Mystery Donor Pledges $1 Million to FIRECLOCK Sculpture in Renaissance Plaza

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WPCNR ART NEWS. By John F. Bailey. March 16, 2004: The Common Council was introduced to a portable sculpture “The FireClock” Tuesday evening intended to grace Renaissance Plaza. They liked it and moved, 5-2  (Bernstein, Boykin, Greer, Hockley, and Mayor Delfino concurring, Malmud and Roach demurring), to authorize $60,000 in seed money from Urban Renewal Funds to have its creator, Gayil Nalls undertake a feasibility study of the work of art.


“FireClock” is an original work combining fire and time “unlike anything else in the world” created by Gayil Nalls, the creator of “The Universal Scent” confetti that rained on Times Square at the turn of the millenium.



FIRECLOCK By Gayil Nalls. A computerized conception of FIRECLOCK installed on the Renaissance Plaza fountain. The clock portion of the sculpture is the concentric circles at far left. The clock will tell time by the use of flames with hours indicated on the exterior circle, and half-hours on the interior circle, with flames popping out for each hour of the day. In the evening, on the half-hour, pedestrians will see flame shows set to music and what Ms. Nalls describes as “sounds of the universe.” The flames  will pop out and die, and appear to race along the swoop and dip of the gold ribbons in time to the music. Photo by WPCNR News 


 


The sculpture was introduced by the Mayor’s Executive Officer, George Gretsas, warning that all art engenders controversy.  He said it is intended to be installed over the Renaissance Plaza Fountain during the months of November through April, when the water fountain is dormant for the winter. 


The sculpture purpose, Ms. Nalls said, is to attract persons to view its “fireclock” that will use flames to tell the time, in halfhour increments 24 hours a day.  The flame jets in the ribbon tracks, 6 inches wide, she said will thrill crowds with flame shows in the evening. The flames dancing and racing along its graceful roller coaster ribbons in dazzling sequence in time to music and sounds of the world and the universe, according to Ms. Nalls



FIRECLOCK in nightime, showing the FIRE CLOCK indicating 12:30 at night. Flames are created from natural gas and are are issued from jets with the metal ribbons. You can see the flames in this rough computer-conception racing on the “Flameway” at far right. Ms. Nalls said the sculpture is designed to be removed during the summer months from April through October, and installed again in November to provide a tourist attraction in the dreary winter months. Photo by WPCNR News


Ms. Nalls created the work on speculation at the request of the Mayor’s Office, and will create the sculpture for a cost of $1 Million to $1.5 Million dollars, which will be defrayed by the generosity of an anonymous donor who has pledged $1 Million towards the project.


There was no indication when the sculpture could be installed, because it is still in the concept stage.



The Sculptoress Explains the FIRECLOCK (on easal) To learn more about the artist, visit her website at http://www.worldsensorium.com/Photo by WPCNR News.


Glen Hockley was impressed with the sculpture and enthusiastic. Robert Greer found it very interesting, and likened it to the “Firewall” in Providence, Rhode Island attraction that draws massive crowds in Providence in the summers. Benjamin Boykin said he did not know what to think about it, but was willing to do the feasibility study.  Arnold Bernstein was intrigued. Tom Roach and Rita Malmud were against even studying it.  Malmud said dryly  the Renaissance Plaza was not the place for it, and Roach said firmly  the scope was too big, and the money could be better spent on Ebersole Rink.


Eli Schonberger, observing, spoke up saying FIRECLOCK would be a drawing card that would bring people to the city, and told of a museum that once installing a sculpture drew 10,000 persons in three weeks. He said the sculpture would be an attraction that would mark White Plains as a place that cared about art.


Mayor Delfino said the city had no art and the sculpture would be an attraction and make a statement about the city.


Ms. Nall said that she has not showcased her FireClock to any other cities as of yet, but if White Plains did not wish to go ahead after the Feasibility Study, she would offer it to other cities and organizations. She said she had done a patent research on the concept, and had found nothing that remotely resembles it. It is, she feels, truly unique and marries the concept of fire and time.


