JANUARY 2, 2026—JUSTIN BRASCH TAKES OATH OF OFFICE AND BECOMES MAYOR OF WHITE PLAINS NEW YORK USA

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WPCNR SIDEWALKS OF WHITE PLAINSBy John Bailey. January 2, 2026:

Former Councilman Justin Brasch of  the last 8 years, was sworn in as the 19th Mayor of White Plains this morning. Attorney General of the State of New York Letitia James administered the oath of office while Mayor Brasch’s family looked on.

Mayor Brasch started in public service as an intern when he was 17 and his lifelong dream was to be an elected official and Friday he achieved that. An impromptu gathering of citizens filled the White Plains High School Auditorium and a host of elected officials filled the dais to share their experiences with the Mayor-to-Be praising his hard work dedication to “being there” when needed. State Senator Shelley Mayer presided over the ceremony with dignity and poise, saying White Plains very fortunate to have him as their new Mayor.

During his Inauguration Speech, Mayor Brasch announced two major appointments to his new administration. Karen Pasquale  of White Plains is being appointed Chief of Staff, and Wade Hardy is being appointed Commissioner of Public Safety. Brasch promised an open administration and urged citizens to call heads of departments directly to report matters that concerned them, a distinct departure previous administrations He also said he would appoint a Director of Services.

Here are two WPCNR videos of Mayor-to-be Mr. Brasch being administered the Oath of Office by the Attorney General of the State of New York Letitia James  and the moment  when he becomes the Mayor, followed by Mr. Brasch’s Inauguration Address.

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JANUARY 1, 2026– COUNTY EXECUTIVE KEN JENKINS IS INAUGURATED FOR FIRST 4 YEAR TERM. JEN PUJA SWORN IN AS COUNTY LEGISLATOR. TOM ROACH IS SWORN IN AS COUNTY CLERK

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(White Plains, NY) – Kenneth W. Jenkins was officially sworn in as Westchester County Executive during an Inauguration Ceremony held at Purchase College, marking the start of a new three-year term in office.

The ceremony reflected both continuity and transition, celebrating the County Executive’s leadership over the past year and setting the stage for the work ahead. Jenkins took the oath of office administered by the Honorable Anne E. Minihan, pledging to uphold the Constitution of the United States, the Constitution of the State of New York and the Charter of Westchester County.

The Inauguration also included the swearing-in of County Clerk Thomas Roach and County Legislators Jennifer Puja and Anant Nambiar, along with invocations and benedictions representing the County’s diverse faith communities, congratulatory messages from state and federal leaders, and a year-end video highlighting accomplishments across Westchester County government.

In his inaugural remarks, County Executive Jenkins reaffirmed his commitment to fiscal responsibility, public safety, infrastructure investment, environmental stewardship and delivering results for residents in every community across Westchester.

Jenkins said: “In my first year as County Executive, I’ve been guided by a simple principle: leadership that listens, acts and delivers for the people of Westchester County. We’ve strengthened our financial footing, invested in housing and infrastructure, expanded educational and economic opportunities, and made real progress on public safety — all while staying true to the values that unite us. This is just the beginning. Together, we will continue to build a Westchester where opportunity is real, government is responsive, and every community thrives.  We’ve proven that responsible leadership works.”

Roach said: “I am honored to have been sworn in as Westchester County Clerk and grateful to the residents of Westchester County for placing their faith and trust in me to serve our community.”

 

Puja said: “It is an incredible honor to serve as a Westchester County Legislator for the district I’ve called home my entire life. I’m grateful for the trust that residents have placed in me. Together, rooted in shared history and united by a common future, we will move this district forward and in unity.” 

 

Nambiar: “I am very honored to be elected to represent District 7 on the Westchester County Board of Legislators. I’m also very proud to be the first South Asian and Hindu elected, and look forward to working with my colleagues and the County Executive and team to solve the difficult, important problems that our residents prioritize.”

The ceremony concluded with a reception celebrating the newly sworn-in officials and their continued service to the people of Westchester County.

Jenkins previously served a one-year term following a special election.

This swearing-in begins a full three-year term, rather than the traditional four-year term, as a result of changes to New York State election law that adjusted the County Executive election cycle. Under the revised law, the 2026–2028 term aligns Westchester County’s executive elections with the State’s updated voting calendar.

