Added Welfare and Juvenile Detention Costs to Increase Cty Property Tax Burden

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WPCNR COUNTY TICKER From New York Association of Counties. March 4, 2008 (Edited): The 2008-09 Executive State Budget proposes two substantial cost shifts that will be added to county budgets and the local property tax burden. According to county calculations, the Executive Budget will require counties and the City of New York to pay at least $27.5 million in the current budget year and $50 million in the next from an increased share of welfare benefits and the full cost of local youth detention facilities.


 


 


Hudson Valley County officials convened in Westchester this morning to hold a press conference to discuss how the cost shifts proposed 2008-09 Executive State Budget would have an immediate and direct impact on New York’s counties and county property taxpayers. The press conference was one of a series of events being coordinated by counties across the state to voice opposition to the costs shifts in the proposed state budget budget.



 


“The state has traditionally viewed its counties as equal partners in sharing the costs of the public assistance and youth detention programs. But we have never been partners on policy decisions or how to best control costs,” said Westchester County Executive Andrew Spano. “George Steinbrenner and his family own more than 51 percent of the Yankees so they get to make all the spending decisions for the team. If the Governor’s proposed budget stands, it would change the historic state/county relationship by requiring counties to pay the majority share for state-mandated programs. There would be no partnership at all. We would be paying more than the state, but still lack control over management. Steinbrenner would never have allowed this and neither should we.”


 


Spano was joined by Suffolk County Executive Steve Levy, who serves as the president of the New York State County Executives’ Association; Rockland County Executive Scott Vanderhoef; Orange County Executive Ed Diana; Putnam County Deputy Executive John Tully; Westchester County Legislators Bill Burton, Peter Harckham and Vito Pinto; NYSAC President Lucille McKnight and NYSAC Executive Director Stephen J. Acquario.


 


“These are unjustified and unacceptable cost shifts that will have a direct cost to county property taxpayers,” said Suffolk County Executive Steve Levy, the president of the New York State County Executives Association. “The property tax burden is already breaking the backs of our homeowners and businesses. The State cannot close the state budget gap by shifting more of the cost to county taxpayers. That burden is already a major cause of our economic stagnation and decreasing population.”


 


“This is a step in the wrong direction,” said Orange County Executive Ed Diana. “It makes no sense to balance the state budget on the backs of New York State property taxpayers, who are already paying the fourth highest property taxes in the nation.”


 


“This budget is a direct contradiction of promises the Governor made at the NYSAC conference last year. He said then, and I quote directly from his address – ‘Our commitment to reducing unfunded State mandates will be measured not in words, but in dollars.’ Either he was disingenuous then, or he doesn’t understand his own budget,” said Rockland County Executive Scott Vanderhoef.


 


“There is a direct correlation between the decisions made in this state budget proposal to the local property tax burden in New York State. Even as we try to put the focus on our solving our property tax crisis, state leaders shift more of the burden on our homeowners and businesses,” said NYSAC President Lucille M. McKnight, an Albany County Legislator.


 


“Most of what we do—as high as 80 percent of our spending—is mandated by the state,” said NYSAC Executive Director Stephen J. Acquario. “When the state unilaterally alters traditional funding partnerships with its local governments, we at the local level have two choices—cut services or raise taxes.”

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School Budget Surgery: Draft Budget Cut $6 Million

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. By John F. Bailey. March 4, 2008 UPDATED WITH PIX 5:24 PM: The Board of Education was presented with a Draft Budget $6 Million less than the $190.7 Million Preliminary Budget presented in January last night. The new Draft Budget comes in at $184.8 Million, a 6.2% increase in spending compared to the 9.6% increase previously proposed. The reduction was achieved by taking out $3 Million of projected certiorari refunds which will be funded most likely by adding to certiorari borrowing next year planned previously.  



School Hears the Draft Budget Monday evening.



The 2008-2009 Draft Budget: $184,828,900



$559 Tax Increase for typical $700,000 Home.


The new budget, combined with 2008 city assessments holding steady at $290.2 Million as announced yesterday, and a scenario assuming the rest of school revenues consisting of $36 Million remains in place, would mean a school tax increase of $559 for the median White Plains homeowner ( house market value of $700,000). The tax rate per $1,000 of assessed valuation would go up $37 to $511/per $1,000 of assessed valuation.


 



The Expense Increases Adding up to the 6.2% increase in the budget. The largest expense increase in the debt service — including the Capital Project now under way — 38.74%. This  2.9 Million in debt service will go up in 2009-2010 when the bond for Post Road School comes on line.


