School District To Cut 41 Full-time Teachers, 39 Support Staff as Predicted

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. By John F. Bailey. March 5, 2010: At a public forum on the 2010-11 School Budget Wednesday, the school district announced it was planning at this time a budget of $184.7 Million, about $1 Million less than this year’s budget.


WPCNR predicted in January, that based on present revenue projections on the new city assessment roll coming in at $3.7 Million less, and the 5.5% salary increases next year for teaching staff,  that the district would either have to cut 100 teaching assistants or a combination of fulltime teachers and teaching assistants (between 40 teachers and 40 teaching assistants, which would total $6,000,000 in salary) to avoid about a 9 to 10% tax increase. WPCNR was told that “we are not firing 100 teaching assistants.”  “Support staff” apparent is going.


WPCNR’s prediction was right on the money. Last night, the district said at this time they were cutting 41 fulltime teachers and 39 “support” staff to bring the budget in at $184.7 Million. The cuts come to $6.5 Million.


WPCNR also reported last Saturday that  the District had unbeknownst to the public negotiated a one year contract extension with the teachers for the 2011-2012 year adding up to a 2-1/4% merit raise in salary in additon to the standard 2% step raise, meaning the teaching staff will receive a 4-1/4% increase in February 2012. This raise was negotiated without the district knowing what their 2012-12 revenue projects could possibly be (considering the very shaky state of the White Plains Assessment Roll.


Last night the district announced this extension, as reported by WPCNR last weekend.


Monday, the district is supposed to discuss their revenue projection for this year. Some 41 teachers are expected to retire, taking advantage of incentives approved by the Teachers union as part of the new contract extension.


WPCNR expects to hear more on Monday.


The district has also set up a similar situation to last when they presented a budget to the public lower or close to what a contingency budget would be if the district voters rejected the 2009-10 budget. WPCNR attempted to get the inflation rate the State Department of Education will use to figure contingency budgets but the press office has not delivered it yet. It has been a week and a half since WPCNR asked.

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The CitizeNetReporter: The First Ten Years. The Way We Were What We Became

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WPCNR NEWS & COMMENT. By John F. Bailey. March 4, 2010 (Adapted from a presentation given the White Plains Downtown Residents Association, February 27): The White Plains CitizeNetReporter idea came to  me in 1998 when I was struck by the news story that that major media and newspapers had not been reporting the large protests being staged at a President Clinton sponsored symposium being held in Seattle.


 


 The extent of the protests was revealed by independent websites internetting pictures of that violence around the world, forcing news networks to cover it, which they had not been doing. This brought home to me the potential the internet had for getting out important information unfiltered by the interests of mass-owned, politically controlled and establishment-motivated and controlled media whatever they may be.


 


At the same time, I was struck by the lack of news stories about White Plains in the Gannett newspaper. Mayor Joseph Delfino had just been elected. Macy’s had closed, the White Plains Watch was running stories complaining about the state of the downtown, I particularly remember a story The Watch ran with the headline, “Not another Dollar Store.”


 


1998 was also when the Gannett Chain consolidated 9 different county newspapers into one edition, The Journal News. It appeared that the Journal News to me was publishing one story a week, if that, about White Plains. Local radio newscasts were not too informative and were only listened to during snow days.


 


I thought to myself: what if I could supplement my reporting with information or news tips given me by local citizens a group of “Citizen Reporters” alerting me or giving me information on what was going on in their neighborhoods or as we found out “being done to their neighborhoods.”


 


I wanted to see for myself if there were any stories the Journal News was overlooking, whether a local news outlet could be created and attract an audience on the internet. I attended council meetings and work sessions practiced taking notes to see whether I would enjoy getting back into reporting again. I mock-covered the city for most of 1999 and explored how a website could be created. Needless to say, I found plenty of stories Gannet was not covering. I launched White Plans CitizeNetReporter in February 2000. 


 


At that time, I had a much more idealized version of city government than I do now: I used my year of mock coverage to learn how the council operated, the importance of work sessions, what the Planning Board, Zoning Board and what other departments did.


 


 I noticed particularly how little coverage there was of the school district, the largest budget affecting residents. I noticed the secrecy behind the dismissal of the school superintendent in 2001 that was kept quiet by the School Board for six months. That was an eye-opener.


