WHITE PLAINS WEEK FOR JULY 12 NOW ONLINE!

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PETER KATZ, JOHN BAILE AND JIM BENEROFE REPORTING

PETER KATZ, JOHN BAILEY AND JIM BENEROFE REPORTING TONIGHT ON

CASS CIBELLI AND THE REPUBLICAN SLATE.

THE OAKLAND BAY BRIDGE DELAY.

POLICE OVERTIME BLOATS–CITY SHOOTS SELF IN FOOT.

THE REBELLION ON THE GREENWAY– SECESSION NEXT?

THE BEFORE I DIE BOARD.

AND MORE!

SEE THE ALL NIGHT NEWS BOYS–MORE ALIVE THAN LIVE AND LOCAL.

ON THE INTERNET AT

www.whiteplainsweek.com

IMPORTANT: In this week’s program, the Claudia Murphy who is running for Common Council on the Republican Common Council Slate was confused with another person, due to the Republican Party failure to provide background information as requested by e-mail and telephone by the producers a week ago.

Claudia Murphy is the owner of Happy Paws Pet Sitting, Treasurer for the Carhart neighborhood association, and president of the Live Oaks condominium board of managers.  She was very active in the fight against the proposed detox center on Dekalb Avenue and quite vocal at the public hearings regarding this project.

 

 

 

 

 

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Letter from Cass Cibelli: Taxes Outrageous. Mayor has lost his way.

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247ec80[1]Dear Mr. Bailey,

     What an honor it is to have been nominated to run for mayor of White Plains. Moreover, my running mates, Anne Marie Encarnacao, Claudia Murphy and Carlo Albanese, respectively, each brings a unique White Plains’ experience while clearly unifying on an indelible message:
        White Plains can no longer function under one party rule. Our ticket has independent minded men and women, democrats and republicans alike; each uniquely qualified to lead. A true bi-partisan ticket!
     At the turn of the century, my wife Patricia and I chose to settle and raise our family here because there was a sense of hope; a sense that economically we could live here and grow. Well, we’re certainly living here and growing now with two beautiful grade school children.
That our taxes grow just as our children do is outrageous.
     Leadership is borne out of vision and vision is focused when input to that vision is honest and trustworthy.
     Currently, my opponent, Mayor Tom Roach, nevertheless a gentleman, has lost his way.
     He relies on his party patrons to sustain him, to guide him and fails to map out the future of the City.
         Yet, when we look around, growth has stalled, shoppers are leaving in numbers and morale amongst police, fire fighters and DPW workers is at an all time low. I know this for a fact because we talk.
     When we’re mayor, fiscal responsibility will be the first order. Depts will not spend their budgets down like DPW currently does.
      DPW spends its entire budget in the 3rd quarter, recently squandering $200,000 on unneccessary curbing and an acre of trees!
        Between this and a confounding $300,000 on a bike lane to nowhere, Mayor Roach wasted $500,000. And this is only the beginning. People lost their jobs at DPW. It doesn’t have to be this way.
     Another $20,000 to survey the Greenway! We have people in our government who do such work as part of their jobs! There’s more.
     The purpose here is to say thank you for trusting us with this honor to bring a campaign to the people that is framed in trust, honesty and competence. We plan to campaign on our merits and vision, where every citizen, every neighborhood matters.
      My promise as Mayor is to offer citizens a monthly forum to address the mayor and commissioners on the citizens’ turf, without the limits currently imposed at City Hall.
       The People’s Forum shall open the doors to government and render an elected body who is accountable to the people; not an elected body which currently is smug, entitled and aloof leaving an inaccessible path to City Hall.
My best regards,
Cass V. Cibelli
Candidate for Mayor
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County Clerk: Jump in Foreclosures a Wake-Up Call for Homeowners to Get Help

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WPCNR REAL ESTATE NEWS. July 11, 2013:

Timothy Idoni, Westchester County Clerk,  told WPCNR that his office announcement of the rise in new foreclosure filings the first six months of the year did consist of many filings of what he called “clean paper foreclosures” on homes previously served with foreclosure notices which were invalidated for incomplete paperwork by 2011 government rulings stopping banks’ practices of “robo-signings” which started a wave of attempted foreclosures in 2008-9.

