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WHITE PLAINS REMEMBERS THE FALLEN, GIVES THANKS SO THAT WE MAY LIVE IN SAFETY,NOT FEAR” MAYOR SAYS

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WHITE PLAINS VETERANS LEAD THE MEMORIAL DAY PARADE THIS MORNING.

WHITE PLAINS COMMON COUNCIL AND REPRESNTATIVES, STEPPING SMARTLY  (FROM LEFT) JUSTIN BRASCH, SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS JOSEPH RICCA, COUNCILWOMAN NADINE HUNT-ROBINSON, CONGRESSMAN JAMAAL BOWMAN,  COUNCILMAN JOHN MARTIN, COUNTY LEGISLATOR BEN BOYKIN,  COUNCILWOMAN JENNIFER PUJA AND MAYOR THOMAS ROACH

THE PARADE STARED PRECISELY AT 10 A.M.. ONE OF THE LONGER PARADES IN RECENT YEARS.

 

 

MAYOR ROACH PRESENTED  THE DECEASED VETERAN HONOREE AWARD TO THEODORE J LEE, JR., WHOSE DAUGHTER (Center) ACCEPTED THE AWARD FOR HER FATHER. MAYOR ROACH CALLED HIM A PERSON WHO ALWAYS MADE YOU SMILE AND A WONDERFUL CITIZEN OF WHITE PLAINS. HIS DAUGHTER IS THE 4TH GENERATION MEMBER TO RUN THE LEE FUNERAL HOME.

Veteranss  Robert “Bob” Wynn, U.S Marines; Stephen Wallfish, Army, Jewish War Veterans Post #191 , and Dan Griffin, Army, American Legion Post 135 read the names of the 66 White Plains Citizens who have died in United States Wars in service to their country, dating back to the American Revolution.

THE MAYOR HONORED THE GRAND MARSHALL OF THE PARADE, CHARLES MEBANE, SR. OF THE U.S. AIR FORCE. THE MAYOR SAID SAID  MR. MEBANE AID HE WAS A ELEANOR ROOSEVELT AND HARRY TRUMAN SOLDIER, WHO SERVED WITH THE TUSKEGEE AIRMEN, AND WAS DISCHARGED IN 1951. HE RETURNED TO WHITE PLAINS AND BECAME A BARBER, WHERE MAYOR SAID THAT WHILE MOST BARBERSHOPS TALKED THE SPORTS SCORES MR.  MAGRANE TALKED TO THE YOUNG PEOPLE WHO CAME IN ABOUT THE CHALLENGES OF LIFE. TR. MAGRANE (IN NATTY TAN CAP), REMARED ” PEOPLE ASK HOW I’M FEELING, I SAY SOMETIMES I DON’T FEEL GOOD, BUT IT’S BETTER THAN NOT FEELING AT ALL.”

 

In closing remarks, Mayor Tom Roach, said “On this beautiful Memorial Day, we are so grateful to the last measure of devotion these veterans gave to their country.” He said that he is correspondence with a member of the city council in Kyiv, Ukraine. He reflected how when school closes here it is because of weather, but the council member’s city is under seige. The Mayor said we in this country are fortunate to be safe from the forces that would threaten our safety and sense of peace. He said we have the sacrifice of our veterans who have died fighting for freedom to thank for our security today.

After placement of wreaths, Cynthia Kauffman, Daughters of Liberty read Flanders Fields

In Flanders Fields

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.

 

A RIFLE SALUTE TO THE DEPARTED VETERANS BY THE FIRING SQUAD AND COLOR GUARD, AMERICAN LEGION POST #135 ECHOED ACROSS THE SILENT CEMETARY GROUNDS.

TAPS WAS PERFORMED BY PETER GASIEWICZ, MARINE INFANTRY VETERAN, BUGLES ACROSS AMERICA

The  White Plains High School Marching Band performed great marches all the way to the Rural Cemetery, entertaing folks lining North Broadway  including a stirring National Anthem, and the Drum Corps kept groups, scout packs, The Rotary and civic groups in step.  

