SOUND OF MUSIC FOREVER YOUNG. Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Last and Greatest Hit Climbs Mountain at WBT: Timeless Songs You Love All Over Again!

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Aubrey Sinn Thoroughly Thrilling as Maria in WBT’S SOUND OF MUSIC!

 

WPCNR THEATRE REVIEW By John F. Bailey. June 23, 2013:

What is the best  super musical of all time? My Fair Lady? Anything Goes? Phantom?  Annie Get Your Gun? Forty Second Street?

My vote is The Sound of Music.

The measure of a musical entertainment is its impact at the time and how it plays a half century after it was first produced. The Cole Porters, the Lerner and Lowes, the Irving Berlins, the Rodgers and Hammersteins’  they hold together  charming audiences decades removed from when they first awed critics and were hot tickets.

You see the magic that sets the supermusicals apart from the rest through August 11 at Westchester Broadway Theatre, (the Super County’s number one entertainment value).  Bring grandma, grandpa, and the grandchildren to see Bob  Funking and Bill Stutler’s (creative teams in their own right)  production of  R & H’s The Sound of Music.  Sound of Music  flaunted its  charm before the distinguished members of the press Thursday evening.

As the nuns of Nunnberg Abbey wonder where Maria is, there is the intrepid Maria, played with poised aplomb by  Aubrey Sinn, singing The Sound of Music  against a majestic mountain,  you come alive! As if an old friend is back again.

You’re grinning to the nuns of Nunnberg Abby singing “What do you do about a problem like Maria?”  as they in song,  define the character you’ve just met:
How do you solve a problem like Maria?

How do you catch a cloud and pin it down?

How do you find the word that means Maria?

A flibbertigibbet, a willow the wisp, a clown

After these first two songs, if you’re not already in love with  Ms. Sinn’s Maria, who hits just the right nuances of independence, spirit, courage and spunk, with repressed sex appeal, and sense of wonder too, of course, hitting all the notes just right, emotionally, comically  as well as  personnally connecting,

Karen Murphy as the Abbess is  taken in…reminiscing with the repentant  Maria dueting on  A Few of My Favorite Things”   (Whiskers on kittiens…remember)

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Aubrey Sinn’s Maria charms The Sound of Music’s charming von Trapp children at first encounter

Ms. Sinn (last seen in Legally Blonde at this venue) is totally believable, interacting naturally and selling Maria’s connection with the von Trapp children, played  by the best acting collection of kid thespians I have seen in a long time since the Mousketeers.

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Captain von Trapp (Matthew Shepard) is shocked, shocked to see his children singing under Maria’s tutelage and whistles them back into march step

And I want to name them all now:  Mollyjane Boyle, Evelyn Carr, Harrison Cohen, Jasmine Cores, Olivia Fanders, Giann Florio, Hannah Moore, Michelle Moughan,, Matthew Quirk, Travis Ramirez Race Rundhaug and Brandon Szep.

They did not all play on the night I saw the show, but the ones who did play had such great rapport, choreography and presence particularly on  Do-Re-Mi. Maria transforms the regimented children of Captain Von Trapp, and teaches them to sing. (Von Trapp summons his children  with a naval ship whistle that’s how domineering he is).

When Maria  is first introduced to the dashing Captain Von Trapp and the uplifting attraction between the three: Maria, von Trapp and the children clicks on stage!  The singing children capture you in the nonsensical “So Long Farewell” at the close of the ball in Act One. (Surprised how songs you know keep cropping up?). Come on you slightly older people–you remember how So Long Farewell goes:


So long, farewell, auf wiedersehen, good night

I hate to go and leave this pretty sight

So long, farewell, auf wiedersehen, adieu

Adieu, adieu, to yieu and yieu and yieu

The oldest of the children Leisel is brought heart-rendingly to life by Molly Emerson whose love for a young man engulfed in the Nazi occupation of 1938 cannot be. Ms. Emerson’s emotionally true reactions – the dramatic confrontation in Act Two in the Abbey Garden with Rolf (Cameron Bartell) is a dramatic highlight – are played flawlessly.

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Molly Emerson as Liesl duetting with Cameron Bartell singing Sixteen Going on Seventeen duet in Act One is pitch perfect between the two. I liked these two actors in this cameo romance.

