53 YEARS AGO TONIGHT: NEIL ARMSTRONG WALKED ON THE MOON. WANTED MORE LEADERS LIKE THEM!

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This column originally appeared on WPCNR on February 1, 2003, and celebrates the Dreamers, the Achievers, the High and the Mighty:

THE SPACE BLAZERS

 The Apollo 11 Crew: Neil Armstrong, Michael Collins,  Buzz Aldrin, Jr. Mr. Armstrong set foot on the moon 53 years ago on July 20, 1969 (NASA Photo)

One of the papers I receive at WPCNR White Plains News Headquarters, White Plains, New York, USA did not tell me ALL week this week was the 53rd anniversary of the week when Neil Armstrong walked on the moon.

The exact hour  was  20:11 GMT (Greenwich Mean Time). That was the culmination of the last great American achievement  – the personal computer, the cellphone and the internet, social media were to come — after the amazing American achievement conquering space in 9 years — when Apollo 11 with Armstrong in command, with astronauts Michael Collins and Edwin E. Aldrin, Jr. blasted off to the stars  for real.

They became the real Flash Gordons, Buck Rogerses, Tom Corbetts and Captain Videos for all-time.

The Apollo 11 mission was a success.

There have been the tragedies associated with striving for the stars and being the best, achieving the best, working for the good. Those are the persons who keep dreams alive by their deaths and personal sacrifice. I wrote the following after the explosion of the Columbia Space Shuttle upon reentry into the Earth’s atmosphere after 19 days in space in January 2003.

Saturday’s fatal Columbia Space Shuttle accident killing all 7 astronauts aboard when the historic spacecraft broke up over East Texas at daybreak Saturday morning begins a period of national mourning. 


The expected media speculations have started, guessing at the cause of the reentry that went bizarrely, awfully wrong.
The truth is the civilized world takes absolute scientific miracles for granted. We do not appreciate the courage and skills of the men and women creating the future.


Those of us with cell phones, internet connections, high-speed trains, satellite communications and entertainment (all products made possible by the space program), do not realize the magnitude of daring achievements that you and I have come to accept to be executed like clockwork.


I first learned of Columbia’s fate late Saturday afternoon when my wife mentioned that instead of sports programming being videotaped on our television, there was coverage of a live NASA event on ABC.


(Incredibly, the radio station I had been listening to on the way from a sports clinic had not reported any hint of the accident. That station was Z-100, the most listened-to station in the New York metropolitan area. America Online also on their first up page did not mention the missing craft as of midday. That kind of communications misjudgment is sad.)


As I watched the close of Peter Jennings’ coverage at about 3 PM, he signed off with no recap, no names of astronauts, and some parting words about what he thought was the cause of the disaster.


I’ll write what he should have said.


Columbia’s seven astronauts who died — we know their names: they were

Columbus, Magellan, Cook, Lewis, Clark, the Wrights, Lindbergh, De Laroche, Earhart, Markham, Gruber, Chaffee, Grissom, White, Gargarin, Komarov, the Challenger Crew, the crew of Soyuz 11. They are a handful of the hundreds of brave men and women who went into the unknown. Some did not come back.

Apollo 11′s Crew which landed and walked on the moon turned the dreams of the 1950s visualized in television shows like Tom Corbett, Space Cadet (above, Astro, Roger and Tom) and Captain Video, “The Master of Science” below  into reality.

America’s Spacemen and Spacewomen and the explorers before them are the people who trust in their ability and their vessel to expand the world’s horizons, to know the unknown, whose legacies build a better world. Whose deeds inspire and achievements are the catalysts for achievement to come. Their failures ever reminders of the uniqueness of their courage and resolve.


From Captain Cook’s fragile vessel which sailed the Pacific, to the marvel that was the Columbia, the captains courageous who sailed the Roaring 40s, blazed the Oregon Trail, discovered how to fly, flew the oceans without radar, journeyed to the stars, knew the risks they were taking. They loved the concept of being ever onward.


The media  trivializes their courage, their skills, and the difficulty of what they did and wanted to do, to concentrate on the causes of their failure, as if knowing the cause will make their loss acceptable.

The Magnificent Seven


I do not know Columbia’s Magnificent Seven. I just see their smiling faces in their photograph, and I regret the loss of every one. They had achievement on their faces, pride in their demeanor. Their eyes shown with the glow of being alive and striving to do the great things they set out to do.


Civilization has been created because of people like the crew of the Columbia’s Magnificent Seven, not the incompetence we see demonstrated daily today where technology is concerned.


The Columbia itself had flown 26 missions since launching in 1981. It was guided and outfitted with the best 2003 communications and equipment had to offer.

Not like Captain James Cook’s bark, Endeavour, a 100-foot ship powered by sail that conquered the “space” of his time, the Pacific Ocean. It was the Columbia’s Magnificent Seven’s “Endeavour.” They were tracked, they were backed up, but they perhaps more than anyone here on the ground knew the high dangers of the shuttle mission.


Liftoff, as their predecessors, The Challenger crew fell victim to, is fraught with risk.

