Parade, Friendly Gathering go on Despite Storm. Bradleys Appear. Ice Show Sunda

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WPCNR SATURDAY NIGHT. March 13, 2010: White Plains ran its St. Patrick’s Day Parade this noon despite the windy, stormy weather that pelted marchers and the high winds swirled through the county seat. Observers  midway through the parade said there sparse crowds of spectators watching the marchers from the sidewalks, but very large crowds in the restaurants and bars lining Mamaroneck Avenue. “They were packed, you couldn’t get in.” Mayor Adam Bradley attended the parade.


 


At  the Friendly Gathering at Good Counsel Saturday night, a crowd braved the stormy night,  despite power being out to over 4,000 White Plains residents. The annual gathering honored Lorraine Buonocunto, of the Ecumenical Food Pantry of White Plains.


 


The Friendly Gathering was highlighted by an appearance by White Plains Mayor Adam Bradley, his wife, and their two children who attended the festivities and were greeted by many well-wishers coming up to their table.


 


At Ebersole Rink the ice show was scheduled to go on at the roofed facility which is protected from the elements. WPCNR has learned Sunday morning the show was postponed late Saturday afternoon and will be “iced” and rescheduled to go on Sunday evening at 6:30 P.M.


 

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Westchester Airport Closed by PowerOut. Mam Ave, Parkview Court, Church OUT

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WPCNR WEATHER SCOOP. March 13,2010: Con Edison reports Westchester County, has over 51,000 customers who have lost power due to the high winds and driving rain storm that has been scouring the county for over 15 hours.


The amount of customers exceeds the 35,000 outages experienced by the county in the snowstorm of February 27 by 15,000 and the number is growing. Yonkers, Greenburgh, White Plains, New Rochelle, Mount Vernon, and Mount Pleasant are very hard hit.


In White Plains, Peter Katz reports that vast banks of homes down Mamaroneck Avenue south of the downtown appear to have lost power. He also reports that the area of Parkview Court and Church Street are without power at this time. Con Edison reports 4,390 White Plains customers are experiencing power failure as of 9 P.M. and they hope to restore power to those White Plainsians by 11 P.M. tonight.


Katz tells WPCNR that Westchester County Airport is closed because of a power outage, and the airport reports winds of 25 knots, gusting to 45 knots, and it is raining in White Plains.


Katz said Con Edison crews appeared be assembling on Mamaroneck Avenue as of 9 P.M. to deal with the darkout.


Elsewhere around the county, outages have grown since nightfall. Con Edison Storm Center reports Yonkers has 8,069 without power; Rye City, 2,308; Port Chester, 172; Peekskill, 144; North Tarrytown, 312; North Castle, 1,692; New Rochelle, 6,484; Mount Vernon, 2,775; Mt. Pleasant, 2,591; Mamaroneck, 696; Larchmont, 1,048; Irvington, 1,194; Hastings, 280; Greenburgh, 6,830; Elmsford, 527; Eastchester,1,659;Dobbs Ferry, 245; Briarcliff, 504; Bronxville, 1,216; and Ardsley, 578.


To find out Con Edison’s estimated time when they will have power restored go to the online Con Edison Storm Center at http://apps.coned.com/weboutageinfo/stormcenter/default.aspx

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WIND, SHEETS OF RAIN RAMPAGE ACROSS WESTCHESTER COUNTY

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WPCNR WEATHER SCOOP. March 13, 2010:  As night fell across the city, howling east winds of gale force sounding like a fast freight train, blew limbs off trees, sent power wires singing, opened garbage storage bins and shredded branches, even blew  nailed-down shutters off homes.


The close to the surface winds bent trees over as if they were palmtrees and have devasted Westchester communities with power outages and dangerous road conditions.


The outages are amazing: Con Edison Storm Center reports 1,101 customers powerless in White Plains;  1,803in Yonkers; 1,949 in Scarsdale; a staggering 4,329 without electricity in New Rochelle; 1,171 in North Castle (Chappaqua); 479 in Port Chester; 2,416 in Mount Vernon; 964 in Mt. Pleasant; 593 in Ardsley; 158 in Briarcliff; 959 in Bronxville; 119 in Dobbs Ferry; 1,588 in Harrison;  154 in Hastings; 534 in Irvington; 585 in Mamaroneck (where 10% of Con Ed customers are without power).


