The Bud Bungle III: Instant Replay is a Pandora’s Box, Baseball Dare Not Open.

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The Bud Bungle 3: Replay Disrespects Umpires and Umpires,Fans, Players should Throw  it Out.

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New Busch Stadium in St. Louis, Missouri. (Word Press)

WPCNR VIEW FROM THE UPPER DECK.  “Bull” Allen on Baseball. August  19, 2013:

Bud Selig, the Commissioner of Baseball is making a serious mistake.

He has recommended instant reply to review umpire’s calls that managers disagree with (from as much as 100, 200, 400 feet away).

Why instant replay? Too many bad calls they say. We need to get the calls right they say.

Umpires do get them right. More than 99% of the time.  A lot better than any other officials in any other pro sport.

With replay,   a dignified and awesome profession is being  humiliated:

What baseball really needs is to only have the best senior umpires with a low percentage of arguments and comment assigned to the post season (not rotated) and stop cutting slack for umpires who consistently make mistakes.

Umpires consistently showing questionable calls and consistently inconsistent strike zones and a high percentage of questionable calls should be addressed by departure back into the minors for “rehab.”

But they never do that. When you get to the show, you  can do no wrong. Umpires are in better shape, but there is still portliness that afflicts some (not many) when they have to become mobile.

Baseball umpires are professional sports best officials. There may be one bad call every two weeks that makes headlines and that is exaggerating.  That’s about 50 errors a  year out of millions of plays—teams make hundreds of errors a season.The men in blue, gray, and natty black are full-time umpires.

They are not amateurs like the NFL  zebras who I guarantee you make the one bad call every game that decides the contest they are officiating.

If baseball games were consistently being decided by bad calls, the media  might have a point. Most games are decided by bad fielding and lousy pitching (in the pinch) and timely hitting.

Post season gaffes have been committed by umpires who have not concentrated.

Egregious calls come to mind that have to be concentration lapses:  the foul double that allowed the Yankees to win a playoff game with the Twins that turned around that series; the home run on fan interference when a fan caught a ball that an outfielder was  camped under in another key Yankee playoff win, ( with I believe the Orioles);  the miscall of a homer by an entire crew this year in Cleveland, and going way back, the infamous Ken Burkhart calling a Cincinnatti Red out  at the plate with Burkhart’s back to the plate in the 1970 Series, perhaps the worst call of all time. None of Burkhart’s umpire compatriots would overrule him on that one. And that play  turned around the series.

The umpires did not get those calls right because they were not concentrating and were out of position. Not ready for the play.

I umpire and I know why I make incorrect calls when I think I may have—

1.) I am not in position to make the call,

2.) I am moving when I make the call (distorting my headview on the ball’s movement, and

3.) Choose the wrong angle.

No call should ever be made when the ump is hustling to make the call. (Factors in each of the above egregious calls) He or she needs to stop and watch the play as it happens. Pause. Then make the call.

The replay decision will also take away the wonderful fun of the baseball rhubarb.

The most exciting thing a fan sees short of a game winning hit or a great play is the heated argument. On the radio, Mel used to say, ” And Casey’s  (Stengel) out of the dugout,” to announce that the Ol Perfessor was incensed over a Nestor Chylak call.

There will be no more kicking of dirt like Ralph Houk did on umpires’ shoes. No more Earl Weaver drop-kicking his hat. No more Billy Martin jaw-to-jawing with the arbiter, his veins standing out on his neck. No patient Jim Leyland eyes bugged infuriated.

Watching the Jet football game Saturday night, I timed the first challenge play that Rex Reed threw. It took two minutes with the replay right on the field.

It will be fun shooting a complex baseball replay  to New York for a baseball guy to review it as baseball proposes. That is two minutes if baseball’s great umpire review panel  executes in Manhattan correctly. Are they going to have a replay crew for every game in the bigs? Every day?

They should.

With the possibility of  8 allowed challenges a game one for each manager in the first 5 innings and three for each manager in the last four.  Three challenges in the late innings is a travesty.Make them unlimited. What if you’ve used up the challenges and an ump absolutely misses one. They’ll change that as soon as that happens once.

