MAY 26– SENATOR GILLEBRAND AND SENATOR TED CRUZ HAIL PASSAGE OF BILL BANNING NON DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS IN SEXUAL CHILD ABUSE CASES– NOW IT MUST PASS THE HOUSE

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GILLIBRAND HAILS SENATE PASSAGE OF HER BIPARTISAN BILL TO PROTECT CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE SURVIVORS

Washington, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) applauded the Senate’s unanimous passage of the Terminating Restrictive Enforcement of Youth Settlements (TREY’S) Law, which she co-leads with Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX). The bill would void nondisclosure agreements (NDAs) that silence survivors of child sexual abuse.

“For too long, nondisclosure agreements have been used to silence survivors of child sexual abuse and shield perpetrators from accountability,” said Senator Gillibrand. “Today, we are one step closer to correcting that injustice and allowing survivors to publicly tell their stories. I am grateful to Sen. Cruz for his partnership and leadership on TREY’S Law and am thrilled that it has now passed the Senate. I urge the House of Representatives to take up this bill and send it to the president’s desk as soon as possible.”

“Trey’s story is not the exception, but the pattern,” said Senator Cruz. “Non-disclosure agreements are too often used to bury abuse and silence survivors, with incalculable and catastrophic consequences for victims. We will never know how many child victims were silenced by these contracts or how many lives were lost because the law enforced that silence. I am thankful to Senator Gillibrand for helping get TREY’S Law across the finish line in the Senate. I now urge my colleagues in the House to pass this legislation and send it to President Trump’s desk to be signed into law.”

TREY’S Law would void NDAs in cases of child sexual abuse or assault. NDAs can be used to silence survivors of child sexual abuse and shield perpetrators from accountability. This bill would make any NDA provision unenforceable if it prohibits or restricts someone from disclosing the sexual abuse of a minor or facts related to that abuse, regardless of whether the NDA was signed before a dispute arose or as part of a civil settlement agreement.

The bill is named in honor of Trey Carlock, a young man from Dallas, Texas who endured sexual abuse as a child while at a summer camp. He signed an NDA as part of a civil settlement, forcing him to silently carry the trauma of his abuse and barring him from publicly speaking out against the perpetrator. He ultimately took his own life at age 28.

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MAY 26–NEW YORK HEALTH ON THE START OF SUMMER FROM DR; MARISA DONNELLEY

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MAY 26–YOUR LOCAL EPIDEMIOLOGIST ON THE EBOLA SITUATION

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The outbreak in Central Africa continues to spread. The latest figures of more than 160 deaths and 600 suspected cases almost certainly represent a significant undercount, and the trajectory remains deeply concerning. For those of us in the U.S., the personal risk remains low, but the toll on the region is severe.

Figure by Resolve to Save Lives

Ebola is often called the disease of compassion by experts like Dr. Craig Spencer. It spreads through direct contact with bodily fluids, which means it spreads when a family member tends to the sick, when a nurse stays at the bedside, or when a community gathers to bury their dead. In other words, it’s spread through acts of care.

But the phrase has been sitting differently lately because this outbreak is spreading not only through compassion but also through the global withdrawal of it. It’s impossible to ignore the quiet (or not-so-quiet) shift from “we” to “me” over the past several years (decades?), now contributing, to some extent, to a body count.

A dangerous myth: Self-interest and global good are opposites

Over the past several years (decades?), a tug-of-war battle has been taking place between individualism and collective responsibility, becoming one of the defining tensions in American identity.

It’s not too hard to understand why. When systems fail people, like through crushing health care costs, stagnant wages, lack of accountability, and governments captured by private interests, people stop trusting those systems. If no one is coming to save you, you learn to save yourself. Sprinkle in profit and power grabs amid the vulnerability of division and isolation, and… here we are.

