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Swimming Boating Advisory on Sound Shore Lifted by Health Department
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WPCNR BEACH REPORT. From the Westchester County Department of Health. July 18, 2013:
The advisory cautioning against contact with the Long Island Sound near Milton Harbor in Rye and Mamaroneck Harbor has been lifted by the Westchester County Department of Health. The advisory is being lifted based on the results of water samples which show that the water does not pose a public health risk.
People who use the Long Island Sound in this area for recreational purposes are free to resume direct contact with the water and swimming at the following beaches is now permitted: Beach Point Club, Orienta Beach Club, Mamaroneck Beach and Yacht Club, Shore Acres Pointe and Harbor Island Park Beach, all in Mamaroneck; and American Yacht Club, Shenorock Shore Club, Coveleigh Club and Greenhaven Association, all in Rye.
The advisory had been issued as a precaution because an underground force main break near Blind Brook had released sludge close to where the Blind Brook empties into the Long Island Sound. The Westchester County Department of Environmental Facilities took the force main out of service at about 2:15 p.m. on Monday, but repair efforts were hindered by high tide.
Repairs to the force main were completed Tuesday evening and water was pumped through the pipe during the night while workers checked the air relief valves along the force main. Crews finished backfilling Wednesday morning and the line has now resumed normal pumping operations.
Mike at the Mike: WP’s Mike Couzens In the Catbird Seat and Courtside. A WPHS “All-Star” and ESPN Mike of All Sports.
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WHITE PLAINS HIGH’S MIKE COUZENS, CLASS OF 2007, VOICE OF THE FORT WAYNE TINCAPS–IN SWANK TAN SUIT AT THE BROADCAST MIKE WITH HIS PLAY-BY-PLAY PARTNER, KENT HORMANN
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WPCNR VIEW FROM THE BROADCAST BOOTH. Interview with Mike Couzens, Voice of the Fort Wayne TinCaps. July 16, 2013:
The major league parks across America are dark tonight.
It’s the All-Star Break, but not at Parkview Field in Fort Wayne, Indiana, where Mike Couzens, White Plains High School Class of 2007, Syracuse University Class of 2010 will be telecasting the Fort Wayne TinCaps
Mike Couzens , just turned 24 July 8, is Media Relations Director and TV/ Radio play-by-play man for the Fort Wayne TinCaps. He is in his second year with the Class A Midwest League team, ( San Diego Padres affiliate) broadcasting the action on television in Fort Wayne and on radio back to Fort Wayne, when the team is on the road. You can see him handling the television duties at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2njaJs6Eh8s

Mike, right with his partner Evan Lepler, his analyst for the Ultimate Frisbee telecast recently on ESPN.
In his short sportscasting career he has impressed and attracted the attention of ESPN and works basketball free lance for the ESPN network, and whatever sport they have for him, including Ultimate Frisbee!
Mike, a former basketball player with the White Plains Tigers, credits White Plains high basketball coach Spencer Mayfield for the work ethic that he practices today and Syracuse University for his entry into the glamor of the sportscasting business.
We caught up with Mike last month when he was in White Plains on a break in his schedule and listened to his authoritative, crisp delivery on a series of questions about how do you get a job like that.
Mike graduating WPHS in 2007, knew he wanted to be in play-by-play and applied only to Syracuse University. For him, he told me it seemed to be the best choice. I asked how Syracuse made a difference:
Mike: “I think through a combination of A.) Teaching you how to be a good journalist, meaning how to ask questions properly, how to find information properly, where to find it, who the right people are. If you’re in news , it’s the Public Information Director, in sports, the Sports Information Director. There’s not a lot of sports education that goes on there in this school.
It’s the opportunity that’s provided to you there and how much you take advantage of those opportunities. While I was in school, we had two radio stations, a full-time tv station, not to mention outside internship opportunities. We got to do talk shows, sports updates, play-by-play of basketball, lacrosse, hockey and football.
I was the General Manager of our student station for a year, managing a $75,000 budget and a 100-person staff. When you get out there in the real world, you’ve been there and done that before. It’s not a huge leap for you.”
WPCNR: Were you able to jump directly into professional broadcasting from this?