 

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NORTH STREET CLOSED AT RIDGEWAY DUE TO DOWNED TREE & LIVE WIRES

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WPCNR WEATHER SCOOP. Special to the CitizeNetReporter from Paula Piekos with WPCNR and Con Edison Sources. March 13, 2010:


As of 3:45 P.M. E.D.T. North Street (Route 127) was closed in BOTH DIRECTIONS due to a fallen tree on live wires. Utility vehicles were on the scene. Live wires are on the roadway. Motorists should avoid the area.


Police Department is very busy at this time, persons knowing of any other road closures in the city, please advise the CitizeNetReporter,914-997-1607


CON EDISON REPORTS 786 WHITE PLAINS CUSTOMERS ARE WITHOUT POWER IN THE CITY AS OF 4 P.M. DUE TO THE TROPICAL STORM WITH GALE FORCE WINDS CLOCKED IN THE 40 TO 50 MILE AN HOUR RANGE. GREENBURGH IS REPORTED BY CON EDISON TO HAVE 802 CUSTOMERS WITHOUT POWER.


ACROSS WESTCHESTER COUNTY 5,048 CON EDISON CUSTOMERS ARE REPORTING POWER OUTAGES.


CON EDISON AS OF 4:07 P.M. IS ESTIMATING POWER WILL BE RESTORED BY 10 P.M. SATURDAY EVENING.


 



TREE FALLS ON NORTH STREET, FELLING LIVE WIRES CLOSING NORTH STREET IN BOTH DIRECTIONS AS OF 4 P.M.



LIVE WIRES SMOULDER ON STONE WALL AT RIDGEWAY AND NORTH STREET

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$11 Million Sales Tax Collection Gap Looms After 8 Months of City Fiscal Year

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WPCNR QUILL & EYESHADE. By John F. Bailey.  March 12, 2010: White Plains sales tax receipts continue to erode at a disastrous  cumulative pace which keeps compounding the city reservoir of red ink week by week.


 


The New York State Department of Taxation and Finance today reportes Sales Tax Collections for the first 8 months of the White Plains 2009-10 fiscal year are 22% behind the 2008-2009 pace, $7.1 Million off what was collected last year through eight months.


 


If the present 7 to 8% rate of decline does not turn up dramatically,  City Sales Tax Receipts will lag $10 Million behind last year’s actual collections and possibly $11 Million short of forecast. The $11 Million sales tax gap alone would precipitate drastic budget cuts in 2010-11, or a property tax increase of 33%.


 


The February Sales Tax Receipts were down 7.3% from February 2009,  according to figures released to The CitizeNetReporter by the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance.


 


 


This is the third consecutive month sales tax receipts have declined  in the White Plains city limits. It should be noted that a major snowstorm may have affected the February Presidents’ Day sales in White Plains. By contrast, Westchester County sales tax receipts the first two months of the county fiscal year is down just 3.6%.


If the present 7 to 8% rate of decline does not turn up dramatically,  City Sales Tax Receipts will lag $10 Million behind last year’s actual collections ($46.3 Million)and possibly $11 Million short of forecast ($47.3 Million).


 


The $11 Million sales tax gap alone could precipitate drastic budget cuts in 2010-11, or a property tax increase of 33% to make up the sales tax receipts gap.


 


The February Sales Tax Receipts were down 7.3% from February 2009,  according to figures released to The CitizeNetReporter by the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance.


 


This is the third consecutive month sales tax receipts have declined  in the White Plains city limits. It should be noted that a major snowstorm may have affected the February Presidents’ Day sales in White Plains.


 


By contrast, Westchester County sales tax receipts the first two months of the county fiscal year is down 3.6%, but that includes White Plains figures.

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State Proposes 2-Lane East West Bus Lanes for Hamilton Avenue for E-W Corridor.

