Parker Stadium Dedicated on Eve of Turkey Bowl. On Time. Looking Sharp

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WPCNR’S PHOTOGRAPHS OF THE DAY. By the WPCNR Roving Photographer. November 21, 2007: The City School District dedicated the new Parker Stadium today at a Dedication Ceremony before 1,000 Highlands and Middle School Students at the brand new synthetic Field Turf stadium. After Principal of Highlands Middle School Diana Knight welcomed the students who filed into the stadium in a “practice” evacuation drill, she introduced Superintendent of Schools Timothy Connors.



1,000 Students filled the Stands this afternoon for the Parker Stadium Dedication Ceremony. The stadium built on-time by Leftek Construction opened today at a Dedication and Pep Rally.


Connors was greeted by a warm roar from the students when he started by asking them “How are you doing today?” (Roar), and the popular Superintedent set the tone of the day telling them how the Board of Education and the taxpayers of the community worked to bring them the new stadium. He encouraged them to take good care of it and enjoy it. He commended Dan Woodard for being the original visionary who convinced the school board of the need for the renovation of the high school field at Loucks, which will be completed in the spring, and the school board vision in also upgrading the Parker Stadium, originally built from 1928 to 1932. He then introduced Donna McLaughlin, President of the Board of Education, and Mayor Joseph Delfino.



Superintendent of Schools Timothy Connors Welcomes the Throng. Behind him is the Board of Education, Mayor Deflino and select dignataries.



Donna McLaughlin President of the Board of Education emphasized how important sports was in developing “discipline, self-sacrifice, and accountability,” and encouraged all to participate in sports.



Mayor Joseph Delfino called it “a great day,” recalling how he graduated form the Highlands School when it was the high school in White Plains. He said the students should thank the Board of Education for working so hard for the students in the district, and encouraged the students to come back and not forget the community, concluding, “Never forget the Orange and Black.” The Mayor makes his remarks as Daniel Henderson, and Corrina Colon just behind the Mayor prepare to cut the ribbon opening the new field. Diana Hyland, Principal is in the orange jacket. Suprintendent Connors is at the right.



Panarama of the stands with Dignatries.



Daniel Henderson, left, and Corrina Colon Cut the Ribbon Officially Opening the Field for the Pep Rally



View from the Stands as the teams from the White Plains Middle School are introduced. New Parker Stadium will be home to Boys Soccer, Field Hockey, Girls Soccer, 7th and 8th Grade football and Cross Country.



2007 Pep Band featured Alex Harelick, Andrew Hall, Wiliam Tunney, Shaina Brady, Jens Sannerud, Richrad Demarte, Mike Rooney, Evan Ruben, Richard Crescenza, Mike DiBenedetto, Travis Petre, Leo Contreras, Jimmy Sorrow, Meghan Barry and Matt Silver.



The White Plains Team, left to right: The Tiger Mascot (Caroline Blaney) Superintendent of Schools Timothy Connors, Donna Mclaughlin, Pres. Board of Ed,  Sheryl Brady, William Pollak, Peter Bassano, Rosemarie Eller, Board of Ed; Tom Roach, Councilman; Michele Schoenfeld, Clerk to the Board(orange jacket), (unidentified), Charles Norris (BOE), Dan Woodard (Brown overcoat), Debra Clay, City Department of Parks and Recreation, Arne Abramowitz, Commissioner, Parks and Recreation; Nick Panero White Plains Schools Athletic Director; Joseph Cloherty, Principal, Eastview Middle School; (Unidentified), and Ivan Toper, Principal, White Plains High School.



The project began  construction July 9. Landtek  replaced the old concrete grandstand of the 75 year old Parker Stadium with metal bleachers seating 1,300, though the population of Highlands just squeezed in from our observations. The firm used 75,000 feet of “Field Turf” to replace the real grass turf.


The project costing approximately $3 Million, is being paid for out of the $66.5 Million bond issue approved by the citizens of White Plains in October of 2006. The high school Loucks Field renovation, at a cost of $5.5 Million, is scheduled to be completed in the spring of 2007 before the start of the Loucks Games.  No one could give WPCNR an exact cost of the Parker Stadium project today.


WPCNR reports the field is very cushiony when run on in today’s damp weather. Football players WPCNR talked with after they practiced on the field last Saturday said the field has a “ring” to it when they hit the turf, but they like the fast starts and cuts they can get on the homogenous surface. They say it makes them faster runners. 


 


 


 


 


 


 

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Planning Board Suspends Comment on Orchard Street Project until Dec. 18

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WPCNR PLANNING BOARD REPORT. November 21, 2007: The Planning Board pushed off all public comment on the controversial Orchard Street  Bernard Place extension Tuesday evening until they had had time to review all materials submitted by the developer, Michael Neubauer. Neubauer wants the city to approve the developing of a paper street, Bernard Place, to give access to two lots he desires to build two homes. Opposition has surfaced over the possibility of the city selling a slice of choice forest adjacent the city water supply for further development, made possible by the new proposed street.