Currently, Ms. Nalls is finishing a video piece designed for projection in a spherical plexiglass globe, known as an “Omniglobe,” that will be showcased at the Siggraph Convention, a technological graphic artists convention.

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WPCNR Photograph of the Day

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS ROVING PHOTOGRAPHER. March 16, 2004: Today’s photograph is of the old Reporter Dispatch Building entrance, its classic freize recalling the nostalgia of old time news gathering, where footsteps and spike heels tapped on marble foyers, when reporters used pencils (because they always wrote), wore fedoras or pillbox hats,  wrote more stories, blasted out scoops on yellow copy paper on ancient Royal Standard Typewriters, called up sources on stick phones where they held the mouthpiece to their mouth and the earpiece to their ear, and said things like, “Give me rewrite.”  


When finished with a story, they’d call “Copy Boy!” who would move the freshly typed scoop to the City Desk Editor, who, in the movies would yell “Stop the Presses!” and scoops used the magic word, “FLASH!” Emerging weary from this entrance in the wee hours, the reporter in rumpled suit, white shirt, tie askew, cigarette dangling from mouth would retire to reflect in a dimly lit bar where he or she got their best stuff, over a gin gimlet or a scotch and soda, always with people, but always alone.



The Reporter Dispatch Building. By The White Plains Roving Photographer

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Parking Authority to the Rescue: $5 Mill in Fine, Rate, Hour Hikes. Taxes Up 14%

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WPCNR PARALLEL LINES. By John F. Bailey. March 16, 2004: The Executive Board of the Parking Authority gave City Hall all it wanted last night approving $5 Million in new revenue streams to contribute to the city’s soaring budget due to sales tax revenue lag and pension, health, salary, and erosion of assessments. The vote of the Executive Board was unanimous.


The Common Council still must approve the rate hikes in meter rates, garage hours, parking permits hours of meter operation (extending 6 P.M. to midnight), and the manna also includes a million dollars from Parking Authority Reserves.


One silver lining in the rate hikes is the city on street meters will be free from 12 midnight to 2 A.M. when all cars have to be off the street.


The $5 Million will only cover one/third the projected paper deficit, estimated by WPCNR based on Budget Director Ann Reasoner’s January sales tax estimates, anticipated salary increases and general expenses as about $12 Million, making a double digit City Tax Increase likely. The Journal News quotes Mayor Joseph Delfino as calling for a 14% increase, the first time the city has put a figure on what residents may face.


The 2003-04 city budget is $104.3 Million. The projected $12 Million deficit would run the budget to $116 Million, without taking into account increased city expenses other than salaries, for all departments, the operation of Liberty Park, the possible acquisition of parkland from New York Presbyterian Hospital, and the expense of running the White Plains Performing Arts Center.


Budget worriers received some reason for optimism on money matters yesterday. A source, on condition of anonymity within city hall downplayed the significance of January and February Sales Tax receipts, (February was not revealed), showing the city running behind last year’s sales tax pace. This source said that these were only estimates supplied by the Comptroller’s office and did not reflect the real January, February receipts which would be reported at the end of March. This source said the January February “estimates” would not reflect  the receipts from new establishments, Fortunoff, Circuit City, Target, Applebee’s, and the Performing Arts Center and movie theatres. Therefore, this source expected the city would be much better off than the now suspect January-February sales tax estimates indicate.


If Mayor Delfino is right, and the city needs to enact a 14% Tax Increase, the owner of a $600,000 home, assessed at $15,000, who is now paying $1,920 a year in City Taxes, would pay $363 more in 2004-05 City Taxes. Link this to the $360 more in School Taxes the same owner will pay under the projected $143.9 Million School Budget, and that owner will pay approximately $723 more in taxes to the city and the City School District next year.

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WPCNR WEATHER SCOOP: Snow Arrives Mid A.M.

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WPCNR WEATHER SCOOP. From National Weather Service. March 16, 2004: Snow Will Develop Between 10 AM And Noon Today…And Become Heavy At Times. The Snow Will Likely Mix With Or Even Change To Sleet Late In The Afternoon. The Mixture Will Taper Off To Light Snow Or Freezing Drizzle Tonight. Storm Total Snowfall Amounts Will Range From 4 To 7 Inches.



