Southwest Yonkers Advised to Keep Boiling Water

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WPCNR HEALTH BULLETIN. AUGUST 28, 2012:


A boil water advisory issued Monday by the Westchester County Department of Health for southwest Yonkers will remain in effect at least through Thursday. From 50,000 to 70,000 people are in the affected area.


The boil water advisory was issued yesterday as a precaution to protect from potential contamination caused by ground water infiltration into water mains as a result of the reduction in water main pressure caused by a water main break.


Once the City of Yonkers completes repairs to the water main, water will be flushed from the mains through some fire hydrants in the area. Once that flushing is completed, the Westchester County Department of Health and the Yonkers Water Bureau will take water samples from 21 locations throughout the affected area, at the earliest tomorrow. Those samples will be tested at the Westchester County Laboratory in Valhalla and at the City of Yonkers Bureau of Water’s Laboratory for coliform bacteria.


There is a 24-hour turnaround time for the bacteriological testing. The county health department will lift the advisory once sampling results are satisfactory.


Residents and businesses in the area south of Ashburton Avenue to the New York City line between the Hudson River and the Saw Mill River Parkway are strongly advised to continue to boil their water before drinking it or using it to prepare food, as a precaution, due to a major water main break in Yonkers on Monday.


A boil water advisory means that residents in the affected area are strongly advised to boil all tap water at a rolling boil for a minimum of one minute prior to drinking it or using it to prepare food, wash dishes by hand or brush teeth. The advisory does not extend to bathing, washing clothes or using a dishwasher.


Restaurants, delis, bodegas and all food service establishments in the affected area must continue to boil water before serving it or using it to prepare food.


The water main break occurred on Monday when a state contractor working on the Saw Mill River Parkway accidentally broke through a 30-inch City of Yonkers water main that runs under the Saw Mill River Parkway near the McLean Avenue exit in Yonkers.


Updates on the repairs will be provided by the City of Yonkers as they become available.

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Legislators Claim Astorino Administration Running $29 M Deficit

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From the Westchester County Board of Legislators. August 27, 2012:


 During his presentation of the 2012 2nd Quarter Forecast today, Westchester County Budget Director Lawrence Soule stated that unfunded salary and benefit costs associated with new contract agreements and a loss of revenue from securitization from the tobacco settlement were key components of a staggering $29.7 million deficit the county is facing.



The 2nd Quarter report was delivered this morning to the Budget & Appropriations (B&A) Committee of the Westchester County Board of Legislators (BOL). Especially frustrating to the Democratic committee members was that significant portions of this newly discovered deficit were included in the initial budget requests made by the County Department of Corrections and Public Safety.


“The Astorino Administration broke the law when it withheld the departmental requests from the Board of Legislators during the budget process,” said White Plains Legislator Bill Ryan, a B&A Committee member. “They hid important financial information that would have given us a clear picture of what we would need in 2012. The County Charter requires that the departmental requests be part of the county executive’s proposed budget. Now, the Board of Legislators—and county taxpayers—have been blindsided by eighteen million dollars in added costs, and the Administration stands at fault.”


These departmental requests were modified by County Executive Robert P. Astorino’s Proposed 2012 Budget, preventing the BOL from analyzing department requests versus the County Executive’s recommendations. Recently, the departmental requests came to light, thanks to a Freedom of Information inquiry after a BOL subpoena.



 




Concluded Ryan: “The Astorino Administration is running a twenty-nine million dollar deficit, and the next thing we’ll hear is that they have to make massive service cuts to cover the mistakes.”



When the 2012 County Budget was adopted and signed into law, there were no projected deficits and a 0% rise in the tax levy. Not only was the $18 million in salary and benefit costs not included in the budget presented to the BOL, but the Administration confidently listed $12 million in revenue from tobacco securitization, which the County is not going to receive.



In contrast to the 2nd Quarter Report last year, Soule noted that, net of the tax levy difference, the County was projecting a $6 million deficit—and sounded the alarms significantly enough to cause Moody’s Investors Service to place the County on a negative watch.



Today, though, Soule said there was “no reason to hit the panic button”—even in light of two major financial gaffes by the Budget Director and Administration that are resulting in a $29.7 million deficit, nearly five times larger than last year’s 2nd Quarter forecast.



