2 Democrats Join Republicans to Approve 2013 County Budget. Astorino Signs It.

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From the Westchester County Department of Communications. December7,2012:


                      


The  $1.7 billion Westchester County budget was approved 9-0 this afternoon by a coalition of seven Republicans and two Democrats. The remaining Democrats walked out of the Legislative Chambers.


            County Executive Robert Astorino said he was proud of the work of the bipartisan coalition that had drawn up the final budget. “This is what government should be about – people of all political sides working together to do right by the public.”


            He singled out Democrats Michael Kaplowitz and Virginia Perez for their willingness to work with him, Republican Minority Leader Jim Maisano, Gordon Burrows and their Republican caucus.


 


 


            This is the third consecutive year that Astorino has initiated and signed budgets that have reduced or kept flat the county’s tax levy on property owners. 


            The final document signed differs in the following ways from the original proposal Astorino made Nov. 14:


 


·        Additional funding will strengthen public safety, emergency services, probation and the DA’s office.


·        Other restored positions were five engineers from Public Works and three parks curators.


·        The parental contribution for subsidized day care was reduced to 27 percent, from Astorino’s proposal to make it 35 percent. 


·        An additional $200,000 was allocated to Cornell Cooperation Extension, making its total $800,000.


·        Arts in Westchester was given $500,000 more, making its total $1.25 million.


·        Other additions were made for legal services for immigrants ($220,000) and  small business loans and technical assistance ($160,000).


 


      “I can accept these changes,” said Astorino, “because the coalition made sure that it came up with a spending plan that did not raise taxes, did not under fund programs, did not hurt the county’s most needy  and did not in any way jeopardize the county’s three triple A bond ratings. I thank everyone for their hard work.”  

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DAY OF INFAMY

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Out of the Sun


A Memorial Poem




The Arizona engulfed December 7, 1941 Pearl Harbor


 



Out of the sun on the quiet Sunday they came


Birds of death blazened with red suns raining fiery havoc on Battleship Row.


One by one, ruthless planes dove, destroyed to their nation’s shame.


Thunderous explosions scattered fiery death on Sunday dawn’s glow.


 



Flames belched from bowels of stricken Arizona, America’s pride,


On Hicham Field pilots raced to planes to defend


As their birds were crippled on ground by Zeros’ glide


Gunners in turrets on ships floundering filled skies with flack’s din.


 



In search of carriers, marauders could not find


Ruthlessly strafed and bombed leaving Pearl


In smoking ruin. Ships sunk, burning as raiders flew into the Sun


The day of infamy had been ignited in the Zeros’ swirl.




The Attack Begins 8 AM December 7, 1941


 



As America listened a world away, somber FDR


Spoke of this day that will live in infamy.


America must never forget that Pearl Harbor Scar


When an unsuspecting America slept in complacency.


 



To the 2,403 perishing that day under merciless bombs


Hails of bullets, terror of torpedos out of nowhere


America must remember forces against our freedoms


Relentlessly work always to surprise with deadly bombs’ glare.


 



Vigilence is the price of freedom always to be defended


Against those who would destroy our republic from within


By dark forces in far off places we have offended.


The answer is not curtailing freedom at home rather it to champion.



The USS Arizona lies in Pearl’s waters, bleeding the lives


 


Of her men through the eerie eternal slick marking the rusting hulk.


Beneath Pearl’s waters, the blood of free people oozes from the shadowy bulk,


Bleeding forever, freedom’s spirit living eternally in lost lives remembered.



She never rests.





Note: The Pearl Harbor attack which took place 70 years ago today and its aftermath is dramatically depicted at http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/events/wwii-pac/pearlhbr/pearlhbr.htm

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Governor, In cabinet Meeting, Unveils 3 Tappan Zee Bridge Designs

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WPCNR TAPPAN ZEE BRIDGE NEWS. From the New York State Thruway Authority. December 6,  2012 UPDATED 11:40 A.M. E.D.T.:


Governor Andrew Cuomo unveiled the three designs for the new Tappan Zee Bridge yesterday at a cabinet meeting in Albany. Each of the three proposed designs comes in under the $5.2 Billion estimated costs previously.





In a Power Point Program presented at the cabinet meeting by the Governor, the least expensive design, Proposal 1 comes in at $3.14 Billion, and is favored by the Governor-appointed design panel, because of its lower cost according to Brian Conybeare, a spokesperson for the Governor.


The decision on which of the three designs is to be built will be made by the Thruway Authority December 17, Conybeare told WPCNR.


 The new double span design has suspension construction, similar to the new San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge, and the bridge crossing the Maumee River in Toledo, Ohio. You may download the power point program at www.newnybridge.com.







The Governor said the designs come in at $1 billion less than originally estimated that the company selected would be responsible for any cost overruns, and that $600 Million to $800 Million would be added to the cost of any bridge for financing, management, contingencies, and aesthetic improvements.