 


The balance of the approximately $3 Million in savings (in addition to offloading certiorari payments into bonds)  consisted of retirements and administrative  and personnel departures resulting in  $1,000,000 in savings in Salaries; $866,000 saved on Fringe Benefits because of only a 12% increase in health costs, less than expected; $230,500 in Tuition costs; $134,000 in Equipment;   $50,000 in repairs; $163,000 reduction in Utilities; $300,000 in Debt Service and $121,474 in miscellaneous cuts.


Staff for district down 14 persons.


No new teachers are being projected at this time to be added to the budget. The district reported that the staff of 47 Administrators was down by 2, and were not going to be replaced; the staff of 659 certified teachers was  657, with the loss of just 2, and they were not expected to be replaced.


The clerical staff as of October consisted of 113 persons, down 5 from last year. The Number of Teaching Assistants is 238, down 5 from 2006-2007, and the number of Facilities & Operations staff was 90, the same as last year. There were no plans announced to cut staff farther from that.  This makes a total of 1,145 employees, plus there are another approximately 300 employees of the district based on information WPCNR received last year from the district.


New School Data System Needed. BOCES Unable to Deliver.


School Superintendent Timothy Connors announced to the Board that the district is planning to overhaul their technology and data reporting operation, long time a source of irritation to the Board of Education for the inability of present data systems to produce longitudinal studies on student groups as they move through the grades, whether this data roadblock applied to financial patterns was not clear.



Superintendent Connors with Fred Seiler, Assistant Superintendent for Business explaining the District data failures last night.


 Superintendent of Schools, Timothy Connors, BOCES has not been able to do what the district thought they could in providing the data analysis of district academic results and studies the district has long requested. Two new software programs are being considered, and the need for a Data Processing Manager, whether on a consulting business or a possible new Board position is being considered to upgrade the district ability to report on its academic


 



State Aid under Governor Eliot Spitzer’s latest proposal would decline almost 4%, Seiler estimated.


In the course of the evening, Assistant Superintendent for Business Fred Seiler said that the school district would receive  less school aid. He said it was unclear what the City Assessment Roll was for 2008.


Good News from City Hall


However, City Assessor Lloyd Tasch reported yesterday that the Roll did not decline from last year, and was actually up some $400,000, meaning the district can expect to collect the same property tax handle they did last year ( approximately $138,495,172). If all other sources of revenue stay steady (last year amounting to $36 Million, the district will have to raise the tax rate $37  per $1,000 over the $474.62/$1,000 to meet the $184.8 Million Draft Budget.


Tax Rate Would Top $500/$1,000 per $1,000 of Assessed Value


The resulting tax rate of $511.62 would mean that a $700,000 home in White Plains, with an assessed value of $14,775 would pay an additional $547 in school taxes next year, a total school tax of $7,559. Add city tax  of $2,700 and the tax bill for the median home owner would top $10,200. You would have to add the county tax on top of that.  WPCNR cautions that this would be the school tax if the rest of the school revenues from last year remain at present levels. Should school aid decline, and other revenue sources decline, the tax increase will be more.


The Annual Budget Committee meets for the second time Wednesday evening to review the Draft Budget.


 

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Photograph of the Day

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WPCNR PHOTOGRAPH OF THE DAY. By the WPCNR Roving Photographer. March 4, 2008: WPCNR observed yesterday that work had resumed on the 189 Main Street Building  on Renaissance Square — the “gallery/restaurant/gathering place” being constructed by Cappelli Enterprises.  A spokesperson for Cappelli Enterprises informed WPCNR that “active negotiations are underway with several very exciting prospective tenants but no announcement can yet be made.”


In a related issue, the spokesperson reports Via Quadronno is expected to open mid- to late spring on the first floor of the Bar Building.



Work resumes on 189 Main Street

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City Assessments Pull Out of Tailspin. Residential Value Down 4%

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WPCNR QUILL & EYESHADE. By John F. Bailey. March 3, 2008: The 2008-2009 Assessment Roll was officially released this morning, showing City Assessed Valuation has risen slightly over last year’s $6 Million decline.  The City Tax Assessor reported thought that Residential Assessed Value had declined 3.9% for the first time in a decade.


 The Roll from which city, school and county taxes are determined rose to $290,189,377  up from $289,902,411 Million last year ending a five year decline in the city’s Assessed Value.


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The Good Book! City Assessor Lloyd Tasch presented the 2008 Assessment Roll this morning.