“The piper will have to be paid,” said Soule today during his report, and acknowledged that he was hoping to identify spending cuts that can be proposed to the BOL.



“This Administration kept us in the dark about the contracts it was negotiating and did not request any added funding for two departments that were going to need it,” said Legislator MaryJane Shimsky (D-Hastings-on-Hudson). “On top of that, it relied on twelve million dollars of non-existent revenue. It’s time for the Administration to quit playing politics and present to Westchester residents a factual and transparent budget.”



One bright spot in the 2nd Quarter forecast is that the Department of Social Services (DSS) is projecting $7.9 million less in expenses and a $2.8 million return to tax levy. This demonstrates that there is more than adequate funding in DSS to retain the parent share at 20% for child care subsidies for low-income working parents.



“Today’s presentation makes it clear that the Administration will try to correct some of its budget deficit by dipping into the Social Services surplus, which is just heartbreaking,” said Legislator Catherine Borgia (D-Ossining), chair of the BOL Government Operations Committee. “Our human infrastructure investments in programs like public health and child care are right for Westchester. These programs should not be a place where we look to fix a structurally unbalanced budget. To put it simply, budgets should not be balanced on the backs of children and hard-working families.”

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Castelli Forum Asks Questions That Need to be Addressed on Spending

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WPCNR ALBANY ROUNDS. From Assemblyman Robert Castelli’s Office. August 27, 2012:


Assemblyman Robert J. Castelli today hosted close to 30 local business, education and industry leaders at a forum at the Harrison Town Hall to discuss the continued need to deliver unfunded mandate relief to local governments, school districts and taxpayers, along with the urgency of creating more private-sector jobs in the Lower Hudson Valley.  


“Westchester County taxpayers are tired of paying the highest property taxes in the nation, and a full 90 cents of every county property tax dollar goes to Albany to fund state mandates,”  Castelli said. “I am pleased to join with local taxpayers and business leaders to say ‘enough is enough’ to Albany’s practice of forcing Westchester County taxpayers to foot the bill for state government mandates.”

Unfunded mandates occur whenever state government tells local governments and school districts to do something, such as implement a new program, expand a service or even build a new school, yet provides zero funding to pay for it. New York’s largest unfunded mandate on municipalities each year is Medicaid spending, which has an $8 billion price tag in the current Fiscal Year. New York’s combined federal, state and local spending on Medicaid is the highest in the nation at $54 billion; the Empire State spent more than California and Florida combined.

“We gathered business and community leaders at the Harrison Town Hall today to ask them three important questions: Should New York institute a state spending cap? Should there be a moratorium on unfunded mandates on local governments and school districts costing more than $10,000 annually or $1 million statewide? And how can we support local businesses so they can create and retain quality jobs in our communities? I look forward to taking their ideas and concerns to Albany to fight for lower taxes, unfunded mandate relief and a better business environment in the Westchester,” Castelli continued.

Forum participants included John Ravitz, Executive Vice President of the Business Council of Westchester, Sergio Brasesco of Emilio Ristorante, Amy Allen and Dorothy Forcina of the Westchester County Association, Alexander Roberts of Community Housing Innovations Inc., Mark Jaffe, Presdient/CEO of the Greater New York Chamber of commerce, Michael Schiliro, Vice President of CMS Bank, Norm Michaels, President of Michaels & Assocites, Deborah Patterson of Con Edison, and Mary Ann Luna of the United Way of Westchester and Putnam. Participants discussed strategies to deliver unfunded mandate relief as well as create and maintain private- sector jobs in the Lower Hudson Valley.

The Steering Committee, a public policy vehicle for the New York State Assembly Minority Conference, is a strong voice for private-sector job creators and improving New York’s business climate. The Conference’s “Taxpayer Protection and Mandate Relief Act” (A.8447, Kolb) would cap state spending, prohibit any new unfunded mandates on local governments and school districts and require the Governor to submit an annual plan to repeal unfunded mandates.