The first bridge achieves its saving, accoording to the power point because it calls for less dredging, can be constructed in 5 years, 2-1/2 months,  while Proposals 2 and 3 take six years to build and dredge far more of the Hudson River bed. Each of the three proposals has unique u-turns, to detour traffic off the bridge in case of a accident on the span. Proposal 3 though the most expensive is not mass transit ready, according to the Power Point and would require more costs in the future to make it mass transit ready.


The name of the construction group has been disclosed by a source close to the bridge selection committee. However, Mr. Conybeare said the name of the contractor of the preferred proposal was not reported officially.


Asked if disclosure of the contracting group giving out  “preferred proposal” (a violation of TIFIA loan application rules)could jeopardize the chances of New York State being approved for the $2.9 Billion TIFIA loan the state has applied for, Conybeare said he did not know.


WPCNR has placed a call to Amy Bernstein of TIFIA, inquiring how leaking of the contractor who submitted the Selection Committee’s preferred proposal, affects consideration of the state proposal.


The Governor said construction would be begin in 2013.


 

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International Cyber Fraud Auto Fraud Ring Smashed.

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WPCNR FBI WIRE. Special to WPCNR from the Federal Bureau of Investigation. December 5, 2012:


In a coordinated international takedown, law enforcement officials in Romania, the Czech Republic, the United Kingdom, and Canada, acting on provisional arrest requests made by the United States, arrested Romanian nationals Emil Butoi, Aurel Cojocaru, Nicolae Ghebosila, Cristea Mircea, Ion Pieptea, and Nicolae Simion. Another defendant, Albanian national Fabian Meme, is already incarcerated in the Czech Republic.


The U.S. arrest warrants, unsealed today, were issued in the Eastern District of New York based on a federal complaint alleging the defendants’ involvement in a sophisticated multi-million-dollar cyber fraud scheme that targeted consumers on U.S.-based Internet marketplace websites. The government will seek the defendants’ extradition to the United States pursuant to the relevant international treaties.


The charges and arrests were announced by Loretta E. Lynch, United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York; Lanny A. Breuer, Assistant Attorney General of the Criminal Division of the Department of Justice; and George Venizelos, Assistant Director in Charge, Federal Bureau of Investigation, New York Field Office.


As alleged in the complaint, the defendants were responsible for saturating Internet marketplace websites, such as eBay.com, Cars.com, AutoTrader.com, and CycleTrader.com, with detailed advertisements for cars, motorcycles, boats, and other high-value items generally priced in the $10,000 to $45,000 range.


Unbeknownst to the buyers, however, the merchandise did not exist. The so-called sellers, who worked for the defendants, corresponded with the victim buyers by e-mail, sending fraudulent certificates of title and other information designed to lure the victims into parting with their money. Sometimes, they pretended to sell cars from non-existent auto dealerships in the United States and even created phony websites for these fictitious dealerships.


In at least one transaction, involving defendant Ghebosila, the purported “seller” pretended to be the widow of an Iraq war veteran who was selling her family’s mobile home so that she could care for her children. In other transactions, the defendants duped victims into sending tens of thousands of dollars for non-existent vehicles, including Lexus, Audi, Ford, Chevrolet, Dodge, Toyota, Mercedes, Porsche, and BMW cars; Big Dog Mastiff and Ninja motorcycles; a Fleetwood Storm motor home; and boats.


As part of the scheme alleged in the complaint, defendants Cojocaru, Meme, Butoi, and others produced high-quality fake passports so that foreign national co-conspirators in the United States, known as “arrows,” could use the passports as identification to open American bank accounts. As alleged in the complaint, Cojocaru was recorded on video during the investigation displaying new holograms that he was using to create more authentic-looking passports.


As alleged in the complaint, after the fake “sellers” reached an agreement with the victim buyers, they would often e-mail them invoices purporting to be from Amazon Payments, PayPal, or other online payment services, with wire transfer instructions. However, these invoices were also fraudulent—the defendants and their co-conspirators used counterfeit service marks in designing the invoices so that they would appear identical to communications from legitimate payment services.


The fraudulent invoices directed the buyers to send money to the American bank accounts that had been opened by the “arrows.” Finally, the “arrows” would collect the illicit proceeds and send them to the defendants in Europe by wire transfer and other methods. For example, the “arrows” forwarded defendant Pieptea $18,000 cash in fraud proceeds hidden inside hollowed-out audio speakers. Other “arrows” used the proceeds to purchase expensive Audemars Piguet watches and then sent the watches to the defendants abroad.


According to the complaint, it is estimated that the defendants earned over $3 million from the fraudulent scheme.


Each defendant is charged with wire fraud conspiracy and money laundering conspiracy, and defendants Butoi, Cojocaru, Meme, Mircea, Pieptea, and Simion are also charged with passport fraud conspiracy. If convicted, the defendants each face a maximum sentence of 20 years’ imprisonment on each of the wire fraud conspiracy and money laundering conspiracy counts and 10 years’ imprisonment on the passport fraud conspiracy count.


“As alleged, the defendants ran a sophisticated fraud scheme that used the Internet to reach across the globe and into the homes of unsuspecting Americans. They utilized high-tech counterfeiting techniques to create an aura of online legitimacy.


