Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security Plan for Handling Illegal Resid

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WPCNR POLICE GAZETTE. Excerpts from Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano Address. November 13, 2009: So even as we press to end this recession and get America back to work, we are determined to deal with long lingering problems that cloud our future. And another problem that has been punted from year to year, from Congress to Congress, from Administration to Administration, is the clear need for immigration reform.



Secretary Janet Napolitano


 


We all know the story: A steady influx of undocumented workers, crossing our borders illegally in search of work and a better life. A market among employers willing to flout the law in order to hire cheap labor. And as a result, some 12 million people, here illegally, living in the shadows—a source of pain and conflict.


It is wrong. It’s an affront to every law-abiding citizen and every employer who plays by the rules.


Like the Administration’s other priorities, when it comes to immigration, we are addressing a status quo that is simply unacceptable. Everybody recognizes that our current system isn’t working and that our immigration laws need to change. America’s businesses, workers, and faith-based organizations are calling for reform. Law enforcement and government at every level are asking for reform. And at the Department of Homeland Security, we need reform to do our job of enforcing the law and keeping our country secure.


Over the past ten months, we’ve worked to improve immigration enforcement and border security within the current legal framework. But the more work we do, the more it becomes clear that the laws themselves need to be reformed.



Let me be clear: when I talk about “immigration reform,” I’m referring to what I call the “three-legged stool” that includes a commitment to serious and effective enforcement, improved legal flows for families and workers, and a firm but fair way to deal with those who are already here. That’s the way that this problem has to be solved, because we need all three aspects to build a successful system. This approach has at its heart the conviction that we must demand responsibility and accountability from everyone involved in the system: immigrants, employers and government. And that begins with fair, reliable enforcement.


We know that one-sided reform, as we saw in 1986, cannot succeed. During that reform effort, the enforcement part of the equation was promised, but it didn’t materialize. That helped lead to our current situation, and it undermined Americans’ confidence in their government’s approach to this issue. That mistake can’t happen again, and it won’t happen again.


The American people expect us to act. Americans value our identity as both a nation of immigrants and a nation of laws. Unfortunately, too many politicians and pundits have treated these values as contradictory. They are not, and we will pursue reforms that emphasize both. The immigrant story is part of what it means to be an American – but failing to fix a broken system that undermines our shared values of lawfulness and fairness is not.


This is why key members of Congress are taking steps toward legislation that will create an immigration system that works. This is why the President continues to be fully committed to reforming our immigration laws, and why he asked me to take a lead role in this effort.


What Has Changed Since 2007


While everyone may agree that the status quo isn’t working, what everyone may not be aware of is how much the immigration landscape has changed since comprehensive reform efforts fell short in 2007. I’ve been dealing hands-on with immigration issues since 1993, so trust me: I know a major shift when I see one, and what I have seen makes reform far more attainable this time around.


For starters, the security of the Southwest border has been transformed from where it was in 2007. The federal government has dedicated unprecedented resources to the Mexican border in terms of manpower, technology and infrastructure—and it’s made a real difference.


Last March, the Obama Administration announced a Southwest Border Initiative that has increased the resources the government is dedicating to combating drug cartels, and the smuggled cash and illegal weapons they thrive on. The Departments of Homeland Security, Justice and Defense have dedicated unprecedented resources to this initiative. This includes additional inspection and surveillance technology, as well as hundreds of personnel specializing in fields like inspection, intelligence and prosecutions. At DHS, we started screening 100 percent of southbound rail shipments for illegal weapons and cash—for the first time ever.


Compared to last year, seizures in all categories—drugs, smuggled cash, and illegal weapons—are up dramatically. For example, just looking at bulk cash, Customs and Border Protection has seized at the border more than $34 million in cash being smuggled southbound so far this year—more than four times as much as at this time last year.


Moreover, the immigration debate in 2007 happened during a period of historically high levels of illegal entry into the United States. Two years later, because of better enforcement and the current economic circumstances, those numbers have fallen sharply. The flow has reduced significantly – by more than half from the busiest years, proving we are in a much different environment than we were before.


These are major differences that should change the immigration conversation. In 2007, many members of Congress said that they could support immigration reform in the future, but only if we first made significant progress securing the border. This reflected the real concern of many Americans that the government was not serious about enforcing the law. Fast-forward to today, and many of the benchmarks these members of Congress set in 2007 have been met. For example, the Border Patrol has increased its forces to more than 20,000 officers, and DHS has built more than 600 miles of border fencing. Both of these milestones demonstrate that we have gotten Congress’ message.


We’ve also shown that the government is serious and strategic in its approach to enforcement by making changes in how we enforce the law in the interior of the country and at worksites. We have replaced old policies that merely looked tough with policies that are designed to actually be effective.