No Comment, Please. John Garment, Planning Board Chair would not allow public comment on the Bernard Place birthing process Tuesday evening, pending Planning Board review of new material submitted by the developer, which included a Full Environmental Review submitted just prior to last night’s meeting. Citizens mocked the completeness of the review citing several one-word answers which they said flew in the face of the facts on water proximity, wildlife threats and water table.



John Garment refused to accept any comments from the public until the Planning Board had had time to review the Full Environmental Review submitted Tuesday by the developer. Garment also refused to allow Nancy Wallace, a representative from the Conservation Review Board to give a verbal report to the Planning panel on the Conservation Board decision Monday evening. (They recommended against the project.)


 



The Perceived Threat: City Sell-off of land for development out Orchard Street way if Bernard Place is approved. The city has refused comment on if it plans to sell the property


 Al Gasman opposed  turning the paper street Bernard Place into concrete allowing access to the two lots,  on grounds it threatened the habitat of the box turtle (which Co-President of the Council of Neighborhood Associations Suzanne Evans felt was unfounded in a letter to the CNA last week) asked if the Planning Board would relinquish lead agency status to the Common Council, Garment declined to comment.


The Planning Board will take  up the matter again on December 18.



A Look into the Orchard Street tract.

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At the Homeless Hotel — It’s So Lonely You Could Die

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WPCNR THE HOMELESS NEWS. News  & Comment By John F. Bailey. November 21, 2007: Last  night the Common Council and the Mayor of White Plains refused to see a group of clergymen who were all set to open a warming shelter split among three churches in White Plains. The Mayor did not put it on the agenda, and Councilmen who apparently think “out of sight, out of mind,” to their everlasting shame,  put off even hearing about the warming shelter sites until next week. Not enough time the Mayor said. The organizations on the agenda were first.


No, not enough time, to hear a plea and be humane — to be decisive!


I have never been more ashamed of my city than I was when the council and the mayor chose NOT to hear what Reverend Carter Via had to say to them last night — when they could.


So as they go to Thanksgiving Dinner tomorrow, as they eat their turkey  in their nice warm houses  they should give a little thought to how the White Plains homeless person spends every night – in the Homeless Hotel.


The lobby is always crowded and you’ll always find some room.


It’s a real place in a wooded area somewhere in White Plains near you. I am not making this up.



The price is not right.


 It opened August 6 of this year with no grand ceremony. No County Executive, Mayor and Councilmen on hand to posture, preen and take credit. Though they all can take credit for this hotel – they are responsible for it.


 It’s down on lonely street where the broken hearted stay. 


It’s so lonely, you could die.


It’s got a lot of open space in its “court yard.”  There is no neon sign. There is extended stay…there is indefinite stay …there are forever stays.


 The developers of this hotel, Westchester County in a joint venture with the City of White Plains, didn’t need to observe the allotted parking spaces regulations.   No special zoning.  No tax incentives.  Neighborhood associations did not object.


There is no concierge. They do not have a Guest Register. No credit cards are needed. No business conference rooms or ball rooms, though the Homeless Hotel does have “Conference Clearings.”


As a guest, the only house rules are that nobody should see you go in and leave. 


The furnishings: damp meadow grass, decaying leaves, hard cold earth, slabs of rock to lean against.  The furniture—fallen logs. The beds, wooden pallets.  


The views  are spectacular of rooftops and  blue sky (on nice days) through the bower of your naturally designed tree canopy.  That canopy is now becoming bare of leaves as the autumn winds and bite of winter aircondition your ground floor, with sodden dampness.


Want to feel how this suite feels to the Homeless Hotel guest? It is about sundown now as I write.


 Go out in your back yard tonight with a couple of blankets and see how it feels to you. Let the bracing damp air of November refresh and invigorate you. Really try and sleep.  Curl up against the side of your garage to escape tonight’s temperature in the 40s.


The room service in the morning you provide yourself.


You don’t have to leave a tip for the maid. You just leave your bedding where it is and return to it in cover of darkness and slip away with it. No need to clean the sheets. Sleeping hours are from about 11 to 3 AM because long about 3 AM,  the chill of the night deepens and you have to get up and start moving before you freeze. One homeless person says, “the cold wakes you up.”


So you go to a warm place. A transit center.  If it’s raining, an overhang, and stay there until dawn until public buildings and malls open, where you can spend your day if you do not have a day job.


If it’s really cold, go to the hospital emergency room and complain of frostbite, cough, etc. At least you can warm up for several hours while you wait to be seen.


You are always cold. It stays with you so you are always huddled up. In summer when it is sultry, you wear a jacket. (Ever wonder why you see persons dressed in overcoats in the heat of a summer day,  that may be one of the reasons.)


