City Sales Tax Take Flatlines. April Take Up less than 1%.

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WPCNR QUILL & EYESHADE. By John F. Bailey. May 12, 2010 UPDATED 9:20 P.M.: The White Plains Sales Tax pace, so encouraging in March when retail tax collections surged 11% flatlined in April (a marvelous weather month) only rising .72% over last April’s city take. The sluggish retail sales reflected that the city may only collect $43.4 Million in sales tax for the year when it budgeted for $47.3 Million. Hopes had been raised that a continued 10% gain in April May and June would cut the projected  deficit substantially, but the ray of hope from the 11% increase in March may be fool’s gold.


The State released sales tax collections for April for White Plains and Westchester County today. The city collected $23,803 more dollars than it did last April, less than 1% ahead of last year. The County as a whole is 5.43% ahead of last year’s collections, $1.7 Million ahead of last April’s sales tax pace.


In the first edition of this article, a mathematical error set the deficit higher than it actually is. To date the city has collected $36,164,299 in sales through the first ten months of fiscal 2009-10. If the city collects what it collected in May and June of last year ($7.2 Million) it will collect $43.4 Million in sales tax– about $4  Million below what the city expected to collect in sales tax ($47.3 Million).


Overall the first 10 months of the current city fiscal year show sales tax collections down 8%.


The April sales tax figures received today from the Department of Taxation and Finance indicate the city has resumed the sluggish 9% to 11% drop in demand that has characterized the first 8 months of the year.


The city previously has not projected more sales tax than it collected the previous year…though the city violated this rule of coin in the 2009-10 budget. When you add the need to replace a million and change in mortgage taxes and paying for wage increases the city faces a deficit of  about $8.5 Million.


To date the budget is just about even with last year’s expenditures ($160.233 vs. $160.4 Million) and the council has not divulged any cuts it plans to make going into decision night next Monday evening.


The Mayor’s  Chief of Staff, John Callahan told WPCNR the Decision Night was postponed from tomorrow evening to Monday because the budget department did not have all facts and figures that the Common Council requested and that was the only reason.


 


White Plains        April 2010                April 2009                % Variance
                $3,351,743.27                 $3,327,940.40                .72%


Westchester        April 2010                April 2009                % Variance

                $32,800,062.36                $31,111,069.15                5.43%


 

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Firefighters Go Door-to-Door, Urging Citizens to Pressure Council to Halt Layoff

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WPCNR THE LABOR FRONT. By John F. Bailey. May 12, 2010: Members of the White Plains Firefighters canvassed neighborhoods in the single family residential neighborhoods of White Plains yesterday “leafletting” the households with a flyer containing the telephone numbers and e-mail addressesd of all seven Common Council members asking the residents to “tell Mayor Adam Bradley and the Common Council that these cuts are UNACCEPTABLE.”



According to the flyer, Mayor Bradley is considering cuts that will “eliminate the hazardous materials unit, heavy rescue operations, collapse response vehicles, ability to respond to terrorist attacks, current fire prevention programs, public education programs and mutual aide contracts (with other fire departments).”


A fire department source familiar with city/union negotiations wrote WPCNR, 


“The Fire Union offered Mayor Bradley $884,000, the amount requested by his office, as our portion of assistance to help lower the property tax. All we asked for in return was to put off the contract discussions until the tax issue was resolved AND get, in writing, an assurance from the City that they would TRY to maintain the Fire dept staffing levels at  160, exactly where we are today.


As of July, we will drop to 158 due to retirements. Bradley said “NO, I want more.” We have made sincere attempts to help the citizens of this great City but are being rebuffed by a man who has a vendetta out for us and the cops. Ask each Council member if the mayor told them these facts because he is certainly misleading the public by saying that we continue to work towards a settlement. The only talking taking place is the mayor saying take it or leave it. No negotiations!


Then he has the (expletive deleted)  to say that it will be up to the Council to fire cops and fireman. He is a coward. Both unions are seriously contemplating public ” no confidence votes for the Mayor.”


The city could have had the money already if he simply agreed to TRY to keep staffing levels at todays number , which is 160. Not too much to ask when we are willing to give back such a large amount of our money to help the City.  The city has violated the Taylor Law by printing stipulation offers on the JN website.”


Yesterday afternoon Decision Night was posponed by the city from tomorrow, Thursday to Monday May 17 at 7:30 P.M.


Police and fire unions are still saying their cellphones are on awaiting further talks with the city.