This personal survival instinct became a governing philosophy, then policy. Fields like public health, which have been built on the basic assumption that society as a whole values a collective approach, have been intentionally targeted. This thinking became so dominant, in fact, that people cheered when a chainsaw was taken to USAID—an organization that built clinics, trained health workers, funded labs, and supported rapid response teams in the places where outbreaks begin. Ebola is one of the first outbreaks unfolding in the aftermath of cutting this global health funding.

The prevailing idea is that what happens on the other side of the world has nothing to do with us. But this idea is a myth, especially when it comes to diseases, for three main reasons:

  1. Americans are impacted by this Ebola outbreak directly, as they are being flown to another country to seek care.
  2. We live in an interconnected world bound together by supply chains, air travel corridors, and accelerating disease spillovers from animals to humans. No wall can stop a pathogen, and neither can a travel ban.
  3. The stakes are also economic. For example, when the U.S. invests in global health research and development, it can yield a sixfold return, including new jobs and economic activity. The Covid-19 pandemic cost 500 times what it would have to invest in proposed preventive measures to reduce disease spillover. The price of prevention is remarkably low, at less than 1% of the federal budget.

This week, the State Department seemed to realize the mistake and announced it will fund up to 50 Ebola treatment clinics in the DRC and Uganda, touting it as an “ironclad” commitment. Sure, treatment centers matter a lot if this actually happens. (As you can see below, the countries don’t even know this is happening.) But what works even better, and is more cost-effective? Helping prevent this in the first place.

True self-interest, rightly understood, is investment in global health. It is a myth that they are at odds.

The ethic of “just because”

But reducing all of this to strategy, or ROI, or soft power is, itself, a shortcoming. Strategy isn’t necessarily why people like the doctors and nurses of Médecins Sans Frontières have spent decades running toward the fire. They put their lives on the line because they simply care.

There used to be a shared value of foreign aid and international cooperation, broadly based on the idea that help was needed. The ROI was compassionate care for others as neighbors, grounded in empathy and equity. The ROI was saving lives and serving. That is enough.

The World Health Organization was built on this. The entire postwar international order, as flawed and incomplete as it often was, rested on the idea that nations had obligations to one another that went beyond what they could extract. That a human life had value that did not depend on its proximity to power, or its usefulness to anyone’s GDP. The value of a life, of all lives, matters and should not depend on where you live.

The Marshall Plan, for example, was not philanthropy because it was strategic. It was simultaneously multiplicative, collective, and synergistic. The people who built it did not find that troubling.

We have lost the animating belief that strangers’ suffering is our concern. That the provision of care is not decided by power but by compassion and collective empathy.

The cost is always paid by the same people

The most heartbreaking thing about all of this is that radical individualism doesn’t distribute its consequences equally. It always funnels suffering downward to the poor, the rural, and the people whose names don’t appear in the articles until they are counted among the dead.

Ebola’s geography is not an accident. Sure, it’s where the fruit bats live, but the cost is high for a reason. The cost lives where the hospitals don’t, where the roads end in mud, and the power cuts out, where the cold chain for vaccines has never been reliable, where the nearest trained physician might be two days’ travel away. It thrives in the gaps left by decades of systematic disinvestment, war, poverty, and a warming climate, and structural adjustment programs that stripped health budgets to the bone. Sometimes international attention arrives, but like many things in public health, it comes in cycles of panic and neglect. Once the cameras leave, so does the money.

The pushback seems to center around power and money. The same countries that hold most of the world’s wealth continue to be the most advanced in terms of health care workers, the number of medical facilities, and their ability to care for infectious diseases like Ebola. There remains a misconception that trickle-down economics and capitalism are the only ways for countries and people to thrive. In an ironic twist, investing and caring for the poorest of the poor first actually benefits all of us more. No matter how you slice the data, collectivism beats out individualism every time.

Research from one of us (Emily Smith) shows that when we start with the poor first, in a trickle-up economy, we actually fare better globally. Within and between countries, starting with the most vulnerable, is advantageous to all of us, fiscally, more than trickle-down capitalistic, individualistic approaches. This is health and wealth. But it only happens when we center the poor first. When the poorest of us are taken care of, we all thrive.

