Public Safety Throws a Party: 1st National Night Out in WP: Residents Meet the S

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WPCNR PHOTOGRAPHS OF THE DAY. By the WPCNR Roving Photographer. August 4, 2010:


Commissioner of Public Safety David Chong hosted a block party for the neighborhoods on Public Safety Headquarters last night, attracting some 500 persons through the evening. He hoped would introduce members of the community to the number of services provided to enhance public safety of residents in the city. This was the first time White Plains has participated in the national police event, “National Night Out,” and Chong told WPCNR he would definitely bring the various organizations back next year for another “Night Out.”


On hand were the the Westchester K-9 unit, the Fire Bureau Rescue 88 truck, the Domestic Violence Unit, the New York State Troopers, the Westchester County Police, the Visiting Nurse Service, and others.  Citizens could meet and greet leading personalities of the White Plains Department of Public Safety: the Commissioner, the Police Chief, and Assistant Police Chief, members of the Fire Bureau on an informal basis. Information tables were set up for the various services with literature available.


Councilpersons Benjamin Boykin, David Buchwald, Dennis Power, Tom Roach, Beth Smayda and Mayor Bradley attended and mingled with the crowd.


As of 8 P.M. the event attracted a crowd as diverse as White Plains itself, enjoying rock and roll music, a boxing exhibition featuring the Youth Bureau, and all had the options of viewing the inner workings of the emergency and service vehicles available.


Chong said it was the first time persons in White Plains had the chance to make themselves aware of all the services provided for their well-being and learn how to work with them. He said, in his opinion it was very successful,well-attended and he thanked the organizations that participated.


Here is how it looked to the WPCNR Roving Photographer:



The Night Out at 8:15 P.M down at the Public Safety Building. For more photos, click READ MORE


 



Information Tables.



The Scene on Lexington Avenue




County K-9 Unit was a star attraction…TransCare ambulance was available for inspection.




The kids loved Rescue 88


 


R


White Plains Youth Bureau staged an exciting boxing exhibition.

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Firefighters Establish Website to Distribute info on Benefits Dispute with the C

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WPCNR INTERNET NEWS. August 4, 2010:


The White Plains Professional Firefighters have launched an internet website.


The site airs concerns, distributes information, and appears to be a vehicle to continue the fight to retain  health benefits and retiree benefits the city is attempting to take away by legislation. (Currently the matter of whether the city has the right to collect health premiums from fire department retirees going forward is in litigation in the U.S. Southern District Court, which has issued an injunction.)  Various comments note the need to remove members of the Common Council one-by-one through the election process.


The site may be viewed at www.wpruff.wordpress.com.

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Roach, Astorino to Address at CNA Tuesday, 7:30

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WPCNR NEIGHBORHOOD NEWS. AUGUST 4, 2010: ‘


White Plains Common Council President Thomas Roach will be the Guest Speaker at the August meeting of the White Plains Council of Neighborhood Associations. Westchester County Executive Rob Astorino will also address the meeting and hold a Q&A session afterward.

The August meeting of the White Plains Council of Neighborhood Associations (WPCNA) will be held at Education House at 5 Homeside Lane in White Plains, NY at 7:30 pm on Tuesday, August 10, 2010. Council President Tom Roach will explore “Leadership in a Fiscal Crisis ” in his keynote address. County Executive Rob Astorino will round out the evening with a brief topical presentation followed by a question and answer period. Admission is free and the public is invited to attend and participate.

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LEARN HOW TO VOTE ON NEW VOTING MACHINES SPECIAL RUNS All WeeK 8:30 A.M. on76,45

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS WEEK NEWS. AUGUST 4, 2010:


The White Plains Week Voting Machine Special which may be seen on the internet now at www.whiteplainsweek.com,  may be seen on local television all week long on Verizon FIOS at Channel 45, and on Cablevision Channel 76, at 8:30 A.M.


Because of the significance of the debut of new voting machines in elections this fall and going forward, the program will be repeated on Channels 45 and 76 all week long at 8:30 A.M. — Start your day with WHITE PLAINS WEEK– “News that really bites!”

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Youth Bureau Celebrates 40th Anniversary Saturday

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WPCNR CITY HALL CIRCUIT. AUGUST 2,2010:


White Plains Youth Bureau is hosting a Homecoming Barbeque on Saturday, August, 14, 2010, Noon-6pm at Gardella Park. This is the first in a series of celebrations for the White Plains Youth Bureau’s 40th anniversary year. Anyone ever involved in the life of the Youth Bureau is welcome to attend and bring their family and friends. There will be tennis, swimming, games, sporting activities and much more!!!