Mike: “Yes. I graduated in December of 2010. But, in the summer of 2010, before I even graduated, I worked as the assistant broadcaster for the Syracuse Chiefs, the Washington Nationals Triple A team in Syracuse. It was a lot of really good experience. It was the year Steven Strasburg (Nationals’s phenom pitcher), came through.
It wasn’t just play-by-play, it was also media relations. I did about 120 games that year and after I graduated, I went to work in Dayton, Ohio through a connection. Matt Park, the voice of Syracuse University used to work as a broadcaster in the southern League and was good friends with the broadcaster of the Dayton Dragons. I went out there for a year. That was my first play-by-play job after graduating, as the number two broadcaster for the Dragons in the Midwest League.”
WPCNR: How do prepare for a game every day, keeping that mental toughness to do that?
Mike: I arrive at the park on game day at 11 in the morning and do not leave until 11 at night. Every day in baseball is different. Some days might be heavier with media relations requests. Hey, this tv station wants to do a feature. We do a monthly magazine show, so I might have to shoot an interview with a couple of people. I am the Media Relations Department as well for the team, so we put together the game notes. I have an intern who works under me and I critique his play-by-play from the day before. Those are the big parts that eat up your day.
Into the early afternoon I start to think about the game that night.
Baseball is not so much like a basketball game where you have this big event and you have all these notes and notes and notes that you’ve prepared just for that two hour stretch. Baseball, you know we play 140 games in 152 days and a lot of it involves just catching up with the coaching staff and the players from the day before, pulling out that interesting nugget you think might tell a good part of the story, not so much going and looking in, finding an obscure stat, though you like to do that, too.
I find it (play-by-play) is much more about story-telling. I think is the interesting part of what’s going on. We had a new player a couple of weeks ago who was on Family Feud , stuff like that. During the offseason our shortstop lost twenty pounds by radically changing his diet and playing hockey five times a week. It’s interesting stuff like that to draw out what can at times, be a slow game.
WPCNR: How do you earn the respect and accessibility of the players?
MIKE: At this level of baseball, I’m 24 and these guys are about two to three years younger than me or my same age. I relate with them well in that sense. But that’s not all of it. You can’t just rely on your age, you have to show them through the questions you ask, and your broadcasting. Because they’re watching. They’re in the clubhouse watching. We do all our home games on television and they watch those in the clubhouse on FOX television.
You have to demonstrate through your knowledge you’re someone that you earn their respect. I think it’s the same as any other relationship you get along well . At this level of baseball, I relate well to the players because of my age.
On the other hand, in the winter I did basketball for ESPN, and I’m talking to managers who in managerhood analogy has played 16 years in the major leagues. These are guys who forget more baseball than I’ll ever know in my life. You really try and learn from them because they know more about baseball than you. That’s one of the great things about working in baseball, I can learn something new every single day. That’s how I approach it. And that’s it.
WPCNR: How did you come to ESPN?
MIKE: It was really through a break. It was a gentleman named Bill Roth, who graduated from Syracuse in 1987, and ever since except for one year when he graduated and worked play-by-play for Marshall University, has been the play-by-play man for the Virginia Tech Hogies, football and basketball. What I do as a process of trying to help myself get better, I send out stretches of my play-by-play to other people whose work I respect and would like to emulate, and ask them to critique it.
I sent some of my television tape to Bill and he said hey would you mind if passed this along to a friend of mine, a gentleman by the name of Bart Fox who is a producer at ESPN, who asked me if I minded if I passed my tape along to some other people at ESPN. They said we’ll keep your name in mind. That was in July of last year. I said, that’s good, at least they saw it. Nothing came of it immediately, but it’s good to get it in front of the right people,
S0, November rolls around and all of a sudden an e-mail pops up in my mailbox and says, “Hey, can you do these three basketball games at the University of Wisconsin?” I said ABSOLUTELY! So I went out to Madison and did a bunch of games, they were preseason games, Wisconsin versus Cornell, vs. Presbyterian, and those three games turned into 20 games over the course of the winter. I get paid per game.
You can hear Mike’s ESPN basketball sound at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UV0PktD-0is
Mike says he is a full-time employee of the Tincaps, and is now a full-time resident of Fort Wayne.
