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As we say in epidemiology, bugs have ears.
This year has already surpassed the annual measles case counts of 12 of the past 15 years—and we’re only 2.5 months into 2025.

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As we say in epidemiology, bugs have ears.
This year has already surpassed the annual measles case counts of 12 of the past 15 years—and we’re only 2.5 months into 2025.

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THE IMPACT NEWS NETWORK!
BANKRUPTING NEW YORK BEGINS
DOT DEMANDS MTA MAKE SUBWAYS SAFER OR ELSE
STARVING HUNGRY WESTCHESTER
37 YEARS OF A WESTCHESTER THAT GOES HUNGRY EVERY DAY

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT CUTS FUNDS
FOR THE HUNGRY 25% OF 2025-26 BUDGET
ALBANY ADOPTS WAIT AND SEE IF THEY HAPPEN ATTITUDE ON CUTS

YONKERS TAKES CON ED RATE INCREASES TO COURT
CONSIDERS GOOD CAUSE EVICTION LAW –THE EFFECT
WHILE WHITE PLAINS COMMON COUNCIL MULLS SAME LAW
AND MORE
THE WHITE PLAINS HIGH SCHOOL PERFORMANCE
NITA LOWEY PASSES AWAY

JOHN BAILEY AND THE NEWS
THE BIG STORIES YOU DO NOT HEAR ABOUT
EVERY WEEK ON WHITE PLAINS WEEK
FOR THE LAST 24 YEARS
WESTCHESTER’S NEWSMAN
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COUNTY EXECUTIVE KEN JENKINS BLASTS TRUMP ADMINISTRATION FOR ABANDONING WESTCHESTER RESIDENTS
BY REJECTING BIPARTISAN PLAN TO KEEP SOCIAL SECURITY HEARING OFFICE IN WHITE PLAINS
(White Plains, NY) – Westchester County Executive Ken Jenkins is slamming the Trump administration’s decision to reject a bipartisan effort—led by Jenkins, U.S. Congressman George Latimer, and U.S. Congressman Mike Lawler—to keep the Social Security Hearing Office in White Plains open. Despite the County’s offer to house the office in County-owned space to ensure continued access, Acting Social Security Commissioner Leland Dudek turned his back on Westchester residents.
In a letter to Latimer, Dudek stated that residents seeking Social Security services could instead travel to Lower Manhattan, New Haven, CT, the Bronx, or Goshen. Jenkins said the Trump administration is indifferent to seniors, individuals with disabilities and other vulnerable residents who depend on these services.
Jenkins said: “This is a disgraceful decision that prioritizes bureaucratic indifference over the well-being of Westchester residents. The Trump administration is effectively cutting off access to Social Security resources for those who need them most. Westchester County will not stand by while Washington abandons our communities. I will continue fighting alongside Congressman Latimer and Congressman Lawler to ensure our residents are not left behind.”
With the lease on the current Hearing Office at 75 S. Broadway in White Plains set to expire on May 31, Jenkins said they are exploring more options.
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WPCNR THE LETTER TICKER. MARCH 20, 2025:
Dear White Plains Week:
I would like to suggest that you interview neighborhood association representatives about the communities of White Plains. I had no idea that there were so many! And I don’t know where they are all located and the area they encompass. It would be interesting to hear how developments impact each community.
I’ve been in contact with Martin Berger about the project on Westchester Ave. I live on Franklin Ave. and I’m President of the co-op board where I live. Until I saw the Common Council meeting a couple of years ago, I had no knowledge of what was proposed. I contacted Mr. Berger, and he was very receptive to speaking with me, met with the board, and reached out to me again when changes to the development were going to be proposed.
I am not a fan of the Galleria property proposal.
I think that it is too much for that space and talk about congestion! As you presented a few years back when bus and bike lanes were going to be part of the Tarrytown Rd. corridor, and as mentioned over the years, there is one primary way in and out of White Plains (Main St. and Hamilton Ave)….
can you imagine what it is going to look like when 5,000 people are added to that two block area!
Not everyone works in NYC and will take Metro North.
Not everyone wants to walk where they have to go or have business in the area which makes it a sensible alternative to walk.
And the high-end restaurants that are proposed! As Councilman Brasch mentioned, there are lower income families in White Plains.
