City 208 West Post Road Home Overoccupied Out of Compliance at time of Fire.

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WPCNR POLICE GAZETTE. By John F. Bailey. December 10, 2007: The City of White Plains reported to WPCNR tonight that the home at 208 West Post Road that burned Friday November 30, was overoccupied at the time of the fire and that it had a history of violating White Plains codes. The fire left over 40 persons homeless. 



208 West Post Road Last Thursday.


Police Deputy Commissioner of Public Safety, Daniel Jackson told WPCNR the fire bureau had determined that the cause of the fire was determined to be accidental, caused by faulty wiring of a heating device.


WPCNR asked Coordinator of Public Information, Melissa Lopes,  if there was a capacity limit on the number of persons who could live in a residential mult-family zoned home. Ms. Lopez in a statement said, “There are limitations based upon the square footage of each room. This is based on the state building code. The 208 West Post Road Building was over occupied.”




View of 208 West Post Road from the Rear.


The 208 West Post Road also has a history of violations of White Plains codes, Ms. Lopez reports, in a statement saying, “Yes, they were cited (for fire code/building code violations) in the past. Damon Amadio (Commissioner of Building) believes the last time they were cited for violations was April. They were not in compliance at the time of the fire. We did not have any active violations on the property at the time of the fire but there has been in the past.”


Melissa Lopez, Coordinator of Public Information for the City of White Plains told WPCNR the home did not have a sprinkler system, but if the owner decides to rebuild, he will be required to install a sprinkler system.



208 West Post Road, North Side Damage.


Mayor Joseph Delfino told WPCNR when asked why the building was so engulfed (flames shooting out of the bay windows in the upstairs of the structure) when the fire department arrived, the Mayor said the residents had attempted to put out the fire themselves before reporting the fire.


The Mayor said the city is formulating strategies to tighten up code enforcement. He said thought was being given to a policy whereby if capacity of any apartment or room is violated, the tenant automatically loses their lease, but he would have more to announce after a meeting coming up this week.  Ms. Lopez said, “As a result of the fire, the city is meeting this week to come up with new strategies to hopefully prevent this from happening again.”


The Mayor said when he arrived at the building he said a prayer, and told WPCNR it was a miracle there were no fatalities.

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Council OKs 17 Beds for Drifting Homeless. Falls Short. Churches Won’t House

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WPCNR COMMON COUNCIL-CHRONICLE-EXAMINER. By John F. Bailey. December 10, 2007: The Common Council with Councilman Arnold Bernstein absent granted a 6-0 consensus approval to house an additional 17 non-Department of Social Services registered homeless at the Open Arms (13) and Samaritan House (4) locations. 


The council responded with their opinion  allowing the opening of 17 additional beds at  the written request of Deputy County Executive Larry Schwartz’s through a letter delivered Monday at 2 PM to the White Plains Mayor’s Office asking “if the County can receive in writing which members of the White Plains Common Council either supports or has no objections to the use of cots at either Open Arms or Samaritan House during their operation as a warming center.”


 


Schwartz’s letter was in responde to Mayor Delfino’s letter to the County Executive (published by WPCNR) Friday afternoon.


The council upon hearing of  Schwartz request and that the county was willing to sign a contract with Grace Church Community Services to pay for two warming centers in White Plains, agreed unanimously to allow cots at the facilities. Councilperson Rita Malmud cautioned that this was not an official vote because Councilman Arnold Bernstein was not present Monday evening. The Schwartz request though did not stipulate it had to be an official council vote.


Paul Anderson-Winchell, Executive Director of Grace Church Community Services said the 17 cots would be available, 13 for men at Open Arms Shelter and 4 for women at Samaritan House beginning Tuesday evening. He said they were already filled, and when asked if this filled the need for drop-in beds, he said “no.” WPCNR has been advised there are possibly 40 or more persons still without shelter.


Paul Wood, City Executive Officer told WPCNR 17 appeared to be the amount of homeless the White Plains Police had been consistently contending with in their patrols for homeless without shelter throughout the city streets.


