My Sisters Place Launches Running Series to Raise $$$ for Victims of Domestic Violence, Human Trafficking

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WPCNR MAIN STREET JOURNAL. From My Sisters’ Place. April 10. 2014:

My Sisters’ Place (MSP) and the community unite to MOVE for change with the new “Team MSP” Initiative to raise awareness and funds for victims of domestic violence and human trafficking through participation in athletic events.  Team MSP is more than just running, biking, walking, or swimming—it’s an entire community advocating for relationships based on respect, equality, and peacefulness.

Currently the scheduled races are:

The Running Goddess 5k (June 1, 2014- Katonah, NY)

North Avenue Mile Run/Walk (June 8, 2014- New Rochelle, NY)

Westchester Super Sprint Triathlon (September 20, 2014- Rye, NY)

Run the Farm 5 Mile Train Race (October, 2014- Katonah, NY)

…Or find a race of your own!

Interested participants can find or create their own activity for Team MSP involvement.  “The beauty of Team MSP is that one can pick their athletic activity of choice and use the same paradigm to help MSP accomplish our formidable goals” says Karen Cheeks-Lomax, Esq. MSP’s Chief Executive Officer.  “Our children will find peace and respect in their relationships when agencies like MSP take our work into every corner in our communities and we become healthier as a result, a true win-win!”

Registration is easy, go to www.mspny.org/news/teammsp.  Create a team with friends and family or sign up independently.  Each participant will receive a Team MSP jersey and can fundraise for families in crisis who are relying on MSP for emergency residential services and supportive counseling and legal services.

We know 1 in 4 women will experience domestic violence in their lifetime (NYSCADV.org), up to 10 million children witness some form of domestic violence annually (dvrc-or.org), and 1.5 million high school students nationwide experience physical abuse from a dating partner in a single year (loveisrespect.org).  So help MSP make a difference by joining Team MSP!

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NNYB Guaranteed not to Cost $14 a Trip. DOT to start part of BUS RAPID TRANSIT by 2018. Tweaking I-287 to Relieve Cross Westchester Congestion Possible. Money Not There Yet to Do Either

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WPCNR NEW NY BRIDGER. By John F. Bailey. April 9,2014:

“Mr. New NY Bridge” Brian Conybeare enthralled 18 representatives of the Council of Neighborhood Associations Tuesday night with a confidence-building, candid new video showing Tappan Zee Constructors efforts to suppress noise, local disruption, protect sturgeon , and monitor structural integrity. He showed the timeline as it now stands, showing  the audience just where the new Tappan Zee Bridge is in its schedule and what is ahead.

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Number one, Conybeare, one of the sincerest and most earnest presenters you will ever meet said the toll on the New NY Bridge has not been decided yet, but will be decided by a financial task force awaiting appointments by Governor Andrew M. Cuomo . Connybeare promised the toll would not be $14 as originally touted two years ago.

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Conybeare told the audience and confirmed to WPCNR in remarks after the meeting that financing in addition to its $1.6 Billion TIVIA loan, would rely on New York State Thruway Municipal Bonds, which could be supplemented by possible grants from the federal  government.  Conybeare said any toll might be mitigated by lower rates for residents. The toll has yet to be determined. He guaranteed it would not hit the $14 level and guaranteed no toll increase in 2014.

WPCNR estimates under current private sector loan rates that a 30 year municipal bonding for the balance of the $3.9 Million bridge in addition to the $1.6 Billion TIVIA loan and interest,   without grants would be covered  by an $11 toll.

In the course of his talk, he said that major reconstruction of I-287 east and westbound is not being considered because the six lane insterstate has just completed a 15 year reconstruction and “there is stomach for it (new I-287 construction). Asked by WPCNR if HOV lanes and redirection of traffic might be being considered to relieve the 4 lanes into 3 merge that will exist eastbound even after the bridge is constructed, Mr. Conybeare said the Department of Transportation would be responsible for that and “is looking at it.”

His 30 minute video confirmed that the Bus Rapid Transit System in some form would be in place at the opening of the bridge in 2018. He told the audience that financing of the improvements for the system including the buses is not in place, either.

He said Bus Rapid Transit access to the White Plains Transit Center  is envisioned to come through the Westchester County Center parking lot at this time and would not block neighborhoods’ routes to the station.