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WPCNR IN TRANSIT. By John F. Bailey. March 11, 2010: The backbone of the new Rockland-Westchester County mass transit system of the future — the Bus Rapid Transit line — is envisioned by officials as traveling east-west on Hamilton Avenue in downtown White Plains, the Council of Neighborhood Associations learned Tuesday night. For many it was the first they had heard of the plan to go through White Plains.



The route the DOT feels is the most efficient at this time is to dedicate two lanes for Bus Rapid Transit, on Hamilton Avenue, one eastbound, the other westbound, with dedicated buslines coursing from 119 East onto Hamilton and down North Broadway eastbound to Westchester Avenue, and a dedicated bus line westbound coming up North Broadway Westbound off Westchester Avenue, connecting with Hamilton Avenue out to Route 119. It was the first time the Hamlton solution had been presented to the general public.



2 Plans to access Hamilton. Via Main Street, or a Tunnel


 


“The Hamilton Solution”  has the eastbound Rapid Transit buses coming off the Cross Westchester Expressway at Exit 5, entering Route 119  and Westbound Rapid Transit buses entering the city via Westchester Avenue. The buses connect between Hamilton Avenue and Route 119 in one of two ways.


 


1. Tunnel: One way is via a tunnel under the Metro North Railroad, the Bronx River and the Bronx River Parkway, avoiding Main Street completely.


 


and


 


2. Eastbound and West bound buses swinging on or off Hamilton respectively on a bypass feeding them to Main Street and under the railtracks back to Route 119.


 


The Department of Transportation, Metro North officials, and traffic engineers who have been working on Westchester and Rockland County transit problems for three years in connection with the Tappan Zee Bridge replacement projection, unveiled their most detailed solution yet to how the East-West I-287 “Bus Rapid Transit Trunk Line” would access White Plains to the Council of Neighborhood Associations.


 


James Coyle of AECOM, the engineering firm working with the DOT, said the 2-Bus Hamilton Plan came out of a suggestion in the fall at a public meeting that a dedicated bus line  East on Main Street in White Plains would cause too much congestion, and that placing two lanes, one eastbound and one Westbound, on Hamilton Avenue might make more sense, the DOT engineers examined this and put forth two ways it might be executed.


 


Coyle said the two-lane concept would work better because it would not disrupt the already-congested Main Street. He said that the city traffic department had been very negative about dedicating a lane on Main Street to buses.


 


The transit team  presented the Hamilton Avenue alternative to the Council of Neighborhood Associations Tuesday evening where about half of the gathering thought the plan would create too much congestion, with one resident throwing up his hands and saying “this is ridiculous!”


 


The lively reception ended with two residents, Pat Casey, of the White Plains Times pointing out the double bus lane on Hamilton Avenue might be at odds with a downtown that has been envisioned by some, including the new administration as having more open spaces and walking plazas, and that the new administration in city hall was looking at those kind of urban “green amenities.”


 


This prompted another resident to say it was long overdue that the city overhaul its “comprehensive plan,” and should start immediately to create a new plan,  decide what the city really wants and needs in its downtown. Various local traffic buffs dismissed the plan as not dealing with realities of traffic in White Plains, saying it would only add to the congestion. Others said why route the trunk line buses on the new Bus Rapid Transit system through downtown White Plains at all.


 


Naomi Klein, Principal Planner for the Westchester County Department of Transportation, said that the principle of mass transit was to move people into the center of destinations , eliminating the need for commuters to make multiple transfers, which increases congestion.


 


Asked by WPCNR if the state Bus Rapid Transit system as it grew would work with the county buslines to terminate routes, cutting down on the number of Bee Line routes into White Plains, Mr. Coyle of AECOM said that has not been considered yet, but said there would be efforts to consolidate routes.


 



Russell Robins, the leader of the Department of Transportation entourage, assured the Council of Neighborhood Associations that  “Nothing will be imposed on the city. This is going to be a participatory process. ” He said the public will have ample opportunities to weight in on the plan for Hamilton Avenue and that the alternative presented this evening will be fully explored in the Developmental Impact Statement being prepared over the next year.

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City Sues Police Union to Overturn 12-hour shifts, work rules.

