KILLERWATTS! 22-1/2 CENTS EACH KWH

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90 PLUS TEMPERATURES THROUGH JULY RAMPS UP KILLERWATT HOURS. DOUBLES THE ELECTRIC BILL TOTAL JULY COST PER KILOWATTHOUR: 22-1/2 CENTS

 CON EDISON HOLDS SUSTAINABLE WESTCHESTER SUPPLY RATE FOR MOST CUSTOMERS IN JULY GOES UP NOW IN AUGUST

DELIVERY WIRES HUM KILLERWATTS AT 15 CENTS PER KILOWATT HOUR.

AC AT 80 DEGREES DOUBLES POWER BILL IN 90-IN-THE-SHADE-SUMMER

NO NEW SUSTAINABLE RATE YET FROM SUSTAINABLE WESTCHESTER.

GRID REWARDS PROGRAM INTRODUCED TO HELP CUSTOMERS SAVE POWER COSTS

WPCNR THE POWER STORY. By John F. Bailey. August 9, 2022

Power consumption hit an all-time high in the month of July  in Westchester County.

Inflation  forced customers to purchase less for necessities like gas and food who are now Buck-smacked with doubling power bills in soon to double once more if the heat keeps on coming.

Power bills doubled this past month of July for a Sustainable Customer directly attributable to 95 degree in the shade-plus average temperatures which have scorched Westchester for 9 days.

The air conditioning has been humming non stop and the Con Ed Delivery charges delivering the juice 24/7 at 15 cents a kilowatt hour purchased.

HIGH COULD THE NEW CON ED RATE GO OR SUSTAINABLE WESTCHESTER RATE GO? YOU DO NOT WANT TO THINK ABOUT!

The Con Edison Media Relations Department confirmed to WPCNR today that the Sustainable Westchester Green Energy Rate of 7.48 cents per kilowatt hour was kept in effect on Sustainable Westchester customers, as well as I believe the Sustainable basic rate (non green exclusive sources).

 WPCNR asked Con Edison Media Relations why Con Edison did not charge a higher rate than 7.48 cents for Green Energy for Sustainable Westchester Customers (not matching the market rate for July, which in mid July a Con Edison consumer representative said was averaging 9 to 10 cents kilowatt hour.

A Con Edison spokesperson in a written state answered:

My question is: on my Con Ed bill the 7.48 cents green rate charged by Constellation Energy the previous Constellation supply charge is still in effect. — is this because Con Edison was able to supply electricity at a rate very close to the 7.48 rate and chose to honor the 7.48 cent an hour charged in June as a good will courtesy to Sustainable customers?  

Constellation New Energy was the supplier on the bill provided in your email. You will be a Con Edison full service customer on your next bill.

My second question is why is the “Delivery Charge” up to 14.9 cents?

The delivery rate reflects higher delivery charges in the summer months. Delivery rates are set by the New York Public Service Commission.

Sustainable Westchester asked to explain why the 7.48 cents/rate was still charged in July saving about $60, wrote in a statement:

“ The current contract expired on June 30th and as such depending upon folks billing cycle (meter reads) many (to most) will still see the Westchester Power rates (and Constellation) on their bills in July.

That said, most (to all participants) will see their August bills reflect Con Edison isupply and supply rates.

We cannot speak to the intel you received from ConEd that the kWh rate (once switched to them) will reflect and increase vs.the Westchester Power prior contract fixed-rate.

While that would be our educated guess, we cannot confirm that nor predict where their rates might go.

We do hope to be able to have something to share (and a contracted rate by September as you suggest). That said, we are not in a position to confirm that today.”

That being said, we do have news to share about our GridRewards program. The residential demand response program executed with our partners Logical Buildings has been particularly this summer with unprecedented high temperatures and the resulting demand on the grid.

