Million and up Home Market Turning Around. Fee-Sotheby’s Opens Kiosk at The West

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WPCNR THE HOUSING NEWS. By John F. Bailey. April 21, 2010:  It’s a great day to buy a nice house.


 


Jumbo mortgages are available again. Homes priced at $1 Million and up are now being seriously shopped, prices of million-dollar-plus homes stabilizing, and the economy is turning around said Edward Ferguson,  senior vice president Westchester for Julia B. Fee Sotheby’s International Realty yesterday at the opening of the company’s realty lounge at The Westchester Mall in White Plains.


 



Edward Feguson of Julia B. Fee Sotheby’s International Realty opening his company’s informational open air lounge at The Westchester’s second floor concourse Tuesday.


 


To showcase attractive availabilities to the market they feel is out there looking to buy the Million plus homes Westchester is known for,  the leaders for years  in the county’s upscale home market, Julia B. Fee Sotheby’s opened the first realty kiosk ever in White Plains upscale Westchester Mall. The company  feels the Westchester housing market is turning around.



The staff who at different times will be talking with folks passing by the Fee-Sotheby’s booth: L to R: Jim Whittemore, Manager, Larchmont office; Joshua Rogull, Rye Office; seated, Melba Herrera Kelly, Larchmont office; Lee MeTeigue, Larchmont office; Helen Properfi, Larchmont; Pati Holmes, Manager, Rye office, and Mr. Ferguson.


 


Ferguson told WPCNR “we have hundreds of homes priced at $1 Million and up in our inventory in the Westchester region. We approached The Westchester because the Westchester is a very defined kind of shopping market.It draws people from all over the world because of the brands in the mall discriminating people depend on. We feel the shoppers it draws are interested in the upscale properties we have available in Westchester and around the world.”


 


Ferguson said the idea came to him November of last year when he was impressed with the car brands such as Cadillac, Infiniti, and the many upscale retailers in the mall and worked with The Westchester to try the kiosk idea.


 


Ferguson feels the upscale market is turning around.  He told WPCNR the availability of jumbo mortgages from Westchester banks is loosening up and improving. He noted that price points have stopped declining and are coming back in the $1 Million plus market, presenting buying opportunities for a market previously on the sidelines.


 


He said his new kiosk was to both showcase local upscale home availabilities on their 42-inch video display, obtain sales “leads” and  promote international real estate as well as local, noting that through Sothby’s  international offices, the Fee-Sotheby organization can showcase condominiums, timeshares, estates, homes and opportunities in 40 countries. Sotheby’s has 10,000 sales associates located in 500 offices worldwide.


 



 


Browsers can stop by the Fee-Sotheby open air lounge on the Second Level of The Westchester, chat informally with Fee-Sotheby sales representatives about their home and homes they want,  and see local and international properties that dreams are made of, or visit the Fee-Sotheby website at www.jbfsir.com

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FBI, County Police Arrest 2 Charged with WP Bank Robberies, 6 Other Area Banks

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WPCNR POLICE GAZETTE. From Westchester County Violent Crimes Task Force. April 21,2010: The FBI and local police forces arrested two Bronx residents, Carl Farrington, 30 and Karriem Barrow, 37, thought to be responsible for the TD Bank holdup in Mahopac March 16, for which they were charged in Federal Court yesterday for Armed Robbery and use of a firearm in comission of a felony. The pair are said to be connected with a series of eight armed robberies throughout the region including two bank robberies in White Plains at TD Bank March 5 and Hudson City Savings, February 22. The suspects were held without bail. The Task Force estimates the pair allegedly stole $300,000 to $400,000 in the various robberies.

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City Hall Announces Shoprite Is Coming to City Center

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WPCNR MAIN STREET JOURNAL. From The Mayor’s Office. April19, 2010: Shoprite, the national supermarket chain is scheduled to open a outlet in the White Plains downtown this summer, taking one of the two major vacant retail spaces in the City Center in downtown White Plains, according to Mayor Adam Bradley’s Chief of Staff, John Callahan.


Callahan said that Shoprite has purchased building permits for renovating the space and that the supermarket is expected to be operational in about 4 months.


A major clothing chain is also expected to be occupying the other major vacancy

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Parking Fines Jacked Under Radar. Council Did Not Approve. Not Told Detail.

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WPCNR PARKING NEWS. By John F. Bailey. April 19, 2010 UPDATED APRIL 20, 2010: Imagine my surprise when I read in The Journal News this morning that White Plains Parking Fines were going up. Gee, I wondered how did I miss that?