Your mattress can be rags and old blankets. Or you can find a wooden pallet, to keep you off the ground. Or a trench dug out military style. It is a little like returning to your grave each night.


 You are living the cowboy-under-the-stars life, but no campfires someone might see you.


 You always dress in layers. You try and do laundry.


Your suite is a clearing in woods or copses of trees,  close to the neighborhoods and the downtown.  You huddle together, talk, smoke, drink in outdoor hospitality suites you share with only the lonely.


There are no marquees at Homeless Hotel. 


You have to know your way into Homeless Hotel.


The rooms cost you nothing except pain — the pain of the creeping seductive, spreading cold that gets inside of you, gnaws on you like a big New York City rat.


The cold weakens your immune system, gives you a perpetual cold, and other things, chills, nervousness,  fear. The cold makes you unable to think and speak straight some nights.


There is collateral damage.


The cold of winter, the heat of summer from what I have observed of the way the homeless act freezes your soul and warps your reason, makes you so bitter you do not know what you want. You turn away help and lash out at those who would reach out to you like a teenager.


But unlike the teenager you do not have a future. Your future was decided by your past. Which everybody holds against you. As soon as you make progress, you slide back to your past.


 You harbor a deep contempt for the officials at the Department of Social Services so they tell me who would take away your Social Security Income stipend in exchange for helping you – and they show you hoops to jump through and tell you places to go then do not provide you with transportation.  Your government leaders  describe you as criminals, sex offenders, psychotics, junkies,  you are the lepers of today.


 It makes you ornery.


 Homeless perception makes you say crazy things even to people who try and help. You beg for jobs and when you are not given them, the shell within you hardens and the irrationality and sense of injustice within you deepens.


 As an old blues song says, “Been down so long it looks like up to me.”


You make a living by collecting deposit cans and cashing them for refunds as one person does. And who knows what other ways these poor souls make money to live? Were a minority or a majority of persons staying at 85 Court Street employed? Unemployed? No one knows.


The county has not to date released any profiles of that drop-in population. WPCNR placed a call to the county to see if they have analyzed any of their records kept on who stayed at the drop-in and what those records revealed. Donna Green of the Department of Communications told WPCNR , “No, we did not keep those records.”  There are no records!


What a missed opportunity! The county had 50 people a night going through that shelter and they did not keep the demographics? And the idea was when the shelter opened at 85 Court, the county and Volunteers of America would keep track of who these people were. Apparently not.


No public official really cares what the homeless are like or who they are or whether they live or die or work – except perhaps if they can make money off of them.


Food: This is not pretty what I am about to write. At Homeless Hotel there is the popular Dumpster Buffet with servings daily. The occasional discarded supermarket meat (after it has expired), a dead bird which you cook. Cheap donuts.


The indifference.


In the White Plains donut, there is the cake of White Plains (the suburban neighborhoods circling the downtown center, the hole)  and then there is the Homeless Hotel –a Hooverville out of the 1930s.


The price of help for a homeless person has to pay  is their freedom.


The county plan is: you accept our help or else no drop in shelter. To get our help and stay in our shelter in Valhalla or elsewhere around the county,  we take your check and give you an allowance. Homeless I have talked to object to the attitudes of DSS workers towards them, the condescension, particularly, and locally alleged roughness by  shelter attendants.  The homeless also do not like giving up their SSI payments.


The only thing you have as a so-called “hardcore homeless person” is your pride – your stubbornness –your humanity if it can be called that.


I talked to one homeless person who attended the Downtown Residents Association recently. He said he had been cut off from a fortune in his family, and that was why he continued to be homeless. Asked by a council candidate and myself why he would not take a menial job, he said he would not do that kind of work.


As my father once said, you have to make yourself happy. Are these persons happy living in Homeless Hotel? 


Well, a source told me felony convictions are a definite impediment for an undomiciled person to connect with a future in employment. 


It is not just the homeless who are afflicted with the felony stigma. Gangmembers and youths once convicted of felonies seem to only be able to get work convincing other youth not to join gangs, precisely because of their convictions, according to speakers at the Westchester District Attorney’s conference on gangs.  It’s much easier not to hire a person with a felony conviction than to hire them. Even unskilled job openings will not hire felony convictions.


The irony of companies not hiring persons convicted of felonies is that illegal immigrants (10% of whom have been found to be former criminals according the Department of Homeland Security statistics) are hired by corporations in the food service and cheap labor businesses, no questions asked.


The exception to this is the local day labor pool – taken advantage by many of the Hispanic homeless  of which there are considerable according to our sources. A source told me that homeless who speak Spanish often get rooms through bodegas that advertise for rooms in their windows. However that source also said when he has tried calling the same room, and he does not speak Spanish, he is told no room is available.


There is a large Hispanic homeless contingent that stays together somewhere in White Plains out in the open spaces.