 “Unfunded mandates and runaway cost increases in state spending result in the same thing – higher taxes and fees for our small business owners,” said Assemblywoman Jane Corwin (R, C, I – Clarence), chair of the Steering Committee. “The Westchester business owners we spoke with today gave us valuable feedback on the most efficient, effective ways to help them create more jobs, right now.”


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Should County Add Bicyle Lanes to Parkways? Step Away from the Bicylce, Sir.

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WPCNR PHOTOGRAPH OF THE DAY. By the WPCNR ROVING PHOTOGRAPHER. AUGUST 27, 2012:


An enterprising bicyclist decided to take the direct route north in Westchester County which this reporter believes prohibits bicyclists and pedestrians. Nevertheless, this intrepid cyclists noting the usual 2 mile standstill of northbound traffic going intothe Cross County parkway interchange, choose to peddle the Hutchinson River Parkway northbound.


He was doing very nicely until the ever-vigilant Westchester County Police swung into action and pulled the biker over.The unique, alert pull-over occurred at 5:44 P.M.Sunday afternoon on the Hutchinson River Parkway and was captured by the ever-alert companion to this reporter,Brenda Starr.




A Westchester County  Police patrol car responded to the intrepid cyclist interloper, the police officer, maneuvering carefully on the paved shoulder, approached, lights flashing pulling the cyclist over.Perhaps he only gave the bicyclist a warning. Photos by Brenda Starr on the Brenda Phone, the WPCNR Roving Photographer


 


Kirin O’Leary of the Westchester County Police said the bicyclist could have been issued a summons for driving a “restricted vehicle” on the parkway. O’Leary said that it is a New York State Law that restricts bicyclists from using parkways. He was checking to see what the penalty if any, is for riding a bicycle on a county highway. O’Leary said bicyclists could ride from the Bronx to the Putnam County border on the County Trailway that begins in Yonkers


 


Brenda wonders since bicyclists do not require a Bicylers License (now there’s a revenue -raiser to ease the new Tappan Zee Bridge toll!), and bicycles do not require bicycle license plates (Governor slaps forehead! Why didn’t I think of that?), and bicyclers will be accommodated on the new Tappan Zee Bridge, regulation of bicyclists, bicyle registration, and a Bureau of Bicycles are idea whose time is now.

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Settlement with Teachers Not Settled Yet.

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BREAKING NEWS!


EXCLUSIVE!


TEACHER NEGOTIATIONS in END GAME


NO SETTLEMENT YET


TEACHERS: AREAS STILL REMAIN TO BE WORKED OUT.


Mediator attempts to Bring Sides Together


 


WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. WPCNR EXCLUSIVE. August 24, 2012 UPDATED 6:35 P.M. E.D.T. UPDATED SATURDAY AUGUST 25, 2012 UPDATED MONDAY, AUGUST 27, 2012:


The head of the White Plains Teachers Association, Kerry Broderick, told WPCNR Monday morning that a tentative settlement has not been officially reached with the City School District.


Ms. Broderick, in a written statement wrote WPCNR:


“There is no settlement.  Both sides have worked hard for a settlement, but  a couple of areas remain difficult to resolve.

 

We are working with the mediator to provide a recommendation for both parties.  When we receive the recommendation, both sides will present to the respective negotiation teams.





 



When decisions are made, I will be sure to let you know.  I don’t expect any decisions until late this coming week.


White Plains Superintendent of Schools, Dr. Christopher Clouet in a statement to WPCNR Saturday confirmed he had reached an agreement on a new contract with union leadership with ratification by union membership the next step. Asked about length of contract and details, Clouet wrote


“I cannot have union members reading about the details in the media, before they have a chance to read the agreement and react (and hopefully ratify).

The Board will be briefed in executive session at Tuesday’s meeting.

I envision being able to discuss the specifics during the first week of school.”


The Superintendent issued this statement late Friday afternoon, indicating agreement had been reached;


“Very close.Still requires union ratification and Board approval.”


A session with a mediator Thursday had not yielded a settlement between White Plains teachers and the city school district yet. A source involved in the negotiations told WPCNR they would return with the mediator today and were “very close,” and that has come true.