We’ve revised and standardized our immigration-enforcement agreements with state and local law enforcement to make sure that these agencies are effective forcemultipliers in our efforts to apprehend dangerous criminal aliens. We’ve expanded the Secure Communities program, which identifies illegal aliens being booked into local jails. Yesterday, we marked the end of the first year for this program, which is being used by 95 jurisdictions and has identified more than 111,000 criminal aliens.


Furthermore, we’ve transformed worksite enforcement to truly address the demand side of illegal immigration. We are auditing the books of thousands of employers suspected of relying on illegal labor to achieve an unfair advantage in the marketplace. As part of this effort, Immigration and Customs Enforcement audited more employers suspected of hiring illegal labor in a single day in July than had been audited in all of 2008. We’re also encouraging workplace compliance by expanding and improving the E-Verify system—an Internet-based system that allows participating employers to electronically verify the employment eligibility of new hires. More than 167,000 employers at 639,000 worksites use E-Verify. In the past month, the program has grown at the rate of nearly 2,000 employers per week.


Improved interior and worksite enforcement is a critical part of comprehensive immigration reform. We’ve demonstrated that when it comes to that issue, this Administration is committed to action.


In addition, recent improvements at managing the legal immigration system also prove that the federal government is ready to handle major reform.


We’ve ended a year-long backlog for background checks on applicants for green cards and naturalization. We’ve expanded the opportunity for a widow to gain legal status here, despite the untimely death of her U.S. citizen spouse. We’ve launched a new interactive website that allows people to receive information about the status of their immigration cases by e-mail or text message, and we have reduced the time it takes to process those cases.


In addition to these changes, since 2007 we have made significant strides in technology. For example, new biometric technology allows us to take the fingerprints of people coming into the United States and compare their prints against databases we couldn’t access before. This means we have new and enhanced abilities to quickly identify people committing immigration fraud, either by using someone else’s documents or by forging documents to escape detection for a past crime or immigration violation. We also have enhanced our capacity to exclude those suspected of supporting terrorism or other serious international crimes before they enter our country.


Overall, these and other changes make comprehensive immigration reform more attainable as a matter of both politics and policy. At the border, in the interior of the country, and when it comes to legal immigration, the government has made significant strides to improve enforcement. This is a fundamental change from 2007.


Here’s the other thing that has shifted in this debate: a larger segment of the American public has embraced the need to engage this debate and arrive at a sensible solution to this problem. CAP has helped to document this shift.


There are leaders of the law enforcement community speaking out, saying that immigration reform is vital to their ability to do their jobs keeping Americans safe. Faith leaders, including the National Association of Evangelicals, have announced their support for immigration reform as a moral and practical issue. We are seeing more business leaders and more labor leaders engaged in this debate in a constructive way than we have ever seen before.


These constituencies have all arrived at the same conclusion that prevails among the American people: this is a problem that needs to be fixed—and the best way to ensure that we can uphold our laws is to make sure our laws are rational and enforceable.


Why DHS Needs Immigration Reform


That reality is apparent to us at DHS. Over the past year, as this Administration has pursued more effective strategies within the current laws, the picture of how exactly those laws need to be changed has become clearer than ever before. In the past ten months, we have made tough choices, and implemented significant reforms within the current legal framework—but they are not enough to create the system that we want or that we need. If we are truly going to fix a broken system, Congress will have to act.


When it comes to immigration, I took an oath as Secretary of Homeland Security to secure the nation by enforcing the law and managing legal flows across the border. Let me be clear: to do this job as effectively as possible, DHS needs immigration reform.


Reform legislation would provide lasting and dedicated resources at our borders, and provide some critical legal tools that we don’t currently have to combat smuggling organizations. For example, we need tougher anti-smuggling laws in dealing with the aggravated crimes smugglers commit—including assaulting law enforcement officers, endangering children, threatening relatives and abandoning people in the desert— hundreds of whom succumb to death from heat and lack of water. We also need to update current laws that don’t cover some of the new means by which criminals conduct their business. For instance, today’s smugglers and drug traffickers often move cash through “stored value” cards, which aren’t even considered monetary instruments under the current money-smuggling laws.


In addition, we need improvements to the current law when it comes to interior and worksite enforcement. Dishonest businesses often ignore the civil fines for illegal employment now on the books because they’re so low. It’s also very difficult to prosecute these crimes as felonies because of the over-elaborate intent requirements built into the current statutes.


Moreover, some current laws covering immigration-related fraud have to be brought more in line with common sense. Right now, a corrupt immigration attorney who facilitates hundreds of immigration violations by knowingly helping aliens fraudulently seek asylum or permanent residence is treated almost the same as an alien who buys a single fake green card.