Currently the approximate 2500 Westchester County Con Ed utility area enrolled residents are experiencing a 4-day streak of demand response events. The events provide an opportunity to reduce electricity demand, save energy and money and earn cash rewards for actions taken and overall performance. It surely has newsworthy potential — its environmental impact, ability to reduce usage and earn participants savings and cash is potentially important messaging for your viewers.

GridRewards is the first-of-its-kind residential demand response program in the NorthEast and was piloted in 2020 in partnership with us in Westchester County. You can learn a bit more here https://sustainablewestchester.org/gridrewards/ (on our website) as well as https://www.gridrewards.com/ (Logical Buildings website for the program).

Background:

That rate to create electricity for customers who are not members of the Sustainable Westchester power cooperative (White Plains is a member), is set based on an average of a month of Con Ed costs to buy or create the electricity. The delivery rate is dependent on the demand running through the system.

  Sustainable paused for a time to  resubmit Requests for Proposals for a new  flat rate going out perhaps one, two, or three years and hired the national leader in energy auctions to find Sustainable a rate that works to keep green energy competitive.

The electric supply companies Sustainable had gone to (apparently on their own not using again Transparent Energy Systems the negotiator of the previous contract), came back with rates that all were higher than last year regardless of the markets they were serving from the very small to the very large.

The pause was still going on , just  when Sustainable Westchester turned over its customers temporarily to Con Edison while it searched for a sustainable Kilowatthour price it could live with (and is still in the process of negotiating).

Meanwhile the cost of Con Edison delivering electricity through its systems soared to 15 cents a kilowatt hour. If you  have an airconditioning system or an window unit, keeping that full house zonal system on will still double your consumption of kilowatt hours in this relentless heat wave, even killing certain zones in your house you do not use.

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THE BIG REALTY STORY

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WPCNR REALTY REALITY. From Howard Hanna Rand Realty. August 9, 2022:

So is the party over?

After two years of relentlessly surging sales and prices, has the seller’s market finally fizzled out? Should we start preparing for a buyer’s market, with falling sales, prices, and a shift of power to purchasers? The answer is “no, not quite yet.” 

Last year was the strongest seller’s market in the history of the region, but we’re seeing clear signs that the historically strong seller’s market that emerged after the pandemic lockdown in the middle of 2020 has cooled off. 

“Cooling” does not mean “cold.” 

Even though the seller’s market might be fading out, it is important to note that this does not mean we are going to see an immediate shift to a buyers market.

Several signs throughout the quarter have indicated that the market might be returning to a more normal, balanced state following an abnormally large two-year tidal wave of activity following the end of the lockdown restrictions, a surge in pandemic-driven urban-to-suburban migration, and the desire to lock in what were at the time historically-low interest rates.

Accordingly, we expect a softer transition to a more “normal and balanced” market rather than a severe correction to a buyer’s market. For one thing, we believe it’s a little misleading to compare this year’s market to the high-water mark of last year, which was the strongest seller’s market in the history of the region.

– Joe Rand, Chief Creative Officer at Howard Hanna | Rand Realty

What’s Going on in the Market? 2019 is a clue

For a better comparison, we reached back to the second quarter of 2019, which we’re calling a “control quarter” because it represents the kind of “normal and balanced” market we believe that we’re entering, before all the distortions of that post-lockdown tidal wave of activity.

And if you compare the current market to 2019, you can see that it’s performing relatively well.

Another reason why we don’t think the market is going to enter a corrective buyer’s market anytime soon is that prices are still appreciating at a tremendous rate. That rate is slowing a little from 2020 and 2021, but it’s still well above traditional averages. Why? Because even with interest rates up, inventory is falling, so we still have too many buyers chasing too few houses.

Basic economics: if demand is steady, and supply is falling, prices go up.

Five Takeaways from the the Second Quarter of 2022:

  1. Sales are down from last year’s all-time highs, but still relatively strong.
  2. Pending sales are also down significantly from last year’s torrid market.
  3. Prices continue to hit all-time highs, but will likely stabilize for the rest of the year.
  4. New listings continue to struggle, but inventory is stabilizing.
  5. Homes are still selling more quickly and for a better price than ever before.