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JANUARY 1, 2026– THERE IS STILL TIME, BROTHERS AND SISTERS TO “FINETUNE” YOURSELF

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THE REPORTER LOOKS AT HIS  IMPERFECT LIFE  AND HIS 17 RESOLUTIONS FOR 2026

  1. OVERCOME FEAR
  2. REPORT THE TRUTH
  3. NOT GET MAD AT EVERYTHING.
  4. FORGIVE PEOPLE’S WEAKNESSES, INCOMPETANCE, AND FEAR.
  5. PUT IN HEARING AIDS BEFORE PRESS CONFERENCES, ENTERTAINING GATHERINGS, INTERVIEWS AND DURING EVENINGS WITH SPOUSE.
  6. FIX THINGS. THINGS DON’T FIX THEMSELVES–BUT SOMETIMES THEY DO.
  7. DO NOT SNACK AFTER 8 PM OR BEFORE BEDTIME.
  8. EXERCISE: WALK SWIM.
  9. TAKE BETTER NOTES THAT I CAN READ.
  10. ASK HARDER QUESTIONS.
  11. START NOVEL.
  12. READ MORE.
  13. LOSE 10 POUNDS–DOWN TO 154.
  14. DO NOT LEAVE DIRTY DISHES AND GLASSES AROUND THE HOUSE.
  15. WATCH MORE BASEBALL IN PERSON.
  16. MAKE FRIENDS WITH HOUSE CAT WHO IS SUSPICIOUS OF ME.
  17. MAKE MORE INTRUSIVE PHONE CALLS.
  18. ORGANIZE BETTER.
  19. STOP BEING JUDGEMENTAL.
  20. WRITE MORE.
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DAVID CHONG WHITE PLAINS COMMISSIONER OF PUBLIC SAFETY MOVES ON

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WPCNR AULD LANG SYNE. By John F. Bailey. December 31, 2025:

This last day of the year not only ends the year, but it is also David Chong’s last day as Commissioner of Public Safety in White Plains.

Commissioner Chong’s greatest achievement as Commissioner the last 15 years is molding a police and fire department that is respected, appreciated, depended upon with confidence by the residents of this city  of all walks of life, resulting in a city where crimes have been substantially lowered the last 15 years.

He has diversified the police and fire departments expanding the number of women officers and officers of diverse backgrounds.

He created a division expert and experienced to handle domestic violence and crimes against women with sensitivity, counseling and trauma conciousness,  which are relentlessly promoted on the White Plains Department of Public Safety website.

The police are so respected in White Plains that no citizen is fearful of calling the police for any personal or neighborhood matter that they observe. Observers and witnesses  trust the police to talk to them during investigations.

The  Police number for general calls (not emergency, which is 911) 914-422-6111 number always answers and the appropriate division speedily directed to.

The website has recent police blotters, how the police can help you and is at https://whiteplainspublicsafety.com/

When an officer on patrol stops you  in White Plains they are courteous, cordial, polite and nonaggressive. The officer displays no “attitude.” It is the David Chong way.

The officer, He or She are poised and demonstrate quiet composure. If a ticket is in order, it is presented with professional restraint without opinion or embarrassing comments.  They enforce without embarrassment. They reflect their leader.

One of the most significant achievements of Commissioner Chong’s tour of duty in White Plains, in my opinion, as Commissioner was the record the police  have compiled of not shooting or killing any persons in the city with their weapons in 14 years from 2011, the date of the fatal Chamberlain shooting.

I salute his department for this impressive record of incident management without use of firearms.

Mr. Chong’s talent and leadership of the department that has through his persuasive experience and obvious training cultivated it and reflected down through his staff has created a city-friendly law enforcement operation.

He changed the perception and reception and interaction  with the Department with  the people. Mr. Chong instilled a feeling of confidence in the police where people will speak with the police during  investigations leading to quick apprehension and arrests.

He leaves his watch in White Plains today.

Thank you Commissioner Chong.

Your record says how good you are.