 

 


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County Yields to Court Demand for Mandatory Sec 8 Acceptance Law in Affordables

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER From the Westchester County Department of Communications. August 24, 2012:


In a news release Thursday, Westchester County said it would move ahead to reintroduce legislation that would require owners of affordable housing to accept Section 8 Vouchers without question. The County Executive had previously refused to consider such legislation.The county faced a possibility of being charged with contempt of court.


This move comes after a county appeal still not decided, of the Housing and Urban Development directive to do so as part of a housing settlement in the Astorino administration ongoing fight against HUD positions on the the county’s settlement on providing 750 units affordable housing.


County Executive Robert Astorino outlined the county’s dispute with HUD on constitutional grounds Wednesday evening before over 100 persons in a Town Meeting in White Plains.


The release details the reasons for moving ahead with the Section 8 mandatory acceptance legislation. The County Executive is also fighting HUD on its demand county cities and towns remove all restrictive zoning.


The release:


 


      


    ” As part of Westchester’s ongoing efforts to comply with the federal affordable housing settlement, County Executive Robert P. Astorino today sent a letter to the monitor in the case stating how the county would comply with an Aug. 10 order by U.S.  District Judge Denise Cote.

            In the letter to James Johnson, the monitor, Astorino makes the following points:


·        The county is well ahead of schedule in meeting the benchmarks for building the 750 units of affordable housing required in the 2009 housing settlement signed by former County Executive Andrew J. Spano and ratified by the Board of Legislators.


·        The county believes its appeal before the U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals will vindicate its position that the federal government’s demands go far beyond the terms of the settlement.


·        The county’s actions continue to demonstrate its compliance with the terms of the settlement.


           


            “Our case continues,” Astorino said. “The arguments we have made to the Second Circuit Court of Appeals are strong and grounded in the principles that are fundamental to our Constitution. While I think it would have made much more common sense for the government to wait until the Second Circuit rules in the case, the District Court has told me to move forward on source of income legislation and I am compelled to follow the order of the judge.”


            The letter to Johnson addresses the three points in Judge Cote’s order: reintroduction of source of income legislation, followed by analysis and signing of the legislation.


·        On point one, the county executive will submit a letter to Board of Legislators Chairman Ken Jenkins by Aug. 31, asking him to have the board reintroduce the prior source of income legislation that had been before the board.


·        On point two, the administration will provide information and assist the board in analyzing the impact of the legislation.


·        On point three, the county executive will wait to see the final legislation before making a determination of whether he will sign it because its content will not be known until then.


 


            The last point is at the heart of the county’s legal case. The county maintains there is nothing in the settlement that requires the county executive to sign source of income legislation – the agreement says only that he must “promote” it. In addition, the county believes the source of income requirement expired in 2009 because legislation referenced in the settlement was “currently” before the board at that time.


            “To compel an elected official to sign legislation sight unseen and to give up his or her responsibility to vote his conscience goes against everything our country stands for,” Astorino said. “We don’t think the settlement says that, and that is one of the issues we are fighting in court.”


            Astorino has taken a principled stand against source of income legislation because he believes it would take away the rights of property owners and hurt the prospects of building affordable housing. At the heart of the legislation is the requirement that property owners must accept Section 8 vouchers as rent. The program now is voluntary. If made mandatory, every property owner offered a Section 8 vouchers would be required to accept it and be bound by all the rules and regulations and potential fines attached to the program.


            Astorino stressed, “I will continue to abide by all lawful orders of the Court in effect at any given time.”


            The 2009 housing settlement requires the county government to take steps to ensure that 750 units of fair and affordable housing are built in 31 so-called “eligible,” or mostly white communities.


            Just this week, the county exceeded the two key benchmarks for the end of 2012; it has in place 130 building permits and secured financing for 207 units. The settlement required 125 building permits and 200 units with financing by the end of the year.

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Nassau County Court Strikes Down MTA Payroll Tax as Unconstitutional

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WPCNR COMMUTER REPORTER. August 22, 2012 UPDATED AUGUST 23, 2012:


Reuters reported this evening that Nassau County Supreme Court Judge Bruce Cozzens ruled on Wednesday that the MTA payroll tax was unconstitutional, reasoning in part that the tax only applies to 12 counties in the state.