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Council Passes 1/4% Sales Tax Increase to Dedicate to Fund Balance

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WPCNR COMMON COUNCIL-CHRONICLE-EXAMINER. From The City Clerk. May 11, 2010: The Common Council passed the 1/4% increase in the sales tax signed by New York Governor David Paterson last week as part of Mayor Adam Bradley’s effort to increase the city fund balance. The increase raises the city take of the sales tax to 2-1/2% (a total of  8.375 % comparable to other cities in the county.  The tax will begin to be collected June 1, adding to expected June sales tax receipts.  The additional 1/4% according to the legislation will be dedicated to a separate fund balance replenishment reserve to build up the city fund balance. The council, however by 5 votes, can dedicate the money in that reserve to expenses in the general fund, if they so wish.

 


  Ordinance amending an ordinance entitled, “An ordinance of the City of White Plains imposing taxes on sales and uses of tangible personal property and on certain services, and on occupancy of hotel rooms, admission charges and club dues, pursuant to Article 29 of the Tax Law of the State of New York,” to provide for an increase in the rate of Sales and Compensating Use Taxes.


 

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Mayor’s Court Proceeding on Domestic Violence Charges Enters Discovery Phase.

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS LAW JOURNAL. By John F. Bailey. May 10, 2010: Mayor Adam Bradley entered Judge Susan Capeci’s Courtroom this morning at 9:48 A.M., accompanied by his attorney Louis Penichet, to proceed to the next phase of his court case in which he is charged with 9 different misdemeanors involving alleged domestic violence charges in separate disputes with his wife, Fumiko Bradley.


Mr. Penichet and  Head of the District Attorney’s Special Investigations Unit, Audrey Stone were bade to approach Judge Capeci. After five minutes of discussion, the judge set a schedule to begin the discovery phase of the case in which evidence supporting each side in the case is presented for mutual analysis. Ms. Stone requested that testimony from Fumiko Bradley’s mother, a witness in the case be allowed to be video-taped because she is returning to Japan June 24. A date to determine readiness for trial was set for July 22, the next date the Mayor is scheduled to appear in court.


In a brief question and answer session with the media, Lucian Chalfen told the assembled press that Mr. Bradley has been attending the SANCIA pyschiatric evaluation workup he (Bradley) had agreed to attend in his April court appearance. The report has not been completed yet, Chalfen said.


Mr. Bradley is accused of  alleged assault in the third degree, and harrassment,  violations stemming from an alleged tea throwing incident on January 11, in addition to assault in the third degree and three other counts stemming from February 28 when the Mayor was charged for alledgedly slamming his wife’s finger in the door.


The charges of  Witness Tampering, 4th Degree, Harassment, 2nd Degree and Contempt in the 2nd Degree, stemming from the Mayor’s alleged violating of the Order of protection five times were added to the six charges, for a total of 9.


The SANCIA program, District Attorney spokesperson Lucian Chalfen, told WPCNR last month the SANCIA program will evaluate Mr. Bradley was a routine program defendents are asked to go into in most domestic violence cases, though this was not applied when Mr. Bradley’s case began.


 

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Hey Mom!

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Hey Mom, bring me two waters so I’m set?


Where’s my under armor? And my visor?


Are my tights washed? My skates are dull.


Hey Mom, can you call the advisor?


 


Hey Mom,  I wasn’t yelling at you.


I didn’t mean to! You were yelling at me!


You never let me do anything my friends do


Hey Mom, would you chill, lighten up, just do!


 


Hey Mom, I don’t like the way this looks for the prom —


I don’t like the color, how could you think this was me?


I just can’t wear this, it’s this, it’s that it’s…Oh, Mom!?!


 


Hey Mom, I’ve been studying all morning getting knowledge.


Can’t I go out, I’ll be back by ten.


But, I know the material, gone over it again and again.


Oh, Mom – I hate my life! I can hardly wait until college.


 


Hey Mom – But I did call and let you know


Don’t you understand, I couldn’t call at that time.


No, you can’t not let me go – it’s a great band


Oh, Mom – I hate you! You never understand!


 


Hey, Mom, please don’t embarrass me at the game


By screaming so loud, it’s just so tacky


But, hey mom, I like that you’re over there in the stand


Watching me play, you know that don’t you Mom, you understand.


 


Hey Mom, can you get me to the rink


At 5 – I know you have to take off from work early?


Thanks, Mom, I’m so sorry but the team has a special thing


I have to be there, thanks Mom – I love you—dearly.


 


Hey, Mom, please when you pick me up at the dorm


Don’t come inside. Just wait outside, call me on the cell


I’ll be right down — it’s the norm.


Don’t ring the bell.


 


Hey, Mom, I’ve read the classifieds


There are no jobs, I can’t make all those calls.


Well, OK, I guess  I can send that resume you made for me (sigh).


OK, I’m lost, where’s the post office, down Lexington to what?


 


Hey Mom, well I’m bringing my friends by,


Don’t let Dad embarrass me with his jokes, OK?