Rabbi Lester Bronstein of Bet Am Shalom Synague who with Reverend Carter Via of the Presbyterian Church of White Plains spearheaded the White Plains clergy reaction to the county plan said this meant that the plan to house the non-D.S.S. participating undomicled at church Warming Centers was dead and would no longer be pursued because cots had been the church issue all along. Rabbi Bernstein told WPCNR he and possibly Via would urge other clergy to call for cots at other warming centers throughout the county as the humane thing to do.


The Mayor told WPCNR in his office afterwards that the issue was not over that the county and the other cities had to get together and find a common solution to the homeless  not affiliated with the Department of Social Services programs for the homeless, housing.


Susan Habel City Commissioner of Planning clarified for the council, the issue of whether churches were subject to zoning restrictions, saying that they were but the rulings for specific projects had to be “fact-based” and judged on individual church circumstances and conditions. Habel said that only the Central Parking District by zoning allowed emergency shelters (such as warming shelters). She said that the Central Parking District only contained three churches, Grace Church, St. John’s and Mount Carmel where such Warming Centers could be located. If churches or places outside the Central Parking District wished to start such a shelter or Warming Center it would require an amendment to the zoning code.


 


 

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ACLU Counters Government Report on Racism With One of Its Own.

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WPCNR Times-Constitution. From The American Civil Liberties Union. December 9, 2007:  The American Civil Liberties Union today released a comprehensive analysis of the pervasive systemic racism in America. It addresses examples of racism that New Yorkers confront and the New York Civil Liberties Union combats every day, including racial profiling, racial disparities in education, drug-sentencing laws, and police brutality.



The report, Race & Ethnicity in America: Turning a Blind Eye to Injustice, is a response to the United States government’s report to the United Nations’ Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD) released earlier this year. The government’s report, which the ACLU called a “whitewash,” concealed the dramatic effects of widespread racial and ethnic discrimination in this country.


Donna Lieberman, NYCLU executive director said: “We strive for a society in which people are treated fairly regardless of their race or ethnicity. This report shows we have many hurdles to clear before we achieve that goal.”



The “shadow report” to the U.N. is based on information provided by ACLU affiliates in 20 states, including the NYCLU. It finds that discrimination in America permeates education, employment, the treatment of migrants and immigrants, law enforcement, access to justice for juveniles and adults, court proceedings, detention and incarceration, the death penalty, and the many collateral consequences of incarceration including the loss of political rights.



The report cites a sharp rise in racial profile in New York City, using NYPD stop-and-frisk data obtained by the NYCLU. According to the data, the NYPD stopped, questioned, and/or frisked 506,540 people in 2006, an increase from just 97,296 in 2002. More than 86 percent of those stopped were black or Hispanic, and 90 percent were neither arrested nor issued a summons.



New York’s Rockefeller Drug Laws are highlighted as a clear example of systemic racism in sentencing for drug-related crimes. The NYCLU is part of a coalition of organizations advocating for the drug laws’ reform. Enacted in 1973, the law mandate extremely harsh prison terms for the sale or possession of relatively small amounts of drugs. They have had a highly disproportionate impact on people of color while doing little if anything to stem the illegal drug trade. While blacks and Hispanics comprise 31 percent of the state’s population, they represent 93 percent of those incarcerated for drug felonies, even though drug selling and use is spread evenly throughout the population.



A section of the report on police brutality features the NYCLU’s work documenting the systemic failures of the Civilian Complaint Review Board, an independent agency established to investigate complaints of police misconduct in New York City. In September, the NYCLU released a report, Mission Failure: Civilian Review of Policing in New York City 1994-2006, which detailed how NYPD resistance, poor leadership, and a lack of resources have rendered the CCRB ineffective. 


The NYCLU also figures heavily in the report’s discussion of the School to Prison Pipeline, a set of policies and practices that shuttles children from the classroom to the prison system. Criminalizing the Classroom: The Over-Policing of New York City Public Schools, a joint-report by the NYCLU and ACLU, showed how the massive police presence in city schools negatively affects students, especially students of color.



The report also chronicles racial tensions in Suffolk County and attempts by local legislators to ban Hispanic immigrant day laborers from working on county roads. The law would have harmed many people who rely on day labor to support their families. It was defeated in the county legislature.  


“Sadly, this is not a complete list of the issues we deal with daily as we confront racism in New York,” Lieberman said. “Just this year, we have filed a lawsuit to force the state to reform its broken public defense system, which denies justice to thousands of people of color.”