 


Noticed and covered by WPCNR was the compounding affect of routine 7 and 8% school budget increases in the first 7 years of the CitizeNetReporter, compounded by an alarming increase in tax refunds initiated by members of the business community which effectively began in 2001 and certiorari after certiorari has since been approved by the city Assessment Review Board based on cases made by businesses, condominiums and co-ops, and the last two years, homeowners themselves whose equity has been whittled away by the robber barons of the 21st century.


 


This tax roll drain really began to hit taxpayers hard in the last three years as the assessment roll has been in free fall — $5 Million last year and this week, $3.9 Million this year.  $9 Million in two years.


 


Meanwhile no one has noticed or attempted to do anything about it – like maybe trim spending.


 


The School District mounted a campaign for a $100 Million construction upgrade to their 9 buildings, which was trimmed down to $69 Million and is now just being completed, after being narrowly passed. They even had a teacher contract dispute last year that wound up being settled for exactly what the teachers wanted all along. Now this week they have added another year on to the contract for another 4% when you include step increases.


 


The district also came underfire for their achievement gap between minority and white performances, which WPCNR explored in depth, and pointed out how advances in minority academic prowess are reported in total without pointing out that the level of passing grades achieved by most students of color is lower than that of whites. The district always releases aggregate statistics which shows improvement of minority students but does not present a true picture of the quality of the progress.


 


I found as the site started that there were three versions of every story: what the city government and school district said it was, what people who did not like city government and school plans said it was, and the truth, which is always elusive and somewhere in the middle. It was my first reality check. Because as I often say, “everything’s off the record in White Plains.”


 


People are reluctant to tell you the truth and stand up in public for the truth. And they would much rather believe what leaders say then accept the truth.


 


 

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The Adam Bradley Statement to the Media Sunday Night

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WPCNR  FOR THE RECORD. From The Mayor’s Office. March 1, 2010: The following is the text of the statement read by Mayor Adam Bradley to the media Sunday evening in the rotunda at City Hall, commenting on his being charged with Third Degree Assault for allegedly injuring his wife in an incident reported by police to have occurred “on or about” 9:30 A.M. Sunday morning:


STATEMENT


EARLIER TODAY I WAS ARRAIGNED IN WHITE PLAINS CITY COURT BASED ON A COMPLAINT MY WIFE FILED AGAINST ME.

I FEEL COMPELLED TO COME OUT HERE TONIGHT TO LET THE CITIZENS OF WHITE PLAINS KNOW WHAT HAPPENED IN THE PAST 12 HOURS.

THIS IS A DEEPLY PERSONAL MATTER, AND SOMETHING THAT HAPPENED WITHIN MY FAMILY.

I AM NOT GOING TO DISCUSS THESE CHARGES IN DETAIL, OTHER THAN TO SAY THAT I AM INNOCENT AND THAT I WILL CONTEST THE CHARGES.

BUT I HAVE TO SET THE RECORD STRAIGHT, I DID NOT IN ANY WAY MISTREAT MY WIFE

THERE HAVE BEEN PROBLEMS IN MY MARRIAGE FOR SOME TIME AND I HAVE MADE MANY EFFORTS TO DEAL WITH THEM.

AT THIS TIME, MY THOUGHTS ARE WITH MY FAMILY AND OUR TWO BEAUTIFUL DAUGHTERS.

I WILL NOT TAKE THIS OPPORTUNITY TO PUBLICALLY ARGUE WITH MY WIFE IN A MANNER THAT WOULD EXPOSE OUR CHILDREN TO IT.

THIS UNFORTUNATE MATTER WILL IN NO WAY AFFECT MY COMMITMENT AND THE IMPORTANT WORK I AM DOING FOR THIS GREAT CITY

AS AN ATTORNEY WITH MANY YEARS OF EXPERIENCE AS A LAW GUARDIAN REPRESENTING CHILDREN I DEEPLY BELIEVE THAT PROTECTING OUR CHILDREN IS MY FIRST AND PARAMOUNT OBLIGATION.