However, in his talking with the county court about the new foreclosure notices,  Idoni said there were quite a few new foreclosures, too, not just reservings. He said the intent of his announcement was to urge homeowners on verge of foreclosure, served with foreclosure notices to seek help from organizations like Westchester Residential Opportunities who could advise them how to work out arrangements to keep their homes.

Idoni did not have a ratio of how many fresh foreclosure filings there were as opposed to filings involving previous attempts at foreclosure.

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Foreclosures Soar first six months of Year in County. Filings of OLD Foreclosures.Does Not Indicate New Market Distress

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER.From the Westchester County Clerk. July 9, 2013 UPDATED JULY 10, 2013 WITH ANALYSIS BY WPCNR;

“The foreclosure activity in the first half of 2013 is the highest since the foreclosure crisis began,” reported Westchester County Clerk Timothy C. Idoni who serves as Clerk of the Westchester County Supreme Court where foreclosure actions are heard.

The information, though, does not signal a new wave of homeowners facing distress, according to an expert in distressed properties, Phil Faranda of J. Philip Real Estate, who spoke with WPCNR Wednesday morning. Mr. Faranda also runs the web newsite, www.nyshortsalesblog.com and www.jphilip.com

Faranda says these filings are filings of complete,  updated paperwork banks started three to four years ago when hundreds of people were being foreclosed on during what Mr. Faranda called the “robo-signing crisis” when the government declared a moratorium on instant foreclosure actions because people were losing their houses without getting due process in the courts. Faranda sees this sudden increase of foreclosures indicating that banks which attempted foreclosures in the county two to three years ago have finally gotten all documents necessary to begin the long process leading to repossession.

“I don’t believe this is the crisis it appears to be,” Faranda said, noting the inventory  would eventually come on the market, but not all at once. He did not  see the filings at all as  a new wave of new homeowners being unable to pay their mortgages. Some he said may not even know they still own those homes. Some he said, had already sold.them.

As the settlements of these foreclosures  come on the market, he said the properties would help real estate sales because buyers who could not afford homes at the steadily rising prices  would have lower priced homes to choose..

He added that the homes would be coming onto a stable market where mortgage money and favorable monetary policy by the government was available, and not in the climate of four years ago where mortgage money was not available. Prices were plummetting and there was no consumer confidence. Mr. Faran

The Office of the Westchester County Clerk reported one thousand four hundred and twenty six (1,426) foreclosure actions started between January 1st and June 30th of this year, as compared with eight hundred and twenty four (824) during the same period last year.  One hundred and fifty one (151) foreclosure judgments have been entered in the first half of 2013, in comparison to ninety three (93) entered during the first half of 2012.  A month-by-month breakdown of foreclosure filings follows:

 

January

February

March

April

May

June

Total

2006

100

119

159

120

140

128

766

2007

146

132

252

181

145

156

1,012

2008

243

231

285

224

202

225

1,410

2009

124

154

210

266

240

266

1,260

2010

260

181

222

210

208

262

1,343

2011

133

145

144

150

157

156

885

2012

105

131

143

148

150

147

824

2013

208

200

275

268

266

209

1,426

“As foreclosure activity in Westchester County increases, so does the risk that our residents will fall prey to a foreclosure scheme,” cautioned Idoni who urged residents to seek help from a trained foreclosure counselor.  Westchester Residential Opportunities (WRO), a non-profit housing agency with offices in White Plains and Mount Vernon, conducts Mortgage Default Orientation sessions most Wednesdays in their White Plains Office.  Trained counselors are available to help at (914) 428-4507 ext. 334 or by visiting www.wroinc.org.

For more information on the Office of the Westchester County Clerk, please visit WestchesterClerk.com or call (914)995-3081.