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS LAW JOURNAL March 11, 2010: On March 2, the City of White Plains filed a suit  in New York Supreme Court against the White Plains Police Benevolent Association (the police labor union) which asks the court to declare “null and void” the December 29,2008 Memorandum of Agreement between Mayor Joseph Delfino and the police putting in place the 12-hour work shifts for patrol personnel on the grounds that “the December 29, 2008 MOA was never approved by the Common Council.”


 


The suit filed also asks the court to direct the City and PBA “to restore nune pro tune all the terms and conditions of employment in effect prior to the implementation of the December 29 MOA,” : the previous 8-hour work schedule, vacation leave,personal leave, administrative worki schedule and court time provisions.


 


Richard Zuckerman of Lamb & Barnosky, the labor attorney for the city, is the city attorney on the matter. Harry Greenberg of  Greenberg Bruzichelli Greenberg is the counsel for the WPPBA.


 


The new city administration estimates the new work shifts have cost the city over  $100,000 in cash payments to police for compensatory time (a new option which previously paid in compensatory time off only)  earned by the new work rules in the first six months of the program this fiscal year. Previously the former Commissioner of Public Safety, Dr. Frank Straub, had touted the 12-hour shifts as having significantly cut overtime.


 


The lawsuit contends that Mayor Joseph Delfino and the union implemented the 12-hour shifts without approval of the Common Council making continuation of the 12-hour shifts up to the discretion of the Police Commissioner. Previously, the council did not contest that arrangement after they agreed to a 9-month trial of the program which came up for extension in October of 2009.

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County Prepares Rebuttal to Glen Hockley’s Response to Dismiss Civil Rights Case

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS LAW JOURNAL. March 10,2010: Matthew Gallagher of the County Attorney Office advised WPCNR today that the former councilman Glen Hockley, who ran unsuccessfully as a write-in candidate against Adam Bradley for Mayor in the fall, after having been denied a position on the November ballot, filed answer papers to the County motion for dismissal of Mr. Hockley’s suit alleging his civil rights were violated by the Board of Elections during the November election, among other matters.


Mr. Gallagher said the county has until April 5 to prepare its rebuttal to Mr. Hockley’s papers, and said that after that date,  Judge Kathy Seibel might be expected to rule on the lawsuit.

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County Executive Announces $166 Million Deficit Outlines Steps He Plans to Take

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From Ned McCormick, Westchester County Director of Communications. March 9, 2010: Faced with a projected county government deficit of at least $166 million next year – and more than double that by 2013 – County Executive Robert P. Astorino today outlined the short-term steps that his administration will implement immediately and the long-term measures, including possible layoffs of hundreds of employees, that must be considered to close the shortfall.


 



County Executive Rob Astorino at his Inauguration in January


 


            Since taking office Jan. 1, Astorino has been meeting with his department heads and budget experts to deal with the looming deficits. Today’s announcement is the outcome of that effort and includes $16 million in short-term operational savings that can be implemented this year without immediate layoffs.  He also detailed the options under consideration to reduce spending next year and beyond.  



Astorino briefed the district attorney and the county clerk, as well as members of the Board of Legislators whose approval will be needed for many of the long-term measures. Later today he will be meeting with employees.


            “We have no choice; we must act now or things will only get worse,” Astorino said. “We have to dramatically cut the costs of our government. If changes are not made, our deficit for next year will be at least $166 million and could be $266 million by 2012 and $355 million by 2013.”


He added, “I know cuts are painful, but I will not close this hole by asking our overburdened taxpayers to come up with more money. The measures I am calling for protect essential services and provide for a zero percent increase in the county’s property tax levy. ”


Every $5.6 million in net spending amounts to about a 1 percent increase in the property tax levy. A $166 million hole in the budget would require a county property tax increase of about 30 percent. County government taxes account for about 16-20 percent of a property owner’s full tax bill. 


For 2011, Astorino’s administration projects that if no cuts are made spending will automatically increase by about $116 million compared to 2010.  This includes increases in personnel costs (salaries, pensions, health care), social services and overall operations.