December 10th is celebrated worldwide as International Human Rights Day. Today, the NYCLU is cosponsoring a forum with the Human Rights Project at the Urban Justice Center and the Women of Color Policy Network on the government’s responsibility to eliminate racial discrimination. The forum, which runs from 4-6 p.m., will be held on the second floor of the Puck Building at 295 Lafayette St.   



A copy of the ACLU’s report on the U.S. government’s report to CERD can be found online at: http://www.aclu.org/cerd.

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Common Council – Saving the Homeless Is Up To You. Let the Legislators Eat Cake

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WPCNR NEWS & COMMENT. By John F. Bailey. December 11, 2007: The holidays – when thoughts turn to peace and good will towards men and women and children the world over – except of course if you are undomiciled, and have a record, or a history of mental instability and just happen to be freezing every night


Nobody knows you when you’re down and out, and nobody wants to take responsibility for peace and good will to men on earth towards the down and out when there is political capital to be made.


 The Mayor of White Plains made that abundantly clear Friday night when he told WPCNR he would not open a warming shelter on his own, that it was up to the Common Council to approve the location (one or two churches in town).


Well, the President of the Common Council never got back to WPCNR this weekend on whether the Common Council would do that tonight.


So I suggest the undomiciled should trudge on over to the friendly White Plains Hospital Center Emergency Room, cough up a storm of mucus and complain of frostbite and exposure, if they have not already. The center cannot refuse them treatment. It is cold out there folks.  If they start doing that, the hospital is not going to be happy. Talk about the equalization of misery!


The Common Council, the County, the Clergy and the Mayor’s Office have kicked this issue around for three weeks instead of doing the right thing the first week which was opening a Warming Shelter. The clergy (as least the three or four leaders recognizing the horror of the county and city policies) is ready to go. But it will still take about two weeks to get the program up and running.


Ridiculous. The Red Cross housed over 40  people who were burned out of 208 West Post Road last week, and housing is now being arranged.


The Council should do the Drop In tonight now with details to be worked out. 


They won’t though. Because they are our Councilpersons.


Next summer when we find a few bodies out there in the woods in shallow graves, be prepared to take those deaths of the despised and unuseful – as Cervantes wrote – “madmen are the children of God,”  on your 7 heads.


But, no, the Common Council is worried about “the outer neighborhoods,” and the inner neighborhoods.


The Council wants adequate security. Yet they can pass a site plan amendment instantly when developers snap their fingers.


Security is  very simple: you order the Department of Public Safety to assign a police officer – we already have an officer patrolling with Operation Trust looking for homeless sleeping on the streets – too bad they do not everywhere in White Plains, isn’t it? You never know what you might find – a frozen body perhaps? Like they found this past summer in front of Bloomingdale’s?


All right, so if you cannot spare the White Plains police, you hire a private security firm – we certainly hire enough consultants and  specialty lawyers who fan monthly on tax certs, don’t we? How about hiring Grace Church Community Services  (to run the Drop In) with our own money?


Or is the new sales tax increase  of ¼% strictly reserved to pay for a 5% raise across the board for the White Plains unions next year?  You bet it is.


Now about this issue of a Warming Center being a threat to neighborhood security:


 The Open Arms Shelter had  many more incidents when last totaled according to police records than the 85 Court Drop In Shelter had. So the county-run and county-approved Drop In was not as safe as the Drop IN…


As for the Sexual Offender argument – police only reported a couple of Sex Offenders showing up at the 85 Court Drop In center and they WERE identified when they checked in.  Philip Grant, the convicted murderer who was homeless did not stay at the 85 Court Drop In. 


Now, the argument against the drop-in is security. Is anyone using their heads here? I don’t think so.


If you have, and I am not saying you do, disturbed, mentally ill persons in this population – if you have persons who once were violent – don’t you think they would be safer if the community knew where they were at night – in a drop-in shelter, accounted for – and not out and about driven crazy by the cold perhaps a little too much one night until they snapped and committed something? 


Normal persons get into arguments over car accidents. Normal persons push and shove waiting in lines. Imagine how a normal person had no place to stay out of the miserable 33 degree rain last night?