To Read the Full Report contact your preferred Real Estate Agent and have it directly on your inbox or download it on the link below:

https://randrealty.com/files/2022/07/NJ-State-Market-Q22022-Final.pdf

https://randrealty.com/files/2022/07/NYS-CT-State-Market-Q22022-Final.pdf

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GOVERNOR HOCHUL ANNOUNCES ANTI TERROR INITIATIVE

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WPCNR ALBANY ROUNDS. From The Governor’s Office. April 9, 2022:

Governor Kathy Hochul today announced the issuance of new guidance for counties throughout New York to support the development of Domestic Terrorism Prevention Plans which each county and the City of New York are responsible for developing.

The Governor discussed the importance of devising Domestic Terrorism Prevention Plans during today’s virtual remarks as part of a two-day Threat Assessment and Management Summit hosted by the State Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Services and its Office of Counter Terrorism at the State Emergency Preparedness Center in Oriskany.

“In the wake of the horrific domestic terror attack in my hometown of Buffalo, I committed to New Yorkers that we will confront the scourge of domestic terror head-on,” Governor Hochul said. “New York is providing local governments with the tools they need to address the threat of domestic terror and targeted violence, so we can prevent tragedies before they even occur. I will never stop fighting to keep New Yorkers safe.” 


DHSES is encouraging localities to develop Threat Assessment and Management (TAM) Teams as part of their Domestic Terrorism Prevention Plans. To assist in creating and operating threat assessment management teams, $10 million will be made available to counties. Such teams shall be comprised of law enforcement, mental health professionals, school officials, and other key stakeholders tasked with identifying, assessing, and mitigating the threat of targeted violence.

Executive Order 18 was issued by Governor Hochul in direct response to the white supremacist act of terror at a Buffalo supermarket in May.

The executive order is specifically designed to fight the troubling surge in domestic terrorism and violent extremism frequently inspired by, planned on and posted about on social media platforms and internet forums.

In part, the executive order calls upon:

  1. DHSES to establish a new unit within its Office of Counter Terrorism dedicated to the prevention of domestic terrorism.
  2. Every county and the City of New York to develop and maintain a plan to address the threat of domestic terrorism, including racially or ethnically motivated violent extremists.
  3. New York State Police to establish a new unit within the New York State Intelligence Center (NYSIC) dedicated to tracking domestic violent extremism and increase social media monitoring for investigative leads that may come from the online promotion of violent extremism.

During the two-day summit, state counterterrorism experts are reviewing the newly issued guidance on Domestic Terrorism Prevention plans and state grant funding opportunities, at both the state and federal level, to advance county domestic terrorism planning and TAM team creation efforts. A consultant with expertise in behavioral threat assessment will also provide training on TAM team development.

Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Services Commissioner Jackie Bray said, “Domestic terrorism fueled by white supremacy and bigotry is the number one terrorism threat we currently face. Our team in the Office of Counter Terrorism is working around the clock to ensure counties across New York have everything they need to meet the challenge in front of us. Thanks to Governor Hochul’s leadership, together we are working with our partners to make New York a safer place for everyone.”

The recent spike in domestic terror attacks represents one of the most pressing threats to public safety across the United States. In the last decade, domestic terror attacks and plots have tripled nationally. In 2021, there were 73 terrorist attacks and unearthed plots in the United States, including 38 white supremacist and similarly like-minded terrorist attacks and plots.

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4 CHARGED IN “GHOST GUNS RUNNING” INTO WESTCHESTER COUNTY IN YONKERS

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Westchester County District Attorney Miriam E. Rocah

WPCNR POLICE GAZETTE. From the Westchester County District Attorney. August 9,2022:

Westchester County District Attorney Miriam E. Rocah announced the indictment of four individuals who were arrested in June as a result of a multi-agency investigation into the trafficking of illegal firearms from Washington to Westchester between April and June 2022.