Do you realize that we don’t have any fast-food restaurants in downtown White Plains? No McDonalds, Burger King, Tocco Bell, Wendy’s. Or even restaurants like Olive Garden and Apple Bee’s. Maybe these types of restaurants should be considered.
Signed (A new Resident of White Plains recently moved to White Plains.)
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A Feeding Westchester breadline on a 30 degree morning last year. Inflation and defunding threaten the food supply.
INFLATION FROM TARIFFS, BIRD FLU SKYROCKET COSTS OF SUPPLYING MEALS TO COUNTY
WPCNR THE HUNGER STORY. By John F. Bailey. March 20, 2025:
Feeding Westchester announced last night it faces a $2 Million loss of government funding .
Ryan Brisk Vice President of Operations and Procurement addressing the audience including many politicians and representatives reported the lost $2 million dollar reduction on the zoom last night. And, there could be more government cuts by July the start of the next fiscal year, Feeding Westchester does not know.
He cited two other situations aggravating the loss of operating funds:
Planned tariffs on Mexico and Canada could be expected to create commensurate inflation prices on foods imported from those two countries.
One example is the cost of eggs. He cited a truck of eggs $50,000, but the latest contracted order was raised to $150,000 for a truck of eggs, and Feeding Westchester did not have the financial resources to pay 200% hike.
The spread of bird flu further complicates staples because of the rising cost of eggs (now $6 a dozen).
Karen Erren, CEO of Feeding Westchester said Feeding Westchester ability to feed county residents that currently makes 229,000 Neighborhood visits each month that deliver 19.3 million months and distributes 23 million pounds of food would be impacted and the organization was planning how to replace the as of now 25% loss of funds for the 2025-6 fiscal year.
When Feeding Westchester was founded in 1988 the organization fed between 175,000 and 140,000 a month. Today that has grown to 275,000 monthly. Westchester County population is 1,000,400 persons.
Other non profits that distribute food will be similarly affected.
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WPCNR THE LETTER TICKER MARCH 18,2025:
WANTED—A CITIZENS COMMITTEE TO ORGANIZE A STUDENT CONTEST AGAINST HATE AND BIGOTRY
WINNING POSTERS WILL BE PLACED AROUND GREENBURGH –CONTEST TO BE ANNUAL
Last Tuesday I suggested to the Greenburgh Town Board that the town sponsor an annual poster competition among school children against hate and bigotry.
Members of the Board asked me to come up with a more specific proposal. The next step: A committee of residents should be formed to help come up with criteria for an annual contest and assist in implementation of this student art contest. The committee may choose to organize two or three different competitions based on grades – grade school, middle school and high school.
I suggest that the winning posters be placed at the entrance to Greenburgh Town Hall, the Theodore Young Community Center, The Police and Court House, the Library, AF Veteran Park and at the entrances to Greenburgh streets for one year.
I think that the winning posters should highlight what a welcoming community Greenburgh is. Those entering the competition should highlight opposition to all forms of bigotry—against Blacks, Hispanics, Jews, Irish, Indian, Italians, Muslims, Chinese, Japanese, Hindu’s, Sikh’s and the LGBTQ community among others.
The winning posters should be placed at the above locations for one year. Each year the town should sponsor another student competition. This contest is also a great opportunity to teach students about racism and bigotry and to encourage our youth to welcome those who are different.
Are you interested in helping develop a proposal? And, working as a member of the committee.? If yes – please e mail me at pfeiner@greenburghny.com.
I would like to present the Town Board with a proposal that could be considered and hope that the first competition could be organized this year.
Let’s celebrate our diversity and let’s send a message to anyone entering Greenburgh that we will not tolerate bigotry against anyone.
PAUL FEINER
Greenburgh Town Supervisor
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Si quiere leer la versión en español, pulse aquí.
Happy Saint Patrick’s Day! Here’s the public health news you can use to start your week. Some virus stuff, but also a lot happening in the nutrition world.
Influenza-like illness (e.g., fever, cough, runny nose) remains moderate across most of the U.S., but trends are sharply declining. If this continues, we could be out of respiratory virus season in a few weeks. The Northeast is still seeing high levels.
Covid-19 spread continues to decrease after a lackluster winter. But eyes are on a highly mutated variant in South Africa—called BA.3.2—which has 50 new spike mutations. This is a lot of changes in one variant. We haven’t seen this many since the Omicron tsunami in 2021.
