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Carl Albanese – a documentary maker and media professional, Mr. Albanese exposed on live television, the 25 year cover-up by the City of White Plains of TCE contamination in the city dump and A Department of Environmental Conservation investigation and laxness in enforcement, which is still undecided and possibly will cost the city over a million dollars to comply with or remediate. He fought successfully a city hall attempt to ban recording of Common Council work sessions, getting city hall officials to back down.
Evette Avila, Principal Ridgeway School – Nominated for her successful use of BOCES Data Warehouse analyses and staff use of the data to upgrade Ridgeway Math Achievement scores 14% in one year, by isolating students’ weaknesses, remediating them, pioneering how BOCES Data Warehouse statistical analysis can help test preparation. It is the most significant one year turnaround in an elementary school in 7 years.
Councilman Benjamin Boykin – Nominated for his decisive vote defeating the Memorandum of Understanding with
Superintendent of Schools Timothy Connors – Nominated for relentless guidance of the
Mayor Joseph Delfino – Nominated for his aggressive leadership continuing residential and retail growth downtown and expanding the renaissance to the West Side of the city. Will 2006-2007 be the year the city realizes the long awaited payoff from the Mayor’s development? 2005-2006 reached projections. Policies of selling “unneeded city assets” for revenue were not always agreed-on by all residents – however, Delfino’s efforts are consistent. His policies are proactive, which may this year finally pay out. Delfino focused on the homeless problem in
Commissioner of Finance Gina
Don Hughes – A private citizen who posts city documents, meetings of note, and highly useful documents on his own website. Mr. Hughes pursuit of federal, state, and city hall documents for all citizens to see easily in a timely manner, is a valuable public service, exposed evidence of city coverups and supplements the city’s own website where key city reports are rarely available.
Deputy Commissioner of Public Safety Daniel Jackson – Promoted this year into the Deputy Commissioner void,
Charles Lederman – a local activist who questioned procedures in determining costs of the $69 Million school district capital project, involving himself in thinking about the scope of the project. His questioning of authority was never really answered satisfactorily by the school district during the course of the campaign, and actually revealed some mistakes. Lederman’s courage in questioning policy is an example of good citizenship.
Commissioner of Public Works Joseph Nicoletti – The Commissioner who makes this list every year showed he runs the most effective Public Works Department around. Snow is removed promptly, but opening up the city after 600 trees were downed, clearing streets within 48 hours this year was a super feat performed by the Commissioner and his DPW men and women. The Commissioner’s men and women did this three times in White Plains – during the Rain/tornado storm July 19 – the heat wave blackout two weeks later and in a third storm in early September. Con Edison could not keep up with the White Plains DPW in those storms. Should the Commissioner extricate his city sucessfully with the DEC over the city dump contamination, he will again have saved the city’s bacon.
Paula Piekos – consistently brings up sore subjects to the City of
White Plains High School Principal Ivan Toper – Toper has acted decisively in dealing with sensitive issues: gang influence and identifying youths at risk, working closely with them, communication with parents, impressing teens on the dangers of teen drinking, (there have been no major teen-drinking incidents this year), supporting and introducing the Margaret’s Place resource for abused teens and domestic violence. He is the first WPHS Principal in this reporter’s memory to deliver public talks on WPHS academic achievement progress.
A man who left us this year suddenly, Ron Jackson, whose untimely death deserves mention as an example of speaking truth to power. He was not as active this year as in the past, due to his deteriorating health, but his spirit lives on in several of this year’s nominees.
Councilman Robert Greer left us this year too, after a long illness and we salute his public service literally to the end, and his courage in facing the inevitable night.


