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American Bridge Company and Fluor Corporation’s New Oakland Bay Bridge Opening Delayed to December Due to key Safety Bolt Failures

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DELAYED UNTIL DECEMBER- BOLTS DEFECTIVE. The New Oakland Bay Bridge will not open due to defective safety bolts.

WPCNR TAPPAN ZEE BRIDGE NEWS. By John F. Bailey July 8, 2013:

The new Oakland Bay Bridge, the model project that New York State touted as one of the reasons they chose Tappan Zee Constructors ( a consortium of American Bridge Company, Fluor Corporation, and Granite Construction) to build the New Tappan Zee Bridge will not open until December due to cracks in the new bridge safety bolts selected by American Bridge and Fluor.The California Toll Bridge Program announced the delay  in an official report Monday.

It is expected to take until December 10 to repair the cracks.

American Bridge and Fluor, are starting on the new New York Tappan Zee Bridge. A press release just yesterday touted the bridge beginning.

In the official report of the Tappan Zee Bridge Selection Committee who went with American Bridge and Fluor the committee wrote, in selecting Tappan Zee Bridge Constructors,  on page nine of the “Blue Ribbon Selection Committee Report::

“Past project experience is more directly relevant to this type of construction,” (their only reference to American Bridge Company and Fluor Corporation “experience.”)

The Blue Ribbon Selection Committee picked American Bridge Company, Fluor and Granite by this process, as described in the Executive Summary:

The BRSC took the following steps in its best-value assessment:

Conducted an in-depth trade-off of technical quality and price, comparing the relative technical and cost advantages of the original proposals as explained by clarifications received in Communications and Discussions with the proposers;

Determined whether the higher-priced proposal offered sufficient quality advantages over lower-priced proposals to justify the price difference;

Reached a decision on which proposal provides the best value;

Documented a justification of the selection; and

In addition, the BRSC separately considered whether the potential enhancements identified by each proposer during Discussions might affect the best-value decision.

Considering both the value added to each proposal based upon the potential changes and the financial impact (if any) of such changes, Niagara (Tappan Zee Constructors) was still also considered to be the best-value proposer.

The Blue Ribbon Selection Committee did not talk over how the new Oakland Bay Bridge Project has been going with the California Department of Transportation

WPCNR was informed by the California Department of Transportation spokesman Mark Dinger on July 1st  that CALTRANS had no record of  any correspondence “that would document any official contact” with the New York Tappan Zee Selection Committee ever contacting CALTRANS about the American Bridge Company and Fluor performance on the new Oakland Bay Bridge.

The spokesman for the New Oakland Bay Bridge, Andrew Gordon speaking to WPCNR in a telephone call last week also reported he has not had any contact with anyone connected with the New Tappan Zee Bridge  Selection Committee in either phone calls or correspondence. He also recalled no representatives from that Committee or anyone from the Thruway taking a tour of the Oakland Bay Bridge in progress.

To see the complete Associated Press story on the delay, go to http://news.yahoo.com/bay-bridge-opening-delayed-until-least-december-183331615.html;_ylt=AhW5TIL6GiCZGvuG9G5NQIAJVux_;_ylu=X3oDMTJhbmtrdHVxBG1pdANBVFQgMyBTdG9yeSBKdW1ib3Ryb24gSG9tZSBDYWNoZWQEcG9zAzM2BHNlYwNNZWRpYUF0dFdpZGdldHJvbkFzc2VtYmx5;_ylg=X3oDMTFkcW51ZGliBGludGwDdXMEbGFuZwNlbi11cwRwc3RhaWQDBHBzdGNhdANob21lBHB0A3BtaA–;_ylv=3

 

 

 

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Watch Boykin Flisser Exclusively on White Plains Week

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Tonight, the second back-to-back Campaign 2013 County Legislator District 5 interviews of White Plains Benjamin Boykin airs on White Plains Week at www.whiteplainsweek.com  You can also seenthe first interview with Miriam Flisser on www.whiteplainsweek.com.  The two candidates are interviewed by John Bailey and Jim Benerofe.2013boykin 004

 