I’ll just die if he’s silly again — you won’t let him do that?


You’ll talk to him about that?


 


All right, Mom I’ll take that extra course.


But I’ve just been going to school for months it never ends!


Can’t I have a little vacation, I don’t know what’s worse


Can’t I spend a little time with my friends?


 


You do like him Mom?


Oh, I hoped you would.


Yes, I really do


I am so glad you do too!


 


Hey Mom, can you take care of the kids this weekend?


We’re going to Vermont with a friend.


And Mom, the cats get kibble in morning and meat at night,


We love you mom, sorry for the short notice, talk to you tonight.


 


Hey Mom, I’m sorry I can’t see you Mother’s Day.


Are you all right, what will you be doing today?


Going to the club – great – you know we love you in every way?


Though we may not show it you’re always with us


even when you’re away.


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See it for SUGAR! SPATS! OSGOOD, JOE, JERRY—SHE’S ONE HOT ACT WHEN YOU NEED IT!

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WPCNR ON THE AISLE. Theatrical Review by John F. Bailey. May 7, 2010: The moment she steps into the joint, you want to do it for Sugar! She’s Colleen Hawks, the gammy, breathy, breathtaking, sugary confectionary blondie from Broadway – a Marilyn Monroe reincarnation with the legs, the chassis and  charm of the one and only.


 



 


Ms. Hawks  breathlessly carries the Westchester Broadway Theatre “just in time” diversion – SUGAR – with her companions in flapper skirts, Gary Lynch as Joe/Josephine (right) and Eric Santagata as Jerry/Daphne, left – the sax and bass players fleeing the notorious – natty and “Tappy” — Spats Palazzo. 


 



Colleen Hawks as Sugar Kane and Ann-Ngaire Martin (far left), with The Society Syncopaters.


 


This just-in-time shot of musical seltzer (a David Merrick two year run hit back in 1972) brings back the1959  Billy Wilder classic black and white movie Some Like It Hot. It starred the legendary Ms. Monroe, Tony Curtis and Jack Lemon.


 


SUGAR pulled into the Westchester Broadway Theatre Thursday night when The Dixie Flyer from Chicago arrived with the all girl band—The Society Syncopaters featuring Sugar Kane whose comic playoffs with the madcap Eric Santagata as Jerry/Daphne and the chesty baritone, Gary Lynch as Joe/Josephine — to rescuse Westchester.


 


SUGAR rescues you from stocks in free all, Madoff madness,  spreading oil slicks, disappearing shrimp, vans full of fertilizer and jawboning tired, tawdry politicians without a clue tediously filling the atmosphere with carbon dioxide and bromides that give you a headache.


 


The whopper of a Second Act sends you out into the night smiling, with zip zing and ginger, and the lady on your arm turns into Sugar Kane, and the man you’re with – Tony Curtis.


 


Hey, Mack! Hey, Doll! Need to get on the lam from life for a two hour mind reset?


 


Make like Joe (Gary Lynch) and Jerry ( Eric Santagata) the sax player and bass player out of work who witness sharp-dressed gangster Spats Palazzo, (Yoav Levin, he of the talented tapping spatted feet) rubout a rival gang at the Clark Street garage – SUGAR is just the tonic!


 


Mr. Levin and his mobsters get the audience tapping with their masterful tap dance number after the big rubout in Tear the Town Apart, and Mr. Levin’s departure from this world in Act II brings down the house – perhaps never has a tommy gun created such laughs.


 



Bienstock (Brian Maxsween, center) and ensemble perform Sun on My Face on arrival in Miami 


 


Starting slowly like The Dixie Flyer rolling out of the Chicago south yards from Union Station,  SUGAR hits its stride when Jerry and Joe decide to pose as girls to join Sweet Sue’s all-girl band to escape the natty Spats Palazzo. Mr. Lynch and Mr. Santagata as Joe and Jerry get the audience in the spirit of the send-up-in-drag “Chicago-cal”  with their spectacular Gypsy Rose Lee introductory number,  The Beauty That Drives Men Mad. Man this song the way Mr. Lynch and Mr. Santagata execute it is pie-in-the-face-slapstick without pies. Mr. Lynch and Mr.Santagata are the guys as girls who have the girls’ moves down. Cincinatti, Knoxville, Atlanta, Macon, Miami here we come!