Reverend Carter Via and Rabbi Lester Bronstein recently have pushed for a warming shelter, at least with cots, saying the County Executive’s plan for warming shelters was inhumane.


Right now three downtown churches have committed to opening their doors as a warming shelter on a rotating basis with 19 cots.


Reverend Carter Via, whom I interviewed on this had this blunt observation:


It’s a mess, it’s complicated, I don’t think anybody on the county or the city level really wants to own this thing. Both parties (county and the city) said they would allow something to happen if it was approved by or driven by the other party, so it’s almost as if what they agreed to allow something as long as the mess isn’t in their hands.”


Our leaders are simply playing politics.


Yet those warming center proposals still have to happen, and when? The city has to whisk through a special permit to open such warming centers. Or how about a PILOT (Permit In Lieu of Tenderness)  Will the council  come back after Thanksgiving and do it?


It’s not going to happen before Thanksgiving.


Now not every homeless person wants a warming center or will go to one, I am told. Some who are homeless, say it  (the warming center) is just politics and they would not stay there.


There will be no shortage of warming shelters after the first homeless person is found frozen to death.


Then the politicians will do something. Because they can get good publicity out of it and, we can salute our compassionate leadership for their responding to the problem a little late – as they always do.


But if there is not any warming center,  whether anyone will use it or wants to use it is a moot point.


There is another argument I have heard from homeless sources who are against the warming shelter: we need jobs, we need provisions, not just a warming shelter, they say.


What do they need and want? Why don’t they work there are plenty of jobs people ask me?


What they need is for all of us to forgive them…


…forgive them for making our lives uncomfortable for their presence


…forgive them for smelling


…forgive them for making a mistake years ago that they have never stopped paying for making


…forgive them for wanting control over their lives


…forgive them for their pride


…forgive them for not being grateful to us that we want to help them so much


… forgive them for not being perfect enough for us to employ  them


…forgive them for drinking, smoking, shooting up, or whatever bad habit they use to take their minds off the hopelessness of the day and the despair of the black night, and the sameness of tomorrow.


…forgive them for making us feel guilty.


…forgive them for looking…well, homeless.


…forgive them for not having money.


 

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Warming Shelter Off Genda. Sales Tax Tabled. Hospital Plans Grandiose

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WPCNR  Common Council Chronicle Examiner. November 20, 2007 UPDATED 12:40 PM UPDATED 12 AM EST November 21, 2007:  Mayor Joseph Delfino received a request from the clergy of White Plains this morning, to take up the matter of establishing a warming shelter for the homeless on the streets of White Plains at three local churches and declined to put the matter on tonight’s Common Council agenda. The Mayor told WPCNR he didn’t realize the Clergy were ready to meet with them, and said a meeting for the clergy to relate their plan for housing homeless in a warming shelter had been tentatively set for Wednesday, November 28.


Rita Malmud, the Common Council President, could not be reached for comment this afternoon to see whether she was in agreement with this delay. Ms. Malmud this evening told WPCNR that no clergy involved with the warming shelter proposal had contacted her about putting the meeting on tonight’s agenda (indicating she would have considered it if they had). Councilmen Glen Hockley and Thomas Roach said they would have been willing to hear the issue. But neither explained why they had not brought it up (since any councilperson can request an item to be put on the agenda).



White Plains Hospital Center presented lavish plans for a $50 Million and Up remodeling which would build a new 3-story entrance on Maple Avenue, a six-story patient care wing over the present entrance on Davis Avenue and a covered bridge leading from the Parking Garage on Longview top of picture to a new hospital entrance on Post Road. (Details below)


Melissa Lopez, spokesperson for the Mayor issued this statement explaining the delay:


The clergy is not meeting with the City at tonight’s work session.  The Mayor’s Office is trying to schedule the meeting for next week.  We have to find a date that works for all the parties involved.  Please note that the responsibility of this issue does not solely lie on the city.  It is a County issue.  We are trying to find the best suitable date to meet with the clergy and the Common Council.  This way we can listen to their proposal and answer their questions as it pertains to the city


However, questions on the legality of the warming shelter in relation to city zoning laws were discussed in October at a meeting held precisely because the clergy wanted to know what they could do under city zoning to establish such a shelter. At that time the Mayor said to come back with a proposal and the council would consider it under the condition that a special permit would have to be issued and it could not be located in the outer residential neighborhoods.


The question of the  establishment of a Warming Shelter for the homeless is was held back by the Mayor to discuss and act on the following agenda items:


 1.) the holding of a public hearing on the new local law on acceptance of flood plain maps and storm water runoff standards in order to expedite White Plains residents’ access to flood insurance.


