FEBRUARY 22–BEELINE BUS SERVICE SUSPENDED AT 7 PM TONIGHT THROUGH MONDAY 2 PM

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(White Plains, NY) – Bee-Line buses and Paratransit will be suspended as of 7 p.m. this evening, Sunday, February 22, and will be suspended until 2 p.m., Monday, February 23.

Westchester County will monitor road conditions and provide updates to the public as necessary. Please check our website for further updates at www.westchestergov.com/beelinebus.

Additionally, following guidance from the New York State Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Services, Westchester County will institute a complete road ban beginning at 9 p.m. tonight, Sunday, February 22, through 10 a.m. Monday, February 23. The road ban is being implemented due to hazardous winter weather conditions expected overnight, including heavy snowfall and wind. Roads are closed to all but essential travel (police, fire, EMS, utility/public works and hospital/medical personnel).

 

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FEBRUARY 22–

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February 22, 2026

White Plains Library to Function as Warming and Charging Center

 White Plains Public LibraryThe winter storm heading our way is expected to bring heavy snow and strong winds. This may result in some power outages. The White Plains Public Library, located at 100 Martine Avenue, will be open to White Plains residents who need to warm up and/or charge their electronic devices as a result of a power outage at their home.

The Library will open at 11:00 AM on Monday, February 23rd. They will not be offering any programs, but the main floor of the Library will be open for residents who need to warm up and/or charge their devices. Please Note:  All other library services, such as The Trove Children’s Library, The Edge Teen Library, and the Library Gallery will be closed.

If you lose power, please report the outage to Con Ed at coned.com or call: 1-800-75-CONED. Or use this direct link:  https://www.coned.com/en/services-and-outages/report-track-service-issue/report-outage-status

If you see a downed power line, DO NOT go near it or try to move it. Report it to Con Ed by calling: 1-88-75-CONED.

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FEBRUARY 22– NO DRIVING IN WESTCHESTER COUNTY AFTER 9 PM TONIGHT SUNDAY

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February 22, 2026

Westchester County Declares Temporary Road Ban Due to Storm

 Seal - gold and blueFollowing guidance from the New York State Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Services, Westchester County has instituted a complete road ban beginning at 9:00 PM tonight, Sunday, February 22nd through 10:00 AM on Monday, February 23rd.

The road ban is being implemented due to hazardous winter weather conditions expected overnight, including heavy snowfall and wind. Roads are closed to all but essential travel (police, fire and ambulance).

Residents should stay off the roads during this time to allow emergency crews and road treatment teams to operate safely and effectively. Travel conditions are expected to be treacherous to impossible, particularly during the overnight hours.

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FEBRUARY 21–TONIGHT “PEOPLE TO BE HEARD” 7 PM “BULL” ALLEN PREVIEWS THE BASEBALL SEASON AS EXHIBITION BASEBALL BEGINS. FIOS CH 45 OPTIMUM CH 76 & 24/7 ON WWW.WPCOMMUNITYMEDIA.ORG

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THE METS THE YANKS

HOW PITCH CLOCK, 9 SECONDS TO HIT, THE SHIFT BAN AFFECTED THE NATIONAL PASTIME

BASEBALL EXPANSION TO 32 OR 36 TEAMS HOW IT COULD WORK

ENDLESS PLAYOFFS?

THE EXTRA INNING FIASCO

THE SALARY CAP FIASCO HEADED BASEBALL’S  WAY

THE “BULL” OF SPORTS ON WPTV ON

THE STATE OF THE GRAND OLD GAME 2026

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FEBRUARY 20–TONIGHT 7:30 SATURDAY 8:30 AM WHITE PLAINS WEEK THE FEB 20 REPORT CH 76 OPTIMUM CH 45 FIOS AND WWW,WPCOMMUNITYMEDIA.ORG WITH JOHN BAILEY AND THE NEWS

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JESSIE JACKSON PASSES THE TORCH TO US

WESTCHESTER COUNTY POLICE MONITOR SOCIAL MEDIA TO DETECT 
ATTEMPTED TAKOVERS OF PUBLIC PLACES META SAYS WE ARE NOT ADDICTING

WHITE PLAINS FIREFIGHTERS IN ZERO TEMPERATURES PUT OUT MULTI FAMILY HOME FIRE. NO ONE KILLED UNDETERMINED NUMBER OF EVACUEES HOMRLESS

DR. KATYLYN JETELINA: COLON CANCER IS RISING IN UNDER 4OS

 

DR. MARISA DONNELLEY: RSV CASES RISING IN NYC.  FLU CASES ON DECLINE, COVID FLAT. 