In addition to the arrests, authorities seized 31 ghost guns (as well as two conventional firearms) that were allegedly assembled and purchased in Washington, D.C. before being transported to Yonkers for sale between April 28, 2022 and June 24, 2022. 

“This case is just one example of my gun safety initiative in action: conducting proactive investigations to remove illegal weapons like ghost guns from our streets and prosecute gun traffickers,” DA Rocah said. “I’m grateful to the Yonkers Police Department and numerous state, local and federal law enforcement partners who are on the frontlines with us every day  in the fight against gun violence and gun trafficking to keep Westchester safe.

The joint investigation—launched by the Yonkers Police Department’s Narcotics Unit in partnership with the Drug Enforcement Agency Group D43, the New York City Police Department, the New York State Police, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Violent Criminal Enterprise Bureau of the Westchester County District Attorney’s Office—focused on the interstate trafficking of “ghost guns,” partially finished, untraceable and fully-functioning illegal firearms that can be easily assembled at home with parts purchased online and designed to evade certain gun laws.  

As alleged in the indictment, Jose Gregorio Olivo-Feliz, 27, of Yonkers, Pedro Junior Olivo-Feliz, 21, of Yonkers, and Netaly A. Pena-Camilo, 25, of Washington, D.C. conspired to transport firearms from Washington, D.C. between April 28, 2022, and June 24, 2022, for the purposes of selling them in Yonkers. Pena-Camilo was allegedly in possession of the firearms and responsible for transporting them across state lines to sell them in Westchester County. 

Jose Gregorio Olivo-Feliz, Pena-Camilo and Idanis Lora-Espinal were arraigned on August 4, 2022, and Pedro Junior Olivo-Feliz was arraigned on August 8, 2022, in Westchester County Court. The District Attorney’s Office requested that Jose Gregorio Olivo-Feliz and Pedro Junior Olivo-Feliz be held without bail, or in the alternative, on $500,000 cash bail. The District Attorney also requested that Pena-Camilo be held without bail, or in the alternative on $1 million cash bail.

Bail was set by various Westchester County judges as follows: Jose Gregorio Olivo-Feliz $50,000 cash bail, Pedro Junior Olivo-Feliz $200,000 cash bail and Pena-Camilo $150,000 cash bail. Lora-Espinal is being held on $5,000 cash bail. 

On June 24, 2022, Yonkers Police and the DEA arrested Jose Gregorio Olivo-Feliz, Pedro Junior Olivo-Feliz, and Idanis Lora-Espinal, 30, of Washington, D.C. 

Pena-Camilo, was apprehended in Washington, D.C. on June 29, 2022 by members of the investigative team, with the assistance of the Metropolitan Police Department of the District of Columbia.  

A Westchester County Grand Jury indicted the defendants on the following felony charges: 

·         Jose Gregorio Olivo-Feliz was charged with Conspiracy in the Fourth Degree, two counts of Criminal Sale of a Firearm in the First Degree, Criminal Sale of a Firearm in the Second Degree, seven counts of Criminal Sale of a Firearm in the Third Degree, Criminal Possession of a Firearm, Criminal Possession of a Weapon in the First Degree, 11 counts of Criminal Possession of a Weapon in the Second Degree, and two counts of Criminal Possession of a Weapon in the Third Degree.  

·         Pedro Junior Olivo-Feliz was charged with Conspiracy in the Fourth Degree, Criminal Sale of a Firearm in the First Degree, Criminal Sale of a Firearm in the Second Degree, three counts of Criminal Sale of a Firearm in the Third Degree, 11 counts of Criminal Possession of a Weapon in the Second Degree and Criminal Possession of a Weapon in the Third Degree. 

·         Pena-Camilo was charged with Conspiracy in the Fourth Degree, two counts of Criminal Sale of a Firearm in the First Degree, Criminal Sale of a Firearm in the Second Degree, six counts of Criminal Sale of a Firearm in the Third Degree, Criminal Possession of a Weapon in the First Degree, 11 counts of Criminal Possession of a Weapon in the Second Degree and two counts of Criminal Possession of a Weapon in the Third Degree.  