…A WINTER STORM WILL IMPACT THE AREA TODAY AND TONIGHT…

.LOW PRESSURE WILL MOVE NORTHEAST ACROSS THE OHIO VALLEY TODAY…
WHILE A SECONDARY LOW DEVELOPS ALONG THE MID ATLANTIC
COAST. WITH A COLD HIGH PRESSURE SYSTEM NORTH OF NEW ENGLAND…SNOW
IS FORECAST TO DEVELOP AND QUICKLY SPREAD NORTHEAST ACROSS THE REGION
FROM SOUTHWEST TO NORTHEAST LATE THIS MORNING INTO EARLY THIS
AFTERNOON.

AS THE SECONDARY LOW MOVES NORTHEAST AND INTENSIFIES…SOME MILDER
AIR WILL WRAP AROUND THIS SYSTEM IN THE MID LEVELS…CAUSING THE SNOW
TO MIX WITH OR CHANGE TO SLEET AND RAIN ALONG THE COAST LATE TODAY
AND TONIGHT.

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State Will Pay for Sandy Homeowner Victims’ Claims FEMA Would Not Pay. Governor Intros Homeowner Recovery Aid

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WPCNR ALBANY ROUNDS. From Governor Cuomo’s Office. September 28, 2013:

Governor Andrew M. Cuomo today announced that New York State’s Housing Recovery Program will fully compensate homeowners affected by Hurricane Irene, Tropical Storm Lee, and Superstorm Sandy for the repair costs of damage to their homes due to ‘earth movement.’

Under FEMA’s existing National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) regulations, damage caused by the movement of soil or earth – even if the movement is the result of flooding – is not eligible for coverage. In comparison, physical damage to a building caused directly by flood waters is covered under NFIP. As a result of this gap in coverage, hundreds of impacted homeowners throughout the state have had their NFIP claims denied, leaving many with no place to live and no resources to rebuild.

“Over the last few years, we experienced three once-in-a-century storms that wreaked an unprecedented level of devastation in communities across the state,” Governor Cuomo said. “While we have made much progress in recovering from Irene, Lee and Sandy, many New Yorkers are still left without a place to call home and limited resources to rebuild due to National Flood Insurance Program regulations, which state that homes damaged by ‘earth movement’ are not covered. Yet it simply does not make sense that some New Yorkers who were just as hard hit by the same storms as others cannot be compensated for their losses. That is why the State is stepping up to bridge this unfair gap in insurance coverage.

Under our Housing Recovery Program, homeowners will be fully compensated for all repairs of damage. We are pleased to deliver this assistance so that all New Yorkers can move forward on the path to a full recovery.”

“Many New Yorkers were hopeful that they would be covered since they had purchased flood insurance,” said Director of the Governor’s Office of Storm Recovery, Seth Diamond. “However, they were unaware of this NFIP rule regarding earth movements. As a result, these homeowners did not receive the assistance they were seeking, and many who did not have the resources to rebuild on their own are still not back in their homes. Now, these residents will be eligible to receive funding through the State’s home rebuilding program instead, and their eligible rebuilding costs will be covered.”

The State will continue to conduct outreach to homeowners to ensure that those interested can apply for assistance. In addition, the Office of Storm Recovery will provide technical assistance to the communities under the New York Rising Community Reconstruction Program to evaluate and determine if local resiliency measures could assist with limiting the impact of earth movements. For more information, call 1-855-697-7263 or visit www.stormrecovery.ny.gov.

Governor Cuomo created the Office of Storm Recovery in June 2013 to centralize recovery and rebuilding efforts in storm affected municipalities throughout the State. In close collaboration with local and community leaders in these areas, the Office is working to respond to communities’ most urgent rebuilding needs while also identifying long-term and innovative solutions to strengthen the State’s infrastructure and critical systems for the future. Storm Recovery programs include the Recreate NY Smart Home program, which provides homeowners with assistance for home repairs/rehabilitation, mitigation and elevation, and buyouts, and the Small Business program, which provides small business grants of $50,000 or more, as well as low-interest loans.