On top of this, in order to have fully effective law enforcement, we need Congress to create the legal foundation for bringing the millions of illegal immigrants in this country out of the shadows, require them to register and pay all taxes they owe, and enforce the penalties that they will have to pay as part of earning legal status. Let me emphasize this: we will never have fully effective law enforcement or national security as long as so many millions remain in the shadows.


Making sure these people become full taxpayers and pay their fair share will both benefit our economy and make it easier to enforce the laws against unscrupulous or exploitive employers. A tough and fair pathway to earned legal status will mandate that illegal immigrants meet a number of requirements—including registering, paying a fine, passing a criminal background check, fully paying all taxes and learning English.


These are substantial requirements that will make sure this population gets right with the law. It will help fix our broken system.


The Broad Need for Reform


While it’s important to emphasize the need for immigration reform from an enforcement perspective, the need for reform stretches far beyond those reasons. We have to make sure the immigration system works to support American families, businesses and workers.


As part of the Administration’s outreach on this issue, my Department has held stakeholder meetings with more than 1,000 people and organizations across the country. The businesses, community leaders, labor leaders, faith groups and law enforcement we’ve met with all have different stories, but they all reach the same conclusion: we need reform. This reform will be part of the new foundation for growth, prosperity, and security that this Administration is working to create.


Our system must be strong enough to prevent illegal entry and to get criminal aliens off our streets and out of the country. But it must also be smart enough to reward the hard work and entrepreneurial spirit that immigrants have always brought to America—traits that have built our nation.


Requiring illegal immigrants to register to earn legal status, as I discussed earlier, will strengthen our economy as these immigrants become full-paying taxpayers. As labor leaders have made clear to me, immigration reform will be a boon to American workers. Think about it: unions will never achieve the best terms for workers when a large part of the workforce is illegal and operates in a shadow economy. By contrast, the status quo not only hurts American workers, it also stifles potential opportunities to grow our economy.


A few months ago, I held a forum where I heard from technology executives in Silicon Valley, our country’s center of technological innovation. They told me that they want to increase their workforce and help get the economy moving again, but some of the major barriers they have to growing their companies are visa laws that make it difficult for high-skilled foreigners to stay here to work. Today, we have a system where America educates many of the brightest individuals from around the world, and then tells them to leave the country when many of them would rather start their own ventures or strengthen businesses right here in America. This hurts the economy for all of us, and it has to change.


Going forward, our visa policies must work for every sector of our economy, and across the income scale. In my meetings, leaders in agriculture, service industries and other fields have told me that current visa policies are hindering the growth of businesses looking to expand. To address this economic need, we need carefully crafted programs that allow American businesses to hire needed foreign workers while protecting the labor and health-and-safety rights of all workers. We need to revise our current provisions for legal migration to help assure a legal workforce in cases where businesses can’t find Americans to fill their jobs. These changes will make our economy stronger and more prosperous at all levels.


Community and faith leaders have also emphasized to me that we need reform because of how difficult the current laws can be on families, especially families of mixed legal status. Our immigration system is outdated where families are concerned, and we need to modernize and streamline the laws governing this process.


No one should have to wait in a line for years in order to reunite with a spouse or a young child. And we must protect the families of our men and women in the armed forces, some of whom volunteer to serve this country before they even become naturalized citizens. These individuals risk their lives to ensure the safety of all Americans. We have a duty to ensure that their families are treated with dignity when their soldiers return from combat.


I have had the honor of administering the oath of citizenship to active-duty personnel who had been serving our country long before I swore them in. These men and women are a reminder, as the President told them on the day of their swearing-in, that America is not just “a collection of rights,” but also “a set of responsibilities…it depends on each of us doing our part.”


Conclusion


So we all have to do our part to have a system that works. At the end of the day, when it comes to immigration, people need to be able to trust the system. Americans need to know that their government is committed to enforcing the law and securing the border—and that it takes this responsibility seriously. Law enforcement needs to have better legal tools and the necessary resources to deal with border-related and immigration-related crime. Businesses must be able find the workers they need here in America, rather than having to move overseas. Immigrants need to be able to plan their lives—they need to know that once we reform the laws, we’re going to have a system that works, and that the contours of our immigration laws will last. And they need to know that they will have as many responsibilities as they do rights.


The President is committed to this issue because the need for immigration reform is so clear. This Administration does not shy away from taking on the big challenges of the 21st century, challenges that have been ignored too long and hurt our families and businesses. When Congress is ready to act, we will be ready to support them.


As I said earlier, we are both a nation of immigrants and a nation of laws. This is ingrained in our national character and it has helped make America the great nation that it is. But we must modernize our laws for the 21st century so that this vision can endure. This is a task that is critical, that is attainable, and that we are fully committed to fulfilling.