This virtual con game nevertheless cost Americans real money. Thanks to our international partnerships, even the most sophisticated and tech-savvy criminal organizations are not beyond the reach of law enforcement. No matter how complex the scheme, we will spare no effort in protecting American consumers from fraud on the Internet,” stated United States Attorney Lynch.


“As a result of extensive cooperation between U.S. and European law enforcement officials, the defendants have been charged with a scheme to defraud unsuspecting Americans of millions of dollars,” said Assistant Attorney General Breuer. “The Department of Justice is committed to finding and prosecuting Internet fraud aggressively, wherever it happens and however hard the perpetrators work to conceal their crimes.”


FBI Assistant Director in Charge Venizelos stated, “The FBI is committed to protecting the American public from predatory conduct whether it originates here or abroad. The international nature of many organized crime groups makes it essential for us to work with our partners here and overseas—as we did in this investigation—to rein in the alleged criminals.”


The offices of the FBI Legal Attachés in Romania, the Czech Republic, the United Kingdom, Canada, and Hungary were instrumental in coordinating efforts with the United States’ international partners, and the Department of Justice’s Office of International Affairs worked with its counterparts in these countries to effect the provisional arrests and requests for mutual legal assistance, including the forfeiture of the illegal proceeds of these crimes. The Department of Justice’s Asset Forfeiture and Money Laundering Section also provided assistance with the forfeitures.


The U.S. government thanks the Romanian government, particularly the Ministry of Justice, the Romanian Internal Intelligence Service, and the Directorate for Combating Organized Crime, for their collaborative efforts throughout this long-term investigation, and also thanks the Czech National Police, Hungarian National Bureau of Investigation, Metropolitan Police Service in England, Montreal Police Service, Royal Canadian Mounted Police, International Organized Crime Intelligence and Operations Center (IOC2), Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3), Costa Mesa Police Department, Orange County District Attorney’s Office, and the New York City Police Department for their assistance.


The government’s case is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Cristina Posa, Vamshi Reddy, and Claire Kedeshian, and Trial Attorney Carol Sipperly of the Criminal Division’s Computer Crimes and Intellectual Property Section.


The charges in the complaint are merely allegations, and the defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.


Defendants


Emil Butoi
Age: 34
Romanian


Aurel Cojocaru
Age: 43
Romanian


Nicolae Ghebosila
Age: 43
Romanian


Fabian Meme
Age: 42
Albanian


Cristea Mircea
Age: 30
Romanian


Ion Pieptea
Age: 36
Romanian


Nicolae Simion
Age: 37
Romanian

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TRAFFIC, R.I.P.,(Rest in Parking) SUNRISE TOXIC. MACY Bloomis $1.8M BLOW

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WPCNR COMMON COUNCIL-CHRONICLE EXAMINER. By John F. Bailey, December 4, 2012:


 


The White Plains Traffic Department


 


Born 1979. Died 2012


 


R.I.P.


 


A funeral service was held for the nationally recognized White Plains Traffic Department Monday night.


 


The service was solemn. The fate of the Department of  Traffic was not deterred, despite the impassioned pleas of its founder and first Commissioner, Bernard Adler, who eulogized the national achievements and recognition the WPTD has earned in its short 33 year life since it was founded in the Alfred Del Vecchio administration in 1979


 


A handful of mourners showed up at last night’s public hearing, three of whom came to praise Commissioner of Traffic Tom Soyk, the certified traffic engineer who will move over to the Department of Parking under the direction of Commissioner of Parking, John Larson.


 


The Common Council voted unanimously to fold the TD into the Parking Department in the name of accomplishing efficiencies.


 


All Councilpersons except Milagros Lecuona said the move was made in light of the  efficiencies accomplished by Mr. Soyk and Mr. Larson’s joining their two maintenance forces over the past year. At no time in the short hearing did any member of the Council put a dollar figure on the savings, or how much the amalgamation was saving.   Lecouna questioned consolidating the department after only a year, and why it had to be done so fast without exploring how combined traffic and parking departments worked in other communities.


 


Bernard Adler recounted the founding of the Traffic Department in the late 1970s to address specifically management of traffic in the city. He noted in his remarks (that can be seen on the city website in the “consent agenda section”) how the traffic department designed and installed the first computer-run traffic light system that could sequence lights throughout the city, among a number of national honors.


 


He closed his remarks saying he had no doubt that as long as Mr. Soyk was Deputy Commissioner of  Parking for Transportation Engineering (his new title, retaining his present salary of $131,580 a year), he felt traffic management would be in good hands:


 


 “While Commissioner Soyk is still employed by the city, the streets will move efficiently, the planning board, zoning board and this Common Council will receive thorough and thoughtful reviews of  (traffic) matters before the city. However,  it is my considerate professional opinion that after Tom Soyk leaves, and  without a person functioning with the title of Commissioner of Traffic, the caliber of succeeding candidates will be well below the standards that the city has expected and has enjoyed these last thirty years. Without  an independent Commissioner of Traffic,important traffic innovations will languish in this city.”