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JENETTE GISBERT EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF VOLUNTEER NEW YORK ON THE VOLUNTEER SITUATION IN WESTCHESTER COUNTY

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JENETTE GISBERT  OF VOLUNTEER NEW YORK ON THE WESTCHESTER NEED FOR VOLUNTEERS NOW

JENETTE GISBERT, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, VOLUNTEERNEWYORK  WATCH HER “PEOPLE TO BE HEARD” INTERVIEW ON www.wpcommunitymedia.org

CURRENT VOLUNTEERS NEEDED BY ORGANIZATIONS  LISTED BELOW CLICK ON TITLE OF ORGANIZATION TO VOLUNTEER, MORE INFORMATION:

 

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CALLING ALL VOLUNTEERS. CALLING ALL VOLUNTEERS

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LOCAL VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES
May 25, 2023
City of New Rochelle
Weekends from 5/26-9/30
New Rochelle
Rockland Farm Alliance
Wednesdays & Saturdays
New City
Family Services of Westchester
6/2 @ 9:30am
White Plains
Junior League of Central Westchester
6/3 @ 10:00am
Port Chester
Ward Acres Conservancy
6/6 @ 10:00am; Tuesdays
New Rochelle
VA Hudson Valley
Flexible schedule
Montrose
SUMMER 😎 VOLUNTEERING
Got plans this summer? Whether you want to read to kids during the school break, tend to a community garden, or become a camp counselor, we’ve got your summer of service covered!
Open Door Medical Center
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Ossining
Mount Kisco Interfaith
Food Pantry
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Virtual
Mount Kisco Interfaith
Food Pantry
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Virtual
Your Life at 10
Weekdays;
flexible schedule
Virtual
Garito Manor
Weekly
New Rochelle
United Community Center of Westchester
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New Rochelle
Westchester Jewish Community Services
Weekday evenings
White Plains
New Rochelle School District
Weekly
New Rochelle
YWCA of White Plains & Central Westchester
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White Plains
Mount Kisco Interfaith
Food Pantry
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Virtual
Mount Kisco Interfaith
Food Pantry
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Virtual
Mount Kisco Interfaith
Food Pantry
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Virtual
Mount Kisco Interfaith
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Virtual
Mount Kisco Interfaith
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Virtual
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Food Pantry
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Volunteer New York!
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Tarrytown drop-off
United for the Troops
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Shrub Oak drop-off
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Sunrise Day Camp
6/29-8/18; weekly
Orangeburg
Family Service Society of Yonkers
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Ossining & Yonkers
Neighbors Link
9/12 @ 6:00pm; Tuesdays
Ossining
D.I.G. Farm
5/25 @ 9:00am;
Thursdays & Saturdays
North Salem
Pleasantville Music Festival
7/8; multiple opportunities
Pleasantville
Afya Foundation
Weekdays
Yonkers
Meals on Wheels of Rockland
Select Fridays @ 9:00am
Nanuet
American Cancer Society
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Throughout Putnam
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Throughout New Rochelle
TRA
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Throughout Westchester & Putnam
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It Takes a Village 10591
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D.I.G. Farm
5/25 @ 9:30am;
Tuesdays & Thursdays
Bedford Hills
LIFE Progressive Services
5/25 @ 10:00am;
Wednesdays, Thursdays & Saturdays
Mount Vernon
D.I.G. Farm
5/25 @ 5:00pm;
Thursdays
Bedford
Mount Kisco Interfaith
Food Pantry
5/26 @ 9:00am; Fridays
Mount Kisco
D.I.G. Farm
5/26 @ 9:00am;
Mondays & Fridays
Mount Vernon
Westchester Parks