·         Lora-Espinal was charged with Criminal Possession of a Weapon in the First Degree.  

The case is before Judge George Fufidio in Westchester County Court, and is being prosecuted by the Violent Criminal Enterprise Bureau of the Trials and Investigations Division. The defendants are scheduled to appear again in court on October 27, 2022.  

The charges against the defendants are merely an accusation, and the defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty. 

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NEW TAX BREAKS FOR SENIORS PIONEERED BY TOWN OF GREENBURGH SIGNED INTO LAW BY GOVERNOR HOCHUL: SENIORS OVER 65 CAN NOW EXEMPT $50,000 OF INCOME FROM PROPERTY TAX EXEMPTION EFFECTIVE THIS TAX YEAR.

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WPCNR QUILL & EYESHADE. From Town of Greenburgh Supervisor Paul Feiner. August 9, 2022:

Governor Kathy Hochul has signed legislation yesterday that the town of Greenburgh lobbied for for many years.

The new law will allow  allow local governments to increase the maximum allowable income eligible for a property tax exemption to $50,000 for people who are 65 and older as well as people with disabilities. The measure will increase the current limit set at $29,000 a year for older New Yorkers who live outside of New York City. 

The Greenburgh Town Board, Assessor Edye McCarthy (Editor’s Note, she is former White Plains Assessor) and I have been pushing for this new law for a number of years.

We felt that it was unfair for NYC seniors to get better tax breaks than seniors of Greenburgh.

Am grateful to State Assemblyman Tom Abinanti who also worked very hard to get this legislation approved over many years and to Senator Andrea Stewart Cousins for her advocacy.  This new law will enable more seniors to continue to live in Greenburgh.

It’s our intention to approve this benefit for seniors. 

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2 WEEKS TO PRIMARY DAY FOR STATE SENATE AND CONGRESSIONAL RACES

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From District 5 County Legislator, Benjamin Boykin
 
en Español

Everything You Need to Know About the August 23, 2022

PrimaryTuesday, August 23rd is Primary Day for our New York State Senate and U.S. House of Representatives. The election will be held for the Democratic Party in the 16th and 17th Congressional Districts, and the 34th NYS Senatorial District.

The Republican and Conservative parties will have a primary election in the 17th Congressional District.

Primary Election Party Enrollment Change Deadline:Thursday Aug. 11 is the deadline to receive party enrollment changes for the Aug. 23 Primary Election. Any enrollment changes received after Aug. 11 are not effective until Aug. 30. If any enrollment changes are received after Aug. 30, these changes will be effective immediately until the Feb. 14, 2023 deadline.

Monday, Aug. 22 is the last day for an applicant or agent to apply in person at the Board of Elections for the Aug. Primary Election absentee ballot.

Tuesday, Aug. 23 is the last day to postmark the Primary Election absentee ballot by mail. The ballot must be received by the Board of Elections no later than Aug. 30, 2022.

Tuesday, Aug. 23 is the last day to deliver the Primary Election absentee ballot in person to the Board of Elections or at any poll site throughout the County, by the close of the polls at 9 p.m.

Early Voting Information:A nine-day early voting period runs from Saturday, August 13th to Sunday, August 21st.  Registered voters eligible to vote in their party’s primary will be able to cast their ballot at any of the County’s 23 designated Early Voting locations during the hours listed below: 

Early Voting HoursDATETIME

Saturday, August 13th10 a.m. – 6 p.m.Sunday, August 14th10 a.m. – 6 p.m.Monday, August 15th8 a.m. – 4 p.m.Tuesday, August 16thNoon – 8 p.m.Wednesday, August 17th8 a.m. – 4 p.m.Thursday, August 18thNoon – 8 p.m.Friday, August 19th8 a.m. – 4 p.m.Saturday, August 20th10 a.m. – 6 p.m.Sunday, August 21st10 a.m. – 6 p.m.