 



The Department of Parking Fine Increases are projected to raise $872,000 more dollars in 2010-11. Fine revnue has been flat for three years.


 


The Common Council was not consulted in any detail  by the administration on the question of the effect of raising parking ticket fines and nonpayment escalation fees, before the city proposed budget was presented. A total of $1.4 Million is expected to be raised in new traffic ticket and other increases — the equivalent of an extra 3-1/2% tax increase on top of the currently planned 19% increase– if the parking ticket and other items are not increased.


 


 WPCNR did not remember at all hearing about these upgraded fees  in any Common Council “Work” Sessions (there have been two in 3-1/2 months).


 


When city revenues were discussed Monday evening Councilman Benjamin Boykin observed that the parking ticket fine raise to $20 was “a fait accompli,” having been approved by city court. He told WPCNR he knew fines were going up having seen it in the published Mayor’s Budget. Tom Roach, Council President, told WPCNR that the administration had not discussed the policy of raising of the basic overtime parking ticket fine with the council, nor the possible impacts of such an increase.


 


No member of the council expressed concern over the increase of $15-$20 in the basic ticket


 


Dennis Power contacted by WPCNR yesterday on the question has not indicated one way or the other whether he knew, indicated last night the raise of $5 was still under other cities in Westchester, but would not want to see the ticket become much more than it is.


 


Councilman David Buchwald though was troubled that the fine amounts were still being decided by city court now that parking is no longer a private public authority. He asked Commissioner of Parking, Albert Moroni, since city court currently holds the power of approving parking fines and fees, (an arrangement followed when Parking was a public authority and separate from the city) whether he thought he Common Council should have the final say in improving such increases in the future. Moroni said he did not have an opinion on the subject and that the court had always had such approval in the past, and observed it was an issue.


 


 



PARKING METER FEE HISTORY, LAST 3-1/2 YEARS. Parking meter revenue eroded 3% ($300,000)  from 2007-08,possibly due to the recession. The city projects to recover that in 2010-11, however meter fees are NOT being raised.



A $1.4 Million Parking Revenue increase is anticipated based on all increased parking fees.





 


The Council voted to approve a new violation allowing the Department of Parking to write tickets for expired registrations on parked cars in White Plains as part of the Common Council consent agenda April 5. However, in going over  the backup material (supplied with the Common Council agenda) with a fine tooth comb, WPCNR only notes that Commissioner of Parking Albert Moroni in his letter to the Common Council wrote,


 


“The Department of Parking has had discussions with City Court Judge Friia, who is  in agreement that it would be appropriate for the “Parked Without Valid Registration” violation within the Traffic Ordinance to take effect immediately, or as soon as is practicable.”


 


There is no mention in the letter to the Common Council of any additional parking fine increases on other violations.


 


However, in the letter to Judge Jo Ann Friia, Senior Judge, City Court of March 24, Mr. Moroni writes,


 


“As per our recent meeting and discussion regarding current parking ticket fines, the purpose of this letter is to officially confirm your approval of  the attached Parking Violation Fine and Penalty Schedule with Proposed Changes. Thank you for your continued support.”


 


However, to be fair, there was ultimately, no need for the Commissioner to mention those increased fines to the Common Council. The Parking Department still operates under the regulations governing the old White Plains Parking Authority, which was regulated by city court,  Commissioner Moroni said:


 


“The Common Council sets the parameters of what limits (of parking fines) can be. It is up to the city court judge to approve any requests (by the Parking Department, previously the White Plains Parking Authority) for violation increases.”


 


Moroni told the Common Council and members of the Budget Committee last night that the “parameter” the council has previously set is no fine shall go above $150.


 


The new parking fines are as follows — and it should be noted, lead-footers with have a tendency to speed through White Plains — the initial speeding ticket has been jacked to $50.


 




 

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Firefighters Extinguish High Rise Blaze at 125 Lake Street. No One Hurt.

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WPCNR PUBLIC SAFETY SENTINEL. From The Mayor’s Office. April 18, 2010: Fire broke out in a tenth floor apartment at 125 Lake Street Sunday morning at 10:45 A.M and was extinguished by responding White Plains Firefighters.


According to Antoinette Biordi, Communications Director, the fire started in a bedroom of apartment 10M, and was so intense flames were shooting out of the window and spread to the bedroom of the apartment directly above the fire scene, apartment 11M. Biordi said the 11 M resident’s quick thinking helped stop the fire from spreading by shutting the door to the 11M bedroom.