Foundation
5/26 @ 10:00am
Peekskill
D.I.G. Farm
5/30 @ 2:00pm;
Tuesdays
Brewster
Mount Kisco Interfaith
Food Pantry
5/30 @ 3:00pm; Tuesdays
Mount Kisco
Mount Kisco Interfaith
Food Pantry
5/30 @ 4:45pm; Tuesdays
Mount Kisco
Mount Kisco Interfaith
Food Pantry
5/30 @ 5:00pm; Tuesdays
Mount Kisco
Mount Kisco Interfaith
Food Pantry
6/1 @ 8:00am; Thursdays
Mount Kisco
Yonkers CAP
6/2 @ 8:00am;
select Fridays
Yonkers
Ward Acres
Conservancy
6/3 @ 10:00am; Saturdays
New Rochelle
Westchester Parks Foundation
6/8 & 6/14 @ 11:00am
Armonk
Neighbors Link
6/9 @ 10:00am;
Fridays
Yonkers
New Rochelle CAP
6/13 @ 10:00am & 1:00pm; second Tuesdays
New Rochelle
Meals on Wheels
of Rockland
6/17 @ 10:00am
Tarrytown
City of New Rochelle
6/22 @ 10:00am; select weekdays
New Rochelle
D.I.G. Farm
6/23 @ 9:00am;
Fridays
Bedford Hills
D.I.G. Farm
6/26 @ 8:30am; Mondays & Fridays
Bedford Hills
D.I.G. Farm
6/26 @ 9:30am;
Mondays & Fridays
Bedford
D.I.G. Farm
6/27 @ 9:30am; Tuesdays & Thursdays
Bedford
Diabetes Research Institute Foundation
10/2 @ 7:00am & 3:00pm
Mamaroneck
DOROT
Westchester
Flexible schedule
Throughout Westchester
Westchester Parks Foundation
Select days @ 8:45am, 11:15am & 1:45pm
White Plains
Access Equestrian Adaptive Riding & Horsemanship
Weekly
Mount Kisco
HOPE Community Services
Weekly
New Rochelle/Virtual
White Plains Hospital
Weekdays; flexible schedule
White Plains
Hammond Museum & Japanese Stroll Garden
Flexible schedule
North Salem
DOROT Westchester
Flexible schedule
Throughout Westchester
Alzheimer’s Association – Hudson Valley Chapter
Flexible schedule
Purchase
Burke Rehabilitation Hospital
Weekly @ 11:00am
White Plains
Northern Westchester Hospital
Flexible schedule
Mount Kisco
White Plains Hospital
Flexible schedule
White Plains
Family Services of Westchester
Flexible schedule
White Plains
Latino U College
Access
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White Plains/Virtual
Alternatives to Violence Project
Flexible schedule
Scarsdale
United Hospice
Flexible schedule
New City
Lifting up Westchester
Tuesdays or Fridays
White Plains
United Community Center of Westchester
Weekdays
New Rochelle
Northern Westchester
Hospital
Flexible schedule
Mount Kisco
DOROT Westchester
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Throughout Westchester
VA Hudson Valley
Health Care System
Montrose
Burke Rehabilitation Hospital
Mondays @ 3:30pm
White Plains
Untermyer Gardens
Saturdays & Sundays @ 10:00am
Yonkers
Wartburg Adult Care Community
Flexible schedule
Mount Vernon
Gilda’s Club Westchester
Flexible schedule
White Plains
Percy Grainger Society
Monthly
White Plains
Unlocking Futures
Weekly
Throughout Rockland
City of New Rochelle
Flexible schedule
New Rochelle
BluePath Service Dogs
Flexible schedule
Throughout Westchester
& Putnam
Guiding Eyes
for the Blind
Weekly
Patterson/Yorktown Heights
Putnam Service Dogs
Flexible schedule
Throughout Westchester & Putnam
DOROT
Westchester
Flexible schedule
Throughout Westchester
Northern Westchester Hospital
Flexible schedule
Mount Kisco
Mental Health Association of Westchester
Tarrytown
Hope Not Handcuffs –
Hudson Valley
Flexible schedule
New Rochelle
Heartsong
Flexible schedule
White Plains
Westchester Children’s Association
White Plains
Brewster Theater Company
Flexible schedule
Carmel
Brewster Theater Company
Flexible schedule
Carmel
Brewster Theater Company
Flexible schedule
Carmel
Heartsong
Flexible schedule
White Plains
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IT’S GRILLIN’ TIME. THE INTREPID AMERICAN GRILLMAN RETURNS–A JULY 4TH TRADITION– ONE POLICY ALL AMERICANS CAN AGREE ON

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WPCNR GRILLMAN GAZETTE. By The Grillin Gourmet. ReInternetted from The CitizeNetReporter Archives of the Ancient Past. July 4, 2023:

No matter whether you’re a New York Liberal, a Michigan Wolverine, A Trump supporter, A Desantisman, BIDENET or California free spirit, there’s still one phenomenon the country still believes in AND IS SOLIDLY ALL IN ON– the American grillin’ Holiday Cookout.