Bottom line

Ebola is called the disease of compassion because it spreads through caring for one another. What we are watching now is what happens when that caring is systematically dismantled. I hope the pendulum finds its way back to a place where compassion and the communal good can, once again, simply exist.

Love, YLE and FNE (ES)


Dr. Emily Smith (ES) is a global health epidemiologist, professor, and scientific communicator. She is the author of the Substack Friendly Neighborhood Epidemiologist (FNE) and the book Science of the Good Samaritan.

Your Local Epidemiologist (YLE) is founded by Dr. Katelyn Jetelina, MPH PhD—an epidemiologist, wife. YLE comprises a team of experts, ranging from physicians to immunologists to epidemiologists to nutritionists, working together with one goal: to “Translate” ever-evolving public health science so that people are well-equipped to make evidence-based decisions. YLE reaches over 425,000 people across more than 132 countries. This newsletter is free to everyone, thanks to the generous support of fellow YLE community members. To support the effort, subscribe or upgrade below:

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MAY 26– MEMORIAL DAY PAST

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Wishing everyone a peaceful, fulfilling, and reflective Memorial Day .
I want to share two poems: “In Flanders Fields”, and “We Shall Keep The Faith “.  These two poems were born on the battlefield with death all around during The Great War or as we presently call it, World War I.
It is where the association of the wearing of the poppy originated. Please take a moment. Read this history and re-clean yourself with these two incredibly poignant poems.
It is Memorial Day weekend 2020. We all know that the wearing of poppies in honor of America’s war dead is traditionally done on Memorial Day. But what is the origin of the practice?
Most of us know the poem “In Flanders Fields” and we associate that poem with the wearing of the poppy and we associate the poem with Memorial Day.
What ties all these things together, and how many people know the ‘sequel’ to “In Flanders Fields”? Here is, in my view, the complete story.
This may take 4 minutes to read, but it is Memorial Day and if you want a solemn and poignant remembrance moment, this will qualify.
Here it is.
In war-torn battlefields of Belgium during The Great War (aka WW1), the red field poppy was one of the first plants to grow. Its seeds scattered in the wind and sat dormant in the ground, only germinating when the ground is disturbed – as it was by the very brutal fighting during World War I, particularly in the trench warfare in Belgium and France.
The practice of wearing of poppies was inspired by the poem In Flanders Fields, written in 1915 by Canadian soldier John McCrae. McCrae was a poet, physician, author, artist and soldier during World War I and a surgeon during the Second Battle of Ypres in Belgium in 1915.
McCrae’s friend Lt. Alexis Helmer was killed during the battle and his burial inspired the poem which was written on May 3, 1915. McCrae saw the poppies during burials around his artillery position. McCrae himself would later become a casualty while commanding a Canadian unit in early 1918.
As I mentioned, McCrae wrote “In Flanders Fields” after losing his friend, Helmer, on the operating table. He sat on a rock afterwards while he was resting and scribbled out the poem while viewing a spectacle of red poppies as he contemplated the loss of his friend and the tragedy that was this “Great War”. Legend further has it that fellow soldiers retrieved the poem after McCrae, initially dissatisfied with his work, discarded it.
Here now, the poem:
IN FLANDERS FIELDS by Lieutenant Colonel John McCrae (written in 1915)
In Flanders fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses, row on row,
That mark our place: and in the sky
The larks still bravely singing fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.
We are the dead: Short days ago,
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved: and now we lie
In Flanders fields!
Take up our quarrel with the foe
To you, from failing hands, we throw
The torch: be yours to hold it high
If ye break faith with us who die,
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders fields
“In Flanders Fields” was first published on December 8, 1915 in the London-based magazine ‘Punch’.
The origin of the red poppy as a modern-day symbol of Memorial Day was the idea of an American woman, Moina Michael.
It was on a Saturday morning, while at work, two days before the World War I Armistice was declared. Michael was on duty at the YMCA Overseas War Secretaries’ headquarters in New York.
A young soldier passed by her desk and left a copy of the latest November edition of the Ladies Home Journal there. In it she came across a page which carried the poem entitled “We Shall Not Sleep”.
“We Shall Not Sleep” was sometimes used as the title for the poem “In Flanders Fields”, because McCrae never gave his poem a title.
Michael found herself transfixed by the last verse. She said she felt as though she was actually being called in person by the voices in McCrae’s poem which had been silenced by death.
She made a personal pledge to “keep the faith.” She vowed always to wear a red poppy of Flanders Fields as a sign of remembrance. Compelled to make a note of this pledge she scribbled down a response on the back of a used envelope.
She titled her poem “We Shall Keep the Faith”.
Michael then had the idea to create an emblem of Remembrance using the red Flanders poppy. At the age of 49, with a career in teaching for over 30 years already behind her, she decided to dedicate her life to campaign to have this emblem recognized by governments, veteran agencies and the public.
She continued with the project for the next 26 years until her death. She became affectionately known as the Poppy Lady.
Here now, her poem, a response to “In Flanders Fields”:
WE SHALL KEEP THE FAITH by Moina Belle Michael (Written in 1918)
Oh! you who sleep in Flanders Fields,
Sleep sweet – to rise anew!
We caught the torch you threw
And holding high, we keep the Faith
With All who died.
We cherish, too, the poppy red
That grows on fields where valor led;
It seems to signal to the skies
That blood of heroes never dies,
But lends a luster to the red
Of the flower that blooms above the dead
In Flanders Fields.
And now the Torch and Poppy Red
We wear in honor of our dead.
Fear not that ye have died for naught;
We’ll teach the lesson that ye wrought
In Flanders Fields.
I wish you all a meaningful, somber, reflective, and solemn Memorial Day!
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MAY 25 –MEMORIAL DAY: GOVERNOR HOCHUL REMINDS WE ARE ALL AMERICANS