There is great room for strategic gamesmanship here.

The banger at first, costing a rally killing doubleplay anytime will be challenged.

The over the bag foul or fair call that maybe gets a piece of the bag.

Fan interference will bring a challenge, particularly on foul pops into the stands with ducks on the pond.

Close pitches that may nick a uniform and put a man on base could be challenged (big rally-builders).

Alleged balks will be cause for challenged. It is unclear if judgment calls like infield fly will be grounds for debate.

And of course the always popular phantom tag (will “Bud Replay” make the gentleman’s agreement allowing a no-touch at second on a double play to avoid rolling blocks taking out the Robby Canos and Jeters for a season, be continued?).

The managers can use the challenge as a “freeze weapon” to disrupt a pitcher who may be humming along, or if your pitcher is tiring, throw a challenge to give him a rest.

Unscrupulous managers like Leo Durocher whose sign stealing scheme in the Polo Grounds won the pennant for the Giants in 1951, would have a field day with instant replay.

Great catches will be challenged, particularly for “traps” in the outfield. Balls brushing a wall. Snowcone catches.

This  replay is a foolish decision, the product of a media obsessed with improving the game so they can see justice done.

Nonsense.

That’s why baseball is so wonderful: It is filled with irony, human error, unscrupulousness, heros, villains, and the umpire is the guardian of the game. Taking it out of his hands challenges the integrity of the game.

Suppose it’s the Dodgers and say the  Pirates in the seventh game of a playoff to get into the Series? Suppose a play happens at the plate in the lates. Did the catcher have possession long enough to record an out, he appears to juggle as a Bucaneer slides across the plate with the winning run.

Don Mattingly challenges. It goes to New York for a replay. Now bear in mind that L.A. in the series will have much more viewers for the networks than Pittsburgh. Will the replay reviewer be influenced by this very well-known fact?

It is well-known that the Detroit St. Louis series and the Tampa Bay-St. Louis  Series just did miserable in the ratings.

This is a factor. As we all know we can count on baseball for its unscrupulous integrity. Like its secret loan to the Wilpons to meet the Mets payroll. Like failing to suspend good-guy press darlings for drug use when they admitted it. Like suspending a Red Sox pitcher only 5 days after he throws at A-Rod four times. Yeah, they have real integrity.

Moreover, technology can lie to you.

The cameras major league baseball intends on using  are high resolution, but they do not deliver true depth of field.

This, in my opinion is why players look safe or out on replay. If you see a tag, face on, instead of to the side…the umpire cannot tell depth or whether the tip of the glove actually clipped the shoulder or thigh or hand. You can see this on the picture of Joba Chamberlain tagging a Blue Jay out in Wednesday’s sports sections.

MLB will have to install a lot of cameras to review 8 angles on a play (12 o’clock, 2 o’clock, 3 o’clock, 4 o’clock, 6 o’clock, 8 o’clock, 9 o’clock, 10 o’clock). Then the reviewer has to see several angles. 1 and a half minutes. You have to be kidding me. Figure 5 minutes at least.

However this is an excellent opportunity for a sponsorship.

I can hear John Sterling now. “This challenge is brought to you by Fussy & Feuder , the official Replay  consultants to the New York Yankees…when you care enough to make sure”

For a leader of an umpire school to embrace the concept of getting the call right as justification for replay, is troubling.

Except for the plays I have mentioned at the top of this article, less than a handful of games in the post season have been lost by a poor call by an umpire.

Players lose games. Not umpires.

Players win games. Not umpires.

Umpires make the calls as they see ‘em.

The great ones have the best view in the house

They make the call in real time. Not slow motion distortion.

And when you come down to it, there is nothing more exciting than a great call on a close play. You talk about that the entire rest of the game.

Whereas an overturning of a call by instant replay is as exciting as getting a traffic ticket.

It is anti-climactic and as the game continues there is a bad taste. A pall that lingers over the game. You never get the game momentum back. Watching any NFL game will tell you that.