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Deputy Commissioners Take Over Department of Public Safety Ops as Straub Leaves

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WPCNR POLICE GAZETTE. From The Department of Public Safety. November 14, 2009: The White Plains Department of Public Safety announced Saturday to WPCNR that erstwhile Commissioner of Public Safety Dr. Frank Straub is no longer supervising the Department operations.


According to Deputy Commissioner of Public Safety Daniel Jackson, in a statement to WPCNR,


“In response to your question, in the absence of the Commissioner, the Deputy Commissioner fulfills his responsibilities until such time as the Mayor decides on whom will replace the Commissioner on an interim basis.


Deputy Commissioner (John) Cullen and I are still here and running the department operations.”

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Board of Education Hears Student Achievement Report Monday

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. November 14, 2009: The Board of Education meeting Monday evening will highlight a report on High School Achievement and a report on district Technology, and discussion of stimulus money to the School District. The Agenda:

Monday, November 16, 2009


 


Education House


7:30 P.M.


 


AGENDA


 


 


I.          Opening of Meeting:


 


            Pledge of Allegiance


            Moment of silence in memory of Nick Girondo, Jr. and Marjorie Ruderfer, retired staff members


            Oral Announcements by the Board President and Board Members


           


 


 


II.         Communications:


 


 


 


III.       Public Participation:  (The Board will entertain comments from the public on any issue, with a time limit of three minutes per person, and a maximum total of 25 minutes.)


 


 


 


IV.       Superintendent’s Report:


            Report on High School Achievement


            Update on Post Road School


            Summer School Reports


            ARRA Report (American Recovery & Revitalization Act)


Technology Report


2010-2011 Budget Development Calendar


 


 


 


V.        Summary Action Items:


 


Recommended approval of minutes of the Regular Meeting of October 19, 2009 and the Special Meetings of October 5, and 29.


 


Recommended acceptance of the following donations:


A tree and transplanting costs from Brian Wallach for Church Street School


Cookbooks from Jeannette Bogart for Highlands School


A bookcase from Gary Boehr for Eastview School


 


Recommended approval to arrange for the appropriate program and services for students with


disabilities, as recommended by the Committee on Special Education:  60 case numbers as per


attachment.


– 2 –


 


 


4.         Recommended approval to arrange for the appropriate program and services for students with


disabilities, as recommended by the Committee on Preschool Special Education:  22 case numbers, as per attachment.


 


5.         Recommended approval that all employees previously granted a conditional appointment and


            who have not received conditional clearance from the State Education Department be granted


            another conditional appointment for 20 days.


 


Civil Service Staffing:


 


            6.         Recommended acceptance of the resignation of Eric Barksdale, Custodial Worker,


                        Mamaroneck Avenue School, effective 10/30/09.


 


7.         Recommended approval of the appointments of the following:


                        Joanne Murphy, temporary appointment, Lifeguard, High School, effective 11/17/09


Tiffany Nardozzi,* 26-week probationary appointment, Teacher Aide, PreKinder-


            garten, 6.5 hours/day, effective 11/17/09 (replacing C. Anes)


 


8.         Recommended approval of a temporary salary adjustment for a Custodial Worker, as per


            attachment.


 


9.         Recommended approval of the substitute appointments as per Board approved “Substitute, Summer School and Supplemental Rates”:


                                    Registered Professional Nurse (Substitute)              Rhonda Yacker*


 


Teacher Staffing


 


10.       Recommended approval of the appointment to tenure of the following Teaching Assistants:


                                    Luz Caceres, George Washington School, effective 1/30/10


                                    Laurie Dunning, Middle School/Eastview, effective 1/30/10


                                    Francesca Salvi, Church Street School, effective 1/30/10


 


            11.       Recommended approval of an unpaid leave of absence for Natasha Dormeus, Teaching


                        Assistant, Middle School-Eastview, effective 9/1/09.


 


12.       Recommended approval of the appointment* of district-wide substitute Teaching Assistants, as per Board approved “Substitute, Summer School and Supplemental Rates,”  Yuki Haynes.*


 


13.       Recommended approval of the appointment* of district-wide per diem Substitute Teachers,


            Substitute Teaching Assistants, Building Substitute Teachers, Adult Education Substitute


            Teacher, and Group Home Tutors, as per attachment.


 


14.       Recommended approval of a request for extension of a childcare leave for Melissa Braz,


            English Teacher, Middle School-Highlands, effective 2/1/10-6/30/10.


 


15.       Recommended approval of requests for childcare leaves for:


Emily DeLucia, ESOL Teacher, Newcomer Center, effective 11/29/09-1/31/10


Kristin Dwyer, Elementary Education Teacher, Church Street School, effective 2/1/10-


            6/30/10


– 3 –


 


 


            16.       Recommended approval of the temporary appointment of Sara Klausman as Instructional


                        Specialist, Post Road School, effective 1/4/10-6/30/10 (replacing A. Kallesten).