He told WPCNR the Department of Transportation is designing the Bus Rapid Transit System and that the DOT would “involve” White Plains and all communities effected.  WPCNR asked when the Department of Transportation was going to start that process, and Conybeare  said that was up to the DOT.

On the shortage of expert pile welders now being experienced by the construction team, Mr. Conybeare said Tappan Zee Constructors is now training local union workers in the special expertise to weld the pilings together to support the bridge. Asked when Tappan Zee Bridge Constructors would have an adequate welding force to proceed, Connybeare did not have an answer to that yet. He said that all welds on the pilings are being tested with ultrasound equipment to assure the welds in the pilings have structural integrity. He emphasized the bridge is right on schedule at this time.

The problem of cracks in  structural welds on pilings of the main support structures in the new Oakland Bay Bridge last fall required  last minute addition of saddles on the towers of the new Oakland Bay Bridge built by Fluor Corporation and the American Bridge Company before that new bridge could open to the public. Failed welds  delayed the opening of that bridge from July to September in the fall of 2012.l.

The video is viewable at www.NewNYBridge.com

New York State Assemblyman David Buchwald was the only local government official to attend the meeting.

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Roll Over Beethoven: City Presents 2.3% Increase in spending 2.3% increase in tax rate for new Fiscal year. No cuts. Workforce not cut. Police Settlement provided for in Budget

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WPCNR Quill & Eyeshade. By John F. Bailey. April 7, 2014:

The White Plains Common Council was presented with a $176.1 Million budget this evening by the city administration, $4 Million more than 2013-14 budget ($172.1 Million)an increase of 2.3%.

The property tax increase as a result of the increase is  also 2.3%.

The tax rate moves from $191.74 to $196.14 per $1,000 of  assessed valuatation meaning that if your own a median priced home in White Plains that would sell for $650,000 with an assessed value of  $16,475 would pay $73 more in  city property taxes ($3,231.41) than you did this year ($3,158.92).

The combination of city and school district property taxes for such a home is $13,118.22 ($9,886.81 going to the White Plains school district). In 2013-14 that combined bill was $12,767.30. City and school taxes are up $351 this year for the $650,000 home.

Add the County property tax of $2,059 (including the sewer taxes)  to this total and that median priced homeowner’s tax bill hits $15,177.     

Budget Director Michael Genito told WPCNR, the city has not reduced their workforce this year. He also said the budget is under the state tax cap.

However, he told us it is not clear yet from the state the consolidations and savings guidelines the city would have to comply with in order for White Plainsians to receive a refund on property taxes from the state next year.

Asked if the city commissioners and non-union employees salary increases were included in the budget, Mr. Genito said any salary increase for commissioners would have to be added by the Common Council.

A 2% raise across the board for city commissioners and deputy commissioners, et. Al would cost the city approximately $75,200. Currently the city pays its 27 appointed officials an aggregate of $3,759,969 plus benefits.

Asked if a possible settlement of the police contract (currently in binding arbitration),was included in the budget, Mr. Genito said it was.

Asked where, consultant Eileen Earl said it was included in the Reserve for Financing, which is currently proposed to be $3.1 Million. John Callahan, city Corporation Council, asked if an decision of the arbitrator was imminent, said he expected the arbitrator decision would come “soon.”

Ms. Earl added that the reserve also included funds for the Civil Service Employees merit pay increases required by their current contract. Five million dollars is planned to be transferred to  the tax stabilization fund to  pay  salaries as it has the last two years.

The budget projects a 2% increase in sales tax allocated to the general fund this year, even though the collections this year are running consistently 2% behind 2012-13. The $46 Million sales tax expected in 2014-15 does not count the sales taxes expected to be transferred into the Tax Stabilization Fund. The total sales tax handle is now running 2% behind after 7 months.

At this time WPCNR projects baded on NY State Department of Finance statistics, the city  will hit $50.9 MILLION, enabling the city to fill up the tax stabilization fund with another $5 Million, which again next year will enable them to handle budgeted pay increases. The Tax Stabilization fund was ostensibly created by the Common Council in 2010 to rebuild city fund balance but actually funds payroll each year instead, and has not grown fund balance.