 The city Homeowner’s total Assessed Valuation declined 3.9%, according to Lloyd Tasch, the City Assessor. The  Assessor attributed the stabilization of the assessment roll to the addition of the Louis Cappelli Ritz-Carlton Hotel structure (excluding the two residential towers) and the Ritz-Carlton underground garage (beneath Renaissance Square) to the tax roll at full valuation for 2008-2009, and the return of Nine West to the tax roll.


The school district Assessment Roll for 2008-2009 stands at $291,802,226, which reduces to $249,529, 555  after the STAR exemption.




The school district Assessment Roll for 2008-2009 stands at $291,802,226, which reduces to $249,529, 555  after the STAR exemption. New York State reimburses the City School District for the shortfall created by the STAR exemption.


The Assessor said the stabilization “reflects a balance between certiorari settlements and current City of White Plains development that has taken place. Without the development the Mayor has been responsible for, the City  would be troubled.”


The assessor remarked that the Equalization rate decline ( from 3.24 in 2007 to 2.75% in 2008) “never helps White Plains therefore the city is dependent on development in order for it to be able to endure its certiorari losses.”


“This year we took a terrific hit at the residential assessed value,” Tasch elaborated, “because of the stabilization or slight decline in the residential market.”


Residential Value Declines 3.9%


Tasch said this was the first time the Residential Assessment Ratio in White Plains had declined in ten years he has been with the White Plains Assessor’s Office. (He has been Acting, then City Assessor for two years.)  He said there had been a 3.9% decline in the value of residential property.


However, the Assessor said there was approximately  twice  the number of residential homeowners filing for certioraris in January up from 106 to 173.  Tasch said those claims had already been settled and were reflected in the new roll.  He noted that adjustments to homeowner assessments had very small effect on the final roll and were not a factor. He said he worried more about the large commercial properties where you can lose a million dollars in assessed value with one settlement.


9-West, Louis Cappelli Hotel & Parking Facility Lifts Roll.


Asked how the city was able to make up the certiorari losses of the last year, Tasch said the Ritz-Carlton hotel structure and its subterranean garage have now been fully assessed and placed on the tax rolls. The condominium tower on Main Street and the office/condominium tower on Hamilton, part of the complex have  not been tax rolled yet.


He also noted that 9 West had come off its PILOT of $355,022 paid to the city and $1,420,000 to the school district. Tasch said he had assessed it at $3.2 Million as a PILOT, and the Board of Assessment Review had set its present assessed value  (after PILOT had ended) at $1,950,000, which added that amount to the city assessment roll.


Tasch said “In the public’s eye, people have a problem with PILOTS. PILOTS have been important to White Plains taxpayers for many years, contrary to the negative portrayal of their agreements.”


Possible new taxes after PILOTS less than the PILOT


WPCNR observes that this new assessment results in a city tax of $276,705  in 08-09 based on last year’s tax rate, and a school tax of $924,300 for a total tax payment between city and school of about $1,201,000 in the coming year. This is approximately $500,000 below  what they were paying in their last PILOT payment, $1,775,000.  At least in this case, the PILOT payment Nine West had been paying was higher than their present estimated tax payment for 2008-2009, though the PILOT was set a number of years ago. The Board of Assessment review apparently feels that time has not been kind to the 9 West appreciation in value over the years.


Expects Equalization Rate,  Assessment roll, to Stabilize.


Tasch said “I estimate the assessment roll to continue to be flat or slightly up for next year and the State Equalization Rate to be flat.”


Asked if the low Equalization Rate of 2.75% was going to result in more certiorari filings in the months ahead by commercial properties, Tasch said he had not seen it, the number of businesses filing had not increased, though as noted previously, residential certioraris had increased, though he allowed that was a possibility. WPCNR notes that the last two times such drops in the Equalization Rate occurred  of this year’s magnitude it resulted in the rounds of certioraris that have resulted in certiorari’s costing the city $30 Million in assessments.  A 1.64 percentage point drop (from 6.35%) in 2002-03 and a .64 drop in 2004-2005 (from 4.45%)  helped induce commercial property owners to challenge their assessments. This year’s reduction was a half percentage (3.24% down to 2.74%), and perhaps may have a comparable impact.


No Surcharge or Penalty Device Being Considered


WPCNR asked if the city was considering a surcharge or mechanism to apply to commercial properties to discourage certiorari filings and recoup lost revenue for successful certiorari suits. Tasch said the city definitely was not contemplating such a mechanism.  He said that because the city is not a reassessment community,  the Assessment office has no right to reexamine a property unless some kind of construction occurs, or the property asks for a Board of Assessment Review.


Long Day’s Journey Into Assessment Night


For the record, the City Tax Assessment Roll 17 years ago (1991) stood at $424.1 Million of Assessed Value. By 1997, the first year of the Delfino Administration, it had fallen to $337.3 Million.