 


17.       Recommended approval of an extension of the probationary period for Shari Kaplan, Speech


            Teacher, George Washington & Mamaroneck Avenue Schools, from 8/30/10 to 12/15/10.


 


18.       Recommended approval of compensation for the following, as per attachments:


a.         2009-10 Curriculum Development, Professional Development,  & Technology


            Activities stipends


b.         2009-10 Interscholastic/Co-Curricular appointments


c.         2009-10 Extended Day Program Appointments


 


*All of these appointments are conditional appointments, subject to and contingent upon, the satisfactory completion of the


 finger printing process and investigatory background check required by the New York State Education Law.  The Board of


Education reserves the right to rescind these appointments without notice, upon receipt of any unsatisfactory report


resulting from the aforementioned background check.


 


 


 


VI.       Other Action:


 


1.         Recommended approval of the appointments to tenure of:


                                    Tatyana Alekhanova, ESOL Teacher, Ridgeway School, effective 11/26/09


Anita Rivera Chiariello, English Teacher, Middle School-Highlands, effective 12/1/09


LaTonya Francis-Cropper, Elementary Education Teacher, Post Road School, effective


            12/29/09


 


2.         Recommended approval of the appointment of Francis Lahey as Interim Administrator,


            Church Street School, effective 11/2/09.


 


            3.         Recommended approval of the Treasurer’s Report for September, 2009.


 


Recommended approval of the Revenue & Expenditure Report for October, 2009.


 


Recommended approval of counsel’s recommendation for a resolution pertaining to tax certiorari settlements.


 


Recommended approval of Mengler Mechanical Inc. change order #2 at the High School.


 


 


 


VII.      Board Discussion:


 


1.                  Review of Communications


           


2.         Board Committee Meetings

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Ryan Wins By 130 Votes. Discusses Budget Process Next.

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WPCNR CAMPAIGN 2009. November 13, 2009: County Legislator Bill Ryan declared victory today in his race for legislative District 5, and said he would seek reelection as Chairman of the Board of  Legislators.  He said he could not reveal whether outgoing County Executive Andrew Spano (defeated by Republican Rob Astorino last week by a landslide, 58% to 42), had cut the County Budget Spano will present Monday) because he did not know, saying the Legislators would be briefed by Spano and hour before the presentation by the County Executive Monday morning.


 



 In an interview with WPCNR by telephone this afternoon, Ryan (shown on Election Night when he predicted victory and was proven correct based on a recanvass adjustment and splitting the absentee ballots, reported today he received about half the 400 or so absentee ballot votes and won by 130 votes over challenger Bob Hyland. WPCNR projected after provided a fix on where Ryan was going into the absentee ballots that Mr. Hyland needed 75% of the absentee, paper ballot count to nose out Mr. Ryan.


 


WPCNR interviewed him on the process — and what lies ahead now that re-election is behind him. Here is the transcript of that interview:


 


 


Mr. Ryan: “Remember that afternoon when I stopped by your house? It seems like decades ago, and then to have this week added on to everything. You’ve been able to see with some of my (previous) races anyway, I’m not used to such a slim margin, cutting it this close. But it was a close one this time.”


 


WPCNR: Where did the discrepancy come about Monday, what district?  (There was a 100 vote error reported in the original Board of Elections tally reported Tuesday evening on the Board of Elections website.)?


 



Mr. Ryan:  It was District 8 (Ridgeway School). I was pretty confident Election Night that our numbers were going to hold up. The system of runners, John, going from the polling places back to the (Democratic Party) tabulation center had always worked really well.  We get a very very good indiciation, it’s highly accurate, we get a good indication as to whether or not we have won or lost based on the machine totals. That night, I saw the numbers, they were tight but I felt I could be confident in those.


 


       When the Board of Elections posted its canvas sheet totals that had me down and not winning,that caused me to go back to our original  tabulation and we were able to identify in District 8 in White Plains, there was an election night total that had me ahead in this district and the Board of Elections was posting this total of 4 votes for Ryan and a 102 for Hyland and it didn’t make any sense. They believed their sheets and posted their numbers.


 


       I retained counsel Wednesday, and told counsel this is the place to start, and District 8 has got to be opened the day the recanvassing begins and it’s got to be looked at because the night of the election,  it showed me the winner  and sure enough, John, when they opened up District 8, it wasn’t what the canvassing sheet said. it was exactly as what our runner had taken the numbers and taken them back to Democratic headquarters. What that did, was that turned close to 120 votes, adding my numbers back to me, and taking my numbers away from him, that was a spread of 120 votes.


 


WPCNR: How did you do in the absentee ballots (counting) Thursday?