THANK YOU ALL FOR COMING AND I HOPE YOU WILL ALL RESPECT MY FAMILY’S PRIVACY AT THIS TIME

THANK YOU

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Assessment Roll Comes in at $3.9 MIllion Down $200,000 More Than Predicted

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WPCNR CITY HALL CIRCUIT. By John F. Bailey. March 1, 2010: The prediction by financial consultant Eileen Earl Bradley, former City Budget Director that the White Plains Assessment Roll would decline $3.7 Million which she put out in January of this year, has come true PLUS $200,000.


The Assessment Roll for 2010 published today at the Accessor’s Office shows the City Assessed property values as $281,318,866 compared to $285,212,346 in 2009, a decline of $3,893,480.


It was the eighth year in the last nine that the assessment roll has declined in White Plains since 2002-2003. In 2002-2003, the roll was at $318.9 Million. In 2010 it has declined to $281.3 Million , a $37.6 Million decline representing roughly $15 Million in property tax revenue lost for the school district.  In the last two years, the assessment roll has declined $9 Million costing the school district alone about $6 million in revenue the last two years.


The decline means that for the purposes of property tax, the city loses $612,300 and is out about $612,300 in property tax revenue at the current $157.06 per $1,000 assessment Rate, requiring an increase of $2/per thousand to make up the assessment difference, plus any other revenue shortfalls.


The School District loses  in $2,892,110 in revenue based on the current $515.15 per $1,000 of assessed valuation, which would require a tax rate increase to $526 per $1,000 of assessed valuation to replace the revenue lost from lost assessments — before addressing the loss of state aid projected for next year and before addressing the salary increases due the teachers in 2010-11, and the tentative 4 to 5% increase due teachers negotiated secretly in the last three months and approved by the teachers two weeks ago.


The school tax impact on making up the assessment revenue drop to the typical $650,000 median priced home in White Plains assessed at 15,100 with the present STAR Exemption ( scheduled to decline 18% in the governor’s budget: $164 plus, before the district budgets for increased teacher wages in 2010-11.


Asked for a statement on the Tax Roll decline, the Mayor’s Office has not yet responded to WPCNR.

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Bradley Reacts to Dredging Up His Past. No Previous Allegations of Spouse Abuse.

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WPCNR CITY HALL CIRCUIT. From The Mayor’s Office. March 1,2010: Mayor Adam Bradley issued a written statement to the media Monday morning clarifying stories appearing in the press about his past in relation to his being charged with Assault in the Third Degree Sunday in an incident involving his wife.


Mr.Bradley’s statement:


” I want to address a couple of issues being raised in the media.


First, there have been no prior allegations of spousal abuse made against me.


Second, questions have been raised about an incident that occurred 10 years ago, prior to my marriage. In that instance, Fumiko (his present wife) and I were harassed by a former girlfriend of mine.


It resulted in an order of protection being issued, barring the woman from contacting me.”


The surprise Bradley statement was issued after a news conference that reported the city, school and community organizations has raised $32,000 for Haitian Earthquake Relief which was being donated to Doctors Without Borders. Mayor Bradley did not chair the news conference. Antoinette Biordi, City Communications Director, said Mr. Bradley would not be handling the news conference because he “was dealing with personal issues.” Councilman Dennis Power represented the City.

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Mayor Charged with Assault 3RD for Allegedly Injuring Wife in Dispute.

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WPCNR POLICE GAZETTE. By John F. Bailey. February 28, 2010: White Plains Mayor Adam Bradley, 49, was arraigned in City Court Sunday morning and charged with Assault in the Third Degree (a misdemeanor) in connection with a complaint filed by his wife, Fumiko, in connection with alleged injuries she suffered in a domestic dispute with Mr. Bradley sometime Sunday.


According to the complaint distributed to the media, and signed by a White Plains Police Officer identified as B. Robbins,


 “at about 9:30 A.M. on the above date, time (February 28), and place the above defendent (Mr. Bradley) did cause physical injury to his wife by grabbing her left arm and placing her hand against a door frame and with his other hand closed the door on his wife’s hand causing pain and bruising to her left middle finger.”