 

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VOICE OF GOLF to Andy Spano on the Greening of Tee Times

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WPCNR CLUBHOUSE. From “The Voice of Golf,” March 15, 2004: Bob Petrucci, a tireless crusader for better golf in Westchester County on public courses, upon learning of the County Executive’s feelings on tee times, finds himself in agreement with Andy Spano, and files this commentary:

       The EZ Reserve Tee Time system was to accommodate those golfers that slept in their cars to get early morning weekend golf tee times.

       So declared County Executive Andy Spano to one of our group’s people last night.

       We agree,  We’ve been saying exactly that for two years now.

       And that means that selling weekend tee times beyond 8-9am is absolutely improper; especially thru noon or so as they are again doing this year.

       This will again make the county a golf financial loser.

       Someone else in the administration then, in his short-sighted greed, went way beyond the county executive’s wishes and sold tee times beyond 8-9am…for a paltry (in comparison) $125,000 and LOST about $3 MILLION from the $600 Season Pass we’ve repeatedly urged.

       It is not likely that the 8000 golfers needed would now spend $600 when they can’t get a weekend tee time to finish 18 holes.

       That then makes the LOSER LIST:…the county, it’s taxpayers, the golfers, the pro shops, the restaurants, other concessions, etc. 

       So why were those “beyond 8-9am tee times” sold?…

       and who allowed it, in opposition to the county executive’s statement? 

       Whoever did should be fired and the county executive should rescind all those times sold beyond 8-9am.

       And then, without any delay, the $600 Season Pass should be instituted.

Bob and Jenny Petrucci

County Residents Protection Alliance

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Most Residents Return to Tompkins Manor Apartments. Cause Being Investigated.

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WPCNR FIRE DISPATCH. March 15, 2004: WPCNR has been informed that White Plains Fire Inspectors are still searching for the cause of the fire at Tompkins Manor Cooperative Apartments on Central Avenue Sunday evening. The determination of a cause is being hampered, sources say by the fact that Apartment 409 collapsed down into Apartment 309, and the picking  through of the debris takes time.


A source familiar with the present situation said that 75% of the residents were allowed to return to their residents by 2 A.M. Monday morning, more residents closer to the scene of the fire, after inspections by the Building Department were cleared to return by 11 A.M. Monday morning. As of Monday evening, residents of 7 to 10 apartments were still not allowed to return because of the smoke and water damage in proximity to their apartments. Sunday evening residents stayed at The Thomas H. Slater Center, but WPCNR is unaware of the arrangements for Monday evening.


 

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County Republicans Host National GOP Convention Chairman March 31

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WPCNR CAMPAIGN 2004. From the Westchester County Republican Committee. March 15, 2004: Chairwoman RoseMarie Panio and The Westchester Republican County Committee will honor Mr. William Harris, Chief Executive Officer of the 2004 Republican National Convention at this year’s annual dinner to be held on Wednesday, March 31, 2004 at the Rye Town Hilton.


 



 


Mr. William Harris, who will be the featured guest, has an extensive background in local, regional and national politics.  As a conservative activist, Mr. Harris helped the Southern United States into a growth area for Republicans in the 1970’s and 1980’s.  He has served in every Republican presidential campaign and has been involved in every Republican convention since 1972.  As Executive Director of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, he was instrumental in winning the Republican majority in the United States Senate in 1994.


 


Chairwoman Panio states that a top priority this year is to win New York State’s 31 Electoral Votes for President Bush and she believes that Westchester County can play a key role in achieving that goal.  Mr. Harris’ presence at the annual dinner should inspire all Republicans in the County to become actively involved in working to return President Bush to office.


 


Jerold Ruderman, Esq., Regional Managing Partner for the law firm Wilson Elser Moskowitz Edelman & Dicker LLP, a longtime outstanding supporter of the Westchester GOP and James E. Cavanaugh, former Westchester GOP Chairman and current Chief Operating Officer for the Battery Park City Authority in New York City will also be honored.