The White Plains Youth Bureau has touched thousands of young lives since it became a formal office of city government in 1970. The White Plains Youth Bureau has one mission: helping youth grow into successful adults. Today, the Youth Bureau works with over 2000 youth each day with 50 programs backed by our proud tradition of 40 years of service.


Bring your White Plains Youth Bureau stories, some sun screen a great appetite!!


ADMISSION IS FREE TO ALL!!!


For more info, please contact the White Plains Youth Bureau, 914-422-1378.

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Fire in the Y-M-C-A Controlled after 30 minutes.

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WPCNR PUBLIC SAFETY REPORT. August 1, 2010:


A smokey fire resulted in evacuation of the White Plains YMCA on Mamaroneck Avenu Sunday morning, according to Jim Benerofe. Benerofe advised WPCNR the fire began about 11:15 A.M. and was under control by 11:45 A.M. No one was injured.Benerofe could not confirm exactly where the fire was, but had heard it started in the sauna. No one was injured.

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Get Up Close and Personal With WP Police on National Night Out

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WPCNR POLICE GAZETTE. By Assistant Police Chief, Anne FitzSimmons. August 1,2010:


On August 3, 2010 between 6 PM and 9 PM, the White Plains Department of Public Safety will for the first time be participating in the National
Night Out. 

National Night Out is designed to: (1) Heighten crime and drug prevention awareness; (2) Generate support for, and participation in, local anti-crime efforts; (3) Strengthen neighborhood spirit and police-community partnerships; and (4) Send a message to criminals letting them know neighborhoods are organized and fighting back.
   
From 6 to 9 PM. on August 3rd, residents in neighborhoods throughout White Plains and across the nation are asked to lock their doors, turn on outside lights and spend the evening outside with neighbors and join forces at White Plains Department of Public Safety Building located at
77 South Lexington Ave. 
     
This is a night for America to stand together to promote awareness, safety and neighborhood unity.  National Night Out showcases the vital importance of police-community partnerships and citizen involvement in our fight to build a safer city. Neighborhoods nationwide are invited to
join in Giving Crime & Drugs a Going Away Party.

Along with the traditional outside lights and front porch vigils, The City of White Plains will celebrate *National Night Out* with an open house of the White Plains Public Safety Department along with a safety fair that will include a live band, and tables manned by various Community Service organizations.  There will be free give aways, along with visits from elected officials representing our local government.

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Common Council set to award Death Benefit to Detective Perry’s Widow

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WPCNR COMMON COUNCIL CHRONICLE-EXAMINER. July 31, 2010:


In the  backup material backgrounding Monday evening’s Common Council meeting, WPCNR has learned that the council will award a death benefit of $86,717 to the widow of White Plains Police Detective Michael Perry who died June 12, 2010 in the line of duty, apprehending a shop-lifting suspect.



White Plains Police Detective Michael Perry


The death benefit represents an amount equal to the salary paid to Detective Perry during the year immediately preceding his death, and $1,000 each for his two children.

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Dems Don’t Invite GOPs to Child Care Hearing, GOPtors Call it a Dem Rally

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From James Maisano, County Legislator. (EDITED) July 29, 2010:


 


GOP legislators today discovered that an event arranged for the evening of Thursday July 29, 2010 was being billed as a Public Hearing, and was being sponsored by ‘The Westchester County Board of Legislators’ and held at the County Center. The event has been advertised through an e-mail campaign and official press releases sent on Friday July 23rd from the Board of Legislators’ Communication Department.


 


Republican legislators were never informed of this event. They were never even copied on the email announcement. Republicans claim a  Board of Legislators Public Hearing must be part of an official agenda, and voted on by the entire board and this “rally” clearly was not. 


 Republican Board of Legislators leader James Maisano contends that on Monday July 26th the event “appeared” on the BOL schedule as being sponsored by the Community Services Committee of the Board, raising  the initial concern of the GOP legislators.


 


“As the only GOP member of the Community Services Committee I was never informed of the event and have serious concerns about it taking place under the auspices of the Board, “ stated Legislator John Testa (R-Peekskill) during his committee meeting on Tuesday July 27th. “It is an obvious political rally and has no governmental purpose. It raises serious questions about the abuse of taxpayer funded resources to not only create the advertising but to secure the County Center,” Testa added.


 


“As elected officials we must be very careful with the public’s money. The Board has been through this before where taxpayer funded resources were used inappropriately. “A lesson should have been learned through the Gary Kriss fiasco,”says Gordon A. Burrows (R-Yonkers).