I am assuming everyone knows the story of The Sound of Music. I saw this with my journalism colleague, Brenda Starr who in her career of reporting for The Flash, had never seen either the musical or the movie of this musical. Ms. Starr is very demanding in her entertainment. Well, she felt the production was  “Well  done. Maria was great sang beautifully and sweet and innocent and the kids were all fun.” This is high praise from the no-nonsense redhead.

The musical is based on the story of Maria Von Trapp who published her autobiographical book, The Story of the Von Trapp Family Singers  in 1949. It is the true account of how she and von Trapp fled German-occupied Austria in 1938, escaping with nothing, eventually settling in Vermont, making a new life for themselves, and toured the world as The von Trapp Family Singers.

Mary Martin, the actress bought the rights for a stage version, commissioned a script and Rodgers and Hammerstein wrote new songs.  It became a  Broadway hit that plays today with all the heart, inspiration and magic it had 54 years ago.

So you’re getting the idea here that WBT has in its reverent respect for the great musicals of yesterday and beyond yesterday has brought this classic back? I hope so.

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Karen Murphy, The Abbess, consoling Aubrey Sinn (Maria)

Karen Murphy, playing The Abbess will send chills up your spine and replace your lost courage with her glorious over-the-top house-pleasing Climb Every Mountain.  Ms. Murphy exhorts Maria – who of course has fallen in love with Captain Von Trapp – and has left to return to the abbey in shame — to go back to the family because her love for von Trapp is a higher calling – as love always is. Murphy steals the show with her two belt-it-out-of-the-park Climb Every Mountain performances.

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Matthew Shepard as Captain von Trapp and Aubrey Sinn is his Maria. All photos by John Vecchiola, courtesy Westchester Broadway Theatre

Matthew Shepard is a game Captain von Trapp to the iconnette   Maria, Aubrey Sinn. I would have liked to have seen a little more chemistry, (but you know these military types!) But perhaps that is what is most charming about Shepard and Sinn in these two roles. They are an incongruous striking couple without the faux passion that Hollywood so often sells us. You root for them.

 

The clinches between Von Trapp and Maria are delicately and expressively played.  Shepard appears genuinely enchanted. Maria not knowing what is happening to her.  And they will get better. It’s true romance. Everybody in the audience feels it and wanted it.

Maria’s return to the von Trapp family in Act II is well –played by them both. The marriage of the two excellently staged.

When the nasty Nazi high command shows up demanding von Trapp take a commission  in the Nazi navy, Maria and her new husband know they must escape. (A note: the menace of the Nazis is superbly rendered by the brown-shirts in this.)

Jamison Stern plays a deft comic foil in Max Detweiler who encourages the von Trapps to appear in the national talent show that plays a key role in their attempt to escape.

Michelle Dawson does a glamorus 30s heiress with her cap set for the Captain, delivering laughs as she observes the threat Maria is to her designs.

The talent show  Max  arranges sets the stage for the von Trapp escape.  The lovely Edelweiss sung by Maria,the children and the Captain at the conclusion of the talent festival means there is no turning back.

Does true love triumph? What do you think?

In my mentioning all these songs, don’t you want to hear them again? You bet.

This is a show where the book is so seamless with the music, tunes so good they move the plot, and  that the frequent reprises in the show tell the timelessness of their message.

A tip of my panama hat to Jonathan Stahl, the director and choreographed whose controlled staging and plot-concious choreography did not distract from the emotional drive and momentum of this musical. And this one really moved, ladies and gentleman. An hour and a half first act that seemed short. The relaxing 30-minute intermission.  A 45-minute second act  filled with suspense and left you walking out uplifted, entertained, and enthralled. The orchestra under Leo P. Causone laid a musical bed that made the singers’ lyrics glitter. No overriding!

As Piia Haas, the ballyhooette who writes WBT program notes observes, “It has been said of the pair (Rodgers and Hammerstein) that they changed the destiny of American musical theatre. The Sound of Music ended up being the most financially successful film adaptation of a Broadway musical ever made.”

Ms. Haas who can be considered the curator of musical history at the WBT, notes in a poignant anecdoate, Edelweiss was the last song Oscar Hammerstein II wrote.