 


For information on how to place an ad in the Dinner Journal, become a sponsor, order tickets or reserve a table, please call Republican Headquarters at (914) 949-3020.

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Council to Consider Farmer’s Market, Fountain Improvements, 221 Main FEIS Tues

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WPCNR COMMON COUNCIL LINEUP. March 15, 2004: City Hall has announced the Common Council will hold a Special Meeting in the Mayor’s Conference Room Tuesday afternoon at 5:30 P.M. to take up the matter of the International Farmers Market, improvements to Renaissance Plaza Fountain (which is scheduled to go wet again in mid-April), and the big item of the evening, consideration of the Final Environmental Impact Statement on the Cappelli Hotel project at 221 Main Street. However, sources have indicated to WPCNR that  Louis Cappelli, the Super Developer, is not expected to attend the meeting.

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City Gets Million from FNMA — Lowey to Bayer to Passarella. 200 homes Benefit.

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WPCNR MAIN STREET JOURNAL. By John F. Bailey. March 15, 2004: The city will begin putting out contracts for bid in the next three weeks on the first of 200 homes and multi-family units across the city, that will be rehabilitated under the city’s Community Development Program, the  White Plains Housing Rehabilitation Program, using $1,000,000 in Fannie Mae mortgage money secured as a result of a chance conversation Representative Nita Lowey had with Naomi Bayer, director of Fannie Mae’s New York Partnership Office two years ago. It is the first time a city or town, anywhere in the U.S.A., has received a Fannie Mae Line of Credit.



AT LONG LAST MILLION: Mayor Joseph Delfino of White Plains, Congresswoman Nita Lowey, left, with Mike Passarella, Director of the White Plains Housing Rehabilitation Program, and Aubria Corbitt, Senior Deputy Director, FNMA New York Partnership Office. A news conference today at city hall, formally announced the $1,000,000 line of credit that was first announced at a Common Council meeting  November 20 last fall. Mike Passarella, (second from left), said the check had been received, and he has 200 buildings, both homes and multi-family housing in the city averaging $5-6,000 in repairs each ready to loan out the funds.


It Started With a Simple Conversation…


Mike Passarella, the “commander” of the Rehabilitation Program since its inception 29 years ago, told WPCNR today that he had never considered Fannie Mae as a source of a line of credit before Ms. Bayer approached him and discussed the possibility of granting Fannie Mae mortgage funds for the Rehab program, which was about two years ago.


That was when Mr. Passarella started to explore the possibility with Fannie Mae. Usually Fannie Mae only provides mortgages for new construction, not existing structures, Passarella said, and that was why he had not considered them before. 


In the news conference, Congresswoman Nita Lowey said she had spoken casually to Ms. Bayer “about two years ago asking  what could be done about existing housing, and held some more informal conversations.”  From there, according to Mr. Passarella, Ms. Bayer contacted him and a dialogue developed.


Lowey said she felt rehabilitating existing multi-family housing was important, because the person making a minimum wage today cannot afford the fair market value of a two-bedroom apartment. She said this meant professionals cannot affrod to live in areas where they work, and through this line of credit, she said the government is creating homes for those in need, and maintaining existing housing stock was “a critical component.”


Mayor Delfino thanked Ms. Lowey and Fannie Mae for investing in the future of the city.


Aubria Corbitt, Senior Deputy Director, Fannie Mae New York Partnership Office, congratulated the Housting Rehabilitation Program “together with Mike to make this happen.”


Ms. Corbitt added that the effort to secure a line of credit for the program, began 18 months ago, and described the program “as exactly the kind of partnership FNMA seeks to support, already committed, housing ready to be repaired.”


She said as part of Fannie Mae’s American Dream Commitment initiative, Fannie had $2 trillion to commit to first time homebuyers and to  raise minority home ownership rate to above 50%. At this point, she said it was “considerably south of that.” Currently 70% of White Americans own their own home, and minorities, less than 50%.  