 


The Mayor dismissed the notion the city would not be able to attract high quality traffic experts to serve in the city because the city is very attractive and has not had trouble doing so in the past. He also said the city is now embracing a concept he called “Complete Streets,” which he said recognizes that streets are for everyone, and not just cars, and moving cars in an efficient (“speedy”) manner. The Mayor said  it is good to move traffic well but “it makes a big difference if they hit someone.”


 


Mayor Thomas Roach noted after the hearing was closed that the city would have no trouble attracting worthy and competent individuals to fill any future  vacancy in the position.


 


In January a hearing will be held to change the zoning ordinances to reflect the responsibilities and procedures under the new arrangement.



 


In other action,


 


WATER RATES RAISED. $10 More a Year Average


 


The Common Council Raised water rates by passing ordinances on the consent agenda, but no one on the Council explained in the live television broadcast what the new rates were. The Mayor remarked the rates are going up because New York City is raising its rates for water, and White Plains gets 90% of its water


 


WPCNR notes that the Council backup material explains that for the first 5,000 cubic feet of water used, the rate goes up to $1.73 per 100 cubic feet for residential customers for the first 10,000 cubic feet, this is about a 6% increase from this year’s rate of  $1.63.


 


Commercial users ( who use120,000 cubic feet and over quarterly) will pay $3.27 per 100 cubic feet for the first 2,500 cubic feet and $3.66 /100 cubic feet after they exceed 5,000 square feet.


 


An example: A three-member family in a typical home paid $141 for 84 100 cubic feet units in October for the last six months. This will go up to $145 and change about a 3% increase. A complete list of  the new water rates is in the backup material viewable on the city website.


 


Commissioner of Public Works explained  during the consent agenda portion of the meeting why the rates were going up:


 


“The city has had raises (from New York City) that have averaged 13% a year for the last five years and that’s certainly been my experience it’s been going on a lot longer, but we just have records for the last five years. That accounts for the majority of it.


 


We purchase almost all of our raw water from New York City and we’re at the mercy of that even though we’ve challenged  their ability to have rate increases like that (through) the coalition of a number of other communities , Yonkers, Scarsdale, Mount Vernon, North Castle . The state has said they do have the right to charge us what they feel is right in the name of conservation, so those rate increases stand  and they have absolutely nothing to do with the cost of living.


That, and there are a number of increase requirements: testing has to be done on a more frequent basis, more elaborate tests, more pathogens we’re required to look for, so the cost of that as well as a number of capital projects are contributing to this increase, and we’re still in the lowest five of the fifty water purveyors.”


 


The Daily News reported this spring the City of New York water rates have gone up because “the Bloomberg administration has pushed forward billions of dollars worth of upgrades to the city’s (New York City) water and sewer system, including building a mammoth third water tunnel and a state-of-the-art water filtration plantin the Bronx.”


 


The News also reported part of the latest round of increases to cities like White Plains to make up for $40 Million in added costs to the improving of the Croton Water Filtration Plant, that serves reservoirs and lakes upstate. The reporters were Barry Paddock and Reuven Blau.



 


 


Macy’s Bloomingdales Property Tax Refunds Approved.


 


Assessments Lowered Impacting 2012-13 Assessment Roll


 


The city’s two largest retailers were awarded $405,000 in property tax refunds from the city for assessments lowered  for the years 09/10,10/11,11/12 and the upcoming tax year 2012-13. This means, according to the city Assessor’s Office that the reduced assessments totaling $405,000  will come off the 2012-13 Assessment Roll, due March 1, 2013.



 


 


SUNRISE DETOX HEARING CLOSED AFTER TOXIC HEARING.


 


The evening ended with the controversial hearing on the CFI Inc. Sunrise Detox Center matter where CFI Inc. Sunrise is seeking a Special Permit to run a short –term residence detox program for individuals at 37 DeKalb Avenue, the former Nathan Miller Nursing Home in the middle of the Carhart neighborhood.


 


After a stormy hearing, the hearing was closed, clearing the way for a vote on the project and its needed Special Permit that could take place in January.


 


The Sunrise representatives began the hearing disputing the allegations of criminal incidents taking place at their Sterling New Jersey and Lake Worth Florida facilities, saying a law enforcement consultant investigated the complaints and found no incidents were any criminal activity affected residents around those facilities.


 


Representatives of the Carhart  Neighborhood Association, said that saying there was not any criminal activity or charges filed, may be true, but that was because the majority of call-ins to othe police from the home involved missing persons, Ken Kristol of the Carhart Association read police reports of three such missing persons incidents.


 


Mayor Roach took exception to one resident’s remarks pointing out that if this project were proposed for neighborhoods in the south end it would not have been considered. She also noted how three representatives of the CFI-Sunrise project are well-known in the city,  and have conducted business with the city for a long time. Mayor Roach defended the city considering the project:


 


“I’ll just say there’s something that’s not a joke to me which is allegations of impropriety or suggesting  that this is only being entertained because of the neighborhood it’s (going to be) in because we have to entertain any application that’s permitted under the zoning, anywhere in the city.