MIRIAM FLISSER, CANDIDATE FOR HARRISON, SCARSADLE AND WHITE PLAINS COUNTUY LEGISLATURE DISTRICT 5 DISCUSSES THE ISSUES WITH JOHN BAILEY AND JIM BENEROFE

MIRIAM FLISSER, CANDIDATE FOR HARRISON, SCARSDALE AND WHITE PLAINS COUNTY LEGISLATURE DISTRICT 5  (ABOVE, AND BEN BOYKIN BELOW DISCUSS THE ISSUES WITH JOHN BAILEY AND JIM BENEROFE ON TWO SEPARATE WHITE PLAINS WEEK SHOWS. SSEE BOTH INTERVIEWS BACK-TO-BACK ON WWW.WHITEPLAINSWEEK.COM

 

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Political Observer Lauds Republican Renaissance

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Dear Editor:
As an old Republican activist and long time critic of Mayor Roach and the Democrats on Common Council who run the Council like the Politburo, I am thrilled with the Republican Nominees for Mayor and Council in this year’s election.
Cas Cibelli is an outstanding candidate for Mayor.  He is articulate and knowledgeable about the issues.
Carl Albanese is a great candidtate for Common Council.  He has been a fixture at Common Council meetings for years.  He knows the issues and has a feisty attitude that will let him take the campaign to the Democrats.
Claudia Murphy and Anne Marie Encarnacao have solid credentials and are excellent candidates.
I look forward to getting behind their candidacies and working on their campaigns.
Michael P. Amodio
White Plains, NY
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Housing up 24% in Hud Valley. White Plains Sales 43% Up. Westchester UP 23%

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WPCNR HOUSING NEWS. From  Mary Prenon, Hudson Gateway Multiple Listing Services. July 8, 2013:

The Lower Hudson Valley’s residential real estate market posted a significant increase in activity during the second quarter of 2013. Realtors participating in the Hudson Gateway Multiple Listing Service* reported a grand total of 3,445 closed residential transactions in the four-county MLS service territory consisting of Westchester, Putnam, Rockland and Orange Counties, New York. The residential properties consisted of single family houses, condominiums, cooperatives, and 2-4 family buildings.

The sales volume represented a 24% increase from the comparable period in 2012 and was the highest second quarter posting since 2010. These closed transactions largely flowed from properties that were marketed in the early months of this year.

Among the four counties, Orange County posted the largest percentage increase, 34.0%, in its single family house sector where there were 528 sales this quarter as compared to 394 sales in the second quarter of 2012.

Westchester County, which accounts for nearly two-thirds of all sales in the region, posted a 23.8% increase in its single family house sector, and 27.8% in its cooperative unit sector.

Putnam and Rockland County posted sales gains in their single family house sectors of 10.6% and 7.2% respectively. This level of activity, if maintained for the rest of the year, and taking into account the slower paced first quarter, will result in an estimated year-end volume of about 13,000 units throughout the region, taking us back to pre-recessionary levels posted in 2007 and earlier.

One of the major consequences of the quickened pace of sales is that inventory (the supply of units available for sale) is under pressure in all four counties.

Homes Available for Sale Decline

In Westchester, the county having the largest volumes, the end-of-quarter 6,156 available properties were 13.1% fewer than last year at this date, and fewer than in 2010 and 2011 as well.

In the post recessionary period since 2008 we have ascribed low levels of inventory to prospective sellers’ reticence to enter what to them appeared to be an unpromising market. Now, however, it appears that a more classic supply and demand condition is informing the market as new listings barely keep up with sales.

Besides Westchester, the Rockland and Putnam markets both experienced further reductions (5.5% and 2.7% respectively) in inventory since 2011 and 2012.

Only in Orange County has the decline of inventory been arrested, a surprising result from the market having the fastest turnover from high sales rates. Very possibly, prospective sellers in Orange are observing the robust sales activity around them and are therefore more inclined to list their properties than before, a proposition whose accuracy will be tested when the third quarter results are in.

Realtors report that the squeeze on inventory is pressing buyers to act more quickly and decisively in their search for suitable properties, but the Multiple Listing Service has not received a comparable number of reports that low inventory is causing any sort of outsize price inflation.