 


When Jerry and Joe playing Josephine and Daphne respectively, join the band and the boys (as girls) mutually fall for Ms. Hawks on the Pullman ride down to Miami by the sea.  Mr. Santagata and Ms.Hawks duet touchingly in a Pullman birth party on We Could Be Close.,


 


The lunacy picks up steam upon pulling into the dazzling palms and sunshine of the Seminole-Ritz Hotel when Sugar, her band leader and the good-looking real girls in the all-girl band: Emily Jan Bender, Christina Laschuk, Jessica Lorion, Meghan Starr,and Natalia Barzilai make you feel the glory of the Miami sun in the splashy number, Sun On My Face – magically conjured by the seductive palm trees and lighting by set-designer Steve  Loftus and WBT resident lighting master, Andrew Gmoser.


 


On the beach at the Seminole-Ritz, we meet  millionaire Osgood Fielding (originally played by Joe E. Brown in the1959 movie) played as believably and deliciously lecherously  by Ed Romanoff who becomes an audience favorite at WBT’s production with Osgood’s love for a very uncomfortable Jerry.  


 


Mr. Fielding and his fellow millionaires are  lounging on the beach reading Wall Street Journals when we meet them.  Osgood and the Millionaires’ rendition of  November Song is just poifect!. Mr. Romanoff’s mincing about after Jerry’s Daphne is naughty old lechery that is definitely not a felony, but a riot.  His prancing and leering will make you laugh despite yourself.


 


Now lest you think this is an off-color show, it’s not. No four-letter words, just innocent, boy-girl fun – after all this is the1920s folks.


 


Joe,  the robust saxophone player starts to fall for Sugar Kane too, after that pullman party train ride, and seeing the abundance of Millionaires he talks Jerry into stringing Osgood the millionaire along to “do something for Sugar” with the First Act wrapping up with Doin It for Sugar.


 


After intermission the show steps into the big time with one of the snappiest Act II’s of a musical that builds this wedding cake of a feel-good show.


 



Sir Osgood Fielding Jr. (Ed Romanoff) Courts Daphne (Eric Santagata) Singing Beautiful Through and Through, romantic and a laugh riot!


 


Mr. Santagata (previously Seymour in WBT’s Little Shop of Horrors)  as Jerry/ Daphne agrees to a date with Osgood against Jerry’s suspicions that  Joe is trying to steal Sugar from him. While Jerry distracts Osgood, who falls for Jerry, singing the beautiful pas de deux  Beautiful Through and Through – you’ll laugh yourself silly watching Mr. Satagata


 


 Mr. Lynch doffs his lady persona of Josephine and for the trademark blue blazer and ascot and captain’s cap of a playboy millionaire. His game interpretation of Tony Curtis’s Cary Grant imitation (in the movie)  on the beach, impresses Sugar…and  she agrees to see him on  Osgood the millionaire’s yacht. (Confused? It’s complicated, but trust me, pally, you’ll buy it!)


 


On Osgood’s yacht, Lynch as the millionaire, complains to the beautiful Sugar that he feels nothing when a woman kisses him. Sugar tries her wiles.


 


They duet What Do You Give to a Man Who’s Had Everything. Ms. Hawks and Mr. Lynch make this scene really funny and every man in the audience wants to be on the receiving end of Ms.Hawks’ lips. I know I did. You can hear a pin drop in the big house when Ms. Hawks lays her smooches on Mr. Lynch.


 


Osgood asks Jerry to marry him—then comes another highlight comic bit when Jerry announces to Joe that  Jerry’s engaged – you’re going to love this part of the show.


 



 


That’s Josephine (Gary Lynch) far left, and Daphne (Eric Santagata) far right with Sugar Kane (Colleen Hawks) the blonde peforming for the toe-tapping gangsters from Chicago.


 


Meanwhile those tap-dancing gangsters are down in Miami searching for Jerry and Joe, they take in a show featuring the girls revue at the Seminole-Ritz – and when they recognize Jerry and Joe – well, all ends happily – I’ll always remember Spats Palazzo and the tap-dancing gangstas – who know how to dress and dance. (In my next life, I’m coming back as a song-and-dance man like Mr. Yoav Levin — he’s a show within the show.


 


No musical is perfect, but SUGAR ends perfectly with champagne and hope, the way all good musicals should.


 


 It’s the one musical I can remember where the second act is not just a way to end a series of reviews. It’s got plot! It’s got Sugar! Everybody gets their man, and you get the laughs you go to Broadway for…and of course a great dinner, and the longest running dessert in show business – Peach Melba.


 


WBT’s 165th show pulls into the Elmsford station just when you need it. The audience delivered two minutes of ovation – bravo-ed Yoav Levin, the dancing gangster; roared for Mr. Romanoff as Osgood – accoladed  Mr. Lynch and Mr. Santagata – and saved its comic tribute for the comic actress who can sing, too in that sweet Marilyn Monroe way, Colleen Hawks. Her breathy, girl-down-on-her-luck, always-falling-for-sax-players all so understandable. She’s a sweetheart!