This $86 Million drop (B.D., “Before Delfino)  in Assessed Value was based largely on the plunge of the equalization rates of  .45% in 1995-96,  .25% in 1996-97, and a stiff .81 % in 1997-1998 – due mainly to ballooning real estate values – triggering certioraris.


From 1997-98, (A.D. “After Delfino”),  the Assessment Roll continued to erode, from $337.3 Million in 97-98 to $318.8 Million in 2002-2003. The Equalization rate fell by almost half from 8.22% in 1997-1998 to 4.71% in 2002-03, triggering massive certiorari efforts on the part of commercial properties as the housing price escalation hammered the assessment roll.  The Equalization Rate experienced a .12% decline in 98-99, a .65% decline in 99-00; a .36% decline in 00-01; a .74% plunge in 01-02 as rising home prices made it clear on paper that commercial properties were over-assessed.


The Time Bomb


In the last five years of the Administration those certioraris won inadvertently by the Equalization Rate, have been coming home to roost, driving down the City Assessment Roll from $318.1 M in 01-02 to $290.2 Million today, a $28 Million loss of Assessed Value in five years. And there are more of these settlements to come.


In the last five years the Equalization Rate has continued to take its macabre financial toll on the White Plains residential taxpayer.


In 02-03, it dropped, as previously noted, 1.64%! Those were boom days in real estate. In 03-04, .26% eroded off the E.R. In 04-05, .63% was shaved off. The last three years the declines continued, .28% to 3.54%; .30% to 3.24% last year down to the present Equalization Rate of 2.75%, another .49% decline.


Seeing this trend, which has not been matched by any fiscal restraint or significant budget adjustment by either the city or the school district,  or mitigation effort,  the White Plains Homeowner may never see the results of selling their home at the price it has inflated to over the last 17 years.  

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Council Expected to Pass Affordable Housing 10% Resolution.Review Venue

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WPCNR COMMON COUNCIL CHRONICLE-EXAMINER. March 3, 2008: The Common Council meets this evening at City Hall, 7:30 PM, and is expected to pass a resolution increasing the providing of affordable housing in new rental and condominium projects to 10%. The Venue project proposed for Old Bloomingdale Road (120) is up for a public hearing. The complete Agenda:

COMMON COUNCIL
AGENDA
REGULAR STATED MEETING
MARCH 3, 2008
7:30 P.M.






PLEDGE TO THE FLAG: Hon. Glen Hockley




INVOCATION: Rev. Jacob Stukes
Lonnie White Memorial Church of God in Christ




ROLL CALL: City Clerk




EMPLOYEE Raymond Tribble
OF THE MONTH:
Youth Specialist II
Youth Bureau




APPOINTMENTS:




  1. Communication from the Council President in relation to re-appointments to the Conservation Board.




  1. Communication from the Council President in relation to an appointment to the Library Board.


ADJOURNED


PUBLIC HEARINGS:




  1. Public Hearing in relation to the reclaiming of jurisdiction from the Planning Board over the Special Permit portion of the application submitted on behalf of CorePlus Properties, LLC and CPP Bloomingdale, LLC, (“Applicant”) for approval of a Special Permit for the proposed restaurant use component of The Venue on Bloomingdale Road.



  2. Public Hearing in relation to an application submitted on behalf of CorePlus Properties, LLC and CPP Bloomingdale, LLC (“Applicant”) for a site plan amendment to the B-1 “S” (Special) Zoning District to allow the construction of a proposed project on 120 Bloomingdale Road to be known as “The Venue on Bloomingdale Road” consisting of 42,000 square feet of upscale retail space; 6,000 square feet of restaurant space with outdoor dining; and 334 new parking spaces on two (2) levels above the retail center/restaurant level on a site containing environmentally sensitive features.




PUBLIC HEARINGS:




  1. Public Hearing in relation to the application submitted on behalf of Citi Center Café, Inc., d/b/a Antipasti, for a Special Permit for Cabaret Use at One North Broadway.






  1. Communications from Commissioner of Building



  2. Design Review Board



  3. Commissioner of Planning



  4. Planning Board



  5. Commissioner of Public Safety



  6. Commissioner of Public Works



  7. Commissioner of Traffic



  8. Traffic Commission



  9. Conservation Board



  10. Westchester County Planning Board



  11. Environmental Officer






  1. Environmental Findings Resolution






  1. Resolution of the Common Council of the City of White Plains approving the application submitted on behalf of Citi Center Café, Inc. for a Special Permit to operate a cabaret at Antipasti located at 1 North Broadway (Section 125.68, Block 6, Lots 2, 3, and 5 (Ward 4, Block 9, Lots 6 – 10) subject to certain conditions contained herein.