 


“This isn’t  us sitting in a lawn chair behind city hall just on a whim deciding to bring an application in here. That’s offensive. And it’s not fair to this council, who I know put so much time, work and effort in preserving this city. When you throw those things around,  I mean, to say something like someone contributed to a (city) charity, somehow that makes this improper? God help us if we get to the point where no one in this city can contribute to any charity because we really count on that. We have a very activist city.


 


And you know what, it’s a small city. People get know each other, I can understand when people are emotional and worry about an outcome they can seize on that. But the reality is being cordial to someone. I’ve been a trial lawyer for 26 years, I would be fighting my tail off in court, and I go out in the hallway and say to the guy I’ve just been arguing, have a nice weekend. It doesn’t mean I’m undermining my client.”


 


The final speaker living for seven years at 24 Carhart Avenue, took up the matter that from the standpoint of why would the city entertain putting the project in the neighborhood. He said he was so proud of the way the city responded to the hurricane October 29, that the Mayor had spoke of at the top of the Council meeting,  “ I was so proud of it, but at the same time, I can’t  even imagine that we are entertaining to put such a detox….”


 


The Mayor interrupted him talking over him, “Understand we have a legal obligation (unintelligle).Let me just say something I don’t take this personally. I understand your frustration, your concern. When we  take office, we raise our right hand and we swear to uphold the Constitution of the United States, the State of New York,and the Charter of the City of White Plains,and we mean it. Part of that is to entertain applications that we legally have to entertain. What I’ve tried to do is create a hearing environment in which the neighbors and proponents of the application can be heard in a civilized atmosphere.


 


It’s surprising to me after what I’ve just said that you would say you can’t  be believe we are entertaining it. Well I don’t know where to go with that.”


 


The citizen attempted to explain:


 


“I’ll continue with that because that is the appearance what the citizens of  White Plains are getting it…and that’s what I’m conveying to you.”


 


Then Council President Beth Smayda interrupted the citizen again, overriding him saying,


 


“I think if we weren’t doing it in public then you may have something to complain (about) but this Mayor and this council is very committed to abiding by the charter and  we are legally bound to review applications and we’re doing them in public. I hope there isn’t any intimation that that is not the case.”


 


The citizen was not to be deterred, responding:


 


“There is no such intimation. What we want to point out  is the fact that we talked about Sandy, we talked about city is committed to residents there. At the same time there was a national disaster and here is a human-made disaster (the detox center) that is supposed to happen when we are going to put a detox center right there in a residential neighborhood.


 


In the example what was given was, there were two houses next to the facility in Florida. Two houses, two familes? There are nearly a  thousand houses in that (Carhart) Neighborhood which are a stone’s throw away. So that (Sunrise) comparison of two houses is totally out of order.”


 


The Mayor then asked, “Anyone else?”


 


Bill Null, the Sunrise attorney came to the podium, and reminded the chamber that the Sunrise proposal  for the community residence was a permitted use subject to a special permit, meets the definition of the city building code and of the zoning ordinance. He said the neighborhood’s contention that drug addiction and alcohol addiction are not disabilities is not correct, citing  under New York Mental Hygiene Law Section 103, definitions,  a mental disability “means mental illness, mental retardation, developmental disability, alcoholism, substance dependence, or chemical dependence.”


 


He noted: “So this is a facility that is legally treating disabled individuals  under the zoning ordinance.”

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D.A. isolates 4 circumstances that were present in 26 infant deaths in 6 years.

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WPCNR D.A. Report. From Lucian Chalfin, Office of the Westchester County District Attorney. December 4, 2012:


 


The Westchester County District Attorney’s office has isolated four common circumstances that have been typically found involved in 26 infant deaths in Westchester County in the last six years.


 


The Westchester County Child Fatality Review Team was established six years ago to review every suspicious death of a child in Westchester County. To date, it has investigated the deaths of 63 children of which the vast majority – 26 deaths – occurred while the infants were in unsafe sleeping environments – by far the largest subset of the deaths reviewed.


 


All twenty six of the infants were just weeks to a few months old. Although the cause and circumstances of their deaths were specific to each case, a number of troubling similarities became evident:


 



  • the use of inappropriate bedding,
  • the use of pillows or stuffed animals in the sleeping area,
  • sleeping in an adult bed with one or more other individuals,
  • the use of drugs or alcohol by adults before bed time.

 


In an effort to combat this continuing trend, the District Attorneys Office, a founding member of the CFRT, along with 8 Hospitals throughout Westchester County, has developed a safe sleeping campaign to inform and educate both parents and caregivers.


 


The primary element in the campaign is: “The ABC’s of Safe Sleeping”, a six minute video produced with support from Lawrence Hospital Center and narrated by Dr. Jennifer Canter, the Director of Child Protection for the Maria Fareri Children’s Hospital at Westchester Medical Center and the CFRT’s forensic pediatrician. Dr. Canter guides new parents or caregivers through safe sleeping practices for their baby. The practices are based on guidelines established by the American Academy of Pediatrics.