 


Mr. Ryan:  As you know it takes a number of days, sometimes it takes weeks. Once they sat down, both sides (Republican and Democrat)  decided that they were going to sit there for the duration and count everything. There were over 400 pieces of paper at that table.


 


           There were 310 about absentees and the rest were emergencies and affidavits. They kind of followed the election. That night Thursday evening, there was not a piece of paper left on that table. My attorneys dropped our objections to the other side’s stuff, their attorneys dropped the objections to ours. I ended up adding 10 votes to my total. Number was adjusted down.


         


 The final number the Board of Elections gave us going into the paper was corrected, it had taken votes from me, and was corrected to 120. We went into the day (of absentee counting)  with a lead of 120 and they then saw a 10-vote margin, with a margin of 130 votes.”


           


WPCNR: So you ended up splitting the absentees and paper with Hyland? Congratulations.


 


Mr. RYAN: Yeah.


 


WPCNR: Congratulations.


 


Mr.  RYAN: I appreciate it.  I really do.  I appreciate the good coverage you gave to us because people certainly weren’t going to find it anywhere else, that’s for sure.


 


WPCNR: Going forward, since the past is the past, do you anticipate seeking reelection as Chair of the Board of Legislators?


 


Mr. RYAN: It’s my intention to seek reelection to the chair. That process will come up later in the year. Right now as the leader within the government, I have this unique responsibility of guiding the legislature through some very important year end activity, not the least of which is a massive budget that we will be presented with on Monday. Between the budget and the housing implementation plan, and our involvement with the medical center. I have to guide them through this last part of the year, then turn my attention to reelection to this position. It will be my intention I am going to  tell the legislators I’m going to seek reelection to the seat.


 


WPCNR: Since Mr.  Spano is now simply a ghost, you are the point man on the budget here.


 


Mr.RYAN: Dynamic, totally new.


 


WPCNR: Is it your position to defend the budget?


 


Mr. RYAN: He’s (Spano) going to do what he has to do as the executive. He’s going to put his budget together and deliver it to us. Tuesday carried a very important message and I believe it’s a message that goes beyond county government.


 


I certainly accept the message here, but I’m going to make sure that the legislators and others in government  and that includes the schools understand that voters and residents are putting their foot down. Incumbents were clobbered on Election night. Voters want things done in a smarter way. They want government  to be more efficient. They want things to be less expensive and they want us to a much better job in balancing service delivery with cost. 


 


         I tell you voter anger is not going to be limited to this past election. We’re going to continue to see this until they see officials at the local, state and federal level start to give them the results they are looking for.


 


WPCNR:  Could you give us a preview of the budget? Is it down or up?


 


MR. RYAN:   I had a discussion with the County Executive to confirm his release date and time. It’s going to be Monday at 11. I’ve arranged with legislators to meet with him prior  to that press conference,  but they usually play it pretty close to the vest. The direction he is taking has not been shared by him with me. So I’m  going to find out a little bit ahead of time, but not much before 11 o’clock on Monday.


 


WPCNR: Did he do some last minute revisions?


 


MR. RYAN: I got to think he did. It’s such a tremendously complex document,  you tweak something over here and it might affect a thousand different lines in the budget. It’s a big job when you change it. But, I have to agree with you after Tuesday night, it’s quite possible there were some changes put into the budget.


 


WPCNR: Have you been working with Mr.  (County Executive-Elect Rob) Astorino on the budget?


 


MR. RYAN: His first budget is going to be this time next year.  He certainly as the new County-Executive-Elect, he is going to have the ability to talk to the  administration and the  board about what he’d like to see the 2010 budget (beginning in January) look like.


 


I called him. We had a good conversation. Very cordial. Rob and I are friends.  We decided we’re going to sit down, the two of us on the direction of government, our service delivery responsibilities and I assured him, I wanted us to be partners in governing this county  so that people residents and taxpayers could benefit from a good relationship that is more about improvements than it was about political fighting and squabbling. I don’t want that to be a part of it.


 


WPCNR: Does Mr. Astorino have the power as County Executive (in January) to withhold funds in the budget at his discretion?


 


MR.RYAN: They do have the authority to do some of that in certain areas, not all. They have the authority over a substantial number of contracts that affect services. In all the different functional and program areas in the county, they do have some authority, but the Board of Legislators has tremendous authority as well.


 


             It’s always the Board of Legislators that has the ultimate authority to spend.


 


WPCNR: Are you going to have monthly budget previews as the year goes on?


 


MR. RYAN: What I have insisted on (as Chairman of the Board) is the budget committee  being active throughout the year in releasing information and discussing with our major cost centers and major contractual agency partners issues of concern, both substantive and financial. That certainly would be my intent under another term with me as Chairman. That goes to expanded and improved transparency, and ties in to what I am trying to do with the website to put as much information as possible for people to try and look at it.