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GOVERNOR HOCHUL ATTENDS MEMORIAL DAY WREATH-LAYING CEREMONY TO HONOR FALLEN SERVICE MEMBERS

  

Governor Hochul:

“I know that our country feels so divided. Believe me, it was divided back 250 years ago… We have had conflicts before, but I want you to know, whether it’s a blue state, red state, purple state — it doesn’t matter, because if someone shook you in the middle of the night, woke you up and said, ‘What are you?’ I guarantee people all across this country from every walk of life would say, ‘I’m an American. I’m an American first.’ Never forget that. We have so much more that unites us.”

Hochul: “In this particular year, on this very Memorial Day, let us not lose sight of the gift we’ve been given, the gift of freedom. But as you know, freedom is not free. There’s been blood spilled to protect that freedom, and shame on us if we ever forget that sacrifice, especially on a day like today.”

Governor Kathy Hochul today attended a Memorial Day wreath-laying ceremony at City Hall in Albany to honor fallen service members.

  

VIDEO: The event is available to stream on YouTube here and TV quality video is available here (h.264, mp4).

AUDIO: The Governor’s remarks are available in audio form here.

PHOTOS: The Governor’s Flickr page will post photos of the event here.

A rush transcript of the Governor’s remarks is available below: 

 Thank you, everyone. Thank you. Mayor, I truly appreciate your confidence in me and how you are a great caretaker of this city that I cherish and have called home for many years. It’s a difficult job to govern this city, and you can count on me to be a willing partner for many years to come. So, thank you, Mayor Applyrs, and to all of our elected officials who are here from our Council and from our Legislature.

Also, our Senator Pat Fahy — more recognizable than anybody, including myself, in the city. She is everywhere, and I thank her for that. And Assemblymember Gabriella Romero, making a real profound difference every day. And also to have our District Attorney be willing to step up and share his emotional story of what it’s like to be one of the ones who was able to go home after being in a conflict where you lost people that you knew personally.