 


Michael O’Steen’s choreography and Charles Repole’s direction moved this show and delivered one great number after another in Act II. The ensemble of musicians under Jeff Tanski delivered a musical bed of crisp, up tempo just right volume and melody.


 


Just 23-skidoo, folks!


 


The company serenaded the opening night audience with one last Doin’ It for Sugar.


 


See it for Sugar!


 


Contact592-2208 for ticket information and slurp up this musical Sundae or go to the WBT website  www.broadwaytheatre.com

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Gov Signs 1/4% Sales Tax Hike. 2 Unions Settle. Police Fire Picket

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WPCNR CITY HALL CIRCUIT. From the Mayor’s Office. May 7, 2010 UPDATED MAY 8, 2010, 1 A.M. E.DT.: The Mayor’s Office reported to WPCNR Friday afternoon that Governor David Paterson signed into law a 1/4% sales tax increase in White Plains that will be dedicated to a special fund to rebuild the city fund balance. The money can only be used by super majority vote of the Common Council. It is expected to begin being collected in June. Mayor Adam Bradley said the 1/4% was expected to add $4-1/2 Million to the city fund balance. He thanked Assemblywoman Amy Paulin and Assemblyman Robert Castelli,who did not vote for the bill, but did not go out of his way to hinder the bill either.


The Mayor’s Office has scheduled a special Meeting Monday to implement the new Sales Tax, and to discuss budget expenditures and will enter into an Executive Session for Collective Bargaining.


Mayor Adam Bradley confirmed to WPCNR today that the city and the Police and Fire unions were not at impasse and were still having discussions.


Jim Carrier, the head of the White Plains Police Benevolent Association, informed WPCNR the police union completed discussions with the city, made some concessions, but was not at liberty to discuss them. Mr. Carrier also reports to WPCNR that the Police and Fire Unions would hold a picketing session Monday afternoon at 5 P.M.


CSEA and Teamsters Cave In to City Demands for Waiving Wage Increases Negotiated for Previous Years.


In Return for No layoffs through May 2011.


Mayor Bradley also confirmed the city had settled contracts with the Teamsters and the Civil Service Employees Association this week, in which the Teamsters and the CSEA agreed to no increases in pay in the new fiscal year beginning July 1, 2010, agreed to paying 15% of medical benefits for new hires into the city. Bradley also said the two unions had agreed their salary schedule would be increased 3.75% for the 2008-09 year, and 4% for the 2009-10 (current year), however the two unions agreed to waive a major portion of the retroactive payment.


For the teamsters, $220,084 will be “used to pay the Union’s share fo the savings required to reduce the city property tax in the city’s proposed 2010-11 budget, with the remaining $63,790 divided up among the members employed from July 1,2008 to April 28, 2010.


For CSEA members, they too will have salaries increased 3.75% and 4% in 2008-09, and 2009-2010. However the retroactive payment to cover those years will be used in the following manner: “$1,265,000 will be used to pay the savings required to reduce the tax rate in the city’s 2010-11 budget. $14,420 shall be used for the temporary increase in the city’s payment for the optical plan,and the CSEA members will receive $423,580 remaining of the retroactive payment to be divided among the union members, including those laid off and who lost jobs in June, 2009, February, 2010, and April 9,2010.  Both Teamsters and CSEA also agreed to health buyout plans.


CSEA Jobs in Police Department Preserved


Up to Council to Decide Whether or Not to Make Police/Fire Layoffs if Fire and Police do Not Settle


The settlements acceded to by the two unions this week means that any layoffs in the police department and fire departments, would presumably come from uniformed police personnel, CSEA workers in those departments obviously protected. Asked why he would protect Civil Service non- law enforcement professionals from layoffs while possibly facing layoffs of uniform police personnel,


Bradley pointed out to WPCNR that if CSEA professionals were laid off, the uniformed police officers would have to do the work of those CSEA professionals. WPCNR asked if this was not compromising law enforcement effectiveness, preserving clerk and office personnel. Bradley said he was not going to make that decision that the decision to layoff uniformed officers would be up to the Common Council to decide. 


Asked if the White Plains Commissioner of Public Safety David Chong, who expressed the seriousness of the massive crowds of young people populating White Plains downtown drinking district from 1 A.M. to 4 A.M. Thursdays, Fridays and Saturday night-Sunday mornings, thought city layoffs of police and fire could be absorbed given the fact the police department is down  9 officers, faces large eligibilities for retirement,  Bradley said the felt Chong would be able to make adjustments. 


The Agenda for Monday Evening’s Meeting:



SPECIAL  MEETING


MAY 10, 2010


6:00 P.M.