After the hearing in which Paula Piekos showed innumerable pictures of what she described as city condoning of storm water runoff at various construction sites around town, and Dan Siedel and Carey Gouldner congratulated the Mayor on the fast action in moving up the public hearing, the council voted to enact the local laws coming into compliance with Federal Emergency Management Administration flood plain rules. Dan Spencer o fthe legal department then took the notice and paperwork to a local Federal Express office to send the notice of passage to the Department of Environmental Conservation in Albany to start the ball rolling to get White Plains residents eligible to renew and purchase flood insurance 


2.) Discussion and possible passing of a home rule resolution requesting a 1/2% increase in the White Plains sales tax by the state legislature (delayed three months by the Common Council, over the election campaign;


In this matter, there was no discussion. Rita Malmud untabled this issue, and then asked to retable the the matter until December 3. WPCNR asked the Mayor why the sales issue was tabled for the third month in a row, the Mayor said he was in “negotiations” presumably with Assemblyman Adam Bradley whom the Mayor wants to sponsor the sales tax increase in Albany. But this could not be immediately confirmed, we will check with Assemblyman Bradley Wednesday.


Ironically, there would have been plenty of time to hear what the White Plains clergy had to present on the warming shelter issue had they been put on the agenda.


3.) Approval of a contract for the city’s state lobbyist.


This was tabled until December 3.


4.) Setting public hearings for The Porter House and The Braxen Fox on requests to obtain a cabaret license.


This was done.


5.) Discussion of Avalon Bay proposal to add 14 units to their apartment complex. 


This portion of the agenda was conducted in work session chambers. Avalon Bay said they were seeking to add 14 more units to the apartment complex since acquiring the Peter Zheng property at 21 Barker. They would add a patio and barbecue area on the Zheng property. A one-bedroom unit would be made “affordable housing” out of the additional 14 units.



New barbecue and patio area is located above swimming pool at lower right of the site schematic.


6.) Setting a hearing date for renewal of The Chatter’s Lounge liquor license was also executed.


7.) a presentation for expansion plans for White Plains Hospital Center.



The White Plains Hospital Center presented a preliminary design, not yet approved by their hospital board, which would establish a new front entrance to the hospital on Maple Avenue; creating the new entrance by demolishing Winslow Hall. They will add six floors on the Davis Avenue side, increase critical care units by four (while consolidating them into one space). An enclosed bridge will be built from the new parking garage being built at Maple and Longview Avenue.  The project is expected to cost more than$50 Million and the money is planed to be raised via fund-raising according to Jon Schandler, the hosptial CEO who made the presentation.


The number of beds in the hospital (277) will not be increased, because, Mr. Schandler said, the trend is towards short hospital stays and to return patients to their homes for recovery as soon as possible and that trend, he said was accelerating.


 

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Former Commissioner of Parks and Recreation Passes Away. Little League Pioneer.

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WPCNR PASSAGES. November 19, 2007 UPDATED 1:21 PM November 20, 2007: Joe Davidson, former White Plains Commissioner of Parks and Recreation passed away Sunday evening. Mr. Davidson was brought in as Commissioner by Mayor Alfred Del Vecchio  in 1979, and was responsible for upgrading the city recreation offerings.He created the Noon Day Concerts, the Pops in the Park program, and worked with the community to bring Little League Baseball to White Plains. He also worked with the Little League to structure the deal where White Plains built Gedney Field, among other accomplishments. Davidson was best known for being Commissioner of Parks for New York City under the John Lindsay Administration in the early 1970s. 


Visitation for Mr. Davidson will be from 3 to 5 PM and 7 to 9 PM Tuesday at McMahon, Lyon & Hartnett Funeral Home. A Mass of Christian Burial will be held Wednesday at 11 A.M. at Our Lady of Sorrows in White Plains.



Commissioner Davidson is pictured at far right, top row in this commemoration  photo of White Plains only District Little League 20 Championship Team. Mayor Joseph Delfino is at far left. The Coaches pictured at top were Adam Corcoran, Nick Baccero and Rich Massaroni.



Joe Davidson throwing out the First Pitch at Opening of Gedney Field in April, 2002 which he helped make possible. Photos, WPCNR News Archive



CHANGING OF THE GUARD 2002: Rich Massaroni, WPLL President with retiring Commissioner of Parks and Recreation, Joe Davidson prior to throwing out the first pitch. Davidson, in his short talk to the crowd, remembered when there was no little league when he became commissioner in 1979, and how the program had grown to include both boys and girls in his tenure.


In a family-placed obituary today, Mr. Davidson was lauded for many pioneering achievements  while New York City Comissioner of Recreation and Parks, and his tenure with the city, including design and construction of the U.S. Tennis Association complex in Queens, the expansion of the New York City Marathon to all five boroughs of New York City, and establishment of the first playground for the disabled in Queens. Working with David Corcoran in the the mid-90s, Mr. Davidson combined the recreation department and Little League programs into one program which grew baseball and softball to the point where over 1,100 White Plains children play Little League Baseball today.