At the ballpark, when there is a controversial call it becomes the stuff of conversation through to the final out and backhome on the subway after the game. Was your team able to overcome it? Justice! Delerium. Did you lose because of it? “We was robbed.”

With instant replay, the fan will never have the satisfaction of his team beating adversity by overcoming a bad call, or the justification of saying “We was robbed again.”

Instant replay is Out if I’m making the call!

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City, Police Department Sued in Federal Court by Woman Police Officer Alleging Discrimination.

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS LAW JOURNAL. From Justia.com Dockets & Filings. August 17, 2013:

A White Plains Police Officer, Jeanette Parra, filed a Civil Rights-Employment suit in U.S. District Court in White Plains, against The City of White Plains, the White Plains Police Department and seven supervisors over her eight years of employment with the department.

The suit was filed August 9.

Ms. Parra is represented by Marjorie  Mesidor of Phillips & Associates, New York.

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LOAD TESTING BEGINS ON T Z B THIS WEEK.

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Tappan Zee Constructors, LLC (TZC) will begin testing both static and lateral loads this week as part of its test pile program.

These load tests are performed to ensure piles are capable of sustaining the design load of the new bridge. Testing will be conducted over a 40-hour period.

Impact pile driving will continue this week as part of the ongoing test pile program and will continue through October at various locations for future pile foundations. This work will be performed from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. on weekdays and, at times, on Saturdays from 12 noon to 7 p.m.  The test pile program will verify subsurface conditions and test structural load capacities in preparation for construction of the new bridge’s permanent foundation.

Overnight lane closures will also be required in both directions on I-87/I-287 and the Tappan Zee Bridge due to various construction activities.

Beginning Monday, August 19 through the morning of Wednesday, August 21, one southbound right hand lane and shoulder between exit 11 and the Tappan Zee Bridge will be closed from 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. for the installation of concrete traffic barriers to facilitate the reconstruction of the Thruway maintenance ramp. Additionally, one southbound right hand lane on the Tappan Zee Bridge will be closed during this period for the installation of structural monitors.

Beginning Wednesday, August 21 through the morning of Saturday, August 24, one northbound right hand lane and shoulder between exit 9 and the Tappan Zee Bridge, as well as one northbound right hand lane on the Tappan Zee Bridge will be closed from 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. for the installation of structural monitors.

 

Additional geotechnical borings will be conducted on the river at various locations. Operations will run 24 hours a day, Monday through Friday.

TZC will continue dredging operations in the Hudson River as part of the New NY Bridge Project. Dredging will occur through October 31 to avoid negatively impacting migration and spawning patterns of local sturgeon populations and other fish species.

Dredging crews will work 24 hours a day, seven days a week starting from the main navigation channel end of the dredging footprint towards the shoreline on both the Rockland and Westchester County sides of the bridge. The operations will deepen the river’s shallow water level in the work zone by removing sediment from the river bottom. The dredged materials are being properly disposed of at offsite locations.

The U.S. Coast Guard has issued a revised Notice to Mariners with updated safety information, including a request that boaters use the main channel, reduce wake and use extreme caution while transiting the area in the vicinity of the Tappan Zee Bridge.

The Coast Guard boating safety information can be found the project website, www.NewNYBridge.com under the boating safety icon.

Ongoing operations:

•         Test pile program

•         Rockland bulkhead construction (including fence & gates) and Dock Extension at Rockland (under existing bridge)

•         Temporary Westchester trestle construction including pile driving on weekdays from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.

•         Survey inspections on existing bridge

•         Mobilization at the exit 10 staging area

•         Support for river-based work from the Rockland shoreline

 Rockland:

TZC will continue fencing and sidewalk work along River Road in South Nyack north of the existing bridge. This work is part of the bulkhead construction area and will be performed on weekdays between 7 a.m. and 3 p.m. At times, River Road will be limited to one lane with flag persons in place to ensure the safe flow of traffic.