Reuters reported the MTA in a statement, said four previous lawsuits challenging the constitutionality of the payroll tax had been dismissed. “We will vigorously appeal today’s ruling,” the authority’s statement said.


By limiting the tax to Nassau County, New York City, and the ring of suburban counties that lie north of the city, including Dutchess County, the legislature signaled that it was not “a substantial state concern” but instead a special law, Judge Bruce Cozzens, a state Supreme Court judge in Nassau County, said in his ruling.


Westchester County Executive Robert Astorino issued this statement: “This is good news for Westchester County and its municipalities. The MTA payroll tax is essentially an unfunded mandate from Albany.  In this case, we were allowed to challenge it. We did.  And now we’ve won an important victory with the court’s decision that this unfair burden on taxpayers was unconstitutional.”


Robert Castelli, Assemblyman for the 93rd Assembly District,representing 3/4 of White Plains, issued this statement:


“Since being elected, I have fought for a full repeal of the onerous MTA payroll tax, a forensic audit of the agency, and legal and legislative action to see this mandate done away with,” Castelli said. “This year we repealed the tax for schools and 80% of small businesses, and now the Courts have fully eliminated this unconstitutional tax once and for all.”


A spokesman for the state senate majority leader, Dean Skelos, a Republican who represents Nassau County, said, “Senator Skelos has always maintained that the MTA payroll tax, which was imposed by the Democrats without a single Republican vote, was an unfair and onerous tax on jobs that never should have been implemented in the first place.”


 

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BOL Demands Independent Review of Playland 2012 Books. Data Challenged

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The Midway at Playland


WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From the Westchester County Board of Legislators.(Supplemented by WPCNR) August 21,2012;


A resolution for an independent audit of Playland, the 280-acre amusement park and beach facility owned and operated by Westchester County, received approval today by the Westchester County Board of Legislators (BOL) Government Operations Committee and will now be set for a full vote at the BOL’s next regular meeting on September 10.



The resolution, was supported only by the Democratic legislators on the committee. The call for an independent audit implies that administration reports of Playland being 10% off in revenues has left out important sources of revenue.


In midsummer, Astorino gave legislators a grim report. He even told CBS Radio “Cash strapped Westchester losing $3 to 5 Million a year on Rye Playland is no longer going to be an option,” and that trend in losses is likely to continue. A decison on the park future will be made in September.






In those reports the Board of Legislators learned that Playland attendance this summer is down 5.6% (mid-July) and revenues down 10.6%.



Last week, Legislator Catherine Borgia and two of her colleagues—Judy Myers (D-Larchmont), chair of the BOL Budget & Appropriations Committee, and Bill Ryan (D-White Plains), chair of the BOL Legislation Committee—called for an independent audit of Playland because of “troubling inconsistencies and omissions” in the data regarding the park’s attendance and revenue figures being reported by the Astorino Administration.



“Playland looks better than ever this summer, and it continues to be a fun-filled destination for residents and families from around the region,” said White Plains’ Ryan. “The park’s finances could be stronger, however, and my colleagues on the Board and I need complete financial information to be able to increase revenues at Playland and even further reduce the nominal tax levy support it now receives.”



The call for an audit comes about 4 weeks before County Executive Robert Astorino is to report on the viability of RFP proposals to take over Playland.


The resolution authorizes BOL Chairman Ken Jenkins (D-Yonkers) to employ an independent financial firm to audit and review the actual revenues and expenses of Playland along with the current procedures in place to ensure proper and accurate compilation of the data; and instructs the Budget Director and the Commissioner of Parks, Recreation and Conservation to provide the professional auditors with all information and documentation requested.



“This is a thirteen million dollar a year business that deserves a full financial and operational audit so that legislators can make informed decisions about Playland’s future,” said Legislator Catherine Borgia (D-Ossining), chair of the BOL Government Operations Committee. “With this in mind, it is entirely prudent that we start planning for an audit right now.”



The County Charter mandates that the BOL “investigate the official conduct and the accounts, receipts, disbursements, bills and affairs of any office or officer of the county, or of any office or officer of any special county district or other unit of county government, and make such studies or investigations as it deems to be in the best interests of the county,” as well as “employ such…financial or other technical advisers as may be necessary from time to time, in relation to the performance of any of the functions of county government.”