When I first met David Chong when he was appointed Deputy Commissioner of Public Safety to newly appointed Commissioner of Public Safety Frank Strawb, it was during the first ball drop during the Delfino Administration. Mr. Chong was with his officers on crowd control and  he said to me as he was turning to go closer to officers near the festive crowd:

“In White Plains, we lead from the front.”

That is what Mr. Chong always did for us.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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DECEMBER 29– WESTCHESTER LIBRARIES SYSTEMS ADVISES OF DELAYS IN DELIVERY OF NEW BOOKS

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You may notice delays of new books at libraries and longer wait times for holds due to the sudden closure of Baker & Taylor, the nation’s major library book distributor.

We apologize for any inconvenience and appreciate your patience as WLS member libraries work to secure materials through other sources. In the meantime, search the catalog, explore digital resources like Libby and Hoopla, or ask a librarian for recommendations.

(Editor’s Note: The problem has been created by the recent plans of Baker & Taylor the nation’s 200 year old book distributing company announcing it is closing in January.

This may change life for authors according to this link:

https://www.klrliterary.com/post/baker-and-taylor-collapse-amazon-library-hub-impact-on-authors

You can read about this situation  at Bakey & Taylor precipitating this situation in the American Libraries Magazine at this link:

Baker & Taylor to Cease Operations

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RIGHT NOW! JOHN BAILEY COUNTS DOWN THE HIGH IMPACT STORIES OF 2025 24/7 ON WWW.WPCOMMUNITYMEDIA.ORG

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JUSTIN BRASH ELECTED MAYOR

EVELYN SANTIAGO, NICK WOLFE ELECTED  TO COMMON COUNCIL

JEN PUJA TO COUNTY BOARD

NYC CONGESTION PRICING A SUCCESS

FUELS MTA COMMUTER AND SUBWAY TRANSIT RIDERSHIP

17% GAIN IN RIDERS

 

STATE SHIFTS TO “BALANCED USE OF ELECTRICITY SOURCES”

SHIFTS CLEAN ENERGY GOAL OUT TO 2050 DOES THIS MAKE SENSE?

WSTCHESTER COUNTY TAKES OVER  PLAYLAND AS STANDARD AMUSEMENTS DEPARTS

STATE, COUNTY WESTCHESTER TOWNS FACE UNCERTAIN FINANCIALS

AS WASHINGTON ZEROS IN ON CUTS TO THE STATE. AID. DOESN’T SPECIFY HOW MUCH.

MONDAY  7:O0 PM FIOS CHANNEL 45, OPTIMUM CHANNEL 76 

 

AVAILABLE NOW 24/7 WORLD WIDE ON  WWW.WPCOMMUNITYMEDIA.ORG

25 YEARS COVERING WHITE PLAINS AND WESTCHESTER EVERY FRIDAY ON WHITE PLAINS WEEK

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DECEMBER 25—COUNTY EXECUTIVE KEN JENKINS ON CHRISTMAS

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WESTCHESTER COUNTY EXECUTIVE KEN JENKINS STATEMENT ON CHRISTMAS

 

“Across Westchester, families are celebrating in ways both big and small. Some are continuing long-held traditions, others are creating new ones, and many are simply enjoying the chance to slow down and be present with the people they love.

 “While this is a season filled with joy, it is also a time to think about those facing challenges or hardship. I ask all of us to be generous not only with gifts but with grace and kindness. We have shown time and again that when we come together, we can overcome anything. That is what gives me hope, not just during the holidays but every day of the year. From my family to yours, I wish you a joyful and peaceful Christmas with your loved ones.”

 

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DECEMBER 23 — THE BIG THREE STAND BY GREEN POWER

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JOINT STATEMENT ON OFFSHORE WIND FROM GOVERNOR KATHY HOCHUL, GOVERNOR MAURA HEALEY, GOVERNOR NED LAMONT, GOVERNOR DAN MCKEE

“The Trump administration’s announcement yesterday pausing offshore wind leases is its latest egregious attack on clean energy and it lands like a lump of dirty coal for the holiday season for American workers, consumers, and investors. Pausing active leases, especially for completed and nearly completed projects, defies logic, will hurt our bid for energy independence, will drive up costs for America ratepayers, and will make us lose thousands of good-paying jobs. It also threatens grid reliability that is needed to keep the lights on.