Reentry, which needs to be negotiated at precisely the right angle of attack, is equally risky.

Soyuz 11’s spacecrew of Dobrovolskiy, Volkov, and Patsayev died in 1971 on reentry, when the Russian cosmonauts took too long to descend.


No guarantees in real life. Machines sometimes run out of miracles.

The magnificence of the explorers’ sacrifice and dedication, is that they accept the risk of “the Endeavor.”


They accept the challenge, bear it alone, seizing challenge with an indomitable spirit and confidence, facing death when it comes with the satisfaction that they made the effort, and I suspect analyzing, coping, trying to fix it until the end, the very end.

They never give up.


Columbia’s Magnificent Seven, after 16 days in space, are gone now.

My sorrow is with their families who will miss these Magnificent Seven, and who know in their hearts that they died trying to reach the pinnacle of their aspirations.


They are only human.


They tried their best, achieved their best, and experienced what they longed to experience. They dared to live the great adventure.


Not all of us have the courage to follow our longed-for adventures and make them real. You can watch movies that attempt to give that experience by transference. That’s why, I believe, you and I take it so personally when we lose heroic personalities of our time. We wonder what they are like. We glorify them, rightly so.

Follow Me! They Say.


I wonder how those Magnificent Seven felt, how satisfying it must have been, to be at your best, doing what you love, coping with the risks.I envy them that.

The Columbia Crew is the Miracle.

In reality it is not machines that conquer, it is the intrepid personalities, each unique, each contributing, who perform the miracles with God’s help. That they fall short is an example to us, not to take ourselves, our fates, or our existences for granted.


This is true of the everyday people we take for granted: the firefighter, the policeman, the train engineer, the airline pilot, the construction worker, the doctor fighting COVID, the nurse, the leader trying to do what must be done despite opposition. All are highly trained disciplined workers, executing precise tasks for which the non-expert has no feel or understanding .
When one of them gives up it is rare. And when they do, they leave the task to us.

What makes for the desire to achieve? What is out there or up there that leads them on?

The Feel of the Unknown


I took Anne Morrow Lindbergh’s biographical adventure diary, Listen! The Wind down from the aviation bookshelf.

She was the young bride of the aviator-pioneer, Charles Lindbergh. She navigated for him in his aircraft, and ran his radio communications on his many exploratory flights around the world.

In a passage she describes a night flight over the ocean, in which she was operating the radio for her husband Charles, who was at the controls. Mrs. Lindbergh is describing the feelings she has as she tries to tune in the South American coast at sea in the dark of night in 1933, 89 years ago.

The feeling, the courage of the adventurer, the explorer has not changed. This is great:

“Night was the hardest. It would be all right once it was day. I kept saying…We began to hit clouds. I could tell without looking up, for the plane bumped slightly from time to time, first one wing down and then the other. And the moon blackened out for short periods.

Then for longer periods. I could not see to write my messages. I stiffened, dimly sensing fear – the old fear of bad weather – and looked out. We were flying under clouds. I could still find a kind of horizon, a difference in shading where the water met the clouds. That was all. But it seemed to be getting darker.

Storms? Were those clouds or was it the sky? We had lost the water. We were flying blind. I turned off the light quickly (to give my husband a little more vision), and sat waiting, tense, peering through the night. Now we were out again. There were holes through which one could see the dark sky. It was all right, I felt, as long as there were holes.


More blind flying. This is it, I thought is what people forget. This is what it means to fly across the ocean, blind and at night. But day is coming. It ought to be day before long… Daybreak! What a miracle. I didn’t see any sign of day and yet it must be lighter. The clouds were distinguishing themselves more and more from water and sea.
Daybreak—thank God—as if we had been living in eternal night—as if this were the first sun that ever rose out of the sea.

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CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICTS 16 & 17 DEBATES COMING UP

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ARE YOU READY TO VOTE?PRIMARY ELECTION ON AUGUST 23 Early Voting is August 13 – 21
Register Today to Hear from the Candidates!Be Informed for the Primaries and the General ElectionYour Vote Matters!Submit Your Questions(See links below)READ HERE: How to Judge a Candidate
NEW MAPS: Congressional Districts 16 and 17

Need to know your voting districts?

They could be newly redistricted.CLICK HERE TO FIND YOUR DISTRICTS

U.S. Congressional District 16 Virtual Democratic Primary Candidate Forum
Monday, July 25, 2022 / 7:00 p.m.

Candidates:Mr. Jamaal Bowman,Mr. Vedat Gashi, Mr. Mark Jaffe Ms. Catherine Parker
Hosted by the League of Women Voters of Westchester
REGISTER HERE SUBMIT QUESTION FOR CD 16 CANDIDATES

PLEASE NOTE THAT THE REPUBLICAN PRIMARY FOR CD 16 IS UNCONTESTED,SO THERE IS NO CANDIDATE FORUM.

U.S. Congressional District 17 Virtual Republican PrimaryCandidate Forum
Thursday, July 28, 2022 / 7:00 p.m