Sound of Music ran for five years on Broadway for 1,443 performances.

In my book, I had no expectations going to see this. My natural cynicism was ready to dismiss it. But, it’s right up there slightly better than My Fair Lady, I’d have to say the musical’s songs and book speak to the doubts we all have in life. The many reasons we find not to chase our dreams and addresses the reasons why we should have the courage to never let them go..

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The ball, where von Trapp is distracted by Maria.

This is Number one in my book. You will love it. And not one nasty word in it. Perfect for children of all ages.

The Sound of Music reprise at Westchester Broadway Theatre plays through August 11. Tickets which include dinner may be purchased at  914-592-2268 or on the theatre website, www.BroadwayTheatre.com

 

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Governor Andrew Cuomo on The 2012-13 Legislative Accomplishments

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WPCNR ALBANY ROUNDS. From the Governor’s Office (Edited). June 23, 2013:

Friday marked the end of the 2013 Legislative Session, and we have again worked together to transform our state and show that government can confront – and solve – New York’s toughest problems.

In our first year, the state closed a $10 billion budget deficit with no new taxes, cut taxes for the middle-class, established a property tax cap to hold the line on skyrocketing tax bills, created a new economic development paradigm with the Regional Economic Development Councils and reclaimed New York’s title as a progressive leader for the nation when we passed the Marriage Equality Act.

The momentum continued into the second year with the passage of legislation imposing a comprehensive teacher evaluation system that now serves as a model system for the nation, sweeping pension reform that saves state and local governments more than $80 billion, and a coordinated statewide plan to rebuild our infrastructure and create thousands of jobs, including the replacement of the Tappan Zee Bridge.

This year, Governor Cuomo took the state’s focus on job creation, particularly upstate, to the next level. This session produced one of the most aggressive economic development agendas in our state’s history, including:

  • START-UP NY: Groundbreaking jobs program designed to jump start the upstate economy through tax-free communities linked to State University of New York (SUNY) and private college campuses.
  • High-tech Job Programs: Innovative “Hot Spot” incubator program and the Venture Capital Fund will help to better commercialize our state’s ideas and innovations and create businesses to transform the face of job creation in New York.
  • Upstate NY Jobs From Gaming: If passed by voters in November, world-class destination gaming resorts will drive economic growth by attracting tourists, generating economic activity for local businesses, and creating thousands of good-paying jobs.
  • Reducing Taxes on Businesses and Families: Nearly $800 million in tax relief for New York businesses over the next three years and relief for middle class families with a targeted tax credit of $350 per year for three years, beginning in 2014.
  • Financial Assistance for Local Governments: Establishes a Financial Restructuring Board for local governments and reforms binding arbitration to help eligible distressed cities and local governments manage their finances and provide public services in a more cost-effective manner.

Again breaking with Albany’s long tradition of late budgets, Governor Cuomo secured passage of this year’s budget days before the April 1 deadline. It was the earliest budget since 1983, and it marked the first time since 1984 that New York has had three consecutive, on-time budgets.

Under the Governor’s leadership, this session that added to the growing reputation of New York State as the progressive capital of the nation, including:

  • One of the most difficult and politically challenging issues facing the nation – reducing gun violence – with the NY SAFE Act, the most comprehensive gun control law in the nation.
  • A long-overdue increase to the minimum wage to align with the standard of living in this state, from $7.25 to $9 per hour over three years.
  • Nationally-recognized education reform continuing our work to create a world-class education system that prepares our next generation for the future.
  • $1 billion affordable housing program to preserve and create 14,300 affordable housing units, which will also create jobs and stabilize distressed areas.

The Governor  proposed a tough anti-corruption and reform agenda in Albany and gave the legislature a simple choice: Pass the legislation or face an investigative commission dedicated to rooting out corruption among public officials in Albany. This commission would determine the key weaknesses in existing law and propose reforms to address those weaknesses in such areas as elections, campaign finance, and the abuse of public office or public funds for personal gain.

New York expects to receive approximately $30 billion in federal aid for recovery, rebuilding and mitigation. This will enable New York to build back smarter and stronger, and ensure that the state is better prepared for the future.