 

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City Sales in July Were Flat. County Continues on Pace for a 6% Increase in Sales Tax Receipts

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WPCNR QUILL & EYESHADE. From Geoffrey Gloak, the New York State Department of Taxation and finance. August 15, 2013:

White Plains Sales Tax Receipts for the month of July, the first in the city fiscal year were flat compared to the July of a year ago, down $16,000 to $4,012,360. A virtually negligible decline.

For the seventh consective month White Plains continued to lag behind the county as a whole in the rate of sales tax collections, even though White Plains contributes to the county sales tax receipts coffers.

Westchester County through 7 months of its 2013 fiscal year is up 6%, collecting $28o,343,008  compared to $264,259,273 in 2012.

If the County continues on the 6% growth rate, the county will earn $487.4 Million in sales tax receipts, generating a $10 Million surplus in sales tax receipts over the 2013 forecast of $478 Million in sales taxes. Should the county have a robust September and Holiday Season there is an outside chance they could hit $500 Million, an all time record.

 

 

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Student Loans and the Effect on the Cost of a College Education

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WPCNR NEWS AND COMMENT From Kimberly Green and the Online Colleges website. Reprinted with Permission. August 15, 2013:

Student Debt in the U.S. (Part 1)

This is our first article in a three-part series about the nation’s ever-rising student debt levels. The second and third entries will look at student debt from a historical perspective and explore some of the potential consequences of the debt crisis, respectively.

As college costs spiral upwards, unpaid student debt has reached a record high of $1 trillion, slowing down economic growth and causing many young individuals to lose control of their finances. Many politicians, media outlets, and educators are focusing on cuts to state and federal subsidies as the reason behind these astronomical tuition hikes. But while this may be true in cases, it’s not that simple.

Paradoxically, many studies have found the opposite to be true: as federal and state subsidies increase, colleges and universities actually charge more for tuition, exacerbating the student debt crisis. Here we will trace the problem back two decades, examine funding trends and college costs to pinpoint what exactly is behind tuition increases.

Student Debt: The Last 20 Years

Student Debt

The rise in student debt is by no means a new phenomenon – borrowing has gone up every year since 1993. According to the National Center of Education Statistics, average (student) debt began to creep up in 1993, making small jumps from an average of $10,000 per student until it had doubled to $20,000 twelve years later. Then it began to increase very sharply. By 2013, the average debt per borrower hit $30,000.

The rise in borrowing naturally correlates with increasing college costs. The average yearly tuition and room-and-board in 1990-1991 was $8,485 at a public 4-year institution. By 2010, that had leapt up 83%, reaching an average of $15,605 per year.

Concern over this upwards spiral is all over the news, as unpaid loans take a major toll on the economy. And many are worried this is just the beginning.

Tuition rates are predicted to rise over the next two decades, with costs hitting $41,228 per year for in-state public tuition and $92,869 for private colleges in 2029. This ridiculous level of debt could not be sustained by parents in stable careers, much less by students with poor financial history. So why is this happening?

Cuts to State Spending

Budget cuts brought on by the recent recession have taken their toll on the American education system, pushing more students and lenders to take up the slack. Incremental cuts have caused education allocations to drop since 2008, with thirty-six states decreasing funds by more than 20%. As a nationwide average, states cut their education spending by 28% from 2008 to 2013, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

Some states have suffered deeper cut more than others. Washington and Florida now provide the lowest amounts of support for their public universities. Spending per student was just about $6,000 for these two states in 2010, barely over half the amount allotted to students in states like Hawaii, Connecticut or Arkansas that year, according to the Department of Education.

Student Debt

When states cut education budgets, where exactly does this money end up? The National Association of State Budget Officers (NASBO) has identified great leaps in Medicaid spending, growing from 22.2% of state expenditures in 2010 to 23.9 in 2012. During the same time period, education spending dropped from 20.4% to 19.8%. NASBO projects that funding will become even more difficult to allocate toward education in upcoming years, due to long-term healthcare demands and pensions.