 


 


WPCNR notes the cost of Playland’s deficit, that the Astorino administration has been wringing its hands over for the last 2 and a half years, apparently did not stop the county from spending $6.7 million (approximately two years of Playland’s revenue shortfalls) to ready the bathhouses for a Children’s Museum and giving that museum a $1 a year lease with no financial resources as yet revealed by the museum’s backers.


 


Ned McCormick, Director of Communications for the County Executive told WPCNR this month that the museum would have to demonstrate their financial resources before the County Committee on Contracts and Acquisitions would approve the lease. If that lease is denied, of course, it would mean the county wasted that $6.4 Million paid to fix the bathhouses that a developer could have paid for.


 



 


 

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CNTY SAVES $25,000 Moving Pools to 12 Noon. Tells No One. 100 STEAM

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Saxon Woods Pool Tuesday.


 


WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. By John F. Bailey. August 21, 2012 UPDATED AUGUST 22 3:30 P.M.E.D.T. UPDATED AUGUST 23, 2012:


 



Thursday morning, Donna Greene, Deputy Communications Director for the Westchester County Department of Communications said the moving back of pool openings around the county to 12 noon did save the county some money, issuing this statement:


 


“It is approximately a $25,000 savings system-wide from 8/22 to Labor Day  .


 


“At all our pools, as of Aug. 18, opening is at noon Monday through Thursday (for those pools open on Monday). This is at least the 3rd year in a row that this has been the case. Our signs and web site should have been up to date with this information, but, our mistake, they were not.”

 


Greene added the website has been updated as of Wednesday.


 


Residents around the county can check all the county pool opening and hours at http://parks.westchestergov.com/activities/swimming


 


This of course, is no solace to those heading for the pools and having to wait 45 minutes to an hour to get in as they did Tuesday.


 


While this reporter was taking his daily walk at the County-run Saxon Woods Pool parking lot Tuesday morning, I noticed a growing line by 11:30 A.M., with mothers, fathers tots, toddlers, and teens waiting to get in as morning coolness turned into high noon swelter. 


 


Since the pool usually opened at 11 A.M. all week long all summer, I wondered if something was wrong with the pool.


 


A knowledgeable source at the pool told me  that on Monday the pool opening hour changed to 12 noon, to save money in salaries and personnel by opening an hour earlier. I checked what the admission signs said – and there was no correcting notice saying anything like “New Opening Time Beginning August 20, 12 noon,” There was no sign at the entrance of the park prominently announcing the new, later opening.


 


Then of course,when the admissions office  opened at noon, there was still a long line (about 75) waiting to get  into the pool when I left the parking lot at 12:30 P.M.


 


I checked with the Westchester County Department of Communications to see why the opening time was moved up, and whether all county pools were opening an hour later.


 


The spokesperson checked the county website and found it was still listing all county pools as opening at 11 A.M.


 


No news release was sent out by the Department of Recreation and Parks announcing the change to this reporter’s knowledge. WPCNR did not get one.


 


A source at Tibbets Brook Park Pool in Yonkers, told WPCNR their opening hour had moved up to 12 noon as of Monday, too. I asked why, and the source said, “county research has showed the 11 AM to 12 Noon hour was “slow, and it didn’t pay to be open at 11 A.M.”


 


Donna Greene, spokesperson for the Westchester County Department of Communications explained Wednesday,


 


“At all our pools, as of Aug. 18, opening is at noon Monday through Thursday (for those pools open on Monday). This is at least the 3rd year in a row that this has been the case. Our signs and web site should have been up to date with this information, but, our mistake, they were not.”

 

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U.S. Seizes $150 Million in Connection with Hizballah-Related Money Laundering

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WPCNR FBI WIRE. Special to WPCNR from the Federal Bureau of Investigation. August 20, 2012:


The United States has seized $150 million in connection with a civil money laundering and forfeiture complaint filed in December 2011 alleging a massive, international scheme in which entities linked to Hizballah, including the now-defunct Lebanese Canadian Bank (LCB), used the U.S. financial system to launder narcotics trafficking and other criminal proceeds through West Africa and back into Lebanon, announced Preet Bharara, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, and Michele M. Leonhart, the Administrator of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA).