Clearly you still wear that weight of that on your shoulders, but I want to thank you for converting that into extraordinary public service and keeping our community safe here in Albany County as our District Attorney. Let’s give another round of applause to Lee Kindlon.

Our Grand Marshal, you can maybe march next year. We can get you out there again. I want to thank you, our Grand Marshal, Louis Mion, and his wife Susan. And what I’m struck with your service, because service manifests itself in many ways, whether you run for office or you engage in the community. You have been putting a spotlight on the needs of homeless veterans back since the 1990s, and thank you for caring so deeply about those who did what this country asked them to do, and then instead of coming home to a warm thank you and a home or a job or an education, they find themselves living on our streets. So, thank you. Let’s give another round of applause to our Grand Marshal and his wife Susan.

And Reverend Charlene Robbins, I was listening intently to your prayer as you harken the names of all the great leaders during our various conflicts and put a more of an emotional feeling around them. The struggles that they had to endure the night before the great battles are the speeches. And so, thank you for personalizing those who have the weight of the country on their shoulders in those times of need. And also to our Albany marching band, it’s never a great occasion unless we have our marching band joining us. I want to thank them as well. 

And to the veterans organizations, the Gold Star families, Memorial Day means a lot to different people, and as a leader myself, I’m also in a position where I have to put people in harm’s way by calling up the National Guard on occasion. And I have incredible respect for those who served in the armed services and returned and wanted to engage in the National Guard or went right to the National Guard.

And on this Memorial Day, I do want to just acknowledge Major Sorffly Davius, an NYPD police officer, a decorated Army veteran. He was a member of our task force, Empire Shield. They’re the ones who are protecting our subways and our congregate areas that we have in New York City that are more at risk, guarding some of our most high-profile locations. We just lost him this spring. He had been deployed by the National Guard to Kuwait to support the conflict in Iran. So even today, we’re still losing members of our family. And I just had a chance to get to know his family and speak at his service, and it was very difficult. 

But also, I chatted with some of our friends in the back. What incredible pride we feel, not just in the State of New York, but in the Albany, Saratoga, Ticonderoga region. If you’ve been watching Ken Burns’ American Revolution, and if you have not, this is what you do on a rainy Memorial Day: You go look it up and start watching it. Because you’ll be perhaps shocked, perhaps you knew, but the most seminal parts of our fight for freedom against an oppressive regime abroad across the ocean all was formulated here. 

They talk about gatherings in Albany where people are talking about how we can foster a protest and to stand up and fight for our rights and freedoms. It was amazing to watch this. But also, you saw what they went through, these individuals who served — ordinary farmers and merchants and people just living their regular lives. They were called to serve for years, away from their homes, to sacrifice in unbelievably harsh conditions, walking barefoot through the snow and in dark forests at night and being terrorized by raids from the British, unexpecting. 

So you watch this and you’re just going to get this sense of awe about what our responsibility is 250 years later as we commemorate this significant anniversary. Know that people who walked in these areas lived their lives here where we do, were called to do something that they never dreamed of but they stood up because they believed in the promise of what a democracy could be, what freedom could actually feel like. And we cherish that because we are the beneficiaries of that.

And also, that means that we are also called on to defend each other and our rights and our values when those are under threat. And I know that our country feels so divided.

Believe me, it was divided back 250 years ago — the Loyalists versus the Patriots. It was an incredible conflict. Or during the Civil War, brother against brother, the North and the South. We have had conflicts before, but I want you to know, whether it’s a blue state, red state, purple state — it doesn’t matter, because if someone shook you in the middle of the night, woke you up and said, “What are you?” I guarantee people all across this country from every walk of life would say,

“I’m an American. I’m an American first.” 

Never forget that. We have so much more that unites us. And yes, we’ve gone through conflicts and wars, but we’re always shoulder-to-shoulder in battle. And I looked at some of our Vietnam veterans who are here, and I was reminded of the fact that I was a young girl, but I had four uncles serving at the same time in the Vietnam conflict.