State funding for education may eventually climb out of the recession pit, as legislators anticipate upcoming economic growth. The Chronicle of Higher Education describes how California governor Jerry Brown is trying to raise expenditures from 4% to 6% in the upcoming year, but it will probably be quite some time before students feel the effects. Moody’s Investors Service still sees massive cuts to key areas like research on the horizon, so wary colleges probably won’t be loosening their budgets any time soon.

Federal Subsidies for Student Tuition

Surprisingly, increases to government spending have also contributed in some real ways to the rising sticker price of a college education. The vast majority of college students who have filed a FAFSA know there is a range of grants and loans available to cover their bills. And of course, these funds are indispensable for the tens of thousands of students who need them in order to attend school. That said, increased funding availability does lead to an increase in price; the more students are given to help pay for college, the more they are willing to spend, and consequently, the more colleges can charge.

A 2012 report by the College Board makes it very easy to see how dramatic rises in tuition mirror sharp increases in federal student aid. The government awarded just around $17 billion in total federal grants (including Pell, LEAP, military, and several others) in 2001. This amount exploded up to $49 billion by 2011. This makes for a 185% increase within a ten-year span.

A very similar trend occurred with federal loans, which jumped from a yearly total of around $47.8 billion to $105 billion over the same period. While enrollment in college-level degree programs rose during this time, graduation rates fell. And unsurprisingly, the number of for-profit secondary institutions also multiplied.

This is a tricky situation. We all agree that deserving students should be granted more, not less, access to higher education and no one wants schools to have to reduce their enrollments or the quality of the educations they offer due to falling budgets. But if we want to lower the burdens on students, schools and taxpayers, we need to focus on allocating federal student aid and loans in a way that isn’t accelerating rises in tuition costs.

So if both cutting and raising government funding makes the student debt situation worse, what is the solution? The question is not about raising or lowering spending, but rather how the money is spent. Heaping thousands of dollars in subsidized loans on young borrowers to cover exorbitant education costs is not the answer, but neither is cutting support for important academic research. It’s a complex equation, but until it’s figured out young graduates are going to be bearing a heavy financial burden.

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County Exectutive Assigns County Police Officers to Schools in Safe Communities Initiative

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County Executive Robert P. Astorino Monday proposed legislation under his “Safer Communities” initiative that will provide School Resource Officers (SROs) from the county’s Department of Public Safety to the Somers and North Salem school districts for the coming school year.

Both school districts sought assistance from the county in creating dedicated SRO posts in the aftermath of the Newtown, Conn. school shootings last year when Astorino launched Safer Communities.  In addition, existing state police resources are not equipped to provide dedicated SROs to individual school districts, which created an opportunity for county police to help.

The proposed agreement sent to the Board of Legislators this week for approval calls for two county police officers to be assigned as SROs in the Somers Central School District. One officer will be assigned to the Primrose Elementary / Somers High School campus and a second officer will be assigned to the Somers Middle School / Intermediate School campus.

In a separate agreement, another county officer will be assigned as an SRO in the North Salem Central School District, serving the North Salem Middle / High School campus and Pequenakonck Elementary School.

Astorino said the officers would be assigned as SROs for one school year, beginning next month. According to the agreement, the school districts will pay the cost of the police officers’ salaries and benefits during the school year. When school is out, the officers will be assigned to other county patrols, and could be pulled from SRO duty as needed during emergency situations.

In response to the Newtown tragedy, Safer Communities has focused on ways that county and local governments, school districts and nonprofits can collaborate to offer practical and cost-effective ways to pool resources in order to prevent violence.

“The Safer Communities initiative is all about collaborating to bring resources together in ways that protect kids and families across Westchester,” Astorino said. “In this case, the county is stepping in with officers from our Department of Public Safety to fill a void. It’s a perfect example of how we can work together to share resources. What we are doing here is expanding the traditional definition of mutual aid so that we can adapt to current circumstances and share services more effectively.”

Public Safety Commissioner George N. Longworth explained how SROs can help prevent tragedies while fostering a safer environment within the schools.