There was an incident reported last week when a person acting out of the goodness of their hearts actually housed a homeless person, who turned on them  when they were asked to leave.


This was sad and shows, at least in one case, that this undomiciled person even when helped could not accept it for some reason. Who knows what caused this Good Samaritan act to go wrong. It shows you are not dealing with persons who can think rationally. You cannot treat them with an accept this or else attitude.


It demonstrates the difficulty in trying to help the undomiciled.


But I am not going to convince the fearful and the prejudiced who, I presume, would much prefer the homeless to simply go away, since if they cannot be used as a source of revenue, we have no use for them.


The homeless – many of whom are African-American or Hispanic – have no advocates.


 Go die. Go freeze. That’s what the county, the Mayor and the Common Council have been saying since August 5 when the Drop-In  in White Plains closed.


Real leaders say: we have to help these people and we’re going to work out the details later.


Politicans say what’s the downside for me? What’s the upside?


Saying it is responsible to think of all the people when reestablishing a Drop-In due to security issues in neighborhoods as an excuse for not opening a White Plains Drop In – ignores the real threat that lurks when as a matter of policy  you force  mentally unstable people, or even normal people down on their luck, or more violent homeless persons to stay in the elements.


It makes them colder and madder and more resentful of any kind of help – and could result in criminal acts, perhaps. A homeless person  who actually stays at the county-run drop-in shelter in Valhalla was arrested last week on a charge of stealing a $295 jacket.


So the Mayor, in his best washing-hands manner, has challenged the Common Council to do the right thing.


Will the Common Council delay action and a vote for another week? What holiday spirit!


Peace and good will towards men indeed.


The shame of White Plains city government and county ineptitude is not to be believed.


I have one comment on whether the County Legislators who are about to give themselves a stealth raise today – a despicable tactic exposed by the League of Women Voters.


Do legislators who condone a budget and a projection process that overestimates their revenue collections in sales tax by 40%  deserve a raise? That is gross stupidity and calls into question the entire county budget process.


I think everybody knows the answer to whether these legislators deserve a raise.


They don’t.


Let the Legislators eat cake.


They are incompetent and irresponsible and don’t pay attention to the budget except when voting themselves raises and establishing more positions for political hacks.


The raises are a disgrace.


But politicians have no sense of disgrace.


They are pathological hypocrites.


 

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3 Ebersole Rink Grads Skate for Their College Synchro Skating Teams.

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WPCNR RINKSIDE. By John F. Bailey. December 9, 2007: December in addition to holiday festivities, brings us the Ebersole Rink Holiday Ice Skating Show which skates this coming Saturday  the 15th at 1:15 PM at Ebersole Rink. The ever popular tots and Ebersole Figure Skating Solists will perform holiday numbers, skating their way into your hearts and ushering in the holiday spirit.



The Ebersole Figure Skating School  managed by Kristen Fuerst, the White Plains Figure Skating Club and the Ebersole Advanced Figure Skating Club   for the last decade have created a camaraderie and a skating ethic that its graduates take with them everywhere they skate. Here is last year’s Holiday Ice Show finale. Another ice show is coming up this Saturday Afternoon at 1: 15PM. (Not 2 as previously reported)



White Plains’ Amy Reinthaler, Ebersole Rink Alumna Takes time out to say hello at The Porter Synchronized Skating Classic in Ann Arbor, Michigan last week“


Three recent White Plains graduates are skating for their collegiate synchronized skating teams and got the synchro season off to a sensational high level last weekend at the Dr. Porter Synchronized Skating Classic in Ann Arbor, Michigan. They are Amy Reinthaler (above) who synchro-skates for Notre Dame University;  Aly Salonger who anchors down a key slot on the University of Delaware Synchro Team and Juliana Bailey who synchros on both the Collegiate and Senior Teams of the University of Michigan.