 


In the video, Dr. Canter explains why a baby:


 


·        sleeps safest Alone,


·        on its Back,


·        in a Crib,


The campaign will begin with video’s distribution to the 8 participating Westchester hospitals, in both English and Spanish:


 


Initial funding for the video was provided by Lawrence Hospital Center.


 


The participating hospitals are:


 



  • Hudson Valley Hospital Center,

  • Lawrence Hospital Center,

  • Westchester Medical Center; Maria Fareri Children’s Hospital at Westchester Medical Center,

  • Northern Westchester Hospital,

  • Phelps Memorial Hospital,

  • St. John’s Riverside Medical Center,

  • Sound Shore Medial Center of Westchester,

  • White Plains Hospital Center.

 


In addition, the campaign will include a door hanger and a poster with the safe sleeping message.


 


The hospitals will use a number of channels for communicating the safe sleeping message such as:


 



  • showing “The ABC’s of Safe Sleeping” to new parents in their maternity departments, and consider including it in their discharge materials;

  • showing the video in other appropriate settings, such as classes for new parents;

  • posting the video on their websites;

  • distributing the “The ABC’s of Safe Sleeping” door hanger to new parents;

  • displaying the “The ABC’s of Safe Sleeping” poster in appropriate locations within the hospital.

 


“In the interest of promoting safe sleeping practices, we created these important resources for parents and caregivers that these participating Westchester hospitals have agreed to show to new parents following the birth of a baby,” explained Westchester County District Attorney Janet DiFiore. “We know that these deaths were preventable and that is why we are committed to communicating this potentially life-saving information before the new parent or parents leave the hospital. We also urge all parents to share this information or watch the video with any caregiver so there is no misunderstanding of what is best for the newborn.”


 


“At Lawrence Hospital Center we deliver nearly two thousand babies each year,” said Edward M. Dinan, President and CEO of Lawrence Hospital Center.  “We work with mothers from pre-pregnancy through delivery to do all we possibly can to bring healthy babies into the world.  It only makes sense that we take the added step and join in with our District Attorney Janet DiFiore to support the creation and promotion of “The ABC’s of Safe Sleeping” video to educate parents and caregivers about the dangers of unsafe sleeping habits.  This is about saving babies’ lives, and we’ll be taking this message directly to every one of our maternity patients.”


 


“We thank the District Attorney for including us in this very important project to educate parents on safe sleeping practices,” said Hudson Valley Hospital President John Federspiel. “The information imparted to the community will go a long way towards keeping our children safe.”


 


Northern Westchester Hospital supports the District Attorney’s safe sleeping initiative and the American Academy of Pediatrics Safe Sleeping guidelines. For us at NWH, that means ‘modeling’ the safe sleep environment in the way we care for the over 1,700 newborns we welcome into the world each year. We encourage and support mothers who have chosen to breastfeed by offering lactation consultants during and after their stay, and we encourage immunization which has been shown to reduce the risk of SIDS. And of course, we disseminate appropriate literature to educate families, which will now include the DA’s excellent video The ABC’s of Safe Sleeping,” Joel Seligman, President and CEO.


 


Dr. Jennifer Canter, the Director of Child Protection at Maria Fareri Children’s Hospital at Westchester Medical Center and the Medical Director of the Westchester County Child Fatality Review Team said, “Maria Fareri Children’s Hospital at Westchester Medical Center is in the process of conducting research as to the potential impact of this safe sleep educational program. We are hopeful that our results will demonstrate the program’s effectiveness in increasing awareness of safe sleep risk factors analogous to our successful statewide abusive head trauma prevention initiative, which resulted in a 75% reduction of abusive head trauma in our region.”


 


President and CEO of Phelps Memorial Hospital, Keith Safian, supports the initiative designed to prevent infant deaths associated with unsafe sleep environments, stating, “The educational materials provided through this program will enhance our efforts to address this important issue with all of our new parents, and we look forward to collaborating with other hospitals and agencies to increase awareness for greater infant safety.  We commend District Attorney Janet DiFiore for her leadership with this noteworthy initiative.”


 


St. John’s Riverside Hospital is the only maternity Services provider in the City of Yonkers and is proud to be part of this Safe Sleeping Initiative,” said Ronald J. Corti, President and CEO of St. John’s. “We believe in the power of education and in this case, educating our new parents and other caregivers on the importance of safe sleeping practices for infants.”


 


President and CEO of Sound Shore Medical Center John Spicer said, “As a New York State Department of Health designated Prenatal Hospital with a Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, Sound Shore has always had a keen interest in babies and safeguarding their health and well-being. Just last year, we delivered 1,077 reasons to encourage parents to adopt Westchester County‘s Safe Sleeping practices.”


Jon Schandler CEO and President of White Plains Hospital said, “We feel we have a responsibility to ensure that the over 2,000 babies born at White Plains Hospital each year have the very best start in life.  We are pleased to be able to partner with Westchester County on this important public health initiative to educate parents, grandparents and other caregivers on these essential guidelines to ensure newborns stay healthy and safe once they leave the hospital.”