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Phylogenic Covid-19 tree showing the number of mutations per variant. Source: Ryan Hisner
The number of spike changes doesn’t necessarily mean it will be easily spread among humans, so we must pay attention to other metrics. According to wastewater trends in South Africa, transmission is increasing, which suggests the variant is something to pay attention to. We have not detected it in other countries yet. Will this fizzle out, drive a summer wave, or become a tsunami? Time will tell.
Norovirus—think diarrhea and vomiting—is having. a. year. Test positivity rates remain nearly double last year’s. The virus mutates slightly every few years, triggering a surge—and we’re in one now. Fortunately, norovirus season is typically November–April, so I’m hopeful this will be winding down soon.
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Source: NREVSS Dashboard
What does this mean to you? Sickness in your family should slow down soon, as respiratory season is in the rearview mirror. If you have the stomach bug, use a separate bathroom in your house and wear a mask if possible. Hand sanitizer doesn’t kill this bugger, either—soap and water are your best bet.
As of Friday, the U.S. has reported 326 measles cases—more than the annual total in 12 of the past 15 years, and it’s only March.
Measles cases surge every five years for reasons we don’t fully understand. Pair that with declining vaccination rates in the U.S. and worldwide, and you get the perfect storm. Last year, Europe saw its highest measles case count in 25 years.
In the Texas/New Mexico outbreak, measles cases continue to climb—and estimates suggest the true count could be 4 times higher than reported. The outbreak is spreading beyond the Panhandle to East Texas, Oklahoma, Mexico, and possibly Kansas. The vast majority of cases are in unvaccinated, school-aged children.
Measles is increasing beyond this outbreak and is linked to international travel. In the past week, cases have popped up in Vermont, Michigan, New York, Houston, California, and Pennsylvania.
What does this mean to you? Check your vaccination status. If you’re up-to-date on vaccines, you’re very well-protected against measles. People around you may start having more questions about vaccines, though, given confusing statements from HHS. The best thing you can do is listen from a place of empathy and point them to evidence-based information or a trusted messenger, like a clinician (or YLE :)).
West Virginia has become the first state to prohibit certain artificial food dyes and preservatives, a groundbreaking move that more states have already begun to adopt.
Supporters applaud the bill. The FDA approved these additives over 30 years ago, and since then, the amount available, purchased, and consumed have increased considerably. Some research has also found:
However, additives in foods at the market aren’t at levels that harm humans, as many studies have been done on rodents at very high doses. In addition, the bans could drive up food costs and reduce accessibility.
The U.S. typically takes a risk approach to policy (identifying a hazard and assessing the probability of the exposure doing harm) rather than a hazard approach (as in Europe, where if a study shows a substance can be toxic, even to animals, they aim to eliminate the hazard completely). This West Virginia policy is taking a European approach.
But let’s not lose sight of the forest for the trees. West Virginia leads the nation in rates of obesity, diabetes mortality, and depression but also ranks poorly in food insecurity and heart disease. Candy is candy, with or without Red Dye #40. Unfortunately, this will unlikely make a meaningful impact without addressing deeper issues such as access to nutritious food, affordable healthcare, and investing in public health infrastructure.
What this means to you: If signed into law, the ban will go into effect in 2028. If you live in West Virginia, this means certain candies, snack foods, drinks, jams and dessert items will be pulled from shelves. This could impact businesses, employment and food costs. This may be coming to more states. However, remember what keeps you healthy is the same boring advice: physical activity, a balanced, nutritious diet, and limiting substance use.
The USDA is eliminating two federal grant programs that helped fund state-level local agriculture, schools, and food programs:
What this means to you: The U.S. government will save $1 billion. If you live in one of these states, your Department of Agriculture will have fewer federal funds to purchase and distribute local foods for schools, food banks, and childcare centers. If states don’t foot the bill, then cuts will affect school meal menus, food programs, local farmers, and local economies. Here’s an email from a local Mayor, as an example:
“I’m still so confused about measles vaccine protection. I was born between 1958 and 1963, which wasn’t included in your table. What should I do here?”
It is very confusing. If you were born:
What you should do: Look at your vaccine records. If you can’t find them, you should be vaccinated. Or, at the very least, talk to your physician.