WPCNR: How do you like the road?
MIKE: I really like going on the road. For me getting into sports, obviously you have to really like sports to work in sports . But, one of my favorite things is people,meeting new people and travel.
Just last week we were in Grand Rapids Michigan. I interviewed the groundskeeper at the field because they were doing a diamond , a club and a spade card design on the outfield in a promotion game with the fans during the game if the ball was hit there.
I write a blog every day http://tincaps.mlblogs.com ,and I try to interview other people when I go on the road. , the Lansing Lugnuts has one of the three lady public address announcers in all of baseball major league or minor league. To bring a unique perspective like that…keep the story fresh rather than say “Jim Jones went 3 for 4 with a strikeout last night that’s the big story today,” because really it’s not.
Life and sports are all about people and their stories.
That’s the fun part for me. And then we get to go places. People are paying me to travel to these far-off places. We go as far west as Cedar Rapids, Iowa, as far east as Cleveland, south to Bowling Green, Kentucky, north to Appleton, Wisconsin— these are places being from White Plains I never would have traveled had I not gotten a job like this. I’ve been to all these places at 23 that some people might never get to see.
WPCNR: What was your biggest thrill in play-by-play so far?
MIKE: I’ll give you two. Last year my team got to go to the championship series in my first year there and two was after my team clinched the play off series in the first half of the season and I went down to the locker room after we were clinched and at home we were on television, in jacket and tie and everything and I had cut my finger in the press box and I went to the trainer’s room to get a band-aid, and the strength and conditioning coach just pulled me out into the clubhouse and they just doused me with beer and champagne.
I got a little bit of a dry cleaning bill that day. It was a lot of fun. You can really do play-by-play for a long time and never experience anything like that.
WPCNR: Where do you go from here?
MIKE: I’m doing some AAU basketball events for ESPN. They are going to fly me out to California, Orlando, Brooklyn and Indianapolis to do one. So hopefully it leads to more basketball in the future. Ideally, I’d like to get a job like Dan Schulman’s, where you get to do Sunday Night Baseball, major league baseball, college basketball during the winter. That would be really cool. Those are sports I’ve always loved growing up. That’s my ultimate dream.
WPCNR: Is there any message you have for the people back here in your hometown, White Plains, New York, USA?
MIKE: I was just home in White Plains, and had everybody over and realized White Plains was a great place to grow up because White Plains is such a great representation of the world we live in. When I graduated, I think racial breakdown of White Plains High School was probably somewhere along a third black, a third Hispanic, and a third white. You get so many different cultures living in White Plains. You can walk three blocks in White Plains down Mamaroneck Avenue and you can see eight different types of restaurants representing eight different cultures from across the world.
I’m thankful for being brought up in White Plains because it equipped me to go anywhere.
Looking back I give a lot of thanks to Spencer Mayfield for doing the basketball team, instilling in me effective hard work playing on the basketball team. You know I was playing with guys like Sean Kilpatrick, (University of Cincinnati )who’s one of the best players in the country right now. Those were the guys I was competing against every day and it installed a good work ethic in me no matter who you are, who you are competing against, you always need to be the best you can be, because you never know what opportunity might be coming for you. When I say playing for that team, I scored 13 points in two years on the varsity team, but it lead me to being a manager for the Syracuse basketball team which opened a lot of doors for me. I just think growing up in White Plains was a fantastic opportunity and I’m thankful for everybody I crossed paths with and helped me get where I am now.
You can hear Mike, who has the authority and personality of Gary Cohen, the informality of Frank Messer, the ruggedness of Ralph Kiner, the humanity of Phil Rizzutto, but he is none of those. He’s Mike Couzens.
When you hear him handling a New York team some day soon, you’ll hear the difference.
You can hear Mike at the Mike with all the TinCaps action next week at www.TheFanFortWayne.com
Wednesday, the 24th,Thursday the 25th, Friday and Saturday the 26 amd 27th at 7 P.M. Pregame at 6:45 P.M. On Sunday, you can tune in the TinCaps from Dayton, Ohio at 7 P.M. and Monday at 7.
Blind Brook Sludge Leak Discovered Monday afternoon by hikers. No construction involved.