  1. Public Hearing in relation to the (1) proposed discontinuance of City-owned traffic island of approximately 200 square feet which was built in the center of the Renaissance Square/Court Street Extension Roadway, in accordance with Sections 151 and 152 of the Charter of the City of White Plains, and (2) to amend the Official Map of the City of White Plains to reflect said discontinuance pursuant to Section 29 of General City Law.






  1. Communications from Commissioner of Building



  2. Design Review Board



  3. Planning Board



  4. Commissioner of Public Safety



  5. Commissioner of Traffic



  6. Traffic Commission




FIRST READING
ORDINANCES:




  1. Communication from Corporation Counsel in relation to the settlement of certain tax review proceedings.




  1. Ordinance authorizing the settlement of certain tax review proceedings.






  1. Communication from Corporation Counsel in relation to an agreement with the Law Office of Vincent R. Rippa, to act as Special Counsel in assessment review proceedings.






  1. Ordinance amending an ordinance entitled, “An ordinance authorizing the Corporation Counsel to enter into an agreement with the law offices of Vincent R. Rippa, to act as Special Counsel in assessment review proceedings for the remainder of FY 05-06 and FY 06-07.”






  1. Communication from Chairman, Capital Projects Board, in relation to Capital Project No. C5303, Public Safety Building – Caulk and Seal.






  1. Ordinance of the Common Council of the City of White Plains to amend the Capital Projects Fund by establishing Capital Project No. C5303, Public Safety Building – Caulk and Seal.






  1. Communication from Commissioner of Public Works in relation to a request from the White Plains Business Improvement District for the closure of certain public streets and appropriate parking restrictions on Saturday, March 8, 2008, for the annual St. Patrick’s Day Parade.






  1. Ordinance of the Common Council of the City of White Plains authorizing the closure of certain public streets and appropriate parking restrictions on March 8, 2008 for a Saint Patrick’s Day Parade sponsored by the White Plains Saint Patrick’s Day Parade Committee and the White Plains Business Improvement District (BID).






  1. Communication from Commissioner of Finance in relation to proposed changes to the fee schedules for the Departments of Recreation and Parks and the Youth Bureau.






  1. Ordinance of the Common Council of the City of White Plains establishing and approving a schedule of user fees for the White Plains Department of Recreation and Parks for Fiscal Year 2008 – 2009.






  1. Ordinance of the Common Council of the City of White Plains establishing and approving a schedule of user fees for the White Plains Youth Bureau for Fiscal Year 2008 – 2009.






  1. Communication from the Mayor in relation to a request submitted by the YWCA of White Plains and Northern Westchester, Inc., in relation to a request from the YWCA of White Plains and Northern Westchester, Inc., for an amendment to a Community Development Special Rehabilitation Fund for roof replacement, and the referral of a request for funds from the City’s Affordable Housing Assistance Fund.






  1. Communication from the City Clerk transmitting a request submitted by YWCA of White Plains and Northern Westchester, Inc., requesting a grant of $360,000 from the City’s Affordable Housing Assistance Fund.




  1. Ordinance amending an ordinance entitled, “Ordinance authorizing a Community Development Rehabilitation Loan not to exceed $180,000 to the YWCA of White Plains and Northern Westchester, Inc., for improvements to the residential portion of the building at 69 North Broadway” to authorize an increase in the loan amount not to exceed a total of $200,000 and to authorize the YWCA to transfer the property to a For-Profit Limited Liability Company, for which the YWCA will remain the managing member, to enable the YWCA to utilize low income housing tax credit financing for the overall rehabilitation of the property.




  1. Communication from Commissioner of Planning in relation to an adjustment of fund balance in the Community Development Rehabilitation Program administered Restore Revolving Fund.






  1. Ordinance amending the Restore Program Fund Budget by appropriating fund balance to the Restore Program.






  1. Communication from Commissioner of Planning in relation to a transfer of funds in the Community Development Program Budget by programming funds from various Community Development Program Years.






  1. Ordinance amending the Community Development Fund Budget by programming funds from various Community Development Program Years.








  1. Communication from Director, Youth Bureau, in relation to an amendment to the contract with the County of Westchester, Office of Workforce Investment, to receive funding for an Out-Of-School Youth Program.