Thanks to the chimney charcoal starter and its glowing orange coals, the backyard American barbeque DNA macho in the amateur chef was inordinately delayed by the coldest WETTEST  windiest spring in memory.

But today its 71  degrees in White Plains New York USA, CLIMBING TO 77 WABCCCCCC DEGREES. The immortal deejay Big Dan Ingram is telling you to “Roll Your Bod,” Beach  and the grill are  READY!

Steak was raised outside!

It was born to be cooked outside.

The outdoor charcoal grilled steak puts the steakhouse in its place!

In this griller’s opinion, outdoor grilling proves once again to be superior to the overpriced artificial-tasting butter steak.

Sleek decor and atmosphere cannot duplicate backyard origins.

The economy may be bobbing and weaving , your home equity shrinking, but  take heart even the hobo can grill! It’s part of American DNA. It’s Democracy!

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To do real steak right , you have to do it outside on charcoal.

The instinct of generations of the American backyard grilling  tradition passed up from  the cave, enjoyed at Valley Forge. Lewis and Clark bit into venison discovering the Northwest.

Cowboys sunk teeth into rare beef around chuck wagons on the prairie  and Miss Kitty’s Long Branch Saloon and up from the Southland , barbecue  inbred and passed on from American father to American son – cutting across nationality and station – gives you real steak – not $100 technology  enhanced cuts. 

Flaming charcoal makes steak a living thing in your mouth! Tastes so damn good.

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As long as the American grilling tradition is handed down, the pioneer “can-do” spirit lives! Look at those glowing babies romancing, enhancing that steak. It makes your mouth water!

Why go out for dinner when you can tap your inner griller and say I can cook steak better!

The difference is the air, the smoke, the way marinade just drips down into the coals and gets into the meat. It’s chemistry,  Americans! We need that American chemistry of gathering around the grill and socializing and appreciating each other and respecting each other.

What is it about the American Grillman that’s so special that his or hers backyard cuts  charred to perfection beat the insider  professionals’ inflation-friendly ostentatious steaks?

It’s the unique chemistry of being American and believing in the charcoal flames. The campfire. Delmonico’s.

On  Memorial Day, or Independence Day it’s a must. t’s not July 4 unless you’re grillin’. On Labor Day, if you’re not workin’, you’re grillin’.

There’s just something about the searing intensity of glowing charcoal combining mystically with the testosterone and instinctual synergy between red meat and the dedicated outdoor griller –  it beats in taste, juiciness and texture the contrived technology of the most expensive restaurant equipment.

No matter how tasty the megabuck meat is in the swank sticker shock steak palaces of the expense accounters, there’s always that artificial packaged taste that betrays the indoor steak. The butter softness. The soft crust of the black topped surface of the indoor steak just does not have the nubile grizzled roughhewn  rugged flamed, charred macho, and  reluctant yield of the outdoor one-on-one grilled steak that fights your bicuspids with spirit, and sealed in juiciness.

The Chimney Starter the Secret.

Pour in a helping of those ultimate black beauties, Kingsford charcoal briquettes into the chimney top.

Fifteen minutes before the wife has the sides ready, take a wooden match to the apertures in the base of the starter and light up the edges of the newsprint. Within 10-15 minutes you’ve got coals a firey orange red. You’re ready to outcook the pros.

After the Griller’s wife has marinated the meat –  the bone trimmed Porterhouse is sizzzzzzzlllllllllling in the caressing deep searing heat of glowing orange briquettes – 4  minutes a side in 400 degree heat and deft turning and surgical “rareness checks” – the seasoned grilling caballero  simply has a feel for the meat – passed genetically down from generations of American grillers.

The combination of cauldron, flavored steel grill rods and perfect flames creates the grillmark “brand” lets you know just by looking at the cut, you’re going to get the natural taste of the backyard steak –  No one can do a great cut like you can!

As any redblooded American Grillman will tell you when doing a steak – you can’t deliver a steak by manual or instructions.