Asked if this was a “bare bones” budget.  Mr. Genito said the budget was increased to maintain services. Mr. Callahan added that to cut the budget would meant eliminating city services.

On the prospect of sharing services and consolidating services to enable the city to qualify taxpayers to receive property tax refunds in the spirit of Governor Andrew Cuomos tax cap legislation applying to villages and cities, Mr. Genito said achieving that qualitifation has yet to be determined, and would be difficult, because the city would have to reach out to other villages and towns. He pointed out the city could not provide fire department service to another community  because this was prohibited by law.

WPCNR asked if the city was going to reconvene talks with the city school district to see if they could save the school district money and consolidate more than $75,000 worth of vehicle maintenance. Ms. Earl said the city already shares recreational fields and facilities of the school district. WPCNR asked Mr. Genito if the school district was reluctant to allow the city to handle services for them  from reluctance to eliminate positions. Mr. Genito said they were not and that the Joint Facilities Committee met regularly to find areas of consolidation.

Asked if savings from introducing  one driver, one armed sanitation trucks, had been dollar-quanitied yet,  Genito said there was not a dollar saving, but the Department of Public Works was able to move former sanitation truck workers into other vacant positions in the department, avoiding new hires.

There is no increase in Parking fees in the budget.

The city said the major factors impacting Tax Rate are labor contracts (2% cost of living and step increases), self-insurance requirements (up 17%) and debt service (up 13%).

The budget now begins review by the Common Council beginning:

April 16, 6 P.M. in the Mayor’s Conference Room: The Budget & Management Committee hears a review of the budget

April 21, 5:30 P.M. — Department of Public Works Expenditures

April 30, 5:30  P.M.–Parking and Public Safety Expenditures

May 5, 7:30 P.M. —Public Hearing

May 19,  7:30 P.M.- Adoption

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Mike Kaplowitz on the Playland Situation, Affordable Housing,County Economy on PEOPLE TO BE HEARD AT 10:30 Wed., ON FIOS 45 AND CABLEVISION 76

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Mike Kaplowitz, Chairman of the Westchester County Board of Legislators 

PEOPLE TO BE HEARD

at 10:30 P.M. on Channel 45 FIOS throughout Westchester and

Channel 76, Cablevision in White Plains

On

Where the Playland- Rye-Westchester-Sustainable Playland Controversy Stands–

If Sustainable Playland Pulls Out — What the County may do —

Affordable Housing Impasse with HUD being mediated and solved by HUD Moderator.

 

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The Best Day of the Year is Opening Day

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WPCNR Press Box. April 7, 2014:  They’re getting ready at the new Big Ball Park.

Today the Bronx Bombers return to Yankee Stadium.  In the honor of Opening Day, WPCNR brings back this original celebration I wrote about why Opening Day is the best day of the year

OPENING DAY is better than Christmas Day,
When you look out the window and you know they’ll play,
Whether dreary gray or billiant spring sun’s ray
Opening Day means the Big Show is back today.

In decades past, Opening Day was for fanatics starved,
Eager for the sharp crack of ash on horsehide carved;
The flutter of pennants snapping in northwest winds
Atop ramparts of inviting arches of walls, and sculpted friezes wistfully escarped. 

Fans lucky to get away with ducats
Marvel at grown men in boys’ flannels and sharp whites pristeen,
Back to play in April’s warm zephers in NY blazened caps,
Dashing specks of white warming up on the sprawl of the greenest green.

Motor cars panting in good-natured traffic jams on the Deegan,
DowYawkey Way, on 35th and Shields or Waveland’s jam.
Through car windows you see the first glimpse of the storied Park,
The place where ball is played, where ghosts of Ted, Babe, Duke
Mel, Spahnie, Whitey, Mickey, Willie, Yaz, Minnie and Sandy lark.

Paying a White Plains fine to park, passing stogie smoking old men
at the same gates for a hundred years,

Now out into the street

You go, aroma of roasting chestnuts, pungent cigars sweet,

Cries of “scorecard heah” “programs,heah” shout out, neath light towers to heaven.

Fans in cap and uniform, little boys and girls gawk in awe hoping to make the Anthem
Never seeing such sheer walls, topped with the legend “GameToday 1:30 PM.”
Clutching slim cardboard tix to Section 14 Upper Deck up to the turnstiles
Festooned with souvenirs more dear as diamonds, beyond, the lure of endless aisles.