  1. Ordinance amending an ordinance entitled, “An ordinance authorizing the Mayor to enter into a contact with the County of Westchester (Office of Workforce Investment) to receive up to $247,352 in funding for an Out-Of-School Youth Program under the Workforce Investment Act (WIA).”






  1. Communication from Director, Youth Bureau, in relation to an amendment to a contract with the Westchester Putnam Workforce Investment Board (WIA) accepting additional funds for an In-School Youth Program.






  1. Ordinance amending an ordinance entitled, “An ordinance authorizing the Mayor to enter into a contract with the Westchester/Putnam Workforce Investment Board in order to receive a two year grant.”






  1. Communication from Deputy Director, Youth Bureau, in relation to a contract with the Department of Community Mental Health (DCMH), in order to receive a three year grant in support of the Collocation Project to provide substance abuse services for White Plains Youth.






  1. Ordinance amending an ordinance entitled, “An ordinance authorizing the Mayor to enter into a contract with the Department of Community Mental Health (DCMH), in order to receive a three year grant to support the Collocation Project in providing substance abuse prevention services to White Plains Youth.”






  1. Communication from Personnel Officer in relation a proposed amendment to the Municipal Code to establish certain position titles, amend the Table of Organization, and adding and abolishing certain positions.






  1. Ordinance amending Section 2-5-81 of the White Plains Municipal Code by establishing certain position titles, and amending the 2007 – 2008 Table of Organization by adding and abolishing certain positions.






RESOLUTIONS:






  1. Communication from Corporation Counsel in relation to the scheduling of a public hearing for April 7, 2008 on an application submitted on behalf of Coughlin Inc., (d/b/a The Prophecy), for a Special Permit for Cabaret Use at 15 South Broadway.






  1. Resolution of the Common Council of the City of White Plains scheduling a public hearing for April 7, 2008, in relation to the application submitted on behalf of Coughlin Inc., for a one (1) year Special Permit to operate a cabaret at The Prophecy located at 15 South Broadway.








  1. Communication from Commissioner of Planning in relation to scheduling a public hearing for April 7, 2008 in relation to the Annual Section 8 Program Agency Plan for submission to the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development.






  1. Resolution of the Common Council of the City of White Plains scheduling a public hearing for April 7, 2008 in relation to the Annual Section 8 Program Agency Plan for submission to the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development.






  1. Communication from the Mayor in relation to a Home Rule Request seeking enactment of State Legislation to amend the Real Property Tax Law to exempt certain construction, re-construction, alteration or improvement of multiple dwelling buildings within certain cities.



  2. Resolution of the Common Council of the City of White Plains authorizing the certification of a Home Rule Request seeking enactment of State Legislation to amend the Real Property Tax Law to exempt certain construction, re-construction, alteration or improvement of multiple dwelling buildings within certain cities (Assembly Bill No. A9274).






  1. Communication from Commissioner of Planning in relation to proposed revisions to the City of White Plains Home-Ownership Program and Affordable Rental Housing Program.






  1. Communications from Commissioner of Building



  2. Planning Board



  3. Commissioner of Parking






  1. Resolution approving revised Affordable Rental Housing Program and Affordable Home Ownership Program Rules and Procedures, dated March 3, 2008.




ITEMS FOR
REFERRAL:






  1. Communication from Commissioner of Building in relation to a request submitted on behalf of ABS Capital Management LLC and Hamilton Park LLC, for a one year extension of a previously approved Special Permit/Site Plan for the construction of a residential development known as Hamilton Condominiums, 116-120 Church Street.




ITEMS FOR


INFORMATION:






  1. Communication from the City Clerk transmitting a communication from LC White Plains LLC, requesting that the February 4, 2008 referral of an amendment to a previously approved site plan in relation to the exterior elevation drawings of the Air Rights Building and re-design of the heating method be withdrawn.

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Tigers Queens of Basketball! Vanquish Vernon for 4th Consecutive Sect Title

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WPCNR SPORTS. March 2, 2008: The White Plains Girls Basketball team won their fourth consecutive Section 1 Basetball Title this afternoon, defeating Mount Vernon High at the Westchester County Center, 48-40. In many ways this was the most satisfying win of each of the Tigers 4 consecutive Golden Balls because they were not expected to do it. But the girls did it with defense, smart play, and believe in themselves. They went from 10th Seed to Number 1 with a bullet.

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High School Musical!

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WPCNR STAGE DOOR. From Libby Hollahan. March 1, 2008: White Plains High School will be presenting its Spring Musical, “How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying!,” on Friday, March 14, and Saturday March 15, at 7:30 p.m., and Sunday, March 16, at 3 p.m.  All performances will take place in the White Plains High School Auditorium, 550 North Street.