ESSENTIAL PLAN THE MINIMUM HEALTH CARE YOU CAB GET PUTS 450,000 NEW YORKERS IN DANGER IF  LOSING HEALTH CIVERAGE

D.A. CONTINUES RELENTLESS PURSUIT OF CHILD PORNOGRAFERS

JOHN BAILEY ON THE LOSS OF JESSIE JACKSON

 

JOHN BAILEY AND THE NEWS

THIS WEEK AND EVERY WEEK

ON WHITE PLAINS WEEK  FOR 25 YEARS

THE NEWS YOU NEED TO KNOW

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FEBRUARY 19– THE ARC OF WESTCHESTER HOLDS ZOOM ON BUDGET IMPACTS ON PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES SATURDAY 10 AM

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Join us this Saturday on Zoom and Hear a Special Announcement from our CEO!

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FEBRUARY 19–NEW YORK HEALTH INSURANCE MINIMUM PLAN THREATENED

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The cost of health care and insurance in this country is outrageous, and it looks like it’s not going to get better in New York.

This is because health coverage for 1.7 million New Yorkers who rely on the Essential Plan (the low-cost state health insurance plan) is under threat, but there is an interesting workaround solution.

I dive in below. I also share how to access free at-home HIV tests, report on a contained outbreak of eye fungus at a clinic in NYC, and provide updates on infectious diseases.


The cuts keep coming: New York health insurance coverage

For 1.7 million New Yorkers, the Essential Plan is the safety net that makes health coverage possible when Medicaid, Medicare, or employer insurance isn’t an option. But new federal policy changes could make that coverage harder to keep.

The “Big Beautiful Bill” includes a major provision that restricts how federal dollars can be used to cover non-citizens. This change is expected to reduce federal funding for New York’s Essential Plan by about $7.5 billion each year.

The rollout has already begun and will continue in a phased approach. Starting in October 2026, federal Medicaid matching funds will no longer cover many legally present non-citizens, including green card holders in the U.S. less than 5 years, refugees, asylees, and trafficking victims (with limited state options remaining for lawfully residing children and pregnant people in states with those options).

This comes just weeks after another hit: the loss of enhanced ACA subsidies—extra financial help that lowered monthly marketplace premiums for many middle- and low-income enrollees. This loss made marketplace coverage more expensive for about 140,000 New Yorkers. (See more about that here in a previous YLE post in January.)

What is the Essential Plan?

To understand what’s at stake, it helps to understand the several ways New Yorkers are covered by health insurance:

  1. Employers: they cover about half of New Yorkers.
  2. Medicare/Medicaid: funded by both the state and federal government.
  3. Health coverage from the marketplace: paid out of pocket and/or subsidized by the federal government.
  4. Essential Plan: a New York-specific program that is funded through the federal government.

The Essential Plan (#4 above) is important because it’s designed to fill a gap for people who earn too much for Medicaid but not enough to afford marketplace plans (and who don’t have employer-based coverage). It also includes many lawfully present non-citizen immigrants (about 750,000 in New York), such as permanent residents with green cards and DACA recipients, who may face eligibility barriers in other programs. The $7.5 billion cut puts all of the Essential Plan coverage at risk.

Is there a workaround? Maybe!

To lessen the blow and keep as many people insured as possible, the governor’s office seems to be trying by moving people around in a pretty creative way.

Some of those in the Essential Plan qualify for Medicaid, so the state will cover them (which will cost $3 billion).

But that doesn’t cover everyone.

For those who can’t move to Medicaid, because of income limits or immigration status, the governor is proposing to shift the Essential Plan back to an older funding model, one that isn’t bound by the new federal immigration restrictions. The trade-off? The old model only allows eligibility up to 200% of the federal poverty level (FPL).

The governor’s Essential Plan change proposal (note: it hasn’t passed yet) tightens eligibility. As a result, ~460,000 New Yorkers would lose insurance coverage.

This is a balancing act—one that aims to preserve health care coverage for the greatest number of New Yorkers, despite federal cuts. The move would maintain coverage for about 1.3 million New Yorkers, but leave 460,000 without the Essential Plan.