She said the resident of 10M is homeless and thought the management of the building was helping to provide for them. She said the fire department Cause and Investigation unit was looking into the cause of the blaze.


White Plains Mayor Adam Bradley arrived on the scene and provided comfort and his personal concern for the residents. The Mayor said the fire department “did a great job,” in bringing the blaze quickly under control especially since this was a high rise building.

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Ruth Rhymes With Truth: Gruber Reporter Icon Still Putting the Truth Out There

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WPCNR CITY DESK. By John F. Bailey. April 17, 2010: When Brenda Starr (Mrs. Bailey) picked out the documentary film Ahead of Time at the Jacob Burns Film Center in Pleasantville for us to go see,  she told me it sounded interesting. She said it was about a writer/reporter who helped save Jewish refugees in World War II. The name of the writer did not ring a bell with me.



Ann Curry, left, News Anchor/Correspondent, Today Show and Dateline, with Ruth Gruber and Stephen Apkon, founder and executive director of the Jacob Burns Film Center in Pleasantville. Curry interviewed Gruber after screening of Ahead of Time, the opening night film of the Westchster Jewish Film Festival 2010 at the Center. Gruber, the subject of the film was a foreign correspondent, photojournalist, author and humanitarian for 70 years. She covered the Nuremberg Trails,documented the voyage of the Exodus and has a lifelong devotion to Jewish causes. Photo, Courtesy, Jacob Burns Film Center, by Lynda Shenkman Curtis.


 


 


So we went and I met Ruth Gruber.


 


I know who she is now. She really did fight  for truth, justice and the humane way. She was one writer against the odds, just like in the movies.


 


With one big chilling difference: she had no script to assure things would turn out right and she would come back alive.


A packed house at the Burns was enthralled by the movie, intercut with memorabilia of Ms. Gruber’s life, pictures of the famous men and women and her presence in the course of twentieth century history. It is a movie that describes her youth growing up in Brooklyn, and being encouraged by a teacher who came to her home one day encouraging her parents that she was a great writing talent. To this day, Ms. Gruber confided to the audience that this teacher inspired her to become a writer


 


After seeing this movie, I asked  reporters I know if they knew of Ruth Gruber. They did not know her.


 


 I, after meeting this shining example of what reporting is and what it’s all about,  shall always remember her .


 


All of us who report because we are compelled to do it, because it is in our gut, and who still search for those guts at times, who still have the inner resolve, should see this movie and learn about Ms. Gruber.


 


I know her now. At the age of 20, (1931) as a young writer growing up in New York she traveled to Germany and earned a Ph.d at that young age. Staying with a Jewish family at the time, and possessed of a reporter’s curiosity, she saw and listened to Adolf Hitler at a Nazi rally, on the rise at that time.


 


In the question and answer period after the movie, she told the audience, “I shall never forget the sound of his voice.” The comment spoke volumes. It was risky for Ruth Gruber to attend that rally, she dressed in a manner so that she would not be perceived as Jewish. It was the curiosity and courage that would distinguish Ms. Gruber’s reporting and adventures her entire life.


 


Ms. Gruber covered the Nuremberg Nazi war criminal trials. She visited Ben-Gurion when he was dying. She stood up to powerful men.  She was a foreign correspondent for the Herald Tribune.


 


Through her pluck and guile and refusal to say “no,” or “give-up,” she became the first correspondent to report from the Russian Arctic. She reported on matters that were not politically correct. 


 


She escorted a boatload of Jewish refugees knowing the ship could have been targeted by German aircraft and submarines, and wrote about the plight of the refugees.


 


She snapped away pictures on the Jewish refugee ship Exodus on its endless voyage,  embarrassing Great Britain, and shaming them into letting these refugees into Palestine. Her photograph of the Union Jack flag with a swastika painted on it is a news photo classic. It was a photo that changed thousands of people’s minds because she had the guts to take it.


 


She picked by Secretary of the Interior Harold Ickes to report on the potentials of Alaska, and stood up to staunch political criticism of her selection.


 


Throughout the film, it became clear that Ms. Gruber achieved because she would not take “no” for an answer, had the courage to take a chance, and always looked to the horizon. She did what she thought had to be done.


 


After the movie ended, Ann Curry, the NBC Correspondent introduced the Ruth Gruber of today, 99 years old.


 


Ms. Gruber was precisely articulate, confident, and we learned she was still out there reporting.


