to increased bacteriological growth rates.”

To reopen the beaches, the algae must be completely cleared from the swim area. Following this, water samples will be taken and submitted for analysis.

Residents and visitors are encouraged to visit the Westchester County website for the latest updates on beach closures and reopening schedules. The County remains committed to maintaining high standards of environmental health and safety across its recreational facilities.

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JUNE 9– COUNTY EXECUTIVE JENKINS, CONGRESSMAN LATIMER CONDEMN 25% CUT IN AID AMTRAK NORTHEAST CORRIDOR

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The Northeast Corridor is the most heavily used and economically critical rail corridor in the country—linking Westchester County to New York City, Boston and Washington, D.C. The proposed cuts threaten to undermine reliability, delay modernization projects and disrupt the lives of thousands of local commuters.

Jenkins said: “This proposal is a serious blow to Westchester County and the entire Northeast. Slashing funding for the nation’s busiest rail corridor – while boosting less-used lines elsewhere – is not only shortsighted, its reckless. Infrastructure investments must be based on need and impact, not politics. I urge Congress to reject this proposal and stand with the communities that power the country’s economy.”

Latimer said: “I am deeply concerned about the President’s proposal to cut Amtrak’s Northeast corridor funding by 25%. This is the most heavily traveled Amtrak route in the entire country. I am weekly Amtrak rider and I see the growth in ridership; this is yet another bad business decision. Cutting this necessary funding is merely political payback to states in the northeast. I will not support a budget that includes this cut

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