 


WPCNR: Two months ago the County was looking at being $80 Million down in sales tax collections. Do you have a handle on current figures on the sales tax and other revenue shortfalls?


 


MR. RYAN: I’m sure they do (the County Executive’s office) . The Board (of Legislators) hasn’t made a call to (the) Budget to give that report during the month of October and with the budget coming on Monday, we’re going to be calling our Budget Officer (Anne Reasoner) up to talk to us about all the different revenue categories, because we’re going to have to do some revenue estimates.

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WHITE PLAINS WEEK REPORTS ON RYAN WIN; COUNCIL HUFF AND PUFF ON STRAUB; DOUBLEDI

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS WEEK NEWS. November 13, 2010: White Plains Week reports the latest on the Common Council Quixotic effort to terminate Commissioner of Safety; the pending sale of Ridgeway Country Club; the double-dip dip-in by our public servants; and Bill Ryan’s absentee vote win. Viewers may see the program this evening at 5:30 P.M. on Verizon FIOS Channel 45, and Cablevision Channel 76 and it will be repeated later this evening at 7:30 P.M., Saturday evening at 10 P.M. and Monday evening at 7 P.M


.



John Bailey, The CitizeNetReporter and Peter Katz, left,above and Jim Benerofe, right count down the week’s top stories in White Plains tonight at 5:30 and 7:30 P.M. and later worldwide on the internet at www.whiteplainsweek.com



Over 40,000 persons watch White Plains Week  weekly on the internet!

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Send Your Ideas to Rob Astorino. Website Debuts.

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WPCNR TRANSITION 2010. From County Executive-Elect Rob Astorino’s Transition Office. November 13, 2009: Westchester County Executive-elect Rob Astorino (R-I) today announced the launch of the website that will serve as the official website of his transition team.

The site provides information on County Executive-elect Astorino’s vision for Westchester, and invites citizens to offer their ideas for running the County more efficiently and cost effectively.  It also invites those interested in serving on the Astorino Transition Team or in the Astorino Administration to submit resumes and cover letters.  The website address is: www.astorinotransition.com

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Bill Ryan Reelected. Closes Out Hyland in Absentee Ballots. Dem Chief Confirms

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WPCNR CAMPAIGN 2009. By John F. Bailey. November 12,2009 UPDATEDNOVEMBER13,2009  8 A.M. E.ST. : WPCNR has learned from Dan Seidel, who is in touch with the Bill Ryan campaign, that after counting of all absentee ballots, and emergency ballots today. Mr. Ryan has won reelection to the County Board of Legislators, defeating challenger Bob Hyland in absentee ballots in District 5, after leading Mr. Hyland by 136 votes going into today’s absentee ballot count.


Democratic City Committee Chairperson, Liz Schollenberger issues this statement on yesterday’s absentee count to City Democrats:


“The Board of Elections (and all the lawyers on both sides) opened the paper ballots today in the 5th county legislative district.  After the recanvass and after all the paper has been accounted for, it’s clear that Bill Ryan is the victor in his race. The Board has not yet certified the results of the race, but there’s no longer any doubt about the outcome.  

 

Congratulations to Bill, and to everyone in White Plains, Scarsdale, and elsewhere who helped to make his campaign a success.”

 


Bill Ryan Closes Out Hyland and is reelected to the White Plains-Scarsdale District 5 Seat.


Mr. Seidel does not have “the final count” yet, but sent WPCNR an e-mail saying…”all votes now counted – Ryan is winner. Amounts not related at present.”


Hyland needed 75% of the 315 outstanding ballots to overtake Mr. Ryan, who benefited from a reporting error of a reported 100 votes in his favor discovered Monday during a recanvas.

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Straub Resigns. Who is Running Department Unclear. Straub til Tuesday?

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WPCNR POLICE GAZETTE. Special to WPCNR. November 12, 2009 UPDATED NOVEMBER 14, 2009 in italic typeCommissioner of Public Safety Dr. Frank Straub resigned from his position Friday by submitting a letter of resignation to the law department according to The Journal News, which reports Straub is leaving effective today.  A call to city hall by WPCNR inquiring of the status of the Commissioner was not returned. However the Journal News report failed to indicate who was commanding the department.


Mayor Joseph Delfino told WPCNR Thursday evening that the resignation was  effective next Tuesday. It is unclear now whether the Common Council will terminate him as they had intended to do Monday evening. The council could not fire him Monday evening anyway because unanimous consent is needed to consider an ordinance, and that was not likely forthcoming since Mayor Joseph Delfino and Councilman Glen Hockley are supporters of Straub.


Council President  Benjamin Boykin told WPCNR Friday morning he would have no public comment on the Straub matter.