Here’s a look at the White Plains “Stars on Ice” as they competed at the Porter last week – where 179 synchronized  skating teams from Canada and across the United States attracted some 5,000 plus into “College Town USA” in the most impressive Porter in the three years this reporter has been covering the Classic


 



 


Aly Salonger (Center of Picture, second from left, foreground) is shown skating the incredibly creative University of Delaware Collegiate Program that, instead of skating to theme of music, told a story in a variety of musical cuts, superbly transitioned. It may, like the “Van Helsing” program of three years ago – also created by the U of D – usher in a new dimension in creating a synchro program. In this reporter’s opinion, it was the most involving, audience-pleasing program of the weekend. The Judges, using the International Scoring System thought so, too. The University of Delaware finished second to Miami University of Ohio, who skated to “Grindhouse



 


Amy Reinthaler, the Angel of the Ice just a few years ago at Ebersole is skating (second from left, front row above)  for the University of Notre Dame.  Here are the Irish skating their best appearance ever in the Porter Classic last weekend.


Ms. Reinthaler has helped to organize and lead the Irish Synchronized Skating team the last two years. She told WPCNR that when she was recruiting skaters, she was told “nobody goes to Notre Dame to skate.” Thanks to Ms. Reinthaler, they do now.  She is seen skating in the Notre Dame Collegeiate program “Haunted.”



Juliana Bailey, “cross-skates” for both University of Michigan Senior and Collegiate Teams, having to learn three different skating programs. Ms. Bailey is shown first skating the Senior Short program above , (the skater on the far right, leading the second line farthest)  as the two lines of Wolverinettes go into the  scary spread eagle splice — one of only two senior teams to attempt the splice-clean-or-die maneuver.  They made it. They skated to That’s Life in their Senior Short program.



Ms. Bailey is seen on far left, front row, skating for the Universithy of Michigan Collegiate team showing great edges. They finished 6th of 12 teams, just 5 points out of 3rd place and a field of terrific skating teams.


The Senior and Collegiate divisions showed terrific competitive balance for this time in the synchro season.The  University of Michigan Senior team placed 8th of 10 teams in the Short Senior Competion in a very strong field of teams—but only 5 points out of fourth place.  The Michigan Collegiate Team placed 6th of 12 teams in their first competitive skate of the year, the last to skate, and vaulted six teams to place sixth only 5 points out of 3rd place.



Skate hard, pass your USFSA moves and dance tests, work on those SAT scores– and you, too can skate synchro and see the USA and the  world and get the best looking warmup jackets. Ms. Bailey models the U of M. Synchro Skating warmup jacket. No teams are better outfitted than synchronized skating teams folks.


 

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The Real Deal – An Outside the Box idea, Inside a Box for Holiday Fetes

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WPCNR’S THE REAL DEAL By  The Wedding Jeannie, Jeannie Uyanik. December 9, 2007: As the time for holiday hullabaloo rolls around yet again, as event planners, we have a particular onus to appear wildly creative at our own annual events.   Using the same dishes and linens that we wowed guests with the year before just would not do and we are fortunate that the über genius creators of Bardin Palomo (www.bardinpalomo.com) have found a solution for us. 


 


 



Jeannie Uyanik, Planner to the World


The Wedding Jeannie





By far, our pick for 2008’s Best Entertainment Idea is awarded to Robert Palomo for his creation of Party in a Box.  Available in limited edition until next spring, when the full line will be launching, Party in a Box will include the following, depending on which box and price point you select: Candles, Stemware, Tablecloth, Vase, Napkins, Napkin rings, Coasters, Flowers.  The ingenuity of this idea can be applied in many ways and customized for luncheons, picnics, large or small dinners, cocktail parties and other in-between events!  


 


The packaging is as fabulous as the concept, following the thematic design of what’s inside each box and it ties in perfectly with the contents that have been cleverly arranged.   With the unwrapping of each box, you appear to have both the flair and budget for a new setting at every party and keep guests on their toes from event to event.  The only drawback; we invite a lot more people over than we used to since it’s so easy to score compliments time and again.  While we would have preferred to keep this secret under wraps, we know it will get out sooner rather than later.  It’s the perfect holiday gift and an excellent way to surprise the person who has everything. 


 


So this year, instead of spending so much time trying to figure out how to rearrange the furniture so that the setting looks different, order the Party in a Box and let the décor do the moving for you.