LOWEY TO BAYER TO PASSARELLA: Ms. Bayer told WPCNR that Fannie Mae had been looking for a “pilot program” to use part of their  $2 trillion in mortgaging funds, to rehabilitate existing affordable housing, maintaining the nation’s current housing stock, and that the White Plains program under Mr. Passarella had the kind of track record that warranted committing Fannie Mae funds.  Photo by WPCNR News


Ms. Bayer added that when other cities hear of the White Plains program, the first in the nation to receive a Fannie Mae Line, she expected to be asked for lines of credit from those cities, indicating that a procedure along the White Plains Home Rehabilitation Program would be one a city should model. 


Ms. Bayer and her entourage in an informal chat with Commissioner of Planning Susan Habel after the news conference, expressed interest in helping with lines of credit to support the White Plains affordable housing initiatives which include involving 6% setting aside of new apartments for low and moderate income housing and condominium owner contributions to assist low and moderate income homebuyers.


Asked if more funds would be forthcoming to the White Plains Home Rehabilitation Program after this initial $1 Million line of credit, Ms. Bayer’s Senior Deputy Director of the Fannie Mae New York Partnership Office said that funds were “unlimited,” and Ms. Bayer said after six months they would look at the program and consider committing more to White Plains. 


Passarella: Roughly $15,000,000 more needed. 2,500 homes, multi-family Buildings in city in need.


Passarella told WPCNR  he had identified 2,500 homes and multi-family units (consisting of buildings containing 6 to 10 apartments), that could use rehabilitation. Passarella said most owners have to refinance with their banks in order to improve their homes. By qualifying for a WP Home Rehabilitation loan, he said, they do not have to refinance.  Passarella estimated that most of these 2,500 needy dwellings would require loans of some $6,000, meaning roughly the city could rehab their existing deteriorating home stock with loans of $15,000,000.


Mayor Delfino introducing the news conference referenced the city effort to make available more affordable housing and praised Mr. Passarella’s Home Rehabilitation Program for having made $8.2 Million in private loans for rehabilitaion, given out $9.7 million in community development funds resulting in the renovation of over 3,500 units.


He noted proudly that this is the first line of credit Fannie Mae has ever given to a city or town in the United States. He said Mr. Passarella’s efforts “have brought us here today. Your work has made it possible.”


 


Successful Program,


As reported in November on WPCNR, The Community Development Fund was founded, Passarella said, with $2 Million in funds from the Department of Housing and Urban Development. Since then, Passerella said Community Development has made loans to 2,700 individuals, leveraging $10 Million in building improvements and has generated $380,000 in interest annually for the city to replenish the fund.


As of November, Mr. Passarella reports the city had $500,000 in loans out to about 100 property owners in the city, paying the city $40,000 interest every month.


The line of credit, Passarella, said in November is a 3 year loan of $1,000,000 at 3%, and brings the Community Fund reserve at less than $1 Million up to $1.8 million.



THE CHECK COMES IN: Left to right, Naomi Bayer of Fannie Mae, Mayor Joseph Delfino of White Plains, Congresswoman Nita Lowey, Mike Passarella, Head of the White Plains Housing Rehabilitation Program, and Aubria Corbitt of Fannie Mae. Passarella said the money had been received and he was about to begin disbursing it to 200 properties already selected. The quartet hold a symobolic check for the first Fannie Mae line of credit awarded to a city or town in the U.S.A. Photo by WPCNR News


Lowey: Tommorrow Housing Authority Restoration, More Funds for Commuter Security.


In the City Hall rotunda, Congresswoman Lowey was asked by WPCNR if there were any plans afoot to seek restoration of the 25% cuts in HUD aid to Housing Authority programs initiated by the Bush Administration in 2001. She told us, “It’s the Republicans. Everything is being cut.”


Lowey praised the work Executive Director of the White Plains Housing Authority, Mack Carter, had been doing, having just toured the Winbrook complex with Mr. Carter recently.


Asked if there was any way to restore those funds taken away, Ms. Lowey, said, “change the administration. It’s the Republicans.”


Ms. Lowey revealed to WPCNR that congress will be supplying more aid to the Department of Homeland Security, as a result of the Madrid train bombings, to enhance protection in rail and commuter staging areas in this country.


 


 


 


 

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