Westchester County Early Voting Centers LOCATION ADDRESS 

Eastchester Public Library11 Oakridge Place Dobbs Ferry Village Hall112 Main Street Greenburgh Town Hall177 Hillside Avenue, White Plains St. Gregory The Great Church 215 Halstead Avenue, HarrisonMamaroneck Town Center740 W. Boston Post Road Mt. Kisco Municipal Building104 Main Street Mt. Pleasant Community Center125 Lozza Drive, Valhalla Joseph G. Caputo Community Center 95 Broadway, Ossining Pound Ridge Town House179 Westchester Avenue Rye Brook Firehouse 940 King Street Somers Town House 335 Route 202 Jefferson Village Annex3500 Hill Boulevard, Yorktown Heights Yorktown Cultural Center1974 Commerce Street Doles Center 250 S. 6th Avenue, Mt. Vernon Mt. Vernon City Hall 1 Roosevelt Square New Rochelle City Hall Annex 90 Beaufort Place,New Rochelle United Methodist Church1200 North Avenue Peekskill Nutrition Center –
Neighborhood Center 4 Nelson Avenue Peekskill Lincoln Depot Museum10 S. Water Street Westchester County Board of Elections 5 Quarropas Street, White Plains Grinton I. Will Library1500 Central Park Avenue, Yonkers Nodine Hill Community Center 140 Fillmore Street, Yonkers Riverfront Library One Larkin Center, Yonkers Please note that due to a recent change in law, NYS voters are no longer permitted to cast a ballot on a voting machine if they have requested to vote by Absentee Ballot. Voters who have requested to vote by Absentee Ballot can still vote in-person using an affidavit ballot.For more information contact:
Westchester County Board of Elections at (914) 995-5700 or https://citizenparticipation.westchestergov.com/NYS Board of Elections at (518) 474-1953 or New York State Board of Elections website
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NUMBERGANDA

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JOHN F. BAILEY

WPCNR THE SUNDAY BAILEY. News & Comment by John F. Bailey. The CitizeNetReporter. August 7, 2022:

I rely on baseball statistics as a measure of team and player performance as unerring indications of how a team, its management, its manager, its players “are doin.’”

The reason why baseball stats are so good is that they are unequivocal and ruthless in saying how good or incompetent a player, manager, general manager is.

You never hear a .220 hitting power hitter rationalized by the press saying he’d hit .300 if he was more selective, or took more walks. The consistency of performance tells the truth about how good a club is.

I am puzzled about how meaning of far more important statistics are analyzed, twisted, interpreted, or suppressed to tell a story in the national media and political stadiums, The U.S. Capitol, and the White House Press room.

Tell you what I mean. Friday and Saturday, the recession was declared over when Employment figures of last month showed according to Government Stats, all jobs lost during the Covid pandemic until now were filled and America what was left of it was back to work. To quote today’s Times: “Employers added more than half a million jobs in July and the unemployment rate is at a half century low.”

Just about a week ago, it was lamented that job numbers fell.

Today, Sunday the paper says in its headline “Free Spending, Plenty of  Jobs: A shaky Boom. An unstable economy Erodes confidence.”

How the public feels about economic statistics is influenced a lot by commentary and reinventing what the numbers mean. If it is good for your party and political view to say the economy is bad you say the numbers do not reflect what Joe the Plumber is experiencing.

Friday’s front page headlines essentially saying we are all back to work was  interesting. We do not know how much of this is caused by summer employment, for example which accounts for hires and are not differentiated. 

However it is to political advantage of the administration in power to say “America’s Back to Work and Rolling Again.” 

It does not take into account our reeling street retail outlets across the nation. It does not take into account the millions of workers who have died of covid. One good statistic does not heal the damage done to the country. We need the Big Number picture

By far the most manipulated statistics are the ones put out on covid spread and hospitalizations. By that I mean suppression of key totals.