 


FIRST READING


ORDINANCE:


 



 


1.                  Communication from the Mayor in relation to an ordinance enabling the City of White Plains to amend its Sales and Compensating Use Taxes Ordinance to impose an additional one-quarter of one percent (1/4%) increase in the City’s local sales tax for a total of two and one-half percent (2 ½%) effective June 1, 2010 and expiring August 31, 2011 to be paid into the City’s contingency and tax stabilization reserve fund.


 


2.                              Ordinance amending an ordinance entitled, “An ordinance of the City of White Plains imposing taxes on sales and uses of tangible personal property and on certain services, and on occupancy of hotel rooms, admission charges and club dues, pursuant to Article 29 of the Tax Law of the State of New York,” to provide for an increase in the rate of Sales and Compensating Use Taxes.


 


 


RESOLUTION:


 


3.                  Communication from Councilwoman Smayda in relation to the support of State Legislation to amend and correct technical deficiencies within the current enabling laws authorizing Sustainable Energy Financing Programs.


 


4.                              Resolution of the Common Council of the City of White Plains in support of State Legislation to amend, strengthen and correct technical deficiencies within the current enabling laws authorizing Sustainable Energy Financing Programs.


 


 


DISCUSSION:


 


5.                  Proposed Tax Budget 2010 – 2011 – Expenditure Overview – Department of Planning and Slater Center, and recommendations of Budget and Management Advisory Committee.


 


 


6.                  Entertainment of a motion to enter into executive session for the purpose of collective bargaining negotiations according to Article 14 of the Civil Service Law.



 


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City Spurns $1 MILLION in Police Savings.City to Police: Renegotiate Contract

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WPCNR THE BARGAINING TABLOID. By John F. Bailey. May 4,2010: City Hall talks with the White Plains Police Benevolent Association broke down today, and no further talks are scheduled, though Jim Carrier, WPPBA chief says his cell phone is on, awaiting the city to get back to him, anytime.


 



 


 


According to Jim Carrier, President of the White Plains Police Benevolent Association, (shown on television, addressing the Common Council Monday evening), in speaking to WPCNR this evening, the police made their proposal to the city this morning in an hour and a half meeting, and it was rejected.


 



“We had given them a proposal which was going to save the city a substantial amount of money, over a million dollars in savings. They made a counter proposal and wanted to tie it in to collective bargaining (renegotiating the current contract),” Carrier told WPCNR Tuesday night. “They wanted other concessions, which as you know, we have a current contract until the end of June. So we felt it was inappropriate, and our stance, is, look, we’re willing to help the city over its financial crisis for one year, but we’re not looking to tie this into collective bargaining. They weren’t willing to move on that issue.”


 


Mr. Carrier explained that according to law, the union would have to agree voluntarily to open our contract, which they refused to do.


 


Carrier said he made a proposal which would save money “in a one-time shot, and they weren’t interested.”


 


Carrier told WPCNR the police would work without a contract beginning July 1, and that it was way to early for binding arbitration. He awaits new proposals from the city. He said he fully expected layoffs in July, which he reiterated would be very hard on the police department.


 


He said the police department uniform force usually declines by eight officers a year, and currently the department was down 8, and he foresaw a the department being down by about 16 uniformed officers by the fall through attrition, which he said would be very bad for the department. “We could be in a bad situation 6 to 8 months from now.And they could be down substantially more, which would leave the police department in a substantially bad situation, and the residents of this city in a really bad position.”


 


Sources familiar with the sensitive negotiations (who have been right on the money so far), informed WPCNR last week the city is determined to cut 19 firefighters (returning the department to hits pre-“Delfino Mini-Renaissance” levels) and 20 police officers, also returning the police department to its 2000-2001 levels. To date, Commissioner of  Public Safety David Chong has declined to comment to WPCNR on the feasibility and effects of these cuts.


 


“Right now, basically, we don’t have any counter proposals,” Carrier said. “The city doesn’t either. The next move is up to the city.”


 


Asked what moves the city had left, Carrier said:


 


“They can’t  take anything from the collective bargaining contract. What they can do is make layoffs, that can be their option. ”


 


WPCNR asked Carrier if the city loses 20 police officers, could the officer power be juggled and still handle the demand  placed on the police department by the City’s “Drinking District,” Thursday, Friday and Saturday evenings.


 


“Obviously, with the implementation of the 12-hour work schedule by (former) Commissioner (Dr. Frank) Straub, we’ve alleviated a lot of our staffing issues. It definitely put a lot more cops on the street. Thank God, they implemented the12-hour work chart or else we’d be in a really bad situation.


 


“But having said that, going down 16 to 20 police officers, that’s going to be very difficult to manage, and what’s going to happen is that operation overtime is going to go through the roof, and obviously the morale of the police department is going to go in the toilet. Something’s going to have to give. When there’s not as many cops on the street, crime tends to increase.”