 


If however, you still need a helping hand with the comparatively small details of food and drink, the team at FEAST Caterers (www.feastcaterers.com) would be the perfect companion for Party in a Box.  Located in Washingtonville, New York, Peter and Patrick, the proprietors of FEAST are able to travel extensively for large and small holiday events, providing everything from the food and drink to the staffing and cleanup.  But if you are going for a smaller affair, call early to book as their small-event staffing is limited during the holiday season.    Our most recent event with them was at the New York Public Library, so their ability to awe does go beyond more intimate events but this holiday season, in conjunction with Party in a Box, your own home will out do any historical monument – although, did you know that you can do weddings near the Statue of Liberty on Ellis Island? 


 


We will have more on some of the most unusual venues at which to throw an event next week, but until then, get your holiday plans in gear.  Whatever you decide to organize, start early, make lists and get those invitations out fast.  People’s schedules for the holidays are 75% fuller than they are at any other time of year!


 


Note: Ms. Uyanik knows all kinds of events! Got a question or a comment for the Wedding Jeannie? Ms. Uyanik will answer your questions. Simply e-mail her at weddinggenie@candgweddings.com


 


 

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Delfino Won’t Shelter Drifting Homeless Pending Resolution of Shelter Issue

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WPCNR THE HOMELESS NEWS. From the Mayor’s Office. December 7, 2007:  The Mayor’s Office of the City of White Plains tonight issued a statement saying the Mayor would not ask the White Plains clergy to open a warming shelter for drifting White Plains homeless persons on an interim basis, pending the County Executive’s commitment to funding the operation.  It said the Common Council would take up the issue of the drifting homeless again Monday evening at 6 PM.


The Mayor’s Office instead said the Common Council is the body responsible for approving the opening of such a shelter. The announcement came after the Mayor’s Office was asked in light of the County Executive’s inability to meet with  the Common Council, the Mayor, and the clergy and church organizations to hammer out the arrangements this week, would the Mayor ask the clergy to open the warming shelter or some kind of shelter of the city’s own. (Currently, police finding homeless sleeping on the streets take them in to the Department of Public Safety. However, many homeless sleep in areas surrounding the city exposed to the elements. )The Mayor’s Statement:



This is not a Mayoral decision.  It’s a policy decision that needs to be made by the Common Council.  The Mayor had hoped that the County Executive would have attended a meeting on December 5th to discuss policy decisions but he turned the city down on the offer.  On December 10th at 6pm, the Common Council will meet to further discuss the issue.  No vote is expected to take place on the 10th.  This is in the hands of the policy makers. 


As of 6 PM in White Plains, it is 32 degrees. It is snowing wet heavy bonechilling snowflakes. The President of the White Plains Common Council could not be reached for comment as to whether the Council will act to get the shelter open.


Previously, Grace Church Community Services, that it will take at least two weeks to begin the Warming Shelter service once an official decision is made from when the city, county and Common Council formalize the Warming Shelter.

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Delfino to Spano: Join Us As Soon As Possible — to Warm Drifting Homeless

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WPCNR THE HOMELESS NEWS. December 7, 2007 UPDATED 5:35 P.M. E.S.T.: County Executive Andrew Spano, according to the Mayor’s Office, could not attend a meeting with the Common Council and the Mayor and the White Plains clergy prepared to run a Warming Shelter in White Plains. The meeting was tentatively scheduled for Wednesday to settle the issue of where and who would operate and fund the proposed Warming Shelter for the drifting homeless outside the county Department of Social Services system who continue to sleep in doorways, in the woods, and around White Plains in sub freezing temperatures. The Mayor sent this urgent letter to Mr. Spano today. Donna Greene of the Westchester County Department of Communications said that the County Executive would be responding to the Mayor’s letter.


The Honorable Andrew J. Spano
Westchester County Executive
900 Michaelian Office Building
148 Martine Avenue
White Plains, NY 10601

Dear Mr. Spano:

I was disappointed that you could not attend an Open Public Meeting that I tentatively had scheduled for Wednesday, December 5th with the City of White Plains Common Council to address the issue of the non-conforming housing population that has been without shelter since the closing of the 85 Court Street facility in White Plains.  As you are aware, this situation is of deep concern to me, the Council, many clergy and others in our community.  The situation is obviously now exacerbated as temperatures continue to drop.

As the Council and I are anxious to address this situation as soon as possible in a public forum, in lieu of your attendance, would you be kind enough to respond expeditiously to advise what, if any plans the County has, or is considering implementing, to address this grave issue.   It would be of tremendous help to us, as the policy makers of the City of White Plains, to have this information as soon as possible.