Click here to read more about this session’s accomplishments.

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Tappan Zee Constructors To Deploy Sturgeon Monitorings Program This Week. Closures East on I-87/287 Midday all Week

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The Sturgeon

WPCNR NEW NEW YORK BRIDGE NEWS & TRAFFIC ADVISORY.  Special to WPCNR from The New York State Thruway Authority. June 23, 2013:

Tappan Zee Constructors, LLC (TZC) will place a full array of acoustic receivers near the construction zone during the week of June 24.  This series of receivers will be used to locate endangered Atlantic and Short-Nose sturgeon that have been tagged by other researchers. 

Limited geotechnical analysis boring and subsurface utility exploration operations continue this week in Tarrytown. The work will require eastbound I-87/I-287 right lane closures in the vicinity of exit 9 on Monday, Tuesday and Thursday as well as westbound I-87/I-287 right lane closures Wednesday and Friday.  Work activities will be conducted between 10 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Monday through Thursday and between 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. on Friday.

The Sturgeon Acoustic Telemetry Monitoring Plan has been developed by fisheries scientists to monitor the movement of sturgeon through the construction zone.  This data will be reported to the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation and the National Marine Fisheries Service and will be an important resource in the study of sturgeon migration and movement through the Hudson Valley.  This is only one part of a much larger environmental stewardship program being undertaken by TZC and the New York State Thruway Authority.

Ongoing operations:

          Cleaning and preparation for future construction of the Thruway’s Rockland Bulkhead

          Construction of the temporary Westchester work trestle which includes pile driving operations that will occur 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 Interchange 10 staging area

          Support for river-based work from the Rockland shoreline

Rockland: Limited geotechnical analysis boring operations continue this week on Thruway property in South Nyack and will not require lane closures due to work being performed behind barriers.  Work is scheduled on weekdays between 7 a.m. and 3:30 p.m..

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Citizen Adam Bradley Not Guilty on All Counts Jurors Decide

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS LAW JOURNAL. June 21, 2013

A jury in the New York State Supreme Court in White Plains found former Mayor of White Plains Adam Bradley not guilty on all counts this morning, after deliberating two days after the defense rested in Mr. Bradley’s retrial on  three counts of harassment, one count of attempted assault, and one count of criminal attempt.

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New York Stands By American Bridge Company and Fluor Corp to build new Tappan Zee based on built-in contract safeguards In Face of California Bay Bridge Situation

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WPCNR TAPPAN ZEE BRIDGE NEWS. By John F. Bailey. June 20, 2013:

The New York State Thruway  is standing behind its selection of Tappan Zee Constructors as the contractor on the new Tappan Zee Bridge, despite  documented failures described as “catastrophic” by  a California Metropolitan Transportation Authority Official in earthquake-resistant supports installed on the new Oakland Bay Bridge in San Francisco three months before that $6.3 Billion bridge is supposed to open Labor Day.

The New York State Thruway confidence is bolstered by the safeguards built into the New York State contract  with American Bridge Company and Fluor Corporation.

The issue surfaced in the face of “catastrophic” failures of one third of the first 96 seismic-resistant bolts  being relied on to make the new Oakland Bay Bridge earthquake-safer. The California Department of  Transportation (acronym CALTRANS) is investigating the cause of the failures of remaining 2,200  30 foot long bolts, after 32 of 96 bolts snapped upon tightening three months ago.

Governor Andrew Cuomo whose efforts to get the replacement of the Tappan Zee Bridge going after a decade of trying, have produced a decision on a design, and selected American Bridge Company (Pennsylvania) and Fluor Corporation (Dallas) to build a new Tappan Zee Bridge for $3.9 Billion by 2018 has not issued a statement on the problems with the new Bay Bridge.

CALTRANS is attempting to cope with a shattering of public confidence in the bridge and a blistering media assault on the process that CALTRANS is encountering with the almost-ready-to-open Bay Bridge. A prestigious fund-raiser tied to the Labor Day opening has already been postponed while tests on the approximately 2,200 remaining suspect bolts ( key components of the new bridge mission to be more resistant to earthquakes). Meanwhile, supportive saddles are being installed on the already-failed bolts in place, which cannot be exchanged out. A decision on whether to open the bridge as planned is expected July 10.