And I’d watch the evening news with my grandparents every night, go to their house, and they were always watching for some sign on Walter Cronkite of whether there’s a glimpse of one of their sons and praying that he wasn’t being carried out, transported to the morgue. It was a difficult time to be a child watching those images. But knowing that I had members of my own family gave me a point, a source of pride to know that someone close to me, my uncles who did come home, but some badly wounded, Purple Heart, they came back home to me. And I’ve always been just so grateful, so in awe of those, even during that conflict, because it was a draft.

Many left. Others, whether you believed in the war or not, still went and served.

And all the conflicts all the way up until what we’re doing in Iran right now, we have had people step up and say, “I love this country enough. I want to protect my country. I want to protect its values. I want to protect its freedoms for not just my family today, but for generations to come, just as we are benefiting from those 250 years ago.”

So in this particular year, on this very Memorial Day, let us not lose sight of the gift we’ve been given, the gift of freedom.

But as you know, freedom is not free.

There’s been blood spilled to protect that freedom, and shame on us if we ever forget that sacrifice, especially on a day like today. Thank you very much.

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COUNTY EXECUTIVE KEN JENKINS MEMORIAL DAY OBSERVANCE

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WESTCHESTER COUNTY EXECUTIVE KEN JENKINS

STATEMENT ON MEMORIAL DAY

Memorial Day is one of the most solemn days we observe as a nation. It is a day to remember the brave men and women who gave their lives in service to our country and to honor the sacrifice they and their families made on behalf of all of us. Behind every name etched on a memorial is a story of courage and sacrifice. These service members came from communities just like ours, raised families, built friendships and answered the call to serve.

As residents gather across Westchester this Memorial Day weekend, I encourage everyone to visit one of the many local memorials as they serve as important reminders of the true meaning of this day and of the sacrifice made by generations of Americans.”

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MAY 23– PLAYLAND PARK OPENS FOR 2026 SEASON

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EARLY ARRIVALS PARKED AT 11:30 A.M. FOR OPENING CEREMONIES AND COUNTY EXECUTIVE KEN JENKINS’ OFFICIAL  OPENING OF THE PARK.

PLAYLAND OPENS AGAIN! 

HUZZAH!


[Rye, NY] —  Summer has officially arrived in Westchester County as Playland Park is open for the 2026 season, welcoming families back for another summer of classic rides, timeless traditions and unforgettable memories, including the highly anticipated return of the historic Dragon Coaster.

 

Watch the News Conference Here:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7MCTEl7IoPk

 

The park is open TODAY, Sunday and Monday of Memorial Day Weekend, each day from 12 p.m. to 10 p.m.

Beginning Wednesday, June 3, the park will be open Wednesday through Sunday through Labor Day, Monday, Sept. 7 and closing out the season on Saturday and Sunday, Sept. 12 and 13.

From adrenaline-pumping thrills to pint-sized adventures, there are rides for everyone in the family. Visit PlaylandPark.org for the current list of open rides, which will be updated throughout the season as more rides open.

Fourth of July Fireworks will return this year, along with weekly Friday night fireworks thereafter that will light up the shoreline through Labor Day Weekend.

Westchester County Executive Ken Jenkins said:

“For generations, Playland Park has been woven into the fabric of summers in Westchester County, creating cherished memories for families and visitors alike. As we welcome guests back for another exciting season, we are proud to continue the legacy of this historic and iconic destination while ensuring it remains a place where residents of all ages can come together to experience the joy, nostalgia and traditions that have defined Playland for nearly a century.”

Westchester County Parks Commissioner Kathy O’Connor said:

“There’s nothing like a summer day at Playland Park. From the rides and games to the beach and pool, Playland offers a true family-friendly experience for visitors of all ages. I’m excited to open the gates once again this season and welcome families back for a summer filled with joy, tradition and lasting memories at one of Westchester’s most beloved destinations.”