Sale Prices Rise Modestly

This second quarter report documents price increases throughout the region, but those increases are moderate and also must be seen against the background of flat or even declining prices over the past several years.

The strongest performer in the single family house market was Westchester County, where the second quarter median sale price of $650,000 was 5.0% higher than in 2012; this was the highest second quarter median since 2008.

The meansale price of $859,861 was only 0.8% higher. The two factors together suggest that high-end sales are maintaining but not increasing their market share or prices for the most part. For example, Westchester houses selling for $1 million or more accounted for 23.4% of total house sales, but this was near the range of 21-23% that has obtained since 2010.

Rockland County was a close second to Westchester with a 4.8% increase in its single family median price to $395,000. Its condominium sector median, however, $205,000, was 9.4% less than last year. In Putnam County, the median house price was $308,000 or 2.8% higher than last year. It, too, experienced a price decrease in its condo sector, by 6.5% to $201,000.

Of the four counties, Orange has experienced the most persistent bout of low or declining house prices. The second quarter median for a single family house was $240,000, down 0.9% from last year. It is believed that Orange has a higher rate than the rest of the region of REO (real estate or bank owned properties) and short sales in its sales mix, which would tend to hold down the averages. However, given its fast pace of sales and steady inventory, Orange may be rapidly burning through its supply of stressed housing and will see a price jump next quarter. Also, it should be noted that Orange County enjoyed a 10.7% price increase in its condominium sector, where the second quarter median closed at $179,000.

Mortgage Effect

Overall the Lower Hudson Region is doing well in its recovery from the “great recession.” Sales volumes have been accelerating and prices have begun to increase, but at sensible rates. However, the one major threat to a full recovery could be mortgage interest rates that increase too rapidly.

Consumers over many months have become accustomed to rates averaging less than 4.0% on 30-year conventional loans, but in response to recent Federal Reserve policies and pronouncements, that 4% threshold was re-crossed on the upward swing in late May and the average conventional rate is now closer to 5% than 4%.

Ascending mortgage interest rates sometimes boost the market in the short run by stimulating prospective purchasers to advance their planning, but in the longer run a too sharp rate of increase can damage the recovering market by reducing the number of consumers who can afford the higher monthly mortgage expenses.

On the plus side in our region, the unemployment rates in each of the four counties has decreased by a full percentage point or more since last year, and all are below the statewide average of 7.3% for the last several months. With a careful eye on mortgage interest rates, and with steady improvement in the region’s general economic conditions, we are likely to see more sales and firmed-up pricing in the coming quarters.

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Beautification Foundation Head Details Extent of Community Gardens Plant Thefts

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WPCNR NEIGHBORHOOD WATCH. From Jean Bello, White Plains Beautification Foundation. July 3, 2013:

White Plains Beautification Foundation Adopt-A-Park Co-Chair, Jean Bello has offered more details on the community gardens thefts first reported in an earlier article today.

Ms. Bello in a statement to WPCNR notes:

The thefts involve at least 4 gardens.
Each year we experience some theft from our gardens, but this year the
perpetrators seem to be especially brazen – 40 plants from just one garden; 2
rose bushes (which are not easy to pull out and carry away) and 12 begonias from
another. 

I don’t yet have a dollar amount of what it will cost to replace the
stolen plants, but I can get a rough estimate for you if needed.  A police
report has been filed. 

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WP FIREWORKS CROWD DAMPENED BUT DELIGHTED AT PRE-FOURTH PARTY

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Commissioner of Public Safety David Chong said White Plains drew a nice crowd to its Annual Fireworks Celebration at White Plains High School Tuesday evening. He said there were no public safety issues. WPCNR observed the fireworks started at twilight, and though a dampening drizzle was falling, the crowd was awed by the booms, colors and celebratory ambience.

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The view from the high school sledding hill 8:50 P.M.

 

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Umbrellas sprouted as Fireworks dazzled the sky. The view from the Tennis Courts

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