That’s your public health dose for the week! Have a great Monday.
Love, the YLE team
Your Local Epidemiologist (YLE) is a public health newsletter with one goal: to “translate” the ever-evolving public health science so that people feel well-equipped to make evidence-based decisions. This newsletter is owned and operated by Dr. Katelyn Jetelina— an epidemiologist and mom. This is free to everyone, thanks to the generous support of fellow YLE community members. To support the effort, subscribe or upgrade below:
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Welcome to the Northeast edition of Outbreak Outlook! It is only available to paid subscribers. If you wish to become a paid subscriber and access region-specific information, please click the Subscribe now button below. Thanks for reading! -Caitlin Respiratory DiseasesInfluenzaFlu activity continues to drift down, but most states in the region are still much higher than what we see during the off season. Maine leads Northeastern states with an outpatient ILI percentage of 5.8%, down from 6.3% the previous week. ED visits stand at 4.8%, among the highest in the region. New York follows closely with outpatient ILI at 5.6% (ignore the big gray bar in the plot below, that is because of missing data last week). The state reports the highest hospitalization rate in the Northeast at 7.2 per 100,000, though ED visits are comparatively lower at 2.5%. In New York City, outpatient ILI is still super high at 7%. Activity there is falling, but the declines have slowed somewaht. Northeast: Outpatient influenza-like illness
% of visits to the doctor that are for fever and either cough or sore throat
New Jersey reports similar levels with outpatient ILI at 5.6%, after decreasing from 6.3% the previous week. ED visits stand at 3.2%, which is moderate to high. Northern New England is still in the thick of it. Massachusetts reports outpatient ILI at 4.7%, though this is a big improvement from 6.3% the prior week, with ED visits at 3.3%. New Hampshire shows similar outpatient ILI at 4.7%, after a big decrease from 6.7% the previous week, but reports the highest ED visit percentage in the region at 5.2%. Connecticut maintains moderate outpatient ILI at 3.8% (down slightly from 4.0%), with the second-highest hospitalization rate in the region at 6.5 per 100,000 and ED visits at 3.7%. Vermont doesn’t appear in the outpatient ILI dataset but reports elevated ED visits at 3.4%. Rhode Island shows outpatient ILI at 2.9% (down from 3.8%), with ED visits at 1.9%, the lowest in the region. Pennsylvania reports the lowest outpatient ILI percentage in the Northeast at 2.8% (down from 3.4%), with ED visits at 3.1%. Northeast: ED visits for influenza (%)
% of visits to the emergency department that are for influenza
COVID-19Covid-19 is pretty quiet. Wastewater activity held roughly steady at low levels this past week. Severe illness is low and decreasing. Wastewater activity has declined to low levels in Maine, Vermont, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, and Massachusetts. While activity is still high in Connecticut and New Jersey, it is trending downward. Activity remains stable at very low levels in New York. It has been roughly around this level since late September, which is a startlingly long stretch without a wave. ED visits are minimal and decreasing or stable across the region, with the exception of Rhode Island, which reported a slight increase. ED visits have declined substantially, and are now 2-4x lower than they were in January in Connecticut, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, and Vermont. In Maine, ED visits have decreased 8-fold since January, down to 0.4%. Hospitalizations are fairly low across most of the region, with most states reporting rates <4.0 hospitalizations per 100,000. Hospitalizations decreased or held steady this past week in most states. Hospitalizations continue to slowly improve in Pennsylvania, where rates have declined to 6.3, down from 12.8 in mid-January. RSV & Other BugsData on other respiratory pathogens was not updated this week. Stomach BugsNorovirus data was not updated this week, but I think it is a safe bet that rates are still very high. Food recallsThe following foods are being recalled because they are contaminated. Please check your cupboards and throw out any of these items: New:
Previously reported:
In other news
Reader pollI’m thinking of adding a benefit for paid subscribers. Would you be interested in receiving regular updates (maybe daily or every other day) on newly reported measles cases? This would help you quickly know if a case is reported near your location. You can also leave a comment or reply to this email to share more thoughts or ideas. |
Hi John,
I wanted to send along our town hall video in case you haven’t found it on our YouTube. Here is the link: https://www.youtube.com/@LatimerOffice/streams.
Thanks for the words of support!