Into the press of crowd, the grizzled usher, RIPS YOUR TICKET.
Turnstile turns, clicks, and into the cathedral of ball you go
Into the rotunda greeted with magic signs dazzling the senses —
UPPER LEVELS SECTIONS 1 to 39, 2 to 40

Hawkers shout –Voices of Flatbush — colorful books in hand

“Yearbook heah,” “Dodger Yearbook here,” “Hot dog, heah,”
Assail your ears up ramps you walk to the sign “NEXT HOMESTAND”
 

Walking the catwalk,sliver of blue is first look of the magic sphere
Into the sunlight splaying the vast rake of the mighty grand stand.

Spread out below are knights of the diamond in white hues
Cavorting, snapping throws across immaculate red clay
As majestic fungo bats CRACK! sending spheres soaring towards filling bleachers a mile away,
Bunting flutters from the deck’s rails red, white and true blues.

Old glory unfurls on the highest pole in center field
Colorful signs deliver the manly flavor of the only real game,
GILLETTE To Look Sharp, The Red Sox use Lifeboy, Schaefer It’s A Hit
Hey, Neighbor Have a Gansett, White Owl Cigars, Hit Sign Win Suit

From old familiar walls, to Gladys Gooding on the organ
Friendly old green scoreboard displaying
Today’s games around the big leagues BETTER THAN CNN
CHI CLE BOS DET, CHI STL, NY WAS make you king for a day.
Two Bits for a scorecard, usher wipes your seat, ballpark fills your heart.

Penciling lineup 422B, 1 SS, 14 1B, 4 CF, 39 C, 6 RF, 23 LF 19 3B 36 P

Smell of beer, peanuts and pretzels.

Nippy air, warm rays sink into your face feels nice,

Starters wheel,deal, kicking high on sidelines fueling expectancy

Men in blue, arms folded solemnly conduct the home plate regimen
Casey, Ralph , Walter, Joe and Sparky exchange lineup cards and knowing
Ground rules by heart, go over them for ritual’s sake.
Announcer entones “Good afternoon, Ladies and Gentlemen,

Welcome to Yankee Stadium.”

“Please rise for the playing of our national anthem,”
Nancy Faust at organ note by note peels baseball’s theme song
Rising on the breeze, uniting do-rag and ball cap,
Fedora, ponytail and bouffant in the spirit of the great game.

Grass is never greener on opening days
Strikes are louder, the long drives electrify in alleys
Beers with THICK hig creamy heads, taste crisp cold mellow best brew all year
Smashes laser through short and in the gap in raucous rallies

Magicians without wands start 6-4-3s,

Backhand sure hits losing their caps

“Oh what a play’s” crackle on WGN with “CUBS WIN!”‘S

Jack and Mel, Vince, Red, Curt and Murph are back at the mikes to turn mundane days Into joy with a ninth inning elixir and “happy recaps” 

Thunderous ROAR accolades the 2-out winner again creating big kids’ grins.

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Womens Club Fashion Show Raises $15,000 for White Plains Seniors

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WPCNR ABOUT TOWN. From the Womens Club of White Plains. April 7, 2014:

The recent White Plains Woman’s Club Scholarship Luncheon & Fashion Show raised about $15,000 for scholarships for White Plains High School seniors and honored former White Plains teachers Judy Schermerhorn and Beckie Bright.

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Above, from left to right: White Plains Mayor Tom Roach, Judy Schermerhorn, event chair Ybelize Pilarte and Beckie Bright.
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WHITE PLAINS MIKE COUZENS TELECASTS HIGH SCHOOL FINAL FOUR TELECASTS ON ESPN FROM MSG

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Mike Couzens, right shown broadcasting a Fort Wayne Tincapsbaseball game. For an article on his stint this weekend telecasting the national high school final four on ESPN follow the link below.

WPCNR VIEW FROM THE UPPER DECK. From the Fort Wayne Tincaps. April 6. 2014:

Mike Couzens, 2007 graduate of White Plains High School and 2011 Syracuse University graduate as you know from a previous feature on Mike on WPCNR is the Promotion Director and Voice of the Fort Wayne Tincaps,  a minor league affiliate of the San Diego Padres, during the baseball season. He also is a go-to broadcaster for all kinds of games in a galaxy of sports all over the country  for ESPN.