 


Tickets are $5 for students and seniors, $10 for adults, and $20 for Premium Reserved Seating.  For ticket information, call 422-2234.


 


“How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying,” is a musical comedy set in the business world of the early 1960s, featuring the office antics at the “World Wide Wicket Company.”  It is the story of Finch, a young window washer with ambitions of rising to the executive suite, and his rival, Bud Frump, nephew of Company Boss J.B. Biggley.  There is Rosemary, the secretary who dreams of marrying a young executive and moving to the suburbs (“New Rochelle…no, White Plains”), and Hedy LaRue, the new secretary who gets hired for talents other than her typing.   The music and lyrics are by Frank Loesser, and the book is by Abe Burrows, Jack Weinstock, and Willie Gilbert.



 


White Plains High School’s production is directed by Ms. Penelope Cruz and Ms. Seren Cepler, and is presented with the permission of Music Theater International.   The cast includes 33 WPHS students.  The Pit Orchestra, which includes 27 students and two faculty members, is conducted by Mr. William Tonissen.  The choreographer is Mr. Kevin Wallace.  The Student Assistant Directors are Remy Adler and Austin Saiz, and Technical Directors are Sabrina Doolittle and Stephanie Quinn.  Additional White Plains School District teachers helping on the show are Mr. Ferrigno and Ms. Tompkins, pit orchestra, and Ms. Davis, sound.


 


Student Participants in the Production (Cast, Crew and Orchestra) are:


 


Pamela Abrahams, Alexis Adamski, Remy Adler,  Daniel Alfonso, T.J. Bastone, Kellsie Belgrave, Rachel Benjamin, Evelyn Berger, Patrick Blaney, Gigi Brady, Victor Brady, Paul Bronzo, Ali Brotmann, Will Burmeister, Alex Cantatore, Seann Cantatore, Jake Carmen, Cara Cohen, Reid Cohen, Andrea DeMarco, David Doyle, Allison Fairhurst, Donya Feizbaksh, Hannah Fine, Remy Gautreau, Cameron Glass, Shinice Hemmings, Mariana Hess, Laura Hollahan, Lani Hosei, Antony Kalathara, Jason Kaplan, Jessica Lacativa, Emma Lagle, Ben Lanman, Katie Lau, Corinne Leary, Ben Leib, Adina Lowy, Julia Maguire, Emily Majsak, Juliana Marothy, Ariel Miller, Paiza Miller, Maia Matsushita, Sean McGee, Meaghan McLeod, Mackenzie Mollo, Ben Norris, Ben Oppenheim, Randy Patterson, Laura Pellegrini, Daniel Petralia, Mitchell Pozo, Peter Pozo, Katie Rie, Becky Riss, Austin Saiz, Alex Sampugnaro, Nicole Santolo, Deborah Scharbach, Elizabeth Scherer, Scott Schwartz, Collin Shepard, Alannah Smith, Zach Sorrow, Preeth Srinivasaraghavan, Edward Zekus,  Mary Zhu.


 


 

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Assessment Roll Holds Steady for 2008. Long Decline Arrested.

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WPCNR QUILL & EYESHADE. By John F. Bailey. February 29, 2008: The Assessor’s Office informed WPCNR Friday that the 2008 City Assessment Roll had risen $300,000 to $400,000 in assessed value stopping a five year decline in city assessments. The last time the assessment roll increased was in 2002-2003. The Assessor, Lloyd Tasch said he could not give the exact final Roll total until it was certified by the Corporation Counsel. The official roll will be released Monday.


 


In 2007 the total assessed value in the city was $289.9 Million. A $400,000 increase would put it at $290.3 Million for 2008. In 2002-2003, the assessment roll was $318.4 Million. It dropped slightly in 2003-2004 then has dropped dramatically for four consecutive years until this year.


This is good news for the City as it begins the budget process in March, and especially for the School District.


It will not have to make up for more lost assessments. It  begins deliberations on whether they will cut the $190.7 Million Preliminary Budget (up from last year’s $174.1 M)  presented January 14. By WPCNR estimates the $16.6 Million budget-to-budget change if covered only by tax increase would require a $57 dollar increase in the tax rate to $531/ per $1,000 of assessed value to generate the $16.6 Million gap based on the new assessment roll of approximately $290.3 million (estimated) Assessment Roll. More significantly the increase in oil prices to $100 a barrel may impact the district more adverserly than the district originally estimated. (Utilities were estimated to rise 10%, and Transportation, 5%.) 