David Corcoran, President of the White Plains Little League at the time of the Recreation Department-Little League merger said, “He was an all-around good guy.”

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3 Churches On Periphery of City Core Commit to Host WP Homeless Warming Shelter

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WPCNR THE HOMELESS NEWS. By John Bailey. November 19, 2007 Updated 5:53 PM: Reverend Carter Via of the Presbyterian Church of White Plains announced today three White Plains churches located around the central city core have firmly committed to offer their facilities for a warming shelter for individual homeless persons. Reverend Via said Grace Community Church would staff the shelter and provide security, and also be responsible for the transportation of homeless seeking overnight shelter over the winter nights. The plan depends on Common Council approval for a Special Permit to run the shelter legally. The forecast for this evening is a cold and damp 35 degrees.



Reverend Via reports he will take the proposal and the locations to the Mayor of White Plains as soon as possible, hopefully at the Tuesday afternoon meeting of the Common Council. A special permit needs to be granted to all three churches committed to hosting the facility, Via said, by the city, or perhaps a Special Permit interchangeable among the three, since each location would host the shelter for two weeks at a time, according to the present plans.


The shelter will offer only 19 beds (cots). Via speculated that Grace Community Church may transport the overflow seeking shelter to Yonkers or another location. Asked by WPCNR if the other two churches could not house overflow clients, Via agreed of the sense of that but that logistics would have to be worked out, whether all three churches would be “on call” nightly or not. The churches, he said at this time would host the shelter for two-week periods, with the site rotating to another church, then the third church, and then going back to the first church.


Homeless would gather at a central collection point in the downtown, Via, again speculated, since the sites are on the periphery of the city with only one church walkable from the downtown.


Reverend Via said the shelter was limited to 19 cots because of state laws calling for state oversite of shelters housing more than 19 cots.


The Reverend said one church had approved the shelter Saturday, and he heard positively from the other two locations in the last 48 hours.


Reverend Via said as soon as the White Plains city government approved the plan which now is definite  on locations and how the clients would be handled, he said that funding for the program would come from County Executive Andrew Spano, who in meetings between Rabbit Lester Bronstein and Mr. Spano, had said he was willing to fund a warming shelter in White Plains as long as the city approved of the location (in White Plains).


Reverend Via was seeking to set up a meeting with the Mayor, and the Common Council, he hoped for  Tuesday evening. The Council meets on the Capital Projects Budget tomorrow afternoon, followed by a Special Meeting at 6. The agenda has just been released to the media, and the shelter proposal is not on it at this hour.


Since the 85 Court Street Drop-In Shelter was closed by Westchester County August 5, the homeless single persons who refused to join the Department of Social Services program and observe its rules, have been spending their nights in wooded locations around the city exposed to the elements.

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Bradley Announces $1.1M in School Aid for WP — to be used for Full Day PRE K

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WPCNR ALBANY ROUNDS. From Assemblyman Adam T. Braley (89th A.D.) November 19, 2007: Assemblyman Adam Bradley (D-White Plains) announced that the White Plains school district received $1.1 million to be dedicated in “Contract for Excellence” programs to help students close the achievement gap. The district commits to use the money to make needed improvements and increase student performance through targeted programs such as class size reduction, lengthened school day, and full-day pre-k and kindergarten.


 



“I am delighted that White Plains will receive funding through the ‘Contract for Excellence’ program,” Bradley said. “This program begins a new era in school financing, ensuring more accountability and transparency.  The Assembly has insisted on accountability for years to raise the bar in our schools and White Plains is a deserving district because of their ongoing commitment to Pre-Kindergarten and other innovative programs.”


 


The “Contract for Excellence” between the state and school districts means schools receive significant funding, but with the requirement of academic progress, as determined by existing benchmarks, to use proven strategies to improve the standards and success of our schools.


 


“The ‘Contract for Excellence’ program will improve student achievement through accountability,” Bradley said. “Our schools need more resources coupled with reform to help them succeed.  This initiative is a step towards ensuring even more academic opportunities for White Plains students.”


 


 


 

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Police Report Two Burglaries Near Highways Last Week

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WPCNR POLICE GAZETTE. From White Plains Department of Public Safety. November 19, 2007: Deputy Commissioner of Public Safety Daniel Jackson confirmed to WPCNR this afternoon that two burglaries occurred in White Plains at the end of last week. One break-in took place on Tuesday, November 13 off Ridgeway and 1 on Thursday, November 15 off Bryant Avenue and North Street, as first reported on White Plains Week Friday evening on Channel 76.


Commissioner Jackson told WPCNR today “We have had several burglaries in the past few weeks (also) in the Rosedale area. Hence, the increased  attention and information to the neighborhood groups. We are asking anyone who sees anything or anyone supicious to call it in to us at 914-422-6111.


Jackson said burglaries for the year were still down 28%.