In September 2011, Société Générale de Banque au Liban (SGBL) agreed to purchase most of the assets of LCB. At least $150 million in purchase price funds related to that sale are being held in escrow in Lebanon at the Banque Libano Française SAL (BLF). The seized funds are substitutes for the money in the LCB escrow account at BLF and came from an account at a U.S. bank that is used by BLF to conduct U.S. currency transactions (the “correspondent account”). The funds were seized pursuant to seizure warrants issued on Aug. 15, 2012. There are no allegations of wrongdoing against BLF, SGBL, or the U.S. bank that maintains the correspondent account for BLF in the United States.


U.S. Attorney Bharara said, “Money is the lifeblood of terrorist and narcotics organizations, and while banks which launder money for terrorists and narco-traffickers may be located abroad, today’s announcement demonstrates that those banks and their assets are not beyond our reach. We will use every resource at our disposal to separate terrorists and narco-traffickers, and the banks that work with them, from their illicit funds, even those hidden in foreign accounts.”


DEA Administrator Leonhart said, “As we alleged last year, the Lebanese Canadian Bank played a key role in facilitating money laundering for Hizballah-controlled organizations across the globe.


“Our relentless pursuit of global criminal networks showed that the U.S. banking system was exploited to launder drug trafficking funds through West Africa and into Lebanon. DEA and our partners are attacking these groups and their financial infrastructure while establishing clear links between drug trafficking proceeds and terrorist funding.”


According to the complaint, the affidavit in support of the seizure warrants and other documents filed in the case:


From approximately January 2007 to early 2011, at least $329 million was transferred by wire from LCB and other financial institutions to the United States for the purchase of used cars that were then shipped to West Africa. Cash from the sale of the cars, along with the proceeds of narcotics trafficking, were funneled to Lebanon through Hizballah-controlled money laundering channels.


LCB played a key role in these money laundering channels and conducted business with a number of Hizballah-related entities. Hizballah is a U.S. Department of State designated Foreign Terrorist Organization, a Specially Designated Terrorist, and a Specially Designated Global Terrorist.


On Feb. 10, 2011, the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) issued a finding and proposed rule under provisions of the USA Patriot Act that LCB is a financial institution of primary money laundering concern, based on among other things FinCEN’s determination that there was reason to believe that LCB had been routinely used by drug traffickers and money launderers operating in various countries in Central and South America, Europe, Africa, and the Middle East. FinCEN also determined that there was reason to believe that LCB managers were complicit in the network’s money laundering activities.


After the FinCEN action, another Lebanese financial institution, SGBL, acquired the assets and liabilities of LCB for $580 million, $150 million of which is being held in an escrow account at BLF (the “LCB escrow funds”). Because the LCB escrow funds are traceable to the assets of LCB, they are also subject to forfeiture; but since they are in an account in Lebanon, the United States is unable to seize the LCB escrow funds directly.


However, under U.S. law, the United States can seize funds located in a bank’s correspondent accounts in the United States if there is probable cause to believe that funds subject to forfeiture are on deposit with that bank overseas. Based on this provision and others, the seizure warrants were executed. A total of $150 million was seized from BLF’s correspondent account. These funds will be transferred to a seized asset account maintained by the U.S. Marshals Service pending resolution of the forfeiture action.


U.S. Attorney Bharara thanked the DEA for its leadership and praised the New York Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Strike Force for its outstanding work on this investigation, which he noted is ongoing. The strike force is comprised of agents and officers of the DEA, the New York City Police Department, Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Homeland Security Investigations, the New York State Police, the IRS Criminal Investigation Division, the U.S. Marshals Service, Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the FBI, and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York.


The strike force is partially funded by the New York/New Jersey High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area, which is a federally funded crime fighting initiative. U.S. Attorney Bharara also thanked the U.S. Department of State, the U.S. Department of the Treasury, the FBI, and the New Jersey State Police for their assistance.


This matter is being handled by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York’s Asset Forfeiture Unit. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Sharon Cohen Levin, Michael Lockard, Jason Cowley, and Alexander Wilson are in charge of the case.

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