“School Resource Officers work closely with school administrators to provide a safe and secure environment for students and staff. They maintain a visible presence at school buildings and grounds and provide a broad range of services to educators and students at the schools where they are assigned. We look forward to having a successful partnership with the Somers and North Salem school communities,” Longworth said.

For example, he said, School Resource Officers assist administrators in developing school security and emergency response plans, participate in lockdown drills, monitor hallways and parking areas, help screen visitors, perform security checks on exterior doors, direct traffic when needed and provide security at school and sporting events that draw large crowds.

SROs also provide student referrals to youth agencies and programs, participate in community-based drug and alcohol prevention programs, prevent or address bullying, and work with teachers to educate students about the dangers of underage drinking, drug abuse, driving while intoxicated, “cyber bullying” and “sexting.”

“Having an actual police officer in the schools, working directly with teachers and administrators and interacting with the students makes a huge difference and reassures parents that their kids are safe when they drop them off at school. We’re grateful for this partnership with the county and can’t wait for the start of a brand new school year,” said Deborah D’Agostino, President of the North Salem Central School District Board of Trustees.

Westchester County police officers have served as School Resource Officers at the Anne M. Dorner Middle School in Ossining and Walter Panas High School in Cortlandt.

Longworth said SROs are a good fit for the county police because the department’s patrol needs expand significantly in summer months. In summer when schools are closed the SROs will be deployed to busy county parks and pools, he said.

County Legislator Michael Kaplowitz who represents part of Somers supports the measure. “The safety of our children is our highest priority,” Kaplowitz said. “I am pleased that we will be able to provide the Somers and North Salem school districts with the officers they requested. At the same time, the agreement is fair to all Westchester taxpayers. The school districts will pay for the full and fair cost of these officers while they are working in the schools.”

MORE ABOUT ASTORINO’S SAFER COMMUNITIES INITIATIVE

Launched earlier this year, Astorino’s Safer Communities initiative has begun a close collaboration between the county’s departments of Public Safety, Health and Community Mental Health, local police chiefs, school superintendents, civic leaders and clergy. In addition to coordinating law enforcement responses and violence prevention, the program has also focused on educating the public about available mental health services and programs in close coordination with individual school districts.

“After Sandy Hook, we all asked what we could do to prevent this from happening again,” Astorino said. “As county executive and a father of three young children, I want to be part of the solution. The Safer Communities initiative has been good start.”

In May, Safer Communities held a school safety symposium with leading experts from federal law enforcement agencies, which focused on preventing school and college violence. More than 300 civic leaders, schools officials, local law enforcement, social workers, psychologists, mental health agency directors, advocates and family members attended the first-of-its-kind event. Astorino has directed county officials to release a report on the group’s findings later this year.

In June, the county announced a separate partnership with Mount Vernon that dedicates six county police officers to beat patrols in the city during the summer. That program has already had a serious impact on crime within the city, yielding more than one hundred arrests.

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White Plains JazzFest 2013 Gets in the Groove September 6

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ArtsWestchester, the City of White Plains, and the White Plains BID will presenting the White Plains JazzFest 2013 from Friday, Sept. 6 thru Sunday, Sept. 8.

This 2nd annual event will have two ticketed events as well as free events. Space is very limited for the ticketed events and we don’t want you to miss out on any of the great music. Get your tickets NOW! Both ticketed events will be held at ArtsWestchester, 31 Mamaroneck Avenue. For tickets visit: www.artsw.org/jazzfest.
Not only will you be enjoying a cool time but your donation will support JazzFest 2013* as well.
Friday, Sept. 6 at 8 pm
Latin Jazz, Food & Spirits
Bobby Sanabria & Quarteto Ache
$35 Individual Ticket, $50 Patron Sponsor
Includes light refreshments, courtesy of Sofrito and Pernod Ricard USA.

AND
Saturday, Sept. 7 from 9 pm – midnight
Jazz ‘Til Midnight
Dennis Bell Jazz NY with Lynette Washington Butch Jones Quintet
$20 Admission includes complimentary beverage, courtesy of Pernod Ricard USA.