You have to feel the meat. Feel it cook. You just know its time. Hearty smoke promising juicy meat that melts in your mouth creates an experience only the grillman or GrillGal knows.

Every cut is not the same.

Each deserves a surgeon’s attention to cooking timing and detail. Surgical checks are necessary.

The American Grillman becomes one with the meat. With eye and knowledge of the hue of red – you just  know  by instinct when she’s done.

Cooking is slowed down by moving the meats to the side off the heat to keep the American beauties warm

With the wife’s deft presentation, sweet potato fries, corn pudding, fresh beans and mushrooms the Grillman’s natural art creates the taste of traditional American 3-Day Weekend.

Get those grills handy and ready to fire up to get that taste of American unity once again.

When you’re over the grill, you’re King of the Hill.

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COVID CASES NOSEDIVE ACROSS USA YOUR LOCAL EPIDEMIOLOGIST REPORTS.

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Catch up quick: COVID-19

MAY 25, 2023

We survived the end of the public health emergency. Here’s the state of affairs.

Surveillance

SARS-CoV-2 is nosediving across all metrics in all regions of the U.S.: hospitalizations, deaths, emergency room departments, and wastewater. Wastewater is still higher than in 2020 and 2021, though.

We’ve been hitting new lows in death counts, too. In fact, excess deaths are hovering at only ~1% above pre-pandemic rates (at the height of the pandemic we were at 47%). In other words, things are looking good right now.

It will be interesting to watch what happens this summer, as the South has consistently faced a COVID-19 wave. Most scientists (including me) are betting that we will continue to see wavelets, at least until winter.

Virologists continue to identify “cryptic lineages” in wastewater, though.

These are highly mutated COVID-19 variants that randomly pop up on our radar. The latest (right below) was detected ~12 hours ago. None have taken off yet, but are a lingering reminder that a variant of concern could be brewing in the background. We still have many unanswered questions about cryptic lineages: What is the health status of the person? Do they have long COVID? Where in the body is the virus replicating?

SARS-CoV-2 cryptic lineage examples from Marc Johnson @SolidEvidence

Noteworthy COVID-19 news

  • Indoor air quality. Up until now, the CDC recommended that we “improve ventilation” to reduce transmission. But by how much? Well, for the first time, CDC set minimum ventilation targets for indoor spaces: 5 air changes per hour. This may sound like boring news, but it’s huge for public health. Not just for viruses but health overall. While this standard isn’t mandatory, you should follow up with your business, school, place of worship, etc. to ensure it’s being met now.
    POLL

    Are you interested in a deeper YLE dive into this ventilation standard topic?

    Yes, would be super helpful
    Maybe
    Nope, I’ve already fallen asleep
    8831 VOTES · 6 HOURS REMAINING
  • Fall boosters. The WHO officially recommends a monovalent (one strain) booster that targets XBB—an Omicron subvariant—this fall. Countries don’t have to follow suit. (The U.S. chose a different vaccine formula than WHO recommended last year, for example.) A big FDA meeting is coming in June to discuss the U.S. plan.
  • Mask usagePolling on May 6-9 found 46% of respondents wore a mask at least some of the time in the past 7 days. Just looking outside, I was surprised about this statistic, but probably because I’m white and in the suburbs, two groups with the lowest rates. We really need to improve masking among older adults, especially in times of high transmission.
  • Potential relief for immunocompromised. AstraZeneca is on track for an Evushield replacement. Their Phase III clinical trial is showing promising results. An emergency use authorization “could be here by the second half of this year.”

Interesting science updates

  • Changes in transmission. The risk of household transmission is increasing as Omicron continues to mutate. In addition, expect to get infected ~1 day quicker than before (average 4 days). Infection risk continues to be higher among unvaccinated versus vaccinated people.
  • Missed opportunity. COVID-19 vaccinations rates among children are abysmal. One study found that if we reached flu vaccine coverage levels over this past winter, we could have prevented 10,019 pediatric hospitalizations and 5,448,694 days of school absence for COVID-19. Better luck next year?
  • Risk of long COVID after second infection. Risk of long COVID decreases after second infections, but is not zero. A new preprint found the risk of long COVID after a second infection is 1 in 40 for those over 16 years old and 1 in 165 for those under 16 years old. (As a comparison, the annual risk of getting into a car accident is 1 in 30 and the annual risk of permanent impairment is 1 in 700.)