We are not by any means getting a handle on how serious the 10,000 new infections a month for three straight months in Westchester County are affecting hospitalizations for covid and hospital staff ability to handle the numbers we do not know.

The number of  total hospitalizations for covid a month in Westchester County are not given. We are not told who is getting sick demographically. We are not told how long the average stay is in the hospital when persons are hospitalized. Do they stay 2 days? 4 days? 7 days? And how really almost full I.C.U.’s are affecting hospitals like White Plains Hospital, Phelps Memorial, Westchester Medical Center where the most hospitalizations for covid (46 covid hospitalizations, 87% of I.C.U. occupied) have been.  

Telling us that we had 150 hospitalizations for covid last week in Westchester on 5,000 infections the last two weeks, after 128 infections the first two weeks of July, mean we had 278 hospitalizations in July by simply doubling the figures given the county.

Now how long did they stay in the  hospital? Did short stays not  stress the medical personnel?

If it took as long as 5 days to stabilize a person, how is that extending the medical staffs to  covid pre-vaccination days in 2020?

Without demographic breakdowns, length of stays of hospitalizations, just saying we only had 150 hospitalized in the last two weeks makes us the general public loosen our covid wariness.

But the disease, variant related, is rolling along consistently at the 2,000 plus new infections a week rate for 3 months of May June and July it infects us Saturday and Sunday. We feel symptoms within two days and the at home testing shows them positive they go to get a lab test and BOOM they have covid ractheting up numbers in the middle of the week, Tuesday, Wednesday Thursday and Friday.

This first week in August is on track depending on this afternoon report on Saturday (yesterday) covid infections), for close to 2,000 infections again for the first week in August. So if 5,000 infections up to last Monday, for two weeks with 150 hospitalized that is a hospitalization rate of 3% of weekly infections

The totals for the month  of July, 10,298 cases resulted in 156 hospitalizations but no Total hospitalizations for the month given.

Why not? It would seem to me, rough guess you can double that 156 to 300 for the month. for the other first two weeks of July

It is impossible to change human behavior if they do not have reason to do so. If statistics are repressed on hospitalizations without drilling down deep into who is getting it how long it takes to get them out of the hospital (OK, we know most are unvaccinated) but how sick are they getting? How is it affecting staffing and keeping them prepared for the monkeypox infections (44 last Monday) that are ramping up.

My feeling is if the state does not report the complete picture on hospitalizations, my assumption is the complete picture does not instill confidence, and they in the state health department do not want to make us feel bad and stay home and not eat out. The state priority is not to keep the state economy continuing to move, by downplaying covid when it is growing faster week after week for three months exponentially ahead of the the first wave that started last July in Westchester County.

Please tell us real revealing figures that instill confidence! Not hope.

Give the statistics like baseball does, the good, the bad  and the ugly without spin. You cannot based on the Yankees performance since the All-Star Break that they have enough hitting to handle good pitching to win the World Series. They can’t handle good pitching. Statistics show that.

Spinning statistics for political advantage which has been going on for 5 years now is reckless.

It erodes credibility and makes opinion news real and real facts vulnerable to denial, solidifying persons unfound beliefs.

Can we strengthen the clarity of our health performance on the 10,000 a month covid spread we are experiencing, show me I am wrong. Give people confidence you can take care of them.

If you start hitting 200 infections every two weeks you hit 400 for a month and if you hit 300 new infections every two weeks you get 600 hospitalizations a month at the 3% hospitalization rate. Give us the totals. Make projections for us. Instill us with confidence that the health institutions (9 of them in Westchester County) know how to handle this relentless new caseload.

Consumers of news should start taking note of the times when good news numbers today, are debunked as bad news numbers on the same subject the next day. (That happens often.)

That is “Numberganda.”