 


Additionally, the Maria Fareri Children’s Hospital will be conducting a research project entitled: the “Newborn Sleep Practices”. The research project’s goal is to evaluate the potential impact of the new Safe Sleep Video on newborn parents’ knowledge about safe sleeping. This project, led by Dr. Jennifer Canter and Child Abuse Pediatrics fellow Dr. Vinod Rao, has undergone review and approval through the New York Medical College‘s Institutional Review Board prior to its initiation. 


 


Extensive surveys regarding sleep practice knowledge and planning will be statistically analyzed before and after the video’s implementation to determine if the video had a positive impact as a preventative measure.

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Cnty Sewage Plant Resumes Fully Treated Sewage. Ban Lifted 2.8 B Gals Later

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WPCNR WATCH ON THE RIVER. From Caren Halbfinger, the Westchester County Department of Health. December 4, 2012  (EDITED):


 


 The advisory cautioning against contact with the Hudson River in Westchester was lifted today by the Westchester County Department of Health.


People who use the Hudson River waters for recreational purposes, namely swimmers, boaters, kayakers and windsurfers, are free to resume direct contact with the water.


The advisory had been issued as a precaution during Super Storm Sandy on Oct 29, after the Yonkers Joint Wastewater Treatment Plant was shut down to protect equipment and for the safety of employees. The plant was flooded and sustained heavy damage as a result of the storm.  The plant began achieving secondary wastewater treatment on Nov. 22 and test results of the plant effluent demonstrate that the effluent limits are being met. Although the plant is fully functioning, repairs are ongoing and are expected to cost $12.65 million.


 


(Editor’s Note: The Health Department told WPCNR that from 80 million to 100 million gallons a day of partially treated sewage (screened, chlorine-treated only) was fed into the river during the 36 days the plant was undergoing repairs. WPCNR estimates about 2.8 billion to 3 billion gallons of substandard effluent (below Environmental Protection Agency approved levels) were released into the Hudson since October 29.)

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4,896 Register for FEMA $$ in two weeks.

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WPCNR THE RECOVERY REPORT. Special to WPCNR. December 3, 2012:


According to Nathan Custer, spokesperson for FEMA, in a statement to WPCNR this morning,  242,947 survivors have registered with FEMA in the 13 counties in New York for which Individual Assistance (IA) was approved.


·         In Westchester County,  Custer reports, 4,986 have registered in the two weeks FEMA has had representeatives available in the County Center to register persons seeking FEMA financial help.


ToToday, FEMEA issued a news release detailing additional steps you need to take to preserve FEMA aid eligibility if your insurance company is taking more than 5 days since you registered with FEMA  to determine your insurance reimbursement.


Keep in mind that you need to file your insurance claim with your insurance company as soon as possible. Failure to file a claim may affect a policyholder’s eligibility for disaster assistance.


 


After filing a claim, if any of the following situations occur, FEMA may be able to provide some assistance:


 


Your insurance settlement is delayed.


·                  “Delayed” means a decision on your insurance settlement has been delayed longer than 30 days from the time you filed the claim.


·                  If a decision on your insurance settlement has been delayed, you will need to mail or fax a letter to FEMA explaining the circumstance. Mail or fax your letter to:


FEMA IHP


National Processing Service Center


PO Box 10055


Hyattsville, MD 20782-8055


 


Fax: 1-800-827-8112


 


·                  You should include documentation from the insurance company proving that you filed the claim. 


 


·                  If you filed your claim over the telephone, you should include the claim number, date when you applied, and the estimated time of how long it will take to receive your settlement.


·                  If you receive FEMA assistance and you later find that your insurance will cover what your FEMA assistance was for, then you must return that money to FEMA because it is considered a duplicate benefit.


 


You have exhausted the Additional Living Expenses (ALE) provided by your insurance company.


·                  If you have received the maximum settlement from your insurance for Additional Living Expenses and still need help with your disaster-related temporary housing need, mail or fax a letter to FEMA at the above address indicating why you continue to have a temporary housing need.


·                  You will also need to provide documentation to prove use of ALE from insurance, and a permanent housing plan.


 


You have up to 12 months from the date of registration with FEMA to submit insurance information for review.


 


For more information on New York’s disaster recovery, visit www.fema.gov/disaster/4085, http://twitter.com/FEMASandy, www.facebook.com/FEMASandy and www.fema.gov/blog


 


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Teamsters Picket WP Transfer Station. City Garbage Trucks Honor Picket Line.

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. By John F. Bailey. November 29, 2012 UPDATED 11:25 A.M E.S.T.:


Teamsters Local 813 is picketing the White Plains garbage transfer station on Brockway Place this morning.



City of White Plains Sanitation Truck being waved off entrance to garbage offloading area this morning by Teamsters Pickets.


The picketing protests the Westchester County garbage hauling contractor hiring non-union drivers to drive the transfer trucks that cart garbage from White Plains to the county disposal plant  in Peekskill.


Phil Oliva, of the County Executive Robert Astorino’s office, told WPCNR at midday that he expected the dispute to be resolved today (and not interrupt garbage collection). He said the Carting Company had the right to hire non-union workers as long as the company paid the “prevailing wage.”