Mr. Bradley was released in his own recognizance without bail being set, and is due back in City Court Friday, March 5 before Judge J. Brian Hansbury to answer the charge. Bradley’s attorney, speaking to the press said a temporary restraining order of protection was issued  forbidding Mr. Bradley to see his wife.  The lawyer also said Mr. Bradley is living at  the home of his parents, while Mrs. Bradley continues to live in the residence where the alleged assault took place Sunday morning. Mr. Bradley’s attorney said the Mayor “turned himself in,” after he learned there was a complaint against him.


Mr. Bradley informed News 12, WCBS-TV Reporters, PIX News, WNBC News and other media in a prepared statement he delivered at a news conference at 7 P.M. at City Hall that “he did not mistreat his wife,” and that he was “innocent.” He admitted in the statement that he and his wife were having “marital problems” and said he would not elaborate. He said the incident would in no way distract him from handling the important matters the city now faces. He took no questions. 


Previously, White Plains police did not answer WPCNR request for the details of the incident, which had been relayed to WPCNR at 2 P.M. The news of the rumored incident spread by word of mouth and phone call around the city. The news conference at 7 P.M. was the first official statement that an incident had taken place, and first notice that a charge had been filed. News 12 reported the existence of the rumors in the late afternoon and was informed of the news conference.

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Teachers Give Back for 2-1/4% More Pay;Retirement Incentives to Trim Stafff

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. By John F. Bailey. February 27, 2010: White Plains Public School Teachers have agreed to accept a 2-1/4% pay increase in 2012 in exchange for money-saving adjustments to pay.


 


The budget-friendly changes will pay teachers for pursuing advanced degrees at a slower (only one academically achieved increase a year may be approved), and a more tightly monitored pace for pursuing M.A. and Ph.D degrees.


 


The teachers have also accepted changes in working conditions, productivity adjustments,  and approval of retirement incentives that are available in the current budget year.


 


The White Plains Teachers Association membership approved the one year contract extension with the City School District through 2011-2012, two weeks ago, WPCNR has learned.  


 


Peter Bassano, a member of the Board of Education confirmed the contract extension to WPCNR Saturday afternoon. He said the District and Dr. Christopher Clouet had started negotiations with the teachers three months ago.


 


The contract extension has yet to be voted on by the Board of Education, Bassano said.


 


The 2-1/4% salary increase in February, 2012 increases up to 4% to 5% when longevity raises (automatic over the first fifteen years of service in the current 2010-11 step schedule for the majority of the current 651 teachers), are factored in. 


 


Here are the sketchy details of the suprise extension so far:


 


Pay





The new  contract extension finds the teachers agreeing to significant contract givebacks in 2011-12 and new teacher retirement incentives effective this current budget year in exchange for a 2-1/4% salary increase in the 2011-12 year, in addition to the 2-1/2% % increase agreed to last June and scheduled to go into effect February 2011.


 


Bassano said the 2-1/2% they receive  in 2012 actually is equivalent to 1-1/4% since it is only in effect for 5 months of the year. It should be noted though that the next year it constitutes a full 2-1/4%.


 


Readers should note the raise is supplemented by the standard salary raises guaranteed for each year of service that roughly gives the vast majority of full-time teachers up to salary increase total taking effect in February of 2012. This means that a 2-1/4% increase translates to an actual total salary increase over 4% for the vast majority of teachers entering 2012-2013, when a new contract will have to be negotiated.


 


Additional pay for Pursuing Advanced Degrees Slowed


 


Mr. Bassano said savings in the Teachers Earning Schedule in  2011-12 will also make adjustments to how soon teachers can earn more salary in making progress in advanced degrees. He said the district will also closely monitor the courses that are accepted for advance degree salary increases.


 


Retirement Incentives to lower Payroll.


 


 The financial details of the retirement incentives were not revealed by Mr. Bassano, but they will be offered to eligible teachers this year. The district, Bassano told WPCNR,  hopes this will induce approximately 40 higher paid full-time teachers accepting incentives to retire at the end of this school year.


 


Bassano said the incentives will only be available if a minimum of 30 teachers eligible to retire opt to take the district offer.