With people traveling this week in connection with the Thanksgiving holidays, WPCNR reprints these Burglary Prevention Steps issued by the police last week.


BURGLARY PREVENTION TIPS


 


The White Plains Department of Public Safety


would like to make the following recommendations.


 


Protect your home while you are out …



  • Always keep doors and windows locked – even for a five-minute trip to the store.
  • Use strong reliable locks such as deadbolts.
  • An easy and inexpensive way to secure your windows is to drill an angled hole through the top frame of the lower window partially into the frame of the upper window.  Then insert a nail or eyebolt. 
  • To improve security on sliding glass doors, you can install keyed locking devices or place a piece of wood or a metal bar in the track of the closed door to prevent the door from being opened.
  • Turn on lights and leave a radio or TV on so it looks like someone is home.

·        Use exterior lighting, especially motion sensor lights.


 


If you are going out of town for more than a day…



  • Call 422-6111 (Police Bureau) and request that your home be checked in your absence.
  • Get an automatic timer for your lights and consider leaving a radio on. Make it look like someone is home.
  • Make certain that you arrange to have the mail and newspaper delivery stopped or picked up by a trusted neighbor.
  • Arrange to have your lawn mowed while you are gone.
  • If you have an alarm, activate it.
  • Ask a neighbor to park in your driveway overnight.

.


If you see anything suspicious call the police immediately


911 FOR EMERGENCIES


422-6111 For non-emergencies


422-6256 for anonymous crime tips hotline (recorded)

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The School Board Reports

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. From Michele Schoenfeld, City School District. (Edited) November 19, 2007: Landscaper Ron Eberlin spoke about the proposal to replace trees with fast-growing evergreens on the High School property adjacent to the Havilands Lane neighborhood.  He said the weather has been warm enough to extend the planting  season well into December.  Mr. Connors and Mr. Seiler had met with the neighbors in the area last Saturday to review the plan and Mr. Connors complimented the Board for its efforts to meet  everyone’s concerns.

 


     


            The Board adopted a resolution on environmental findings, working with the City and complet-


     ing the full disclosure form.  The Board becomes the lead agency and makes a negative declaration


     for compliance with the New York State Environmental Quality Review Act (SEQRA).  The district


     will get quotes for planting and hopes to complete the entire process within the next few weeks.


 


POLICY ON SEX OFFENDER NOTIFICATION:  The Board adopted a revised policy on this subject,


     and accompanying rules will clarify the location of school bus stops in relation to homes of registered


     sex offenders.(Editor: A copy of the policy was not distributed.)


 


ENROLLMENT:  Presenting enrollment figures as of October 1st, Mr. Connors said they are very much on target, with no significant differences from projections.  Total enrollment is 7,038, conpared with 7,000 last year.  The High School figure has increased slightly, while the other school counts have decreased a bit.


 


Reporting of Disciplinary Incidents to state: Mr. Connors asked Assistant Superintendent for Pupil Services Anne Lillis for reports on two matters.  She said that after efforts to improve accuracy in reporting student disciplinary incidents, the State has responded that the district is now in compliance.  Secondly, Dr. Lillis will be sending the Board a plan for 504 Accommodation (students with specific disabilities who are not classified for Special Education) and this is to be approved December 10th.


 


Full Day PreKindergarten Starts: Mr. Connors informed the Board that the full-day Prekindergarten class, funded by the State Contract for Excellence is expected to begin in December.


               


     AUDIT:  The Board accepted the Independent Auditors’ Report for the 2006-07 school year by Bennett


     Kielson Storch DeSantis Division of O’Connor Davies Munns & Dobbins, LLP.   Auditor Margaret


     Modugno said the district is in excellent financial condition.


            



  


     PERSONNEL:   Two teachers were awarded tenure by the Board:  Akiva Friedman, Science


     Teacher at the High School, and Jenifer Berenberg, English & ESOL Teacher at the Community  


     School.  Presenting Mr. Friedman, Science Coordinator Margaret Doty described him as enthu-


     siastic, innovative, engaging, and a leader among teachers.  Gary Peluso, Director of Supplemental


     Programs, called Ms. Berenberg a tireless worker with high expectations, who has a keen insight into  


     reaching students.


            The Board appointed three Probationary teachers:  Miriam Pena as Chairperson of the Com-


     mittee on Special Education at the High School; Tatyana Alekhanova, ESOL Teacher at Ridgeway


     School; and Marie Negri, ESOL Teacher at the Highlands Middle School.  


 


     DONATIONS:  The Board and Mr. Connors thanked the following donors for their generosity:  Deirdre


     Washington for a scanner for Eastview Middle School, PRO Sports Therapy of Westchester for


     physical therapy machines for the High School Athletic Department, Mrs. Deborah Van Glahn for a  


     trumpet for the Music program, Brunschwig & Fils for fabric for Art classes at Post Road School, and


     Helene Alalouf for a drafting table and easel for the High School.