Here is the problem: The governor’s Essential Plan change proposal requires approval from the federal government (Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to be exact). If CMS says no (which I think is likely—I don’t think the same administration that cut funding in the first place would approve a workaround), the entire Essential Plan may be cut. If that’s the case, it would likely result in 1.7 million New Yorkers without coverage.

What you can do

  • Get help with applying for insurance coverage if you need it: https://communityhealthadvocates.org/
  • Check in on neighbors who may be on Medicaid or need help with renewal forms. The New York State Medicaid Help Line is (800) 541-2831.
  • Call your senators and congressional representatives to advocate for the issues that matter to you. (Find their contact information here.) Some apps provide representative info as well as scripts for specific topics.

FYI—Free HIV tests available to New Yorkers

New York State just launched a free HIV self-test giveaway campaign with nearly 2,000 kits available statewide.

  • If you live in New York outside NYC, you can take the eligibility survey to see if you can get a free at-home kit mailed to you.
  • If you live in NYC, request a free kit through an agency listed on the NYC Health Map and (click “HIV Testing”).

Free testing helps people get care earlier and prevents transmission:

  • Antiretroviral therapy treatment (ART) can make HIV undetectable—meaning it can’t be passed through sex (undetectable = untransmittable).
  • Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), medication that can be taken before sex, injection drug use, or other potential HIV exposures, can prevent HIV.
  • Post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) can reduce risk if started within 72 hours of potential exposure. (Visit the New York State PrEP website for more info.)

These treatments and medications are truly remarkable for HIV prevention and treatment, but early testing, diagnosis, and access to care are essential.


Good news: An eye fungus outbreak stopped in its tracks

This week, disease detectives at the NYC Department of Health published an investigation that underscores the critical importance of infection prevention in health care settings. In December 2024, three people developed serious fungal eye infections after elective laser eye surgery at a single NYC ophthalmology clinic. All three had vision loss, and one required a corneal transplant.

The clinic reported the trend after noticing that three of 11 patients (27%) who underwent surgery over a two-week period developed eye infections. After testing, Purpureocillium lilacinum, an environmental mold that rarely infects healthy people but can be dangerous to the eyes, was found to be the culprit.

After an investigation, there were many things that went wrong at this clinic:

  • Incomplete sterilization logs.
  • No EPA-registered disinfectants for work surfaces.
  • Expired eye medications.
  • Notably, cool-mist humidifiers in the procedure room. (CDC specifically warns against cool-mist humidifiers in health care settings because they can aerosolize mold spores.)

A single definitive “smoking gun” source wasn’t confirmed, but fungal DNA was detected in the tubing of one surgical device.

The good news was that after the clinic paused surgeries, fixed infection control problems, and resumed operations in January 2025, no new cases occurred. This is a solid example of how fast action and cooperation can stop an outbreak.

What this means for you: If you’re considering LASIK or similar procedures, ask your clinic about infection prevention practices: how they sterilize instruments, whether they use EPA-registered disinfectants, whether they check medication expiration dates, and if cool-mist humidifiers are used near procedure rooms. If you’ve had recent eye surgery and develop pain, vision changes, or discharge, seek care immediately—eye infections require fast treatment to prevent permanent damage or vision loss.


Infectious disease “weather report”

Measles: NYC reported the first measles case of the year—an unvaccinated infant with a history of international travel. Contact tracing by the health department is underway, and people who may have been exposed are being notified.

Measles is of increasing concern in the U.S., including in New York. (See YLE National’s updates.) Last year there were 48 cases in New York, including 20 in NYC.

The most important thing to do is check the MMR status for everyone in your household, and get vaccinated if eligible and not fully vaccinated, especially if you will be traveling internationally or to any U.S. region with a measles outbreak. Two doses are about 97% effective at preventing measles.

Flu: Cases increased slightly in NYC, but ED visits and hospitalizations continue to fall. With severe indicators continuing to decline, this small increase in cases isn’t a big concern.

Flu emergency department visits in NYC. Figure from the NYC Department of Health Respiratory Illness Dashboard. Annotations by YLE.

RSV: RSV cases went up while ED visits slightly decreased, a sign that activity is still elevated but that severe infections are going down. If you’re an older adult or have small children, it’s still worth continuing to take precautions like masking in indoor crowded spaces.

RSV cases in NYC. Figure from the NYC Department of Health Respiratory Illness Dashboard. Annotations by YLE.