 


 Inducing the higher paid  teachers to retire could enable the School District to keep the 2010-11 School Budget at approximately the present $186 Million high water mark,


 


Asked if this meant  30 to 40 full-time experienced teachers eligible to retire would not be replaced, Bassano said that has yet to be determined. He said this weekend was the deadline for retirement declarations by the teachers.


 


Paying more of Their Share of Medical


 


The School District and the White Plains Teachers Association also agreed that teachers would pay “another full point” on their medical benefits. WPCNR was told by a reliable source the teachers’ share of paying for their medical benefits from 9 to 12%. WPCNR awaits confirmation.


 


The contribution that retirees pay for their medical benefits will also be raised in the new contract extension in 2011-12.


 


Work Schedule changes


 


Teachers also agree effective in the new budget year that they will teach 5 periods a day five days a week. This, Bassano said, enables the White Plains High School to go to an 8-period day and offer more personnel savings across the board. “Teachers will be working harder,” Bassano said, and “Class sizes will increase.”


 


District follows WPCNR Observations


 


WPCNR predicted previously that in order to stay at the $186 Million level the school district would have to trim some 50 full-time teachers or  remove 100 Teaching Assistants (who average $50,000 in salary and benefits) in order to keep the school budget for 2010-11 at the current level.


 


Should 40 teachers making an average of $100,000 a year or more take the district’s incentives, that would mean a salary savings of approximately $4 Million to $5 Million in salary. But it depends on how many teachers the district decides to replace after retirements are totaled up. This should become clearer March 8 when the District unveils its revenue budget and final Instructional Budget.


 


Clouet Began Negotiations in December.


 


Bassano said the Board of Education and Superintendent of Schools Dr. Christopher Clouet approached teachers association to seek adjustments to the teachers’ contract about three months ago. WPCNR has contacted the President of the White Plains Teachers Association, Kerry Broderick, for specific details on the contract.

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Con Ed Restores half of Westchester Power Outages. Only 61 in WP Still Out

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WPCNR THE POWER NEWS. February 27, 2010: Con Edison’s army of power restoration teams cut the number of County outages caused by the14 to 25 inch snowfall that ended Friday evening, in half  in the last twelve hours.


As of 10:45 P.M.  15,627 Westchester Customers still remain without electricity, down from  over 29,000 twelve hours ago.


Con Edison swooped down on Greenburgh, the county’s hardest hit and restored approximately 5,000 customers to service, as of this hour, 1,030 Greenburghers are without power.


In White Plains, 61 customers are without power as of 10:45 P.M. E.S.T.

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SNOWNOMI MISERY AFFECTS 29,937. WP HAS 268 W/0 POWER. WEDNESDAY TO Restore

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WPCNR THE POWER NEWS. February 27, 2010: Con Edison continues repairing power outages across Westchester County Saturday morning. In White Plains 268 customers remain without power this morning. Full restoration to the entire county has now been targeted for Wednesday March 3, according to the Con Edison website.


Across Westchester County, the misery of the 2010 “Snownomi” that delivered 14 inches of heavy wet snow to White Plains and amounts over 20 inches to the western and northern parts of the county, Putnam and Orange Counties, 29,937 are without power as of 11 A.M. Saturday. Families are leaving thousands of unheated homes to stay with relatives. Homes perhaps face damage from freezing pipes should temperatures dip lower though in Westchester County temperatures remain above freezing.


Across Westchester, the power out numbers are staggering as of 11 A.M.: 6,683 are without power in Greenburgh.


Town Supervisor of Greenburgh, Paul Feiner issued this statement to media Saturday morning: 


“Earlier this morning I spoke with officials at Con Ed and with Victor Carosi, Commissioner of Public Works about the power outages and snow removal efforts.

As of an hour ago we still have not plowed about 25 streets in Greenburgh, according to the commissioner. The reason: There are downed wires. Our crews cannot plow streets until Con Ed makes sure that the live wires are back where they should be. We are planning to send police cars out to the streets impacted to verify that the wires are still down. Once the wires are safe– the streets will be plowed.

Con Ed officials have advised me that they will free up some additional crews which could speed up power restoration for some residents.

In the meantime — some residents have volunteered to house families who are out of power in their homes. If you need this service, please call me at 438 1343 (cell) or at my home: 478-1219. You can also e mail me at pfeiner@greenburghny.com.  Yesterday I was on the phone almost non stop —and have been on the phone most of this morning. I promise to get back to everyone and am in constant communication with public works.