Westchester County Parks First Deputy Commissioner Peter Tartaglia said:

“Summer in Westchester is synonymous with Playland Park. For almost 100 years, visitors have been coming to Playland for unforgettable memories, timeless traditions and the unique charm that makes this park so special. From generations of families riding the Dragon Coaster to children experiencing the magic of Playland for the very first time, this park continues to hold a special place in the hearts of so many throughout our community.”

 

REPORERS ON THURSDAY’S MEDIA PREVIEW  TAKING A RIDE ON THE DRAGON COASTER

SQUEALS AND THE DRAGON ROARING ON THE TRACKS HIGH ABOVE PLAYLAND BROUGHT BACK MEMORIES AND PROMISED MORE MEMORIES  TO COME

AND DOWN THE STRETCH THEY COME AFTER A RIDE OF A LIFETIME!

(Coaster photos by WPCNR)

PLAYLAND IS FOR CHILDREN OF ALL AGES, AND IT IS SO EASY TO FEEL LIKE A KID AGAIN!

District 7 Westchester County Legislator Anant Nambiar said:

“I am thrilled to see Rye Playland and the iconic Dragon Coaster open for another season! I am very proud to represent this District and want to thank all the dedicated local residents and staff whose hard work makes this Westchester landmark such a wonderful part of our County. While I’m sorry to miss the festivities today, I look forward to seeing you on the rides very soon. Enjoy opening day, have fun!”

Playland’s beach is also open on Saturday, Sunday and Monday, May 23, 24 and 25, from 11 a.m. to 6:30 p.m., weather permitting. The beach will then operate on weekends and holidays through Sunday, June 21, before both the beach and pool begin daily operations on Friday, June 26, and continue through Labor Day, weather permitting. Parking and admission fees apply.

 

Season Passes are available to purchase online only and daily rider wristbands are available to purchase online or at the park.

Playland Park is located at 1 Playland Parkway in Rye, NY.

“COASTER” THE OFFICIAL HOST AT PLAYLAND

WELCOMES THE CITIZENETREPORTER AT THE MEDIA PREVIEW THURSDAY

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MAY 22–WHITE PLAINS WEEK TONIGHT THE MAY 22 REPORT ON FIOS 45 OPTIMUM 76 AND WWW.WPCOMMUNITYMEDIA.ORG ANY TIME

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WHITE PLAINS PASSES SCHOOL BUDGET BY 90% 

VALERIE DANIELL AND ROSEMARIE ELLER

ELECTED TO NEW TERMS ON BOARD OF EDUCATION

COUNTY EXECUTIVE KEN JENKINS GIVES STATE OF COUNTY FINANCES REPORT

INSIGHTS !

SUBDIVIDING THE HIGHLANDS 

 THE NEW IRS JUSTICE DEPT PROTECTIONS AGAINST PROSECUTION 

WITH JOHN BAILEY

AND THE NEWS

YOU NEED TO KNOW

THIS WEEK EVERY WEEK FOR 25 YEARS

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MAY 22–CHHOP & LIFTING UP WESTCHESTER FORM PARTNERSHIP TO FEED HOMELESS OF PEEKSKILL

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Lifting Up Westchester and Caring for the Hungry & Homeless of Peekskill Form Strategic Partnership to Strengthen Services Across Westchester County

Longtime Nonprofit Partners Unify Under Co-CEO Leadership to Expand Impact

WESTCHESTER COUNTY, N.Y. — Lifting Up Westchester (LUW) and Caring for the Hungry & Homeless of Peekskill (CHHOP), two pillars of Westchester County’s social services and advocacy community, today announced a strategic partnership that merges their operational infrastructure while preserving each organization’s independent nonprofit status. Under the new structure, Cynthia Knox and Anahaita Kotval will serve as Co-CEOs of both organizations, unifying leadership across a combined network that serves more than 10,000 individuals annually.