 


Just four years ago, she was asked to go on a speaking tour she said to raise funds to transport Jewish refugees from Ethiopia to the United States during the awful civil war there. She said she could not do that without seeing first-hand the refugees’ plight. So in her mid-90s she traveled  to Ethiopia and interviewed the refugees first-hand.  For a person that at half her age doesn’t like driving into New York City, well I tell you, I was confronted with my own fear.


 


When you meet some one like Ruth Gruber, you’ll never forget them.


 


In the audience were persons who traveled on the refugee ship that Ms. Gruber was on in 1944 as am ambassador and actually a human shield, that because of her international reputation, the United States felt the refugee ship would be protected with her on board. Ms. Gruber took the risk. Their admiration for her was shining, even after all these decades have passed.


 


She has authored seven books and writes every day, using computers.


 


She is the reporter’s reporter, and I wondered why I and some of my colleagues did not know of her. We know of the Cronkites, the Murrows, the Hemingways, Martha Gelhorn, but I had not heard of Ms. Gruber, until last week.


 


Some one in the audience asked what advice she had for the young today for young writers.


 


She said, “Read, read read every paper you can get your hands on. Write, write, write, do not be discouraged by rejection. Do not let anything stand in the way of your dreams.”


 


Asked how she raised two children and still kept her career going, Gruber, obviously the mold from which tough, no-nonsense, nose-for-news woman reporters were made of dismissed the incredulous-tinged question with a thoughtful, “it was not easy.”


 


The woman has a way with dialogue. Snappy, direct, uncompromising, self-sufficient. It is very attractive.


 


I encourage every reporter – especially young women and men  in journalism—to see this documentary, Ahead of Time. It is a film to watch whenever you don’t get that interview, whenever you’ve been scooped, lied to, hit on, disrespected, not given big assignments, and given the shaft, and your editor is a jerk.


 


Ms. Gruber was treated like that, experienced those things but did not let it stop her – she rose above it – when women were not supposed to be reporters.


 


Asked for one last bit of advice from the audience about what she would tell young people, Ms. Gruber repeated,


 


“Let nothing stand in the way of your dreams.”


 



Ruth Gruber Reporting

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Now for Something Completely Different; SUGAR Plays WBT! Last Perfs of NINE!

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WPNCR STAGE DOOR. From Pia Haas, Westchester Broadway Theatre, April 17, 2010(Edited):  WBT is coming through to put a smile on your face, a leer on your lips, and fill your evening with side-splitting laughter with just the right cocktail to forget your troubles: Starting a run April 29th,  an evening of hilarity, hi-jinks, high camp seasoned with a spicey blonde when Stutler and Funking, the WBT empressarios present the musical revival of Billy Wilder’s hilarious movie, Some Like it Hot!


 



 


 


What’s the best way for two unemployed male musicians to escape the Chicago mob? Dress up in drag and join an all-female band on a train headed for Miami, of course! That’s Michael O’Steen, Jennifer Lee Andrews and Keith Bernardo reprising the Tony Curtis, Marilyn Monroe and Jack Lemmon roles a previous smash Westchester Broadway Theatre production of SUGAR, a WBT revival of  SUGAR  with  Colleen Hawks in the Marylin role, Gary Lynch in the Curtis role and Eric Santagata in the Jack Lemmon role comes back April 29 at the WBT. Photo by John Vecchiolla.



The Hit Musical, SUGAR is based on Billy Wilder’s 1959 comic masterpiece; “Some Like It Hot, starring Tony Curtis, Jack Lemmon and Marilyn Monroe. Two musicians in 1920s Chicago are unwilling witnesses to a showdown between rival bootleggers and need to get out of town fast. The only jobs to be had are in an all-girl band conveniently headed for sunny Miami. Their problems aren’t over by a longshot, though: both fall for the band’s lead singer, Sugar Kane; one of them becomes the object of affection for an elderly millionaire – and then the Chicago mobsters show up. Memorable musical numbers include “Penniless Bums”, “The Beauty That Drives Men Mad”, “We Could Be Close”, “Doin’ It for Sugar”, “What Do You Give (To a Man Who Has Everything?)”, “Beautiful Through and Through” and “November Song”.



SUGAR, marks the 165th production for WBT, New York State’s longest continuously operating Equity Theatre. The Show has all the needed elements for lively theater, including tapdancing gangsters, beautiful showgirls, true love, mismatched love, great music, catchy tunes, and of course, guys in drag! The production features Gary Lynch as Joe (aka Josephine) and Eric Santagata as Jerry (aka Daphne) the musicians. Colleen Hawks will star as the sultry Sugar Kane and Ed Romanoff as the confused millionaire, Osgood Fielding, Jr.  Spats Palazzo, the tapping bootleg kingpin, is played by Yoav Levin, The band’s gimlet-eyed leader, Sweet Sue, is played by Ann-Ngaire Martin.
 