“Atlantic states are working hard to build more energy to meet rising demand and lower costs. Already, these projects have created thousands of jobs and injected billions in economic activity into our communities.

“This baseless, reckless and erratic action from the Department of Interior will also inject further uncertainty into the markets, making it harder for states and private companies to secure financing for public works projects if investors know they can be stopped at any time despite having gone through all the necessary local and federal approval processes.

“A federal judge earlier this month ruled the Trump administration cannot simply halt federal approvals of offshore wind permits arbitrarily. We are committed as governors to again fight back to ensure these projects move forward and provide power, jobs, and grid reliability to our communities.”

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DECEMBER 23– PLUS CA CHANGE, PLUS CA MEME CHOSE. SPEEDING ENFORCEMENT WAS NEEDED 18 YEARS AGO TOO.

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WPCNR DAILY BAILEY. News & Comment By John F. Bailey.  REPRINTED FROM WPNCR OF August 31, 2007:

In support of Paul Feiner’s call for more intensive, costly and life-saving speed enforcement, this commentary I wrote in August of 2007  18 years ago, indicates the blind eye speed enforcement has closed to cowboy driving on the area’s parkways and by ways.

Unfortunately the  the driving today is far worse. Motorists are cutting in and out at high speeds,  not yielding turning in front of on-coming traffic, and, in White Plains the U-turn on Mamaroneck Avenue is very popular. Pedestrians are jay-walking and just amblin’ out in traffic whenever they choose too.

Let us go back to my observations of 2007. My observations then could have been written yesterday. The bottom line. Speeding is encouraged when not paid attention to.

There have been a rash of traffic accidents around Westchester County due to high speed in recent months. I have also remarked on how often I get my doors blown off by drivers flooring it way beyond the speed limits on the New York State Thruway and especially I-287, and the Sprain Brook Parkway.

Rolling Across the Heart of America on The Ohio Turnpike.

I almost never see speeders hauled over by a New York State Trooper or a Westchester County Police vehicle. At traffic work zones there are rarely any troopers disciplining traffic merges – this includes county police (responsible for the “International Speedway” – the Sprain Brook Parkway and the Taconic Parkway). Coming into the holiday weekend, I want to share with you what it is like driving in other states

 

Other states are very serious about enforcing the speed limits. Why are they successful? They put more troopers out there on the road and they watch very closely. Motorists are highly aware of state police presence, and subconsciously keep their speed within 10 miles of the limit.

The Ohio Turnpike (the Ohio segment of Interstate 80) is an example. On this road which begins at the Pennsyvania Border and courses across the Buckeye State to Michigan and Indiana, the speed limit is 65 – and good buddy, you better go within five miles of it. The Ohio State Highway Patrol in their white-and-blues hawk this road, stationing two patrol vehicles, one perpendicular to the Westbound lanes, the other perpendicular facing the Eastbound lanes – in close-together segments — and these two-car teams are stationed every 20 miles or so. If you’re over the limit they get you. You also never see them until they see you.

This frequent presence of patrol vehicles inhibits speed. I kid you not, no one was going over 70 the entire length and those that did they were bagged. You become so paranoid about getting a ticket, that even the truckers obey the limit. In New York State, and New Jersey, there seems to be a real reluctance to give high speeding truckers tickets since they haul their loads past me routinely—and I do 5 over the limit.

Now when I roll up the New York State Thruway, if I see two State Police cars between the Tappan Zee Bridge and Albany, that’s a lot. If I see two trooper cars on the Taconic Parkway, that’s a lot. And above Albany, forget about it. Sure it’s a big state. But Ohio is a big state too and they manage to patrol the Turnpike so tightly that 95% of the cars on it drive the limit within 5 miles.

Pennsylvania is the same way. There are not as many of the gray-and-blues in Pennsylvania on I-80, but they are there. What I like about the Pennsylvania roads is that the work zones are well marked and supervised, so the mergers are better.(With one glaring exception on I-78, midway between Allentown and Harrisburg).

In New York State the setups for the road workers are not very well-marked and the mergers non-supervised. (When was the last time you had a trooper out of his or her car supervising a merge in New York State? You never see it. Wednesday night the only traffic delay I had on a 630 mile drive from Michigan was on the idiotic repaving on you guessed the New York State Thruway about 5 miles before the Tappan Zee Bridge – a three lane into one that was not supervised or watched by a uniformed officer). The state police come in very handy on manhunts, but I seriously think their speeding enforcement and deployment at workzones could use a little more energy thought and creativity.