On a house with market value of $700,000, and an assessed value of $15.5 Million, the owner would pay $8,230 in school taxes in 2008-2009, a school tax increase of  $883 year to year, with city taxes and county taxes tacked on to that.


The White Plains homeowner is being faced at the present rate of school budget and city budget and county budget  escalation of  expenditures with a steady $1,000  annually in tax increases 

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Celebrating a Legend. Cab’s Daughter Swings the North End. Brings Back the Past.

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS AFTER DARK. By John Bailey. February 28, 2008: Ci Ci (Lael) Calloway, daughter of the jazz legend, Cab Calloway, performed an informal runthrough of a benefit show she will be performing in April at the North End Restaurant Thursday evening in prepartion for a gala benefit she will be staging there in April  to raise funds for the renovation and restoration  of her father’s home on Knollwood Road in Westchester.



Heidi-Heidi-Ho…once more. Cab Calloway’s daughter, Lael “Ci Ci” Calloway reprised her father’s old standards in a runthrough of a benefit for restoration of her father’s former home in Westchester.  She performed in the intimate North End Restaurant Thursday evening and intrigued hipsters with her father’s unique riffs that just get you moving.


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Ms.Calloway with a commanding voice and warmth towards the audience, performed her renditions of her father’s famous standards, “Tain’t Necessarily So,” and of course, “Heidi-Ho”  and others accompanied by video of her father performing in the past. The benefit  show featuring Ms. Calloway now in runthroughs, will be hosted by The North End on North Broadway in White Plains in April in an effort to turn the Calloway residence where she grew up into a museum. Ms. Calloway recalled for the audience the many famous names in music whom she met growing up as a child there, including Lena Horne and Duke Ellington.



PARTNERS:  Serena Russell, left, and Barbara Cantatore, owners of the North End with Ms. Calloway inbetween sets. Ms. Russell said the idea for the benefit came up in casual conversation with Ms. Calloway on a visit to the restaurant.


Serena Russell, partner in The North End, said the idea for the Calloway House Restoration Project”  benefit occurred when Ms. Calloway had dinner at the North End and struck up a conversation with Ms. Russell. Ms. Russell said she was very excited and behind the project of establishing the Knollwood Road residence place in America’s musical history.



Calloway’s voice filled up the room with its power, range and command, and brought back the toe-tapping “scat” style her father made famous. White Plains residents will be able to hear that never-to-be-forgotten style at her complete show in April in the uniquely intimate North End restaurant. For details on the benefit, contact the North End at 914-993-9333.


 



Ms. Calloway showed off her range in her breathy contralto.



Brenda Starr, left, and Serena Russell digging the scene.


Your peripathetic pavement pounding reporter notes that the North End bar could become a habit. The sea food fancier should try the oysters at the bar. They were terrific, big and juicy, plump, white, glistening. They were served arranged on their shells  which surrounded around a  festive red zesty, tasty, mouthwatering sliced red pepper dressing in the middle the oyster platter.



The sliced red pepper slaw taste intermezzo between  mouthfuls of oyster,  set the stage for each smooth luscious sliver of the monster oysters  to slide right down your throat. The unique idea of the red pepper slaw showcased the subtle sensuality of the oysters. The oysters from the North End Kitchen were detached but laying in the shell, too (how oysters should be served), so the go-down-easies  could be smoothly slid into the mouth without loss of any part of them. The reporter lost his objectivity and devoured most of the slaw when this shot was taken. Forgive me.


Ms. Calloway’s performance showed the North End could become a place to get into some good sophisticated jazz on a regular basis combined with, if the oysters are any indication — a place that unlike any music place I  have been in — serves great gourmet food. The North End’s chef is formerly the chef at the leading independent seafood restaurant in Philadelphia, The Striped Bass.



David Kurdys, the restaurant General Manager said  top chefs from New York and other cities are coming to White Plains because it was becoming much harder for chefs to own their own places in Manhattan because the real estate is so expensive. He said the chef wanting to make a name for himself has to get into a chain, working with corporate management. Once that name is made, he said, they like the idea of coming up to Westchester to have their own place. He said the food product comes from the Hudson Valley so it made sense for them to come on up here, and establish their own niche. 


He predicted the county would be seeing more name chefs coming up to Westchester in the future.  

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Goin to the Final. White Plains Basketball Girls Knock off N.R.

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WPCNR SPORTS WIRE. From a White Plains CitizeNetReporter. February 28, 2008: The White Plains Girls Basketball Tigers are going to the Section Final Championship game for the third year in a row. The Tigers defeate North Rockland 40-26 Thursday evening to earn a birth to defend their Section title against Mount Vernon.

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