Charles Repole, a favorite of WBT, will direct the Production.  Michael O’Steen will Choreograph and Jeff Tanski is the Musical Director. The winning production team includes Steve Loftus (Scenic Design), Matthew Hemesath (Costume Design), Andrew Gmoser (Lighting Design), Jon Hatton (Sound Design), Victor Lukas (Production Stage Manager & Properties Design), and Ron Rogell (Assistant Stage Mgr.).


 


Produced by David Merrick and directed and choreographed by Gower Champion, SUGAR opened on Broadway at the Majestic Theatre on April 9, 1972 and closed on June 23, 1973 after 505 performances. The opening night cast included Robert Morse as Jerry/Daphne, Tony Roberts as Joe/Josephine, Elaine Joyce as Sugar Kane, Cyril Ritchard as Osgood Fielding, Jr., Sheila Smith as Sweet Sue, and Steve Condos as Spats Palazzo.  The West End production, starring Tommy Steele, opened at the Prince Edward Theatre on March 19, 1992 and closed on June 20, 1992. The production reverted to the film’s title of Some Like It Hot.  A 2002-03 US National Tour starred Tony Curtis as Osgood Fielding, Jr.


 


LAST 2 WEEKS!


 



 


This weekend and next are the last two weeks to catch NINE, with Robert Cuccioli. The sophisticated tour de force of the secret lives of a legendary Italian Director, that WPCNR’S insightful, demanding and ruthless theatre critic called “a glam show, a string of clever, introspective ballads, laments and lampoon blockbuster production numbers. Robert Cuccioli a silky Sinatra with machismo, a lusty Tom Jones with subtlety, a hunky  Tom Selleck with very effective and attractive 80s sensitivity.”


 


For ticket information and showtimes of SUGAR and the final Westchester Broadway Theatre performances of NINE, go to www.BroadwayTheatre.com or call the box office at 914-592-2222. Do not forget an evening at WBT includes a full-course dinner with your entertainment.


 

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District Acheivement Scores STUNNINGLY UP At Elementary, Middle School 5th and 8

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. By John F. Bailey. April 16, 2010: The 2009-2009, White Plains City School District School Report Card shows the district Elementary and Middle School populations improved substantially on English and Math performance on the new 08-09 achievements last year. The April 15 release of the previous year Report Cards was a first for the New York State Education Department, which traditionally have issued those reports in June, substantially after all school budgets are presented to voters in May.


Early analysis of the test results by WPCNR, show stunning improvement at the elementary levels. In 5th Grade English Language Testing, results were even with 2007-08 80%  402) of 499 students passing, and 14% scoring in the highest level as opposed to 7% in the highest achievement level.


In 5th Grade Mathematics, 87% of the Elementaries (443 of 501 students taking the test) passed compaged to 76% in 2007-2008.


The Middle School results were even more impressive. In 8th Grade English Language, 75% (389 of 502) passed compared to 58% in 2007-08, a 17%  improvement.


On the Mathematics Side, 90% (474 of 520 students) passed, compared to 80% in 07-08.


The High School Results on Regents exams were comparable for the most part with previous years.

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Decline in jobs Turns Around.

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WPCNR EMPLOYMENTARIAN. By Johny Nelson, New York State Department of Labor Analyst April 15, 2010: The region’s job market has begun to show signs of life as over-the-year losses have started to narrow.  For the 12-month period ending March 2010, private sector jobs declined by only 2.7 percent.  This was an improvement from the 3.1 percent year-over-year decline recorded in February and the 3.3 percent drop in January. 

 

The public sector continues to struggle locally as it shed 3,600 jobs over the year in March. Job losses in that sector are likely to continue as budget woes mount. 

Private sector employment in the Hudson Valley Region decreased 19,200 or 2.7 percent, to 694,600 for the 12-month period ending March 2010. 

 

Employment gains were only recorded in educational and health services (+1,800). 

 

Job losses were centered in the following industries: natural resources, mining and construction (-6,400), trade, transportation and utilities (-4,100), manufacturing (-3,600), professional and business services (-3,500), financial activities (-1,400), information (-1,200) and leisure and hospitality (-500).  The Government sector shed 3,600 jobs over the year.