The Thruway issued to  WPCNR responses to a series of questions said the New NY Bridge and the new Bay Bridge are “very different designs.” The Thruway said there are no plans to use steel bolts or anything on the New New York Bridge  from Dyson Corporation of Ohio that supplied the allegedly defective bolts

The communication said that on  possible delays and cost overruns, the new New York design-build law shifts the risk for most delays and cost overruns from New York to the contractor “not taxpayers or tallpayers.”

The Thruway noted to WPCNR that  HNTB, the firm hired as “Owners Engineer” on the New New York Bridge Project will be doing “rigorous quality control on all aspects of the design and material that will be used, including inspecting steel fabricating facilities.”

The Thruway did not respond yet to WPCNR’s question whether the 12-member Blue Ribbon Selection Committee had talked with CALTRANS to evaluate American Bridge and Fluor Corporation performance through the seven years the new Oakland Bay Bridge, or was aware of the bolt problem that has been known about since 2007-08 as indicated by CALTRANS public documents, and American Bridge Company and Fluor response to the defects found and acknowledged publicly by CALTRANS.

The Thruway also did not respond to the question of whether new test borings recently ordered are routine or to make certain of past findings.

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California Dept. of Transportation Investigating 33% Failure Rate of Key Earthquake Proofing Rods on New Oakland Bay Bridge — Constructed by NY’s New Tappan Zee Contractor

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THE NEW OAKLAND BAY BRIDGE (ON LEFT)- BEING BUILT BY NY’S TAPPAN ZEE CONTRACTORS–SCHEDULED TO OPEN IN SEPTEMBER

 WPCNR TAPPAN ZEE NEWS. By John F. Bailey. June 19, 2013:

Media in the Bay area are swarming over the failures of one/third of 96 seismic safety bolts installed in the main structural tower out of  a total of 2,300 “suspect bolts” (California Department of Transportation words) now being tested for integrity. The new Oakland Bay Bridge ia scheduled to open in September. The official Caltrans statement may be seen at http://baybridgeinfo.org/rods

The problems with the rods were discovered in March of this year, when, as The New York Times noted in a front page article by Norimitsu Onishi last Saturday, 32 of 96 of the 17 to 34 foor long bolts installed in the main tower snapped.ZsFxX_Em_4

In chronicling the troubles encountered by these key earthquake safety features, The Times failed to connect  that the contractors of the Oakland Bay Bridge are the same contractors New York State has selected to build the new Tappan Zee Bridge, Fluor Corporation and American Bridge Company which form Tappan Zee Constructors.

According to the California Department of Transportation,  The Toll Bridge Oversight Committee which had been planning on a grand September Labor Day opening of the bridge, three things must happen before they can open the bridge:

* Completion of the investigation of why the seismic bolts failed.

* Firm date for the affixing of concrete saddles to reinforce the 96 bolts in place that cannot be removed. The approximate date is July 10

* A determination of what to do about the 2,300 bolts now being tested.

The oversight committee on May 29 also detailed a laundry list of problems the bridge has before opening, including “bad welds in the tower base, corroded skyway tendons and alignment of the suspension deck and Yerba Buena Island deck off by “a couple of inches,” which have been corrected.

In reviewing Bay area news coverage of the bridge, it is reported that according to documents released by the California Department of Transportation, Caltrans own inspectors identified problems with the bolts in 2007 and 2008. The Associated Press reported it is unclear whether the problems were remedied before they were installed. Caltrans inspectors noted bolts failed structural integrity tests and the quality of erosion protection. The AP report of these earlier events may be seen at

The manufacturer of the bolts has not commented. American Bridge Fluor, has not commented and the California Department of Transportation has not commented.

For an overview of the bridge situation go to http://sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com/tag/bay-bridge-bolts/

 

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County Approves Banishing source of Income in Determining Eligibility for Rentals

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From the County Board of Legislators. June 17, 2013:

The Westchester County Board of Legislators (BOL) approved tonight legislation banning discrimination against potential renters and home buyers based on their source income. The legislation, which has long been sought by advocates for fair and affordable housing, was a slightly modified version of the Source of Income legislation submitted by County Executive Rob Astorino to the BOL in April, and which he’d previously vetoed in 2010.