CovidED visits and hospitalizations for Covid slightly increased, but overall remain low compared to previous winters.

Covid cases in NYC. Figure from the NYC Department of Health Respiratory Illness Dashboard. Annotations by YLE.


Bottom line

Health coverage for up to 1.7 million New Yorkers is on the line, and the state’s workaround would still leave hundreds of thousands uninsured. If you or someone you know is affected, now is the time to plan: get enrollment help, watch for renewal paperwork, and talk to your representatives about your concerns.

Love,

Your NY Epi


Dr. Marisa Donnelly, PhD, is an epidemiologist, science communicator, and public health expert. This newsletter exists to translate complex public health data into actionable insights, empowering New Yorkers to make informed and evidence-based health decisions.

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FEBRUARY 18–YONKERS MAN CHARGED WITH POSSESSION OF CHILD ABUSE MATERIAL

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Susan Cacace

DISTRICT ATTORNEY

FEBRUARY 17, 2026

WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. – Westchester County District Attorney Susan Cacace announced that a Yonkers man has been arrested and charged with offenses related to the possession and promotion of child sexual abuse material.

Jonathan Garcia Salvador, 32 years old, was arraigned on Friday, January 6 in front of Judge Karen Best in Yonkers City Court. Garcia Salvador was charged with Promoting an Obscene Sexual Performance by a Child, a class D felony, and Possessing an Obscene Sexual Performance by a Child, a class E felony.

DA Cacace said: “Protecting the most vulnerable members of our community will always be a priority for our office. This investigation and arrest is just further proof of our commitment to root out evildoers who try to exploit our children.”

This case is just the latest effort by DA Cacace to protect children and to deliver justice in the most heinous of cases. In January, DA Cacace announced the conviction of a Yonkers man, Eleuterio Duran. Duran was convicted of numerous felonies in relation to his violent, sexual abuse of two individuals, one of whom is a minor, and was subsequently sentenced to 45 years in state prison.

In addition to investigating and prosecuting these cases, the District Attorney’s Office also engages in community outreach to provide education to students, parents and school staff on recognizing potential threats and encouraging children to report inappropriate behavior.

This investigation was conducted by criminal investigators from the Westchester County District Attorney’s Office.

This case is being handled by ADA Mathieu Reno of the Trial Division and Bureau Chief Laura Forbes of the Child Sex Abuse Material (CSAM) Bureau.

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FEBRUARY 18– COUNTY POLICE MONITORING SOCIAL MEDIA FOR “TAKEOVER” EVENTS IN WESTCHESTER

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County Police working to assist municipal law enforcement with planning and response

 

(Hawthorne, NY) – The Department of Public Safety and its Real Time Crime intelligence center are monitoring social media activity and working with municipal law enforcement partners to discourage so-called called teen-ager “takeovers” of retail venues and other public spaces.

In addition, the Department’s patrol officers are prepared to respond to assist any municipality if needed in the event a disruptive takeover occurs.

Commissioner Terrance Raynor said,

“We are asking teens to take our advice about takeovers: do not participate in this kind of activity. You can get hurt, other people can get hurt and you can be subject to arrest. We are also urging parents to speak with their children and advise them to ignore this dangerous ‘challenge’ being presented to youths via social media.”

On Monday, several hundred teens “stormed” the Bay Plaza shopping center in the Bronx, causing chaos and property damage and prompting a large response by the NYPD to control the crowd.  Eighteen people were arrested and several persons were injured.

Raynor urged business owners and other members of the public to alert police immediately if they observe any mass gathering of youths at public spaces such as malls, individual stores or shopping centers, libraries and other public venues.

County and local police are aware of social media posts identifying various locations in Westchester as potential sites for a takeover. Raynor urged the public to share any information they have about potential takeover targets or events.

The County Police maintain telephone and electronic tips lines so the public can provide information confidentially or anonymously.

·         Voice Tip Line: (800)898-TIPS (8477).

·         Electronic Tips: Send email, text messages and small video clips to tips@wccops.com.

·         Via Mobile App: The WCPD Mobile App contains a home screen Submit a Tip button to enable tips to be sent confidentially or anonymously. It is available for Apple and Android phones. Enter Westchester County PD in the app store search bar to locate and download it.

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FEBRUARY 18—YOUR LOCAL EPIDEMIOLOGIST DISEASE WEATHER REPORT COAST TO COAST

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