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WPCNR BEACH & HARBOR REPORT. By John F. Bailey. July 16, 2013:
Peter DeLutia, Deputy Commissioner of Public Health Protection for Westchester County, explained to WPCNR the sewage slude break that has prompted the County to close beaches in Mamaroneck and Rye appears to have been caused by a sewage pipe 7 feet underground, laid in 1978 or 79 breaking for unknown reasons in Blind Brook. No construction or escavating or “Call before you dig” violation was involved Delutia told WPCNR.
Delutia speculated it could be ” weakened pipe, corrosion, undermining underneath the pipe shifting.” He said the pipe had been escavated by this afternoon, but county crews would have to wait until high tide tomorrow before they would be able to begin replacement of the pipe;
He said it was discovered by residents of the area walking on a trail, who spotted “bubbling” above ground. DeLutia said there was no telling exactly when the pipe broke. “Sometimes it takes a long time (for the effluent) to come up (to the surface),” Delutia explained.
The pipe runs along Blind Brook and goes to a sewage treatment plant in Port Chester.
DeLutia said Rye Playland Beach is not affected because of the topography of the area.
Persons in Rye Harbor, Milton Harbor and Greenhaven, in Rye, and in Mamaroneck Harbor to avoid contact with Long Island Sound until further notice due to an ongoing sludge force main break.
There will be no swimming at these beaches until further notice:
Beach Point Club, Orienta Beach Club, Mamaroneck Beach and Yacht Club, Shore Acres Pointe and Harbor Island Park Beach, all in Mamaroneck; and American Yacht Club, Shenorock Shore Club, Coveleigh Club and Greenhaven Association, all in Mamaroneck.
An underground force main break near Blind Brook has released sludge close to where the Blind Brook empties into Long Island Sound, in the vicinity of the Rye Marina on Stuyvesant Avenue near Milton Road in Rye.
Return to 8 Hour Police Shifts Compromise Safety. One Year Experiment Doubles Overtime, Union Notes
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WPCNR POLICE GAZETTE. By John F. Bailey. July 16, 2013:
City Hall has so far declined to respond to WPCNR requests for actual figures detailing how much more money has been spent on police overtime in 2012-13, the first year the city has gone back to the old 8-hour patrol shifts. WPCNR has learned that overtime approximates $800,000 as opposed to about $300,000 in 2011-12.
City hall also has not given an explanation of how the OT was spent; is the council and the Mayor planning to address this problem and how was the overtime covered in the 2012-13 budget just spent, and more importantly what has the city budgeted for overtime for police in the current budget year just begun.
Sound Shore Beaches, Harbors Closed Because of Sludge Leak
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WPCNR BEACH & HARBOR REPORT. From the Westchester County Department of Health. July 16, 2013:
As a precaution, the Westchester County Department of Health is advising all recreational boaters and swimmers in
Rye Harbor, Milton Harbor and Greenhaven, in Rye, and in Mamaroneck Harbor to avoid contact with Long Island Sound until further notice due to an ongoing sludge force main break.
There will be no swimming at these beaches until further notice:
Beach Point Club, Orienta Beach Club, Mamaroneck Beach and Yacht Club, Shore Acres Pointe and Harbor Island Park Beach, all in Mamaroneck; and American Yacht Club, Shenorock Shore Club, Coveleigh Club and Greenhaven Association, all in Mamaroneck.
An underground force main break near Blind Brook has released sludge close to where the Blind Brook empties into Long Island Sound, in the vicinity of the Rye Marina on Stuyvesant Avenue near Milton Road in Rye.
The Westchester County Department of Environmental Facilities took the force main out of service at about 2:15 p.m. Monday, but repair efforts are hindered by high tide. Low tide begins at about 4:30 a.m. tomorrow and the Department’s contractor will be on site at that time to begin repairs. It is not known how much sludge has entered Long Island Sound due to the force main break.
The county health department will sample the water today.
Once results are received and evaluated, at the earliest on Wednesday afternoon, the health department will determine whether to reopen the beaches and lift the advisory or to sample the water again.