Thank you for your timely attention to this matter.

                            Very Truly Yours,


                            Joseph M. Delfino
                            Mayor, City of White Plains

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Pearl Harbor Day: Out of the Sun

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,

Out of the Sun


 



The Arizona engulfed December 7, 1941 Pearl Harbor


 


Out of the sun on the quiet Sunday they came


Steel birds of death blazened with red suns raining fiery havoc on Battleship Row.


One by one, ruthless planes dove, destroyed to their nation’s shame


Thunderous explosions scattered fiery death on Sunday dawn’s glow.


 


Flames belched from bowels of stricken Arizona, America’s pride,


On Hicham Field pilots raced to planes to defend


As their birds were crippled on ground by Zeros’ glide


Gunners in turrets on ships floundering filled skies with flack’s din.


 


In search of carriers the marauders could not find


They ruthlessly strafed and bombed leaving Pearl


In smoking ruin, ships sunk, burning as raiders flew into the Sun


The day of infamy had been ignited in the Zeros’ swirl.


 



The Attack Begins 8 AM December 7, 1941


 


As America listened a world away, a somber FDR


Spoke of December 7 as ever a day that will live in infamy.


America must never forget that  Pearl Harbor Scar


When an unsuspecting America slept in complacency.


 


To the 2,403 who perished that day under merciless bombs


Hails of bullets,  terror of torpedos out of nowhere


America must remember forces against our freedoms


Relentlessly work always to surprise us with deadly bombs’ glare.


 


Vigilence is the price of freedom that must always be defended


Against those who would destroy our republic from within


As well as the dark forces in far off places we have offended.


But the answer is not curtailing freedom at home rather it to champion.


 


The USS Arizona lies in Pearl’s waters, bleeding the lives


Of her men through the eerie eternal slick marking the rusting hulk.


Beneath Pearl’s waters, the blood of free people oozes from the shadowy bulk,


Bleeding forever, freedom’s spirit living forever in lost lives remembered.


 


She never rests.


 


 



Note: The Pearl Harbor attack which took place 65 years ago today and its aftermath is dramatically depicted at http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/events/wwii-pac/pearlhbr/pearlhbr.htm

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Council Reverses Pre-Election RFQ Stand–To Review Proposals Mon Thurs.

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WPCNR DEVELOPERS DAILY. From a White Plains CitizeNetReporter. December 6, 2007: The Common Council which published a lengthy letter in the White Plains Times three months ago stating their unequivocal opposition to the Delfino Administration Request for Qualifications from developers issued last August in an effort to upgrade the White Plains Railroad station area has reversed itself. Today, WPCNR has learned the council will review Requests for Qualifications submissions from four developers next week, who responded to the RFQ. Prior to the election, the Council said they would not review any proposals or qualifications generated by the RFQ



NOW


RFQ Submissions to Be Considered by Common Council Anyway Despite Pre-Election Opposition. Above is the controversial Railroad station in White Plains seen from the Ritz Carlton Residence Tower.  In right foreground is the White Plains Mall.



Then


On Monday, at 6 PM in the Mayor’s Conference Room the Council will hear a presentation from Archstone Smith/Tishman-Speyer and Reckson, a firm that (as WPCNR first reported last month) has developed a preliminary plan which Reckson had showed to three members of the Council of Neighborhood Associations in October. Those persons were Candyce Corcoran, Bob Myerson and  Marc Politzer, who each greeted the plan with enthusiasm.  


On Thursday, December 20 at  6 PM at the regular work session, the Council will hear from two other suitors, Rex Corporation and Albanese Development Corporation/Starwood Capital Group (the hotel organization).


In September, four members of the council had published a flat rejection of any interest in following through on any developers or development plans generated by the Delfino Administration Request for Qualifications.  They rejected the Mayor’s vision for developing the station. Now they are willing to see visions. In September the four (Councilpersons Malmud, Boykin, Power and Roach) wrote:


“ We serve notice that we do not support the RFQ recently released by the mayor’s office through the commissioner of planning and will avail ourselves of all measures at our disposal to bring this ill-considered proposal to a quick end.” and that any proposals should have “input from our residents is what is required.”

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