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WHITE PLAINS WEEK MUST SEE NEWS–THE HEAT IS ON ON THE WPW AUGUST 5 REPORT AROUND THE WORLD ON www.wpcommunitymedia.org

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THE NEW CITY SOLAR INSTALLATION ORDINANCE.
WP MAYOR TOM ROACH EXPLAINS “WE MUST ACT”

COUNCIL PRESIDENT NADINE HUNT-ROBINSON

ON HOW THE ORDINANCE PROTECTS NEIGHBORHOODS

PROMOTES MORE SOLAR PANELS

THE CON ED BILL–HAVE YOU GOTTEN YOURS YET? THROUGH THE ROOF! WHITE PLAINS AWAITS SUSTINABLE WESTCHESTER NEW RATE
96 DEGREE SUN AT HIGH NOON BURNING UP THE KILOWATT HOURS
10,268 NEW COVID CASES IN JULY– HOSPITALIZATIONS NOT TOTALED FOR THE MONTH–WHY?
THE HOSPITALS ARE GETTING FULL WITH COVID CASES FILLING UP ICU’S — ARE WE UNDER PRESSURE? HOW MANY CASES OF COVID HAVE BEEN HOSPITALIZED IN THE LAST MONTH AND HOW LONG DO THEY STAY? WHY DON’T WE KNOW? WHAT IS THE PROGNOSIS FOR AUGUST SEPTEMBER GROWTH IN HOSPITALIZED COVID PATIENTS? WHY DON’T WE KNOW THE FIGURES AS HOSPITALS SLOWLY GET BUSIER AND BUSIER. TOO MANY UNANSWERED QUESTIONS.

COUNTY EXECUTIVE GEORGE LATIMER ON COVID SPREAD AND MONKEYPOX DOUBLEDEMIC URGES VACCINATIONS

WESTCHESTER DISTRICT ATTORNEY CHALLENGES A NEW ROCHELLE JUDGE’S TOSSING OF EVIDENCE

ABORTION TRESPASSERS SENTENCED TO 3 MONTHS IN WHITE PLAINS

GOVERNOR HOCHUL ANNOUNCES FREE FALL OF TAX PAYER REVENUES

BOARD OF ELECTIONS SETS DEADLINE BEFORE AUGUST 23 PRIMARIES TO CHANGE PARTY AFFILIATION

JOHN BAILEY AND THE NEWS

EVERY WEEK ON WHITE PLAINS WEEK

FOR 22 YEARS. FROM WHITE PLAINS NY USA

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FLASH! YOU CAN CHANGE YOUR PARTY AFFILIATION BEFORE AUGUST 23 PRIMARIES BUT IT WILL NOT TAKE EFFECT (CHANGE YOUR PARTY) UNTIL AUGUST 30 IF YOU DO NOT FILE THE CHANGE BEFORE AUGUST 11. UPSHOT: CHANGING YOUR PARTY AFTER AUGUST 11 WILL NOT ALLOW YOU TO VOTE IN THE DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY OR THE REPUBLICAN PRIMARY AUGUST 23.

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NEW Change of Party Enrollment Info for August Primary. Primary Election: August 23 Early Voting: August 13-21
WPCNR CAMPAIGN 2022. From the League of Women Voters. August 4, 2022:
On August 3, 2022, the State Board of Elections filed a motion to the NYS Supreme Court asking for a blackout period to be instated, which would create a deadline by which someone must change their party affiliation for the August primary.

 Judge McAllister issued an order last night (Wednesday) which makes the deadline to register with a party or to change party affiliation August 11th

Applications must be received by a board of elections on this date. August 11.

Any application received on or after August 12th will not be effective immediately, but will become effective seven days after the August primary (August 30, 2022). 

This closes the loophole that would have allowed voters to change party affiliation by voting via affidavit ballot or a court order in the August primary.

Download Voter Registration Form (English)Descargar Formulario De Registro De Votantes (Spani
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WPCNR THURSDAY DATELINE: REPORTER’S COMMANDMENTS # 31
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