On the revenue side for 2011, the administration projects a decrease of about $50 million, including drops in federal aid and a drastically reduced fund balance from previous years to draw upon.


Sales tax revenue is expected to remain substantially down from its peak of approximately $363 million in both 2007 and 2008.  Projections for 2010 are $339.6 million and just $18 million more in 2011. However actual sales tax receipts are running behind projections for the first two months of the year. Even if the sales tax eventually rebounds as the nation and Westchester recover from the recession, this cannot offset the loss of other revenues and increased expenditures, Astorino said. 


For 2012 and 2013, the projections are for continued pressures on both the expenditure and revenue sides.


Bennett Kielson, the county’s long-time auditor, has reviewed the county’s assumptions and methodology for 2011 expenditures and revenues and has found them to be reasonable.


SHORT-TERM STEPS


Astorino, whose own office is operating with $1.2 million less than was spent in 2009, said he has already acted to realize some savings and will act to implement $16 million in savings in 2010 based on recommendations by his department heads.


These include: 


·        Social Services: $5.8 million from the Department of Social Services, including $3.3 million in reduced costs of foster care due to better case management.


·        Finance: $2.1 million in savings from the refinancing of bonds.


·        Information Technology: $2.7 million in savings by temporarily not filling vacant positions, cutting overtime, and deferring some maintenance and hardware purchases.


·        Public Safety: $905,000 by temporarily not filling vacant positions, reducing overtime through redeployment and eliminating the mounted unit.


·        Transportation: $1.37 million in savings by temporarily not filling vacant positions and eliminating the express bus route (Bx M4C) to New York City. The ridership on this bus route is down, other alternatives, such as Metro-North, are available and the loss of service will not unduly impact low-income commuters.  


·        Parks: $1.6 million in savings by temporarily delaying the filling of 20 vacant positions, closing the Croton Park Pool and opening Playland one hour later each day.


“I thank my commissioners and department heads for their efforts to find savings in their current budgets,” said Astorino. “They have assured me that the cuts they have recommended and which I will be acting on do not affect their core services.” 


LONG-TERM STEPS


            Astorino stressed that these short-term measures, while very important, can only go so far. The solution for the future requires significant reduction in the county’s personnel costs. For 2010, salaries and fringe benefits (including health care and pension) account for $601 million.  For next year, they are projected to be $655 million.


            The county executive said there are various ways that savings can be accomplished and that he expects to have discussions with the county’s unions to determine the best path. Most of these changes would have to be approved by the Board of Legislators as well.


Some of the possibilities and their financial ramifications include the following:


·        Layoffs: The average cost of a Westchester County employee with fringe benefits is $100,000. For every 100 full-time positions eliminated, the savings would be $10 million. Eliminating 1,600 positions would save $160 million.


·        Pay freeze: $20.5 million can be saved in salary and fringe benefits if the county’s major unions would agree to forego raises next year.


·        Pay decreases: An additional $23.8 million can be saved with a 5 percent decrease in pay and $47.6 million with a 10 percent decrease.


·        Health care contributions: $22.3 million can be saved if the unions agreed to a 15 percent contribution to the cost of their county health plan. Savings grow as contributions are increased.


·        Furloughs: $5.1 million can be saved by a 5-day countywide employee furlough.


·        Separation incentive: An estimated $7 million in savings in personnel costs can be realized in 2011 if employees are given an incentive to voluntarily leave employment with the county.



 “Fixing our budget deficit will require changing the way we think about county government and the way we operate county government,” Astorino said in conclusion. “These changes will hurt, but not as much as denial that they are needed. The time for acting responsibly has come.”


 

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Schools Bottom Line: 4.72% Tax Increase.Teacher Contract Extension OKd.

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. By John F. Bailey. March 9, 2010: The School District has officially cut the school budget year-to-year for the first time in district history. Last night, the district  matched up revenues with their final round of expenses Monday evening and projected the 2010-11 School Budget would raise school taxes 4.72%.


 


All together, possible city tax increases, county tax increases combined with the School District budget presented Monday night could increase property taxes $1,500 or more in 2010 for the White Plains homeowner with a $650,000 home.