This weekend, the Tincaps report, Mike has been tapped to telecast on ESPN the high school national basketball tournament, and is featured in an article on the ESPN website, which you can read  right here: http://frontrow.espn.go.com/2014/04/mike-couzens-brooke-weisbrod/

Mike got to telecast from Madison Square Garden. Congrats, Mike, we’ll be looking for you in a major league play-by-play booth someday soon.

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WHITE PLAINS WEEK RIDES AGAIN NOW INSTANTLY ON THE INTERNET WITH BREAKING NEWS!

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CONNECTED. CONTEMPORARY. COGNIZANT.

ON

THE SCHOOL AID CAPER

THE JET BLUE BIRD STRIKE

TOM ROACH ON WHAT’S GOING ON THE FORMER SHOLZ BUICK PROPERTY

 THE NEW WHITE PLAINS CITY WEBSITE–WHAT’S THERE. WHAT’S NOT.

SUSTAINABLE PLAYLAND TAKES A TIMEOUT 

THE NOBLE DEMOCRATS GLOSS OVER DISTRICT LEADERS PROTESTS WITH A TASK FORCE

SEE THE NEIGHBORHOOD NEWS BOYS NOW

THE APRIL 4 EDITION

ON

www.whiteplainsweek.com

AND ON

THE SAME WEBSITE ON 

PEOPLE TO BE HEARD

YOU’VE GOT

MIKE KAPLOWITZ

BREAKING NEWS!

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ON

THE ASTORINO-SACH-KAPLOWITZ

SUSTAINABLE PLAYLAND SUMMIT

WHAT HAPPENED. WHAT DIDN’T HAPPEN

HUD MONITOR REACHING AGREEMENTS IN ZONING CHANGES WITH THE WESTCHESTER 7

PEOPLE TO BE HEARD WILL BE TELECAST MONDAY, 10 P.M. AND WEDNESDAY 10:30 P.M. ON WESTCHESTER FIOS CHANNEL 45 AND WHITE PLAINS CABLEVISION AT CHANNEL 76

BUT YOU CAN SEE MIKE NOW ON

www.whiteplainsweek.com

 

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Not a Delaying Tactic, Sustainable Playland Says. No Deadline for Rye and County to figure out who’s in charge on Playland. Rye Consultant Precipitates Playland Crisis

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WPCNR PLAYLAND REPORTER. By John F. Bailey. April 1, 2014:

A spokesman for Sustainable Playland, the group attempting to redesign and develop the 1928 Playland amusement park owned by the county, denied today that Sustainable Playland was withdrawing temporarily from  the Playland Improvement Plan review process as a delaying tactic to avoid taking over Playland this year (2014).

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Geoffrey Thompson, spokesman for Sustainable Playland

 

Thompson said  that when the Sustainable group walked out of last week’s Board of Legislators Committee meeting, they were optimistic that matters were proceeding satisfactorily..

Thomson said that the management of Sustainable Playland announced their indefinite withdrawal only when confronted by the City of Rye legal consultant, the environmental lawyer Michael Gerrard, in a letter calling for a complete environmental review of Playland, citing various cases which Gerrard interprets as giving  the City of Rye full rights to approve any changes to Playland, and conducting a full environmental review.

Thompson said Sustainable decided to suspend spending further dollars on consultants and professionals in the active Playland Review (now underway under the leadership of County Legislator Peter Harckham. Thompson said that “when the county and the City of Rye decides who’s on first, and who’s in charge, and gives some clarity  we will be glad to rejoin the review, otherwise there’s no point to it.”

Thompson added that County Legislator Kenneth Jenkins second lawsuit contending that the county should  not have signed a management agreement with Sustainable Playland without approval of the Board of Legislators, and also includes Sustainable Playland in the suit, can also have the affect of limiting Sustainable Playland ability to raise funds.

County Executive Robert Astorino in a news release and statement said he is attempting to get the Mayor of Rye and the Chairman of the Board of Legislators, Michael Kaplowitz together to hold talks on resolving the controversy over who’s decision is it anyway (The County’s or the City of Rye) to decide on the future development of Playland.