 


“My phone is on, whenever they (the city) want to sit down and talk,”  Carrier said.

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Conciliatory in Public.Hard Ball at Table.City Rejects Fire Offer.Police Next

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WPCNR THE BARGAINING TABLOID.  By John F. Bailey. May 3, 2010 UPDATE 3 P.M. E.D.T.: The deadline set by the city, according to union sources to respond to the city request for layoffs and givebacks on police and fire contracts to address the city’s alleged $9.5 Million deficit has passed.


 


Joseph Carrier, President of the White Plains Firefighters, told WPCNR the city rejected “a very fair offer” the union made to the city on Friday. Carrier said, “we do recognize the fiscal situation is in, and made a fair offer to save jobs and positions, but it was rejected.”


 


Mr. Carrier told WPCNR he was going to go back to his executive committee and regroup. Mr. Carrier denied the city had given the Firefighters a number of positions (19) to be eliminated. He pointed out though that presently the fire department was down 9 men with 2 to retire. WPCNR notes that if the city wanted to cut the fire department by 19 personnel, they could ride with the 11 vacancies, eliminate eight more positions, to reach the 19 figure, and a reduction to the 152-man level, reportedly originally requested by the city.


 


Mr. Carrier said a reduction to the 150-man level (currently the Work Table calls for 171 positions), would “devastate” the department and take “two rigs” out of service.


 


Another source familiar with the proposal Friday has since confirmed the WPCNR analysis: 


 


“The Administration is proposing 6-8 layoffs from the FD. What they are not telling you is that as of July 2010, the FD will be down 11 personnel due to retirements this past year and no filling of those vacancies. So, in reality, layoffs will be really be 17-19 people because they will not fund those retirement vacancies in this budget year. The FD has not been that low since the mid 70’s.”


 



Earlier today, this same source familiar with the fire department proposal offered the city Friday,  said that Richard Zuckerman, the city negotiator rejected a union proposal that would


 


“give back the amount of money requested by the city in exchange for a tabling of demotions and layoffs so that the Turn Out (of staff reduction) could be properly studied.


 


The source wrote WPCNR,


 


 “Adamant no from City. They said take the 0% raise, 15% health care contribution, pay back the money requested and still have layoffs.”


 


Meanwhile, Police Ready Proposal


 


 


Meanwhile, Jim Carrier, the President of the White Plains Police Benevolent Association, told WPCNR the police union was readying a proposal for the city which they hoped to deliver in a meeting with the city early this week.


 


WPCNR asked the Police Union leader if he felt the police department could handle the downtown “drinking district” security on the weekends if 20 officers were laid off.  He pointed out the police uniform personnel were already down 8 persons. WPCNR pointed out again that if  12 more officers were eliminated the city would reach its reported goal of 20 police officer reductions.


 


Jim Carrier noted that the police uniform compliment was set at 215 by the city, and wondered why they wanted to reduce that.


 


Last Thursday, Commissioner of Public Safety David Chong would not comment to WPCNR when asked if he felt that if there were a further reduction of uniformed officers, policing of the “downtown drinking district,” as WPCNR has dubbed it would suffer.


 


Chong noted the serious problem of retirements the police and fire bureau face at last Thursday’s meeting. In the Police Bureau, Chong exhibited a chart that showed the police bureau with 9 vacancies, with currently 206 active members, with four of those out on long-term sick/injured leave and one on military leave and 15% of tho 201 remaining actives (25 personnel) eligible to retire, many senior officers. Chong also noted it would take a year and a half to train new officers to replace retirees.


In the Fire Department, Chong reported that department had 9 vacancies., and of the 161 active members, 2 were out long-term, sick/injured, one on military leave, and two are retiring.


 


Former Police Chief Dan Hickey who worked for the department through 2002, said he could not make a judgement on whether the police and fire departments could go back to 2001 levels, saying it depended on the levels of services the city wanted from the departments.  He said he was not familiar enough with the downtown drinking district behavior problems, since he does not go down there in the late evenings on Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights.

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14 Speak Out on the 2010-11 Budget. No One Likes It.

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WPCNR COMMON COUNCIL CHRONICLE-EXAMINER. May 3, 2010 UPDATED 11:45 P.M.E.D.T.: The Common Council heard 14 persons speak on the 2010-11 City Budget Monday eveningmeet this evening. Four persons spoke in favor of reopening the White Plains Public Library on Saturdays. Marjorie Davies of the League of Women Voters speaking on behalf of the league, urged the city to mitigate the tax increase, support countywide revaluation of real estate properties, and renegotiate union contracts with the police, fire, teamsters and CSEA unions to avoid layoffs and lower wage increases. 