 No news release was issued by the city and no statement released on Straub’s departure, today though The Journal News quotes Mayor Delfino as saying


 


“I can’t understand why Commissioner Straub, who has done an outstanding job, is being fired,” Delfino said in a statement. Straub “has saved taxpayers money, improved safety to its highest level in four decades and established, at the state level, the highest acceptance ratings for our police and fire departments.”



Dr. Frank Straub in his meeting with the Common Council October 27, that soured Straub’s relationship with the Council due to his ignoring five members of the council who asked he not allow 12 and 24 hour work schedules for police and fire to become perminent. Dr. Straub will no longer be running the Department of Public Safety as of the end of the workday Tuesday, according to the Mayor Thursday evening. It is unclear who is running the Department as of Saturday morning.


Mayor Joseph Delfino Thursday night in a telephone conservation with WPCNR at 7:30 this evening, reported that Commissioner of Public Safety Dr. Frank Straub told him late this afternoon he would resign officially November 17. Delfino said he has not received Straub’s letter of resignation yet, but expected it tomorrow (Friday). Straub had indicated at a police swearing in ceremony November 2, that he would be resigning at the end of the year.


“I intend to appoint an interim Commissioner to replace Dr. Straub who has done a terrific job,” Delfino told WPCNR. “I will be looking at persons with the Department of Public Safety for an interim replacement until the new administration takes over, and I will look nationally. I will be reaching out perhaps to Commissioner (of Public Safety, Westchester) Thomas Belfiore, whose contract is expiring with the county, or perhaps Commissioner David Chong (of Mount Vernon). The next two months in White Plains are the busiest months of the year.The city cannot afford to be without a Commissioner.”


Today, the Mayor said, Council President Benjamin Boykin in a letter this afternoon called for a Special Meeting to discuss the termination of Dr. Straub Monday evening at 6 P.M. It could not be determined if Dr. Straub’s sudden decision to resign early was directly caused by the calling of the meeting.


Mayor Delfino told WPCNR Dr. Straub was not under contract and that he was entitled to vacation pay and sick day pay only if he was terminated.


Asked if he felt the Termination Meeting called for Monday was an effort by the Common Council to nullify the 12 hour and 24-hour work shift  decision Straub made by refusing to terminate the 12 and 24 hour work shifts for police and fire, the Mayor said he did not know.


Councilpersons Benjamin Boykin, Rita Malmud, Dennis Power, and Glen Hockley have not responded to WPCNR calls asking about the strategy behind calling the termination meeting.


 


 


 

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City Schedules Special Meeting Monday to Terminate Commish of Public Safety

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WPCNR COMMON COUNCIL CHRONICLE-EXAMINER. November 12, 2009: The City Clerk has announced a Special Meeting of the Common Council Monday evening at 6 P.M. for the purpose of terminating the employment of Commissioner of Public Safety Frank Straub. Staub has previously announced his resignations on November 2, 2009, three days after he allowed the 12-hour and 24-hour work shifts the Council approved on an “experimental basis” to become permanent. The council in a 5-2 consensus (not an official vote obligating Straub in any way) had indicated to Straub at a meeting on October  28 they wished him to terminate the 12-hour and 24-hour work shifts.


After that meeting was completed,the Council might have met the following two days, passing an official resolution directing Straub to do so, but did not.


The notice:



COMMON COUNCIL AGENDA


SPECIAL  MEETING


November 16, 2009


6:00 P.M.


 


 


 FIRST READING


ORDINANCE:


 


1.                  Ordinance of the Common Council of the City of White Plains removing Frank Straub from the Office of Commissioner of Public Safety of the City of White Plains pursuant to Section 20 of the Charter of the City of White Plains.


 


 


 

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Ridgeway Country Club In Final Negotiations for Sale to Harrison Shipping Exec.

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WPCNR SOUTHEND TIMES. By John F. Bailey. November 12, 2009: Ridgeway Country Club is expected to be sold to a Harrison man in the ocean shipping business by  January 1, according to Nick Wolff, of Prudential Rand Realty, White Plains, this morning.


 


Mr. Wolff, the agent for the sale said the lawyers for the club and the potential buyer have entered final negotiations. Price has not been settled upon yet, but the buyer has assured the members of the club, he intends to keep the Country Club as a club, according to Mr.Wolff.  Wolff said that no zoning changes or variations need to be approved by the city because the use of the club will not change, at least for five years, which is one of the matters under negotiation, he said.



Ridgeway Country Club in the heart of Gedney Farms shown via sattelite.


 


Ridgeway Country Club has been seeking buyers for a year due to the declining revenues of the club. Wolff said the new owner hopes to make the club a semi-private club, add a 4-hole family golf course, and expand the club catering facilities. He is planning no other type of development of the club, Wolff said.  Wolff said the buyer comes from a shipping family based in Greece.

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