  


     BOARD ACTIVITY:   Board President Donna McLaughlin was presented with a Developmental  


     Achievement Citation from the New York State School Boards Association, for “participation in


     activities to improve governance knowledge and skills.”


            Board Vice President Terry McGuire was a facilitator at the recent Youth Business Skills Olympics


     sponsored by the African American Men of Westchester Inc. and Purchase College.  The White Plains


     team took first place in the event, which had a theme of Internet Ethics.


            Board members Sheryl Brady and Charlie Norris participated in the New York State School


     Boards Association Annual Convention in New York City last week.  Both attended the full-day


     School Law Seminar and Mrs. Brady also sat in on the business portion of the convention.  They agreed


     that it was a very worthwhile, enlightening experience.


            Other members reported on the various Board Committees which have met in the last few weeks —


     Finance, Curriculum and Safety.


 


     PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT SCHOOL:  Shelley Wepner, Dean and Professor at Manhattan-


     ville College described this partnership with George Washington School.  The goals are for teachers in


     the classroom to be current with theory, while the college faculty understands the realities of the


     classroom.  It also involves a year-long internship and a student teaching program.  As a result, our


     students benefit from this alliance. 


 


     PUBLIC COMMENT:  Cary Kyzivat, President of the Concerned Citizens for Open Space, questioned


     the timing of the tree planting and asked for a commitment that it will occur during the current planting


     season.


            Parent Marjorie Madfis expressed concern about priorities for staff appointments in relation to


     teacher leaves, noting the number of changes in her child’s classroom at Post Road School. 


    


     UPCOMING MEETINGS:    November 29:    Special Meeting, Education House, 7:30 P.M.


                                                   December 10:    Regular Meeting, High School, B-1 Room, 7:30 P.M.   


                                                                                    Recognition of Scholar-Athletes                                                    


An invitation was extended for everyone to celebrate the new Highlands Field at the Thanks-


     giving Day Football Game on November 22nd at 10 A.M.


 


MOMENT OF SILENCE:  Superintendent of Schools Timothy Connors asked for a moment of


     silence in memory of Robert Jackson, a Science teacher in the district for 25 years before his


     retirement in 1982.

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The Ritz Carlton White Plains Opens for Stay of All Stays December 20.

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WPCNR MAIN STREET JOURNAL. From the Ritz-Carton. November 18, 2007: The Ritz-Carlton, Westchester, the area’s only luxury hotel, has announced that it has begun taking reservations. The first guest rooms are being booked for its official public opening day of Thursday, December 20th and thereafter.


 



The Ritz Towers Distinguished by its night beacon welcomes in travelers the world over and furnishes its impeccable world class hospitality to the world  December 20


 


The Ritz-Carlton, Westchester hotel, located at Three Renaissance Square in White Plains, New York, is setting a new standard for hotels in the market.  The world-renowned hotel, making its debut in Westchester County, features 122 luxury rooms, including 38 suites, a Grand Ballroom, and meeting rooms.  The hotel also offers a BLT Steak, one of Manhattan’s hottest restaurants.  As the name Bistro Laurent Tourondel suggests, Chef Tourondel presents his adaptation of the American Steakhouse, elevating it with his signature style.



 


“Guests of The Ritz-Carlton, Westchester, will experience a hotel stay like no other, with a wealth of world-class amenities,” said Andrew Howard, The Ritz-Carlton, Westchester’s Reservations Manager. Each room is furnished with either a king bed or two double beds, designed for maximum comfort. An oversized five-fixture bathroom with separate shower and bathtub, remote control drapes, and a spacious closet with safe are standard at        The Ritz-Carlton, Westchester.


 


All rooms are equipped with a 42” LCD Flat Panel Television and DVD Player. A work desk with two-line phone and wireless Internet allows you to conduct business easily right from your room.


 


Enjoy in-room dining anytime, a fully-stocked honor bar, and two signature terry bathrobes. Housekeeping is done twice daily, and valet parking and chauffeur-driven luxury sedans and limousines are always available for guests. 


 


The Ritz-Carlton, Westchester represents a truly unique experience in luxury hotel living.


To make a reservation, at The Ritz-Carlton, Westchester, please call 914-946-5500.



About The Ritz-Carlton Company, L.L.C.


The Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company, L.L.C. of Chevy Chase, MD, currently operates 67 hotels in the Americas, Europe, Asia, the Middle East and Africa.  Over 30 projects are currently underway with openings slated for China, Japan, Ireland, Dallas and Denver in 2007. The Ritz-Carlton company is the only hospitality company to have twice earned the prestigious Malcom Baldrige National Quality Award, which recognizes outstanding customer service.  For reservations, other inquiries, call (toll-free) 1.800.241.3333, a travel professional or view the website at www.ritzcarlton.com.


 

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