The Presidents of the Police and Fire unions urged the council not to jeopardize citizens and police officers and fire fighters by lowering department strengths.  Joseph Carrier, President of the Firefighters said the council was putting White Plains citizens at risk if they lowered firefighter staffing as has been proposed: “The council has a responsibility to weigh and differentiate between the citizens’ safety needs and the need for budget cuts…Let me state on the record, (these layoffs) have the potential to kill.”_) James Carrier, head of the police union, said he’d be meeting with the city Tuesday morning with a police offer to the Mayor and his staff. The police union head noted how the 12-hour work schedule had cut overtime in half, and cautioned that layoffs would increase the need for overtime, and put his fellow police officers at risk.


Former Councilman Glen Hockley chided Tom Roach, Benjamin Boykin, Dennis Power and Milagros Lecouna and Mayor Adam Bradley for not supporting the 1/4% sales tax increase three years and two years previously, blaming them for the present budget “crisis.” 


Rosemarie Hicks, noted that White Plains single family homeowners, if property taxes are not held down, will face continued lowering real estate values and higher taxes making White Plains less competitive. Nick Wolf, the realtor,encouraged passing the tax increase since it amount to about $1 a day for the average homeowner.


Councilmembers Roach and Boykin, stood up to one speaker and defended themselves from attacks on them for approving previous Delfino Administration budgets the last 9 years, claiming they cut Mayor Jospeh Delfino’s budget this year.


Carl Albanese, challenged the Common Council to remediate the city’s Gedney landfill and to be forthcoming on how much that was eventually going to cost the city. He also urged that when times got better in the city that tax reduction in the city property tax be considered, Lyn Huber, noted that the high cost of benefits for each city employee which he placed as $34,000 was “ridiculous,” urging all city employees be subject to paying a portion of their health benefits.


At the meeting tonight, the Council approved $285,092 in certiorari refunds, $48,528 refunded to Verizon for tax years 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, plus an assessment reduction of $215,000 for Verizon, and a $166,229,06 refund to 11 Lake Street Associates for tax years 2003 through 2010, and an assessment reduction of $180,800. The total assessment roll reduction which had already been deducted from the 2010 tax roll from the 10 properties receiving certiorari refunds this evening is $285,272.59.


The eight other properties are Harding Avenue Associates, $12,575, assessment reduction ($5,614.24 cert refund); Gisondi Family LP,291 Central Avenue, $2,462.67 cert; Gisondi Family LP, 287 Central Avenue, $8,150 assessment reduction, $3,638.65 refund; Gisondi Family LP, 285 Central Avenue, $24,250 assessment reduction, $10,826.66 cert refund; Gisondi Family LP,295 Battle Avenue,$24,000 assessment reduction, $10,431.18 cert refund; Harding Avenue Associates LLC, 30 Dekalb Avenue, $2,600 assessment reduction,$1,160.80 cert refund; Tiffany Towers,Ltd., 56 Doyer Avenue, $38,500 assessment reduction,$22,539.15 cert refund,and 451 Broadway Realty, 172 South Broadway, $22,000 assessment reduction, $13,661.48 certiorari refund.


In the next two weeks, the Council will hold their final sessions on the budget as follows:


COMMON COUNCIL AGENDA
REVISED
SPECIAL MEETING
MAY 10, 2010
6:00 P.M.


DISCUSSION:


 


5.       Proposed Tax Budget 2010 – 2011 – Expenditure Overview – Department of Planning and Slater Center, and recommendations of Budget and Management Advisory Committee.


COMMON COUNCIL AGENDA
SPECIAL MEETING
MAY 13, 2010
6:00 P.M.


DISCUSSION:


6.       Proposed Tax Budget 2010 – 2011 – Decision Night.


COMMON COUNCIL AGENDA
SPECIAL MEETING
MAY 24, 2010
7:30 P.M.


DISCUSSION:


7.       Proposed Tax Budget 2010 – 2011 – Adoption.





COMMON COUNCIL AGENDA
REVISED
SPECIAL MEETING
MAY 10, 2010
6:00 P.M.


DISCUSSION:


 


5.       Proposed Tax Budget 2010 – 2011 – Expenditure Overview – Department of Planning and Slater Center, and recommendations of Budget and Management Advisory Committee.







COMMON COUNCIL AGENDA
SPECIAL MEETING
MAY 13, 2010
6:00 P.M.


DISCUSSION:


6.       Proposed Tax Budget 2010 – 2011 – Decision Night.




 




COMMON COUNCIL AGENDA
SPECIAL MEETING
MAY 24, 2010
7:30 P.M.


DISCUSSION:


7.       Proposed Tax Budget 2010 – 2011 – Adoption.

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