VISIT OUR WEB SITE FOR A COMPLETE LIST OF ALL EVENTS AND PARTICIPATING RESTAURANTS.

Oh, did we mention this also will be an International Food Festival? No. Well, we just did…say it can’t get any better than this.

* Your donation is tax-deductible to the extent permitted by law.
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Ray Kelly, Former NYPD Commissioner to Address Business Council of Westchester r

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The Business Council of Westchester announced  that New York City Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly, the longest serving Police Commissioner in the city’s history, will be the keynote speaker at its Annual Fall Dinner to be held Wednesday, October 23 at the Hilton Westchester.

“We are absolutely thrilled to have Ray Kelly as the keynote speaker for our Annual Fall Dinner. His long and distinguished career in law enforcement and counterterrorism has drawn praise both nationally and internationally. Commissioner Kelly’s efforts in reducing the city’s crime rate has helped spur economic growth in New York City, which has benefited Westchester’s economy as well. We look forward to his keen insights on some of the most pressing security issues facing our nation today,” said Marsha Gordon, President and CEO of the Business Council of Westchester.

Kelly was appointed Police Commissioner by Mayor Michael Bloomberg in January 2002, making him the first person to hold the post for a second, separate tenure. He also served as Police Commissioner under Mayor David Dinkins from 1992 to 1994. Under Commissioner Kelly’s leadership, the NYPD became the first municipal police department in the country to develop its own counterterrorism bureau and global intelligence program. Commissioner Kelly also established a Real Time Crime Center, a state-of-the-art facility that uses data mining to search millions of computer records and put investigative leads into the hands of detectives in the field. Under his tenure, NYPD has driven crime down by 40% from 2001 levels.

A 43-year veteran of the NYPD, Commissioner Kelly served in 25 different commands in the department before being named Police Commissioner. A combat veteran of the Vietnam War, Commissioner Kelly retired as a colonel from the Marine Corps Reserves after 30 years of service. He holds a BBA from Manhattan College, a JD from St. John’s University School of Law, an LLM from New York University Graduate School of Law, and an MPA from the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.

For information on sponsorship opportunities for the Annual Fall Dinner, contact Allison Calvert at (914) 948-2110.

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EPA Ignores 2 County Requests for Extension of Ultraviolet Treatment Deadline. EPA and Justice Dept. Decline to Comment on Whether WP and Scarsdale Water is “Safe” EPA declines comment on Why it Would Not Drop Suit.

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WPCNR WATER NEWS. By John F. Bailey. August 10, 1013:

Earlier this week, David Simms, spokesperson for the Westchester County Department of Communications, told  WPCNR  the lawsuit filed in Federal Court in White Plains by the U.S. Attorney’s Office  alleging the county of violating the was “ a complete surprise to the county,” and that White Plains and Scarsdale drinking water is safe because the EPA has never cited the water as being unsafe to drink (as a result of the ultraviolet testing failure to comply as of yet).

Simms added that the county had told the EPA they would be unable to meet the deadline of putting ultraviolet treatment into effect because the cost of running a line to the Mount Pleasant reservoir to bring White Plains and Scarsdale ultraviolet-treated water was approximately $100 Million and the county was seeking a less expensive solution. Simms said the county never heard back from the EPA.

Herbert Hadad, spokesperson for the U.S. Attorney’s Office, told WPCNR  the law suit filed Tuesday   being a surprise  was not exactly true.

Hadad said the U.S. Attorney’s office had been in  discussions with the county on issues concerning the county’s being charged with violating the Safe Drinking Water Act.

The exact charge in the suit accuses the county that  “Westchester, through its Water District No. 1, has failed  to comply with an SDWA rule that requires municipal drinking water suppliers to treat all unfiltered surface water for Cryptosporidium, a microscopic parasite. Cryptosporidium can cause cryptosporidiosis, a potentially fatal gastrointestinal illness in humans with symptoms that include diarrhea, nausea and abdominal cramps. There is no known treatment for cryptosporidiosis, and symptoms may persist for two weeks  or longer in otherwise healthy adults and can be life-threatening for more vulnerable individuals.”