The one modification for the bill was to change a single exemption. Previously, a landlord living in and owning a rental property with four or less units and maintaining ownership or part ownership in another property of four or less units would be exempted from the law. The modified Source of Income legislation now simply exempts landlords and owners of one property of six or less units.

“This legislation will protect seniors, veterans and low-income working families struggling to find an affordable place to live and who depend on government assistance to get by,” said BOL Chairman Ken Jenkins (D-Yonkers). “No form of discrimination is acceptable in Westchester. Our communities will be stronger because of this legislation, which my colleagues on the Board of Legislators should rightfully be proud of.”

The Source of Income legislation, which was passed by the BOL in June 2010 but vetoed by County Executive Astorino, received more scrutiny by the County Board than any other local law in recent years, noted Jenkins. In addition to numerous committee meetings, there were several public hearings, with a variety of stakeholders providing comment, including landlords, tenants, realtors, tenant advocacy groups and business groups.  During a process of “extensive discussion and comment,” the legislation was re-drafted several times, ultimately resulting in the June 2010 legislation.

Westchester County was notified by the U. S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) that it would risk having $7.4 million in 2011 Community Development Block Grant  (CDBG) funds reallocated if Astorino failed to take steps toward promoting Source of Income legislation, as stipulated in the fair and affordable housing settlement between the County and the HUD.

Moreover, U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara demanded that the County Executive resubmit to the BOL the Source of Income legislation and provide written assurance he would sign the legislation, if passed by the BOL, or risk contempt of court charges and crippling fines against the County.

HUD has since declared that the County’s 2012 and 2013 CDBG funds, now totaling $17 million, are also at risk.

Although the legislation bans source of income discrimination, it allows landlords to use reasonable business judgment and level of income in evaluating potential tenants.

The legislation, which does not apply to cooperative apartments and condominiums, will sunset in five (5) years unless re-enacted, and it includes a 180-day phase-in period. Also, the County will conduct public education and outreach to inform the public about the new legislation once it is signed into law.

“The Board of Legislators has done everything possible to help County Executive Astorino promote Source of Income protections for county residents and move Westchester closer to full compliance with the housing settlement,” said Legislator Bill Ryan (D-White Plains), chair of the BOL Legislation Committee. “Now, it’s up to him to show the federal authorities that he’s serious about moving forward with the settlement and protecting our CDBG funds.”

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Germs Caused Kensico Burger Bash Barfing Says Health Department. No Burger Isolated at this time.

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WPCNR HEALTH HERALD. From Caren Halbfinger, Westchester County Department of Health. June 17, 2013:

The bacteria that has sickened some residents who attended the outdoor food festival at the Kensico Dam in Valhalla on June 6 has been identified as Campylobacter. The bacteria was identified through tests done on samples from several people who became ill after attending the event.

For most, symptoms will resolve on their own without medication within three to five days, although some people can take 10 days to recover. In rare cases where a person’s immune system is weakened by other illnesses or medication, or where illness is particularly severe, antibiotics may be prescribed. Campylobacter can cause diarrhea, vomiting and fever.

“Anyone who has not already become sick following this event should no longer be at risk,” said Health Commissioner Sherlita Amler, MD. “Anyone who continues to have symptoms should contact his or her physician and should not go to work or school until symptoms resolve.”

Due to the fact that at the June 6 event, most attendees ate food from many of the 30 food vendors, it may not be possible to identify the exact source of the bacteria at the Burger and Beer Bash at the Kensico Dam.  However, the health department is actively investigating and interviewing people who attended in an effort to identify the food or foods that may have been the source.

Most cases of campylobacteriosis are associated with eating raw or undercooked poultry meat or from cross-contamination of other foods by these items and occur two to five days after consuming the contaminated food. Cross-contamination can occur when the same knife or cutting board used to cut raw poultry is then used to prepare fruits, vegetables or any other food.

The health department issues more than 500 temporary food service permits each year. This is the first time in recent memory that a food outbreak occurred following a temporary event.