Karen Pasquale, Advisor to the Mayor of White Plains, told WPCNR this afternoon the action is not affecting city pick-up or disposal.


 



The protest started Thursday afternoon, pickets told WPCNR this morning and is over a contract dispute with City Carting, the county-contracted garbage hauler that has the county contract. WPCNR was told the picketing is also in effect at Yonkers and Mount Vernon. The dispute is not with City of White Plains practices.


Pickets said the teamsters  have been without a contract with City Carting for  a year and recently Carting had laid off five union drivers and started using non-union drivers to transfer the trash at least in White Plains.


The picket told WPCNR the teamsters voted down City Carting’s recent contract offering because it called for almost zero raise increase over the next three years and  raising union members’ share of medical benefits of $30 a month share the first year, $60 the second year and $66 the third year. The picketer WPCNR spoke with, who requested anonymity because of fear of retaliation said the union realizes paying more for medical benefits is needed, but said it was too much of an increase. He also said the 7 year contract over raised wages only 75 cents an hour over seven years.


Several White Plains sanitation trucks with full loads were prevented from delivering their load of leaves to the transfer area during WPCNR observation this morning.


WPCNR  has a call in to the Mayor’s Office to ascertain how the inability to transfer garbage will affect garbage collection today and tomorrow.


Other transfer stations in Yonkers and Mount Vernon are also possible picket locations, a picket told WPCNR.


Mr. Oliva, speaking for the County Executive’s office, said he had no knowledge that those cities were affected at this time.

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Sewer Plant Repair: $12.65 Million. Feeds 2.3B GalsSubstandard Effluent in Huds

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WPCNR WATCH ON THE RIVER. By John F. Bailey. November 27 UPDATED November 28,  1:50 A.M. E.S.T.:


The Yonkers  Water Treatment Plant is still pouring 80 to 100 Million gallons of below E.P.A.  standard effluent into the Hudson River, after 30 Days. The WPCNR- estimated total of substandard treated effluent dumped into the Hudson is about 2.3 Billion gallons as of Tuesday. Repairs to the extensively damaged plant have so far cost $12.65 Million according the Department of Health.


The unacceptable levels of effludent have been pouring into the Hudson River since October 29.


On that day, the 14 foot tide of  Hurricane Sandy engulfed the sewage treatment plant, flooding and short-circuiting the plant’s pumps. The tidal surge crested across Fernbrook Street, damaging the County Bus Company offices as well.


Spokesperson for the  Westchester County Department of Health, Caren Halbfinger advised WPCNR Tuesday that repairs are still being made to the Ludlow Street plant after 30 days.


Ms. Halbfinger told WPCNR all effluent (80 million to 100 million gallons per day) is being “screened, disinfected and chlorinated but is below the Environmental Protection Agency standard.” Ms. Halbfinger said no solid effluent is being dumped into the Hudson, that solid wastes are being removed and trucked elsewhere.


Asked the degree of how substandard the effluent is, Halbfinger said she did not have that figure.


Halbfinger said it could take another 14 days to complete repairs at the plant, which she said are ongoing. Tuesday evening Halbfinger got back to WPCNR and reported the total cost of repairs to the plant so far was $12.65 Million.


The Federal Emergency Management Agency management was unaware last week of the damages the plant suffered, WPCNR has learned.


An advisory to avoid contact with Hudson River waters remains in effect, Halbfinger said.


Halbfinger in a previous WPCNR interview three weeks ago explained the extent of the damage when the tide of Hurricane Sandy engulfed the plant:


1.     WPCNR:  What caused the Yonkers sewage plant to discharge the raw sewage into the Hudson?



Halbfinger: The equipment was shut down to prevent an explosion and fire that could be caused by water hitting high voltage lines. In addition, the storm surge washed the Hudson into the basement of the plant, where much of the pumps and electrical equipment are located. All of the motors had to be taken apart, cleaned and repaired and parts had to be replaced, along with electrical controls. The whole plant had to be pumped out washed and disinfected and treated to prevent mold. All the insulation on the pipes had to be removed, the pipes had to be cleaned and the pipes will be reinsulated.



WPCNR: When is it expected to be fixed? 


Halbfinger:  Secondary treatment is expected in the next few days, but it will take at least a week for this biological process to start providing treatment.


 WPCNR: What was the delay in getting it fixed? What caused the delay?


Halbfinger: We’re making steady progress, but the sheer size and scope of the work involved has been a tremendous undertaking by the Department of Environmental Facilities. The plant is about a half-mile long, and for most of this length, the basement was filled with water that had to be pumped out. 


Then the basement had to be dried out. All of the pipes had to have their insulation removed, the salt water had to be washed from the pipe and then new insulation will be installed.


We had 250 motors that had to be removed, repaired and reinstalled. It all takes time. Two 5,000 gallon tanks of polymer ruptured in the basement and that had to be cleaned up. It took time to get the needed parts and to make the repairs. And we’re in good company. Sewage treatment plants throughout the tri-state area have all been faced with similar problems.

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