Simms, confronted with this comment from the U.S. Attorney’s Office, acknowledged that in December of 2012, eight months ago, the county was presented with a consent order by the Department of Justice that the County was asked to sign admitting they had failed to comply with the ultraviolet light treatment directive and had missed the deadline for compliance. Simms told WPCNR, the county refused to sign the consent order because the county attorneys objected to the county being described as a purveyor of  water, which is actually purchased from New York City, or a supplier, or seller of water.

Simms acknowledged that negotiations over what he described as  legal definitions and “standing”. Simms said the county also did not want to sign a consent order acknowledging non-compliance and opening itself up to massive fines, over

Last month, Simms said Deputy County Executive Kevin Plunkett went to the Environmental Protection Agency and explained the $5 Million solution the county has devised to run a spur line from the Kensico Dam Delaware Acqueduct to White Plains and Scarsdale to bring the county into compliance.

Simms said at that time Mr. Plunkett asked the EPA for an extension to implement the $5 Million plan, which Plunkett explained in detail. Simms told WPCNR the plan, if the County Board of Legislators passed the funding request (which Simms said the County Board has had since April), could be completed by next summer.

Simms said the EPA did not react one way or another to Plunkett’s request  for an extension. The county, Simms said had already made fixes to Yonkers and Mount Vernon the other two  communities in District 1.

The next thing that happened was the filing of the law suit August 7.

WPCNR asked Environmental   Protection Agency spokesman, John Martin why the EPA would not grant an extension for the county to implement the treatment, and why since the county has devised a solution, would it not withdraw its lawsuit, and set up a timetable for the compliance. Mr. Martin said the EPA would not comment because the suit is a Justice Department matter.

He referred me to Herbert Hadad, spokesperson for the U.S. Attorney’s Office.  I asked Hadad if once a U.S. Suit was brought, whether it had to be decided by a Judge who manufactures a settlement , and brought to a conclusion, or whether the originating plaintiff could asked the U.S. Attorney’s Office to drop the suit, or settle the suit by setting up a terms of compliance.

I also asked him if the EPA and the Justice Department would declare the White Plains water and Scarsdale water “safe” to drink  at this time.

Haddad said,  “The Office declines to comment.”

The suit has to be responded to by the county within 21 days (approximately August 28).

Simms said the county would be seeking a dismissal bec;ause the county feels it has no “standing” in the matter; is not a seller of water; and does not own the water, and would argue the suit “has no merit.”

Fines if imposed, on the county from April 2012, if the “fix” was completed by summer, 2014, would amount to 790 days which would equal $30 Million. (at $37.50 a day), still about $70 Million less expensive than the original running of pipe to Mt. Pleasnt solution,

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With New Hires, Police Department Still 16 Officers Short of Full Strength. 49 Retirement Eligible Officers Could Retire at any Time.

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WPCNR POLICE GAZETTE. By John F. Bailey. August 10, 2013:

With the hiring of 8 new officers, the White Plains Police Department, remains 16 officersl below their full compliment of men and women, 210, according to James Parlow, Treasurer and Benefits Administrator of the White Plains Police Benevolent Association.

Barlow released the information for the WPPBA on request from WPCNR. He said that the department faces a situation where 49 officers can take retirement if they wish at any time, which would further lower the patrolpower the department can put on the street.

According to a statement issued to WPCNR, by Mr. Parlow, writing on behalf of the WPPBA,

“The eight recent police hires brings the total  number of sworn officers to 194.  Bear in mind that we have one sergeant  retiring next week and another sergeant who should be retired shortly due to a  disability. 

Additionally, we have 49 officers who can retire as of today.  Of  the 38 supervisors (including the two sergeants mentioned above), 30 can  retire as of today.

Our official number, unless City Hall cut it without telling us, is 210. Before it was increased to 210 around 2004, we had 202 officers. So we are clearly not  at maximum staffing.

 

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