 



 


 


 


 


The school tax increase quietly crept up over the last six days.


 


Last Wednesday evening at a public forum on the budget, the district touted the tax increase to those in attendqance as being only 3.4%.


 


This means about a $400 increase for the White Plains median home priced at $650,000.


 


The tax increase has gone up over 1% from what the district told the public it was going to be six days ago  at a budget forum at the high school.


 


Should Governor David Patterson’s budget team and the State legislature go through with plans to lower the Star Exemption by18%, the school tax will go up an additional $165 to $665 for the median home


 


Barring any last minute financial miracle from the state legislature restoring school aid, there appears no revenue relief in sight. Assistant Superintendent for Business Fred Seiler told WPCNR, Assemblywoman Amy Paulin had indicated that the legislature would like to restore school aid cuts (accounting for $2.4 Million in revenue shortfall),but the state was facing a $9 Billion budget deficit themselves.


 


First School Budget Decline in District History


 


The new budget presented stands at $184,539,094, down ¾ of a percentage point from this year’s budget. This is the first time the White Plains School budget has decreased year-to-year since it incorporated in the early 1950s, according to the School District Business Office. The budget has increased every year for the last 60 years. Current budget history only goes back to 1989-1990.


 


83 Full-Time Employees Cut.


 


Last night the district said that 41 Full-time teachers were being cut, 38.5 Support Staff (teaching assistants), 3.7 administrators,  for a total of 83.1 position cuts, lowering total employment staff of the district (including part-time employees) to 1,060. Retirements, according to Fred Seiler are also expected, and Seiler said retirees were not going to be replaced.


 


Jackie Mackin of the School District Business Office explained how this works. She said, “That’s not entirely true, say,  a history teacher retired and no cuts had been made in social studies, a teacher could be hired to replace that retiree’s slot,” she explained. She said that presently 71 persons presently on staff are scheduled to have their positions eliminated. So far 30 teachers have retired.


 


Assistant Superintendent for Human Resources Leonora Boehlert said teachers being terminated would be notified in April.


 


Teacher’s Contract Extended to Save Money This Year: Clouet.


 


WPCNR learned last night from the head of the White Plains Teachers Union that the School District, two weeks ago approved a contract extension for the teachers in Executive Session.


 


The extension grants the teachers a 2.25% pay increase, with no change in pay increases per step level and longevity, which amounts to approximately a guaranteed 4.25% increase in pay in February 2012.


 


Extending Teacher Contract enables cuts.


 


Asked why the school district negotiated raises two years ahead of time when revenues for 2011-12 are being challenged due to assessment declines, and revenues for 2010-11 were unknown at this time, Superintendent of Schools, Dr. Christopher Clouet said “It was to save money this year.”


 


He said that in return for extending the contract an extra year and agreeing a a 1-1/4 net expenditure to fulfill the raises, the teachers extended the work day by one period every day, granted retirement incentives this year, and agreed to limit “lane changes (automatic increase for completing course requirements for advance degrees)” to one lane change per year, as well as health charge increases.


 


The new pay chart for 2011-12 has not been completed yet, Leonora Boehlert, Assistant Superintendent for Human Resources told WPCNR.


 


Revenue Losses


 


The school district lost $6,135,931 in revenues. $1.57 Million were lost due to PILOTS terminating on 360 Hamilton Avenue and a PILOT refund on the Cohen Brothers building (333 Westchester Avenue); $450,000 in lower interest income, $1.6 Million due to a closure of the BART program at New York Presbyterian Hospital, and $2,439.940 in decreased school aid.


 


Property Taxes up over $1,500 for median home in one Year.


 


In 2009-10, the median White Plains homeowner having a house valued at $650,000  paid approximately  $13,500 in property taxes to Westchester County, the City of White Plains and the School District.


 


In 2010-11, that same homeowner could pay $2,860 to the county,  possibly $3,600 to the city (if the city raises the tax rate $40 to cover their anticipated deficit, $12 Million), and $8,657 in school taxes (if 18% STAR EXEMPTION is enacted), for a grand total of  $15,117 and increase of $1,646.


 


 


 


 

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