 


“To date we have not received any official notification of this event,” says Sheila Marcotte (R-Tuckahoe) “This was strictly a one-sided operation, with no notice to any Republican on the Board. We found out about it second hand and county taxpayers are stuck with the tab, over $1500, to rent the County Center, plus the cost of any County police at $110 per officer per hour.” 


 


The invitation carries the theme of an invitation to a ‘public hearing’ to save childcare in Westchester County and stop what it says are ‘Illegal Cuts to Child Care.’


 


” This was a blatant use of board staff and funds for a political purpose and shows a callous disregard for not only the taxpayer but the principles of transparency and accountability. If this was a true public hearing we all would have been properly notified and it would be held in the Board Chamber,” stated Minority Leader Jim Maisano (R-New Rochelle).


 

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Educ Dept. Raises Gr. 3- 8 Pass Levels on 2010-11 Assessment Tests Coming Up

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. From the New York State Department of Education. (Edited) July 29, 2010 UPDATED WITH COMMENTS FROM WHITE PLAINS SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS DR. CHRISTOPHER CLOUET:


Regents Chancellor Merryl H. Tisch and Education Commissioner David Steiner  released results from the state’s 2010 Grade 3-8 assessments in Math and English Wednesdays. Cut scores (passing scores) for these tests and the 2010-2011 school year assessments to be administered this year have been raised to new Proficiency standards redefined to align them with college-ready performance.


As a result of raising the bar for what it means to be proficient, analysis of the 2009-2010 test results showed many fewer students met or exceeded the new Mathematics and English Proficiency standards in 2010 than in previous years. Across Grades 3-8 statewide, the majority of students, 53% in English and 61% in Math, met or exceeded the new Proficiency standards this year.  By contrast, in 2009, 77% of students met or exceeded standards in English and 86% of students did so in Math.


The new Proficiency standards students in White Plains and across the state have to meet this year will be higher, according to White Plains Superintendent of Schools Dr. Christopher Clouet.


Clouet said White Plains scores have improved steadily the last two years because the district curriculum approach has addressed the achievement gap and has “raised all boats.”


“We will have our work cut out for us with the raising of the passing levels,” he told WPCNR this afternoon. Asked the percentage of White Plains students who wouould have passed the Grade 3 through 8 assessments this year if the new passing levels were in effect, Clouet said the district is in the process of figuring that out because the new passing levels vary per grade level. He promised a more detailed analysis and statement would be forthcoming. Clouet said there would be a report showing the effects of the new standards within the next two months.


According to the Department of Education news release, cut scores “are based on a review of research that analyzed how the grade 3-8 state tests relate to the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) exam; how the state’s eighth grade Math and English tests relate to the Regents exams; how performance on the Regents exams relates to SAT scores; and how performance on the Regents exams relates to first-year performance in college. 


 



“We are doing a great disservice when we say that a child is proficient when that child is not. Nowhere is this more true than among our students who are most in need. There, the failure to drill down and develop accurate assessments creates a burden that falls disproportionately on English Language Learners, students with disabilities, African-American and Hispanic young people and students in economically disadvantaged districts – who turn out to be much further behind than anyone recognized,” said Chancellor Merryl H. Tisch. “The Regents and I believe these results can be a powerful tool for change. They clearly identify where we need to do more and provide real accountability to bring about the focused attention needed to implement the necessary reforms to help all of our children catch up and succeed.”


“New, higher cut scores have resulted in fewer students scoring at a ‘Proficient level’,” said Commissioner Steiner.”While that is sobering news, it should cause all of us – the State Education Department, schools, administrators, teachers, and parents – to work ever more effectively together to ensure that all children in New York State get the knowledge and skills they need.”


John King, Senior Deputy Commissioner for P-12 Education said,”These newly defined cut scores do not mean that students who were previously scoring at the Proficient standard and are now labeled Basic have learned less. Rather, the lower numbers of students meeting the Proficient standard reflects that we are setting the bar higher and we expect students, teachers, and parents to reach even higher to achieve these new targets.”


The new Proficiency standards were developed based on research from the state Testing Advisory Group (TAG) and CTB/McGraw-Hill, the state’s testing contractor, to provide a clear indication to parents and schools as to whether a student was on-track for college success. The 8th grade Level 3 cut score is set at a level that offers students a 75% chance that they will score at a college-ready level (75 in English and 80 in Math) on their Regents exams in high school. The Grade 3-7 Proficiency scores are set so that a student making a year’s worth of developmental growth for Math and ELA will be on track in 8th grade to achieve a Proficiency level indicating readiness for high school work that will lead to success in college.