We apologize for the inconveniences.”

 

There has been no news release from the Westchester County Government on storm response measures as of 11 A.M.

 


638 in Elmsford; 402 in Harrison;565 in Irvington; 222 in Mount Kisco; 1,508 in Mount Pleasant;  New Castle, 4,872; North Castle, 2,501; North Pelham, 303; Ossining/Ossining Village,3,841; Peekskill, 371; Pleasantville, 1,780; Scarsdale,555; Tarrytown, 1,800; Yonkers, 2,423.

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Just 317 Without Power in White Plains as of 11 P.M.. Full Restoration to Count

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WPCNR THE POWER NEWS. WPCNR News & Con Edison Media Relations.  February 26, 2010. UPDATED 10:50 P.M. E.S.T.: Hundreds of White Plains Con Edison customers without power have been reconnected as we approach 11 P.M. by Con Ed crews.


 


The number of Con Ed customers in White Plains’ reported without power due to “The Big White,” the continuing snowstorm that has left 14 inches of snow  and higher drifts across White Plains and the Westchester County region has shrunk to 317 as of 11 P.M. due to new reports of outages, Con Edison posted on its Storm Center moments ago.  Greenburgh still has 6,950 without power . Across Westchester County, 28,107 customers are without power as of 11 P.M.


 


 


A Con Edison spokesperson advised WPCNR the company is promising full restoration of power to the entire county by 11 P.M. Tuesday. The spokesperson said the number of White Plains customers without power grew this evening because more customers have reported outages while Con Edison has worked to restore earlier losses of power. She said more field crews have been dispatched. The growth in White Plains outages, she said,  was not due to the weather or sinking temperatures.


 


The White Plains Mayor Adam Bradley’s Office issued the following statement this evening:”As of Friday at 5:30pm…The White Plains Department of Public Works and Public Safety have been working hard to meet the needs of the residents of White Plains during this snowstorm. The Department of Public Works is also working with Con Edison in the event of any electrical wires that may come down that would force road closures.

Any shelter issues or immediate problems, please co
tact The American Red Cross.”


 


Greenburgh Relief for those without Power:


 


Paul Feiner, Supervisor of the Town of Greenburgh announced a temporary shelter is available for anyone without heat in this statement:



“Many Greenburgh residents are out of power. Con Ed may not be able to restore the power tonight. In fact, I have been told that some people may not see their power restored for a few days.  For the comfort of residents out of power the town will be opening up the Theodore Young Community Center on Manhattan Ave as a warming center. Call 682 5300 if you are out of power.

 

Sorry for the inconveniences Greenburgh residents have experienced during this major storm.  A few people have contacted me offering to house residents in their homes as well. Call me at 438-1343 (cell) or e mail me at pfeiner@greenburghny.com if you’d like to take advantage of this.

 

 


 


 


The Town of Greenburgh outages totaling 7,985 as of 5 P.M. have been reduced to 6,950  as of 11 P.M, as more outages have been reported.


 


It appears, checking with persons living in Ossinning and northern New Jersey that the areas West of White Plains and North received a lot more of the storm’s white wallop than the eastern part of Westchester County.



Tree Down, Resting on Power Wires, on Havilands Lane,  street closed off by White Plains Police.



 


The outages, according to a Con Edison spokesperson, have been caused by the heavy wet snow freezing and trees not being able to sustain the weight and falling onto Con Edison powerlines. A total of 35,755 customers in Westchester County were without power as of the 5 o’clock hour.


 



HEAVY SNOW AND ICE BASE WEIGHS DOWN BRANCHES OF SENIOR TREE .


 


 


 


Other communities devastated by falling trees taking customers offline are Hastings,  Cortlandt, Croton-on-Hudson, Briarcliff, New Castle,North Castle, and Mount Pleasant, and North Tarrytown.


 


To check Con Edison’s Westchester Outage Report as of 11 P.M, Saturday night and estimated times when they expect power to be restored got to http://apps.coned.com/weboutageinfo/stormcenter/default.aspx


 

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