 

In Westchester County the County Police rarely corral speeders in my experience based on the frequent near-rear-enders I am nearly whacked by at least once a week on I-287, the Sprain Brook and the Cross County. Sedans, SUVs, motorcyclists routinely blow down those highways at a solid 20 miles over the limit. Could the County Police use a little creativity to start stopping this dangerous activity?

You do not have to do much: putting more trooper cars out there is the answer. You can station dummy cars without a patrolperson, but with dummy police officer dolls holding a radar gun on the traffic at certain points. (The phony owls keep pigeons away from public buildings. Let’s apply that concept.) Heaven knows we have three empty County Police Cars parked in front of the Michaelian Building doing nothing every day of the week. Those could be parked on the Sprain, the Taconic as dummy cars.

But the real answer is the Ohio Turnpike technique. You know I was on that road for 5 hours Wednesday and there was not one accident the entire length? Everyone was going the speed limit and was wary Ohio’s finest was watching them. There is a valuable lesson there.

Contrast that with what we see in New York State.

Here are some suggestions. Overpasses should have radar installed to highlight speeders to patrol cars stationed ahead to intercept speeders. Closed circuit TV mounted on overpasses could sweep highways to identify aggressive high speed drivers with troopers positioning themselves based on the television coverage. Message Boards could have written messages warning “will the black Corolla License CPC 449 slow down and pull off at Exit 29, you are speeding, and await the presence of an officer.” That would put a lot of feet on the brakes real fast.

The lesson I learned in traveling the interstates outside New York this week is that their highway patrols tackle speeding very aggressively and creatively. I do not think the New York State Troopers or the Westchester County Police are creative enough or resourceful enough in the efforts they make to enforce the limits on the big roads I mentioned – the Sprain, I-287, I-684, I-84, the Taconic, I-87. In addition, speeding tickets on New York City roads, let alone moving violations and reckless driving, I rarely see strong traffic enforcement within New York City.

Take some notes from Ohio, Pennsylvania and Michigan – they take traffic enforcement to new level – that our local county and state police should take note of.

If you’re on the Ohio Turnpike this weekend, a word to the wise — Keep it at 65 — you’ll be glad you did. And, just when you expect that there are no more Ohio Highway Patrol cars stationed, well they’ll pick you up. Take it from yours truly it is a very tightly patrolled interstate.

No, I did not get stopped for speeding, Mr. and Mrs. White Plains, but it struck me how simple a concept was being used by the Ohio Highway Patrol to enforce the limit: presence!

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DECEMBER 23: FEINER CALLS FOR BETTER SPEED POLICING ON THE DEADLY SPRAIN BROOK PARKWAY

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WPCNR THE LETTER TICKER. DECEMBER 23, 2025:

 

Sign petition for speed cameras on Sprain Parkway–another accident this weekend

There was another accident on the Sprain Parkway this weekend. Not unusual—there are many accidents on the Sprain Parkway during the year—injuries and fatalities.

The NYS police don’t have the resources to properly monitor speeding on the Sprain. I started an online petition in November calling on the state to place speed cameras on the Sprain Parkway. So far over 450 people have signed the petition. The link is below. NYS has placed speed cameras on highways around the state- but not on the Sprain in our area.

Speed cameras could save lives and send a message that speeders on the Sprain will get ticketed.

https://www.change.org/p/authorize-speed-cameras-on-sprain-parkway?source_location=psf_petitions

https://dailyvoice.com/new-york/greenburgh/crash-on-sprain-parkway-sends-multiple-people-to-hospital-in-westchester/

PAUL FEINER

Greenburgh Town Supervisor

Stay informed. Sign up for email alerts about the Town of Greenburgh by clicking https://www.greenburghny.com/list.aspx There is a new “Public Hearings Alert” solely to notify you of all public hearings scheduled by the Greenburgh Town Board, Planning Board and Zoning Board of Appeals. Enter your email address and click on “Public Hearings Alert” on the list to get the public hearing alerts.

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