The partnership brings together two organizations with complementary geographic footprints. CHHOP primarily serves Northern Westchester while LUW focuses on Central and Southern Westchester. Together, they provide a continuum of services – including emergency shelter, permanent housing, food access, job readiness, youth mentorship, and homelessness prevention – that now spans the full length of the county.

By consolidating management, payroll, human resources, finance, and development functions, the partnership creates administrative efficiencies designed to direct more resources toward programs and the people they serve. The transition will be implemented in thoughtful phases, with programs and staffing remaining intact throughout.

The partnership has drawn support from Westchester County government.

“The alliance between Lifting Up Westchester and Caring for the Hungry & Homeless of Peekskill is exactly the kind of bold, forward-thinking collaboration that ensures our most vulnerable residents continue to receive the support they need. I’m proud to see these two organizations lead the way. Westchester County is stronger when our nonprofit community works together.”
— Ken Jenkins, Westchester County Executive

Board leadership from both organizations sees the partnership as a deliberate step toward greater regional impact.

“We are combining our infrastructure so that both organizations benefit from greater efficiency and shared strength, and our clients benefit from increased resources and more seamless regional coordination of services.”
— John A. Smith, Board Chair, CHHOP

LUW’s board echoes that view and emphasizes that the partnership opens new possibilities for advocacy and innovation on behalf of the people both organizations serve.

“During this era of shifting and uncertain funding, our united organizations will have more opportunities, more resources, and a greater ability to coordinate services, advocate, and innovate for the people who need us most.”
— Janine Simon Daughtry, Board President, LUW

The organizations are formalizing what has long been true in practice. Their missions, values, and commitment to the people served are deeply aligned. LUW and CHHOP have chosen a unique path, growing stronger together rather than competing. In a county of nearly one million people, where the margin between stability and crisis can be thin, that choice truly matters.

About Lifting Up Westchester (LUW)

Founded in 1979, LUW is a nonprofit organization providing life-changing support to people who have lost their housing or are struggling to meet their other basic needs. Each year, the organization partners with men, women, and children experiencing homelessness and hunger to build a more secure future for themselves and their families. For more information, please visit www.liftingupwestchester.org or connect with us on Facebook, Instagram, or LinkedIn.

About Caring for the Hungry & Homeless of Peekskill (CHHOP)

CHHOP’s ethos is that every person is entitled to safe, affordable housing and healthy, nutritious food. Since 1987, CHHOP’s work focuses on housing and food equity in Peekskill and the surrounding communities and supports people living with domestic violence, veterans experiencing homelessness, immigrants, people with mental health challenges, and other lower-income households. For more information, please visit www.CHHOP.org or connect with us on Facebook or Instagram.

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MAY 19–SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS DR. JOSEPH RICCA THANKS WHITE PLAINS VOTERS FOR THEIR CONFIDENCE IN THE BUDGET

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WPCNR THE LETTER TICKER.MAY 19, 2026:

Dear White Plains CSD Community Member,

On behalf of the White Plains CSD Board of Education, we would like to take a moment to thank you!

Your feedback, recommendations, and support throughout the budget planning and presentation processes is appreciated. We are grateful for your continued support of our Tigers and the WPCSD educational community.

As you may know, the White Plains CSD 2026-2027 Budget was passed with a (unofficial) total vote count of 838 YES (91.2%) and 81 NO.

Thank you!

Mrs. Rosemarie Eller and Mrs. Valerie Daniele were re-elected to the to the Board of Education. Congratulations!

We are grateful to all who took the time to attend meetings; share information; participate in focus group meetings; offer recommendations for improvement and organize community gatherings. It is because of you, and the support of our White Plains community, that we can move forward with our outstanding student programming!

Thank you for your continued support and congratulations! #WPProud 🐯

Respectfully,

Joseph Ricca

Joseph L. Ricca, Ed.D.

Superintendent of Schools

White Plains Public Schools

Education House

5 Homeside Lane

White Plains, NY 10605

(914) 422-2019

(914) 422-2024 Fax

www.whiteplainspublicschools.org

Twitter: @drjosephricca

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