County Sales Tax Receipts UP 5.82% First 6 Months. White Plains Sales $$ Handle Continues FLAT
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WPCNR QUILL & EYESHADE. Figures From Geoffrey Gloak, the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance. Commentary by John F. Bailey July 15, 2013 CORRECTION.:
Westchester County Retail is back in the money.
Through the first six months of the new county fiscal year 2013, the county sales taxes are up 5.82%, based on a robust $51 Million raked in in June. The June County Sales Tax Collections alone were $51,067,630 compared to $43.7 Million last year, an increase of 17% .
At this pace the county is on pace to generate $488 Million in sales tax $$ a $10 Million surplus over the $478.7 Million forecast. If the county only equalizes the $229 Million it realized in sales tax receipts from July to December of 2012, it will generate $473 Million. At a 6% rate of increase, it could conceivably top $500 Million in sales taxes receipts.
The June break out is particularly noteworthy because it is $2 Million more than the county pulled in in December of 2011–the June 2013 county handle is equivalent to a peak holiday month. It is also the largest one month jump in two years.
Through the first six months of the 2013 fiscal year, the County has pulled in $243,486,675. compared to $230,100,707 the first six months of 2012, an increase of 5.8%. (CORRECTION:Due to an omission in computing the first six months of 2012, WPCNR has not counted a full month in 2012.
The City of White Plains June sales tax was virtually even with June of 2012, receiving $4,339,872 in sales taxes, compared to $4,218,196 in June, 2012, That is an increase of about 3% (.028) just ahead of inflation
More significantly, the June White Plains increase was 2.7% in sales tax receipts while the County was generating a 17% increase, a significant difference.
The city finishes the fiscal year 2012-13 with a sales tax handle of $49,913, 990, approximately $2 Million less than last year’s $51 Million. It also shorts them a little in paying for next year’s pay raises that they bank on paying for with funds from the tax stabilization fund that is funded out of current year sales tax receipts.
First Test Piles for New Tappan Zee Bridge Begin Installation Today
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WPCNR TAPPAN ZEE BRIDGE NEWS . From the New York State Thruway Authority. July 15, 2013:
Beginning today, Tappan Zee Constructors, LLC will install the first test piles for the New NY Bridge.
The test pile operations will be conducted over the next three months at proposed locations for pile foundations. Work will start at the main span footings. Piles will be placed by utilizing both vibratory and impact installation techniques. The test pile program will verify subsurface conditions in preparation for the construction of the bridge’s permanent foundation.
Multiple crews will conduct night time boring operations along I-87/I-287 in both Westchester and Rockland Counties. The night time operations are necessary due to lane closure restrictions during day time hours that are in place to keep traffic flowing over the current bridge. Boring operations will begin at exit 10 in Rockland County and move west into Westchester County.
Ongoing operations
– Temporary Westchester trestle construction including pile driving on weekdays from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.
– Survey inspections on existing bridge
– Rockland environmental monitor installations continue
– Geotechnical land borings
– Mobilization at the exit 10 staging area
– Support for river-based work from the Rockland shoreline
Westchester:
Night time boring operations to investigate subsurface soil conditions will be conducted in the southbound shoulder of I-87/I-287 and will require a temporary right lane closure between the existing bridge and exit 9 on Friday, July 19 from 9 p.m. to 6 a.m.
Rockland:
Night time boring operations to investigate subsurface soil conditions will be conducted in the southbound shoulder of I-87/I-287 and will require a temporary right lane closure between exit 10 and the existing bridge from 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. beginning Monday, July 15 through Thursday, July 18.
WHITE PLAINS CITIZENETREPORTER SERVICE RESTORED
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A failure of the WPCNR international server caused White Plains CitizeNetReporter to go dark this morning. Now as of 2 P.M. service has been restore. Thank you for your patience.
AVIATION STAKEHOLDERS INVITED TO AIR ISSUES ON FUTURE OPERATIONS OF WESTCHESTER COUNTY AIRPORT
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This may be your only chance to affect the outcome of the HPN Master Plan and more importantly, the survival of a viable Runway 11/29.
Please attend this meeting and give your opinion. Your participation will make a difference and we appreciate any help and support.
If you have any additional question please contact John Johnston, WAA President at: 917 817-392, or Milt Hobbs WAA Vice President at: 914 289-4861.