Thompson said the City of Rye Mayor and City Council voted unanimously to approve the original Sustainable Playland plan which included the field hourse. “From the beginning, Sustainable Playland assured the Mayor and the City of Rye whey would have a seat at the table, they could bring their planning commission in. But, we never said they would have the final decision.”

 

 

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Sustainable Playland (Short $$ for Legaling) Suspends Participation in Playland Review Indefinitely Over Rye Demands, Jenkins Lawsuit. “Pointless,” Sustainable says. ASTORINO REACTS

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WPCNR PLAYLAND REPORTER. Special to WPCNR From Sustainable Playland and Westchester County Department of Communications. April 1, 2014  UPDATED WITH ASTORINO STATEMENT/ REACTION April 1, 2014 12:45 P.M. E.D.T.

Sustainable Playland Inc.  said today that it is suspending its participation in the review process of its Playland Improvement Plan (PIP) for the park, provoking instant reaction from County Executive Robert P. Astorino who has long championed the citizen group.

Sustainable said in a news release  statement it will not participate any more in the Playland review process until  issues involving the City of Rye’s demand to conduct a full environmental review of the plan and a lawsuit brought by the former chairman of the County Board of Legislators are resolved. 

SPI’s announcement was made in a letter from SPI President Kim Morque that was delivered late Monday to County Executive Rob Astorino and copied to County Board of Legislators Chairman Michael Kaplowitz and Peter Harckham, the legislator chairing the Legislature’s committee that is reviewing the Playland Improvement Plan (PIP.)

Westchester County Executive Robert P. Astorino today called on the chairman of the Board of Legislators and the Mayor of Rye to meet with him to see if they can resolve the legal uncertainties hanging over plans to save Playland.

County Executive Astorino’s reaction came slightly after 12 noon today:

“For four years, our goal has been to save Playland,” Astorino said. “We have reached the point that litigation now threatens our improvement plans and the park itself. It is now time for elected leaders to do everything in their power to resolve the legal impediments that stand in the way of moving forward on saving Playland for future generations.”

According to the Astorino statement released, “Astorino’s call to BOL Chairman Michael Kaplowitz and Rye Mayor Joseph Sack was precipitated by a letter Monday night from Sustainable Playland, the Rye-based not-for-profit selected after an extensive Request for Proposals process to restore and run the park. In its letter, SPI says that after spending $600,000 to date, it does not have the monetary resources or manpower to be engaged in protracted legal battles on multiple fronts.”

Astorino’s news relase said he hoped that meetings with Chairman Kaplowitz and Mayor Sack could be arranged within the next several days. He said that the discussions would take place within two parameters:

  • The status quo was not an option for Playland. An amusement park that costs county taxpayers $4 million to $5 million a year is not viable in today’s world given all the cost pressures on county government.
  • The county must maintain approval rights on its own property, otherwise it would open itself to legal challenges on every county property and facility every time a change or improvement is made.

The not-for-profit group said that the uncertainty caused by Rye’s insistence that it has the right to review and approve the entire plan for revitalizing the park made SPI’s continuing participation in the legislature’s review pointless.

“Our primary concern is that unresolved issues threaten to delay SPI’s revitalization of the park in ways that will remove the viability of our implementation plans in terms of both economics and timing,” the letter states.  “We are asking the County Executive to use his office to see if the current uncertainty regarding the approval process can be removed.”

SPI “remains committed to our vision and the goals of renewing and restoring the park” and are hopeful that a resolution can be reached that will allow the public-private partnership to move forward.  Once the jurisdictional issue between the County and Rye, as well as the lawsuit against the County and SPI that was brought by County Legislator Ken Jenkins are resolved, SPI said it will resume work on implementing the PIP.

SPI was selected to be the future manager of the park from among a dozen respondents to an RFP to reinvent Playland for the 21st century that was issued in 2010 by Astorino.  The SPI approach is to create year-round activities at the park with multiple venues to reduce the dependence on the aging amusement  area that is subject to a warm-weather only season and the lost attendance due to bad weather during its season.  The major component of the SPI model are the amusement park, ice casino, a new field house with indoor and outdoor playing fields and the Westchester Children’s Museum slated to open in 2015.

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