What’s next?

We are in for a few quiet weeks (or months? who knows). In June, we should have clarity on the fall COVID-19 vaccine plan in the States. Stay tuned.

Love, YLE

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WHITE PLAINS WEEK REPORT MAY 26 AT www.wpcommunitymedia.org

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JOHN BAILEY AND THE NEWS THIS WEEK EVERY WEEK ON WHITE PLAINS WEEK FOR 22 YEARS.

FIRST MIGRANTS COME TO WESTCHESTER COUNTY. WHAT WE KNOW, DON’T KNOW AND WHY WE DON’T KNOW–THE LEADERS DON’T KNOW WHAT TO DO

PLAYLAND OPENS, JOHN BAILEY TAKES YOU THROUGH THE NEW PLAYLAND.

SHOCKER OF THE WEEK : PRESIDENT’S NEW ASYLUM GUIDELINES WILL BAR THOUSANDS FROM ASYLUM

COVID CASES EASING DOWN SLOWLY NATIONWIDE  LAST THREE MONTHS

GOVERNOR HOCHUL ASKS WASHINGTON TO SEND JUDGES, CLERKS AND MONEY TO HOUSE NEW YORK CITY’A 71,000 MIGRANTS. 

 

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WHY I WRITE FORCE OF INFECTION

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‘WE’LL HELP OUT!” on HOUSING MIGRANTS, COUNTY EXECUTIVE LATIMER ASSURES

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WPCNR Migrants Today. May 24, 2023:

Being interviewed on WOR Radio Tuesday, County Executive George Latimer  in a statement implied he would accept New York City migrants placements in Westchester County:

He said: “Our attitude isn’t as severe as some of our neighboring counties. If we’re trying to help release a little bit of the pressure valve in New York City, we’ll help out. We’ll do a certain amount, and we’ll manage it, and we’ll try to make sure that it goes well.”

On WVOX Tuesday morning he said there was no “sanctuary” towns or cities in the county and no other locations other than the Yonkers Ramada Inn where 50 rooms are allocated and paid for by New York City to house migrants currently, at this time.

At the end of last week, the county has not yet  responded to WOR questions as to how the county was mobilizing with Westchester organizations, businesses, hotels and cities since last week  to line up possible migrant housing locations in the county.

WPCNR has learned that a number of non-profit organizations have been meeting and discussing needs and logistics as to how their organizations can respond to help and provide for New York’s 71,000 migrants needing housing.

The Hudson Valley Gateway Association of Realtors, asked by WPCNR if the realtors discussing a policy to find housing available for migrants in a statement wrote:

” HGAR does  not have a statement about housing at this point.  As for  foreclosures (as housing locations)  that would be up to individual brokers.” (The Regional Realtors are having a conference the first week in June where how real estate professionals could help the region respond to the migrant crisis by discussing possibilities, but it is not planned to do so at this time.)

Modayn NY Governor Kathy Hochul in an appearance in Brooklyn with Mayor Eric Adams, said the state is coordinating  locations to house the migrants. She did  not prohibit counties from  responding with their own local location suggestions. She called on the Biden Administration to provide Judges, Clerks and Money to expedite the asylum procedure.

in her address to the state Monday, she said:

“Right now, we have members of my senior team literally embedded working shoulder to deal with finding space, just emergency shelters, wherever we can find it. We have over 1,500 National Guard members. What are they doing? Building cribs, running out for food, making you feel secure, helping people apply for their asylum status, becoming a friend to people. And I want to thank our National Guard. This is a hurricane of sorts and they’ve been out there since for many months, and I want to thank them for what they’re doing.  

And we are identifying additional shelters.

“The city is overflowing. The mayor has used every ounce of creativity with him and his team to find space, and we are asking for more space. We’re looking at hangers at JFK.

We’ve asked for Floyd Bennett Field to stand up a major operation. We have other facilities we’ve been talking about. We’ll be announcing more on that briefly.

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MASS SHOOTINGS CASCADING IMPACT ON COMMUNITIES

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