Results for English:


The average scale scores on the English Language Arts test this year were about the same as last year in all grades.


While 53% of Grade 3-8 students across the state met or exceeded the new ELA Proficiency standard, 14% of English Language Learners met or exceeded the new ELA Proficiency standard.  Fifteen percent of Students with Disabilities met or exceeded the new ELA Proficiency standard.


The ELA results for racial/ethnic groups across Grades 3-8 reflect the stubborn persistence of the tragic racial achievement gap. Low-need communities continued to outperform large cities and rural areas in ELA. A smaller proportion of students met or exceeded the new ELA Proficiency standard in the Big Five cities than in the rest of the state.   In New York City, 42.4% of students met or exceeded the English Proficiency standard, while in the Big 4 cities the figure was 29.1%.


Fewer than 40% of the students from economically disadvantaged districts met or exceeded the new ELA Proficiency standard.


In charter schools, 43% of students met or exceeded the new ELA Proficiency standard.


Results for Math:


The average scale scores on the Mathematics test this year were about the same as last year in all grades.  Rapid student gains from previous years leveled off.  Although there may be several possible explanations, we note that 25% to 30% more performance indicators were tested in 2010 than in 2009.


While 61% of all students met or exceeded the new Proficiency standard, 31% of English Language Learners met or exceeded the new Mathematics Proficiency standard.  For Students with Disabilities 25% met or exceeded the new Mathematics Proficiency standard.


The Mathematics results for racial/ethnic groups across Grades 3-8 reflect the stubborn persistence of the tragic racial achievement gap. Low-need communities continued to outperform large cities and rural areas in Mathematics.  A smaller proportion of students met or exceeded the Mathematics Proficiency standard in the Big Five cities than in the rest of the state.  In New York City, 54% of students met or exceeded the Mathematics Proficiency standard, while in the Big 4 cities the figure was 31.1%.


Fewer than half the students from economically disadvantaged districts met or exceeded the new Mathematics Proficiency standard.


In charter schools, 60% of students met or exceeded the new Mathematics Proficiency standard.


Background:


In order to align our Grade 3-8 assessments with a new college-readiness goal, the 2010 Math and ELA Proficiency Standard scores (Level 3) have changed from 650 where they have been set in the past to these scores:































Grade Math ELA
8 673 658
7 670 664
6 674 662
5 674 666
4 676 668
3 684 662

The Level 2 score, renamed the Basic Standard, has been set at a level that gives  students a 75% chance of earning a Regents score of 65, sufficient to earn a Regents diploma.  The 2010 Math and ELA Basic Standard scores have changed from where they have been set in the past to these scores:































Grade Math ELA
8 639 627
7 639 642
6 640 644
5 640 647
4 636 637
3 661 643

The Performance levels for students have been renamed to reflect more precisely for parents, teacher and schools whether a student is below, meeting, or exceeding the Proficiency standard. The new labels are:


















Performance Level Label
Level 1 Below Standard
Level 2 Meets Basic Standard
Level 3 Meets Proficiency Standard
Level 4 Exceeds Proficiency Standard

The Board of Regents has approved greater flexibility to districts in meeting Academic Intervention Services (AIS) requirements, essentially holding districts financially harmless in 2010-11. Specifically, for the 2010-11 school year only, AIS regulations have been adjusted so that cut scores by which students are mandated to receive AIS – based on 2010 assessments – will be identical to the 2009 cut scores that required students to receive AIS.


During this transition year, Commissioner Steiner will ask the U.S. Department of Education (USED) to allow schools and districts that would have made Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) had the cut scores not changed, to get credit for making AYP in 2009-10.  If approved by USED as we expect, this will significantly reduce instances where schools and districts that would have made AYP will fail to do so based on the new cut scores. 


Ensuring that student achievement information provides meaningful information about student progress is just one element of the Regents’ broader reform agenda.  The State Education Department is working to enable educators and parents to make the most of that information – for example, by developing statewide curriculum models aligned with college and career-readiness standards, and by implementing a teacher and principal evaluation system that will provide differentiated professional development.


School by school data and district by district data for all public schools in the state along with detailed breakouts of subgroups’ performance are available on the State Education Department website, www.nysed.gov.


Additional technical information used in setting the cut scores is also posted at www.nysed.gov.


 


Webcast of News Conference and Grade 3-8 Data

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