“As part of our response, the health department will send sanitarians to each of the food service establishments who participated in the festival to provide a refresher to restaurant staff about food safety, with special emphasis on safe off-site practices,” Amler said. “Sanitarians will also conduct a detailed food preparation review by observing as restaurant staffers prepare the foods they served at the June 6 event.”

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County Settles with County Police on 6 Year Contract thru 2014-Raises 3%, 2.75%, 2.5%, 2.5%,2.5%

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From the Westchester County Department of Communications. (Edited) June 17, 2013:

The rank and file police officers in the county’s Department of Public Safety would be the fifth county union to agree to a labor contract that includes employee contributions to the cost of their health care under terms of a tentative pact between the county and the Police Benevolent Association.

The contract provides for salary increases for police officers of 3 percent retroactive to 2009; 2.75 percent retroactive to 2010; and 2.5 percent retroactive to 2011, 2012, and for 2013 and 2014.

Under the terms of the tentative agreement with the PBA, members will contribute what amounts to about  $1,100 annually in health care for individuals or $3,100 for a family plan.   The proposed contract continues to include other differentials, a clothing allowance and special stipends to employees assigned to the aviation or K-9 units.

A tentative six-year contract, running retroactively from 2009  to the end of 2014, was announced today by  County Executive Robert P. Astorino and Michael Hagan, president of the 265-member union. It now needs to be ratified by the union and then by the county Board of Legislators.

In addition, for the first time all police officers would contribute to the cost of their health care. As such, the union becomes the fifth county union to agree to this concession, something that has been a cornerstone of union negotiations by the Astorino Administration. For current employees, this contribution will cease upon retirement. For all new hires, it will continue even upon retirement. This will begin to reduce the county’s substantial liability for health insurance for retirees.

Upon taking office, Astorino immediately initiated legislation that required nonunion  workers – including himself – to contribute to the costs of what was before that free health care. Since then, agreements have been negotiated with the Teamsters Local 456, the Correction Officers PBA, the  Corrections Superior Officers Association and the New York State Nurses Association.

“This agreement is in the best interests of Westchester County,” Astorino said. “This is a good contract, fair to the union and fair to our taxpayers. I thank Mike Hagan and his negotiating team for their hard work. At the same time I again call on the county’s largest union, the Civil Service Employees Association, to accept a contract where they contribute to their health care costs.”

Hagan said of the contract: “The Westchester County Police PBA is pleased to have reached a multi-year collective bargaining agreement with the County that will bring us current for the first time in nearly a decade.

This agreement is the result of the prolonged, good faith efforts by both sides, and addresses important issues, including health care costs, in a way that is fair and equitable to our membership and the residents that they serve.”

The CSEA has been working without a contract since Dec. 31, 2011.  The other unions still without a contract are the superior officers union for the county police and the union for the investigators in the District Attorney’s office.

 

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My Dad — the Real Personal Trainer

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How to Celebrate Father’s Day: A Parisien Martini and Bluepoint Oysters.

White Plains CitizeNetReporter WPCNR THE MONDAY BAILEY. By John F. Bailey. Republished from The CitizeNetReporter of June 17, 2007:

My father gave me three pieces of advice in life: Always drive an air-conditioned car. Always centrally air-condition your home. Stay out of court.   

And don’t sit in traffic.

Always take the service road on the Long Island Expressway. (He would have loved a Garmin.)

In restrospect, his advice has served me well.  I am always comfortable. I sit out traffic delays in comfort. I have not made lawyers rich.

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Charles F. Bailey

My Dad

Pleasantville, NY

1918-1986

He was not an emotional man. He was a banker and always wore suits to work. I have fond memories of going to meet him when he got off the train in Pleasantville – when  The train tracks were at grade with Manville Road.

I was most impressed as a young child by how he always smelled of coal cinders when he got off the train – like commuter’s cologne.

Sadly on today’s electric trains you do not get that. And you always heard those steam engines coming. You could see them: Clouds of very busy and industrious black smoke streaming at the horizon down the line. He’d get off the train.

My mother would move over and he’d drive the old Hudson Hornet home. He always spoke quietly. Never raised his voice. Drank scotch and soda in the winter. Gin and Tonics in the summer and he smoked Marlboros, then Kents.