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Sustainability Commitee Report–UPDATED WITH MAY AGENDA!

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WPCNR SUSTAINABLE TIMES. By Dan Seidel. April 15, 2010 UPDATED APRIL 17 WITH MAY AGENDA AND PRIORITIES: I was present from the beginning of the Sustainable Committee meeting to the end. The group broke down into 6 or 7 tables, each handling a different aspect of “green”, the matrices developed being the type the County Global Warming task Force used, so we are not reinventing the wheel.

 

 

 

 

 

The ideas deduced from the first session, which were written on 3×5 cards and handed in to the Steering Committee, were all listed, and each table went over what was listed and what should be included – so the macro version was increased – now we have to scale down exactitudes.

 

Bice made the statement at the beginning that the commissioners should be involved at these meetings to comment on what is being done or not, so if we come up with the same “solutions” that are ALREADY being done, we should go on to something else instead of wasting time and effort on something that is being done already. Sue Habel kind of squashed that and said let’s see what concerns the community and then we’ll comment on it.

 

I completely disagreed. Dennis Power stated that this was being done in tandem with our meetings – Well, if Bud and Sue are really the only two people with jurisdiction to comment on what is or not being done right now, and they were both there last night (Bud came in late) why not do it now?

 

So Bud sat with the energy Table and that was my table and we went thru the short term and long term goals and Bud , from his head, came up with pretty much many things being done, but he did not offer to write them all down, which is what we need if we are to see what is being done and what needs improvements, etc.

 

This is not to second guess the Commissioners, but maybe we have some additional ideas that were not/have not been considered, like the Energy Bank Units (capacitor devices) that can show instant electrical usage bringdown and verifiable CO2 tonnage/carbon offsets which can be sold as credits on the carbon exch in Chicago – make an income stream from carbon (verifiable as per Kyoto Treaty Stands on the UN Website – EcoSecurities of Wall Street will but the tonnage at $5-7 per ton – need to come up with 20,000-30,000 tons displaced annually – its can be a steady $$ producer) so since Rick Ammirato had a reach out with EB Unit guy/area rep (last week?) maybe we can do this now, to get ready for the July 8 event of Clean and Green.  Other things were done.

 

The group is kind of adrift however – need Commissioners to put together a brief outline of what initiatives have been undertaken already, what is happening now, and with the Rx’s of our group, where we can go.

 

I think I am more optimistic now that the “energy group” knows each other, have similar contacts and “a can do attitude”, regardless of what is happening at the very top.

 

NYPA, NYSERDA, Reckson, WP Housing, Lou bruno, myself, a few others were in Energy. I can fax the matrices – I will try for a scan – colored headings with short term and long term goals and ideas. Trying for no/low $$ loads in the beginning (budget) and trying to use other’s money where the energy savings will initially pay for loans and then it’s free sailing after 1.5 years on the EB Unit at least.



Sustainability & Environmental Enhancement Committee (SEEC)
Committee Meeting – April 14, 2010, 7:30 – 9:00pm
AGENDA

1.  Welcome new SEEC members    

2.  Minutes from March 10th Formation Meeting     

3.  Purpose of tonight’s meeting: review and refine the suggestions for sustainability Initiatives made at our initial meeting on March 10, 2010 which have been sorted into the areas of study outlined in the SEEC Mission Statement:       


ENERGY
WASTE REDUCTION
TRANSPORTATION
LAND USE
WATER MANAGEMENT
GENERAL

a.  Members of the Committee are asked to join a PROJECT TEAM for one or even two of these subject areas to discuss the list of proposed initiatives supplement them as appropriate and begin the process of preparing a formal recommendation to the Mayor and Common Council. A Member of the Steering Committee will moderate the PROJECT TEAM discussions and request the project team to document the results of their discussions.  

b.  By the May 12, 2010 SEEC Committee Meeting, it is requested that each of the PROJECT TEAMS be prepared to finalize their recommendations to the full Committee so all suggestions can be incorporated into a DRAFT recommendation to the Mayor and Council by the June 9, 2010 meeting as described in the SEEC Mission Statement which is partially excerpted below.

 “Develop prioritized and cost effective short and long-term recommendations for presentation to the Mayor and Common Council on ways to make White Plains a healthier, safer, more sustainable and more livable community

2.  Wrap-up discussion on how to proceed with Project Team assignments     

3.  Announcement about local EARTH WEEK events       

4.  Next SEEC Meeting: Wednesday, May 12th, 7:30-9:00pm   

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