He set up a Lionel train set in our basement – perhaps our unspoken connection. When I was sent in by train for the first time to meet him at the office during Christmas time, He’d have his secretary greet me at Grand Central Terminal which still is a very big and scary place.

He would take me to lunch at Jack’s Monte Rosa restaurant on 49th Street – which I thought was a very great place. When I first went to it with him, I was a little disappointed that it was not more glamourous but I was really impressed that Jack the owner greeted him by name. I thought that was great that my Dad was greeted with respect.

When I first started working in Washington, D.C. in 1968 I ate regularly at a restaurant below the television station WMAL-TV where I worked, it was called Marty’s Italian Village.  Mary, the owner started calling me when I came in around 7 PM, ‘Hi John, how are you?” People would look at me. They thought I was big.  I liked that.  

When my father came to visit me in Washington where I worked. I took him around town. I told him when he got off the plane. “Hi, Dad, welcome to my town.” I wanted to impress him. We’re always trying to impress our fathers. 

  Another Father time was when my Dad came out for Dad’s day at college. I mean this was a big thing to me. He watched me do play-by-play of a football game from atop the press box in 15 degree weather. It was cold. But he watched. Acted impressed.

Another time he impressed when I lost a job where I was working at the television station that I had been being considered for. And I told him how unfair it was, he put things in perspective: “Puggy, he said,  “The film manager wasn’t going to put you in as his Assistant if you were going to be bucking him all the time.” It put things in perspective. No false sentiment. No making me feel better, he was tough enough to teach by being realistic while telling me not to feel sorry for myself.

Then later in my career when I was fired out of a job completely blindsided. He again intervened, saying to me he thought what the agency head had done was a terrible thing. I needed that at the time.

He also, in a very supportive move, told me if I could make $1,000 a night writing a free lance direct mail package, I should keep trying to do that. 

Dads are there to say the right things to you at the right time. Sometimes it is not always the right thing, but they try. Often, if you’re lucky, as I was, they say the right thing. And not the wrong thing.

When I bought my first house in White Plains. He never criticised the house. But when I sold it, he complimented me, “I think it’s great how you came out of it (the crummy first house).” They’re personal trainers.  

The good ones  train you to run a race. If you stumble, no one hurts more than they do. When you succeed, no one is prouder. T

They know what you should do, but they can’t tell you, because you won’t do it if you’re a kid.

But the more subtler of them tell you any way in hopes it will sink in to the rebellious offspring mind. My dad was subtle.

Another fond memory: My father took me camping once at a friend’s cabin in Pennsylvania. Funny thing was there was such a great comic collection we wound up sleeping in sleeping bags on the porch of the cabin. That was funny.

Another time when I was being threatened in college over a position at the radio station, I asked him if I should just abdicate and assign a play-by-play position to the person who was being forced on me. He advised me to “stick to your guns,” so I reported the threat to the Dean.

The position was compromised, but I was never threatened again.  He never shared my love for baseball and sports. In fact he never played catch with me all that well.

I mean I could have made the big leagues (pipe dream) if he played catch with me more. But that’s a small criticism.  I wish I had more of his financial acumen. But I do not.

As you grow into your 30s and 40s, little things they say to you you begin to understand. My father never struck me, but always disciplined me with quiet words. I have not always been that way as a parent myself, being somewhat volatile. I wish I had his even temperament. He always asked me to take care of my mother. And the only time he really got mad at me was when I had made my mother upset with me.

He was a little like John Wayne in the way he disciplined, I remember he would say admonitions quietly. Such as when I got an F in an English course at college. He told me, that was the last F I would get at Ohio Wesleyan, because the next one he would stop paying my tuition.

That had an effect. And that was when tuition was only $3,000 a year.

So, on Father’s Day, I think of him as I do every day of my life. I become more like him every day. He is always lingering in the background of my thoughts. I do not know what he would think of what I am doing now.  But, he’d say — “If that’s what you want to do. Do it.” He also would say, “You have to make yourself happy.”

I also think, even today of what advice (laconic as always) he’d give me in a situation. And I wish I could discuss property taxes with him.

I especially have to salute him, because I am an adopted child. That alone makes me appreciate his love and acceptance with a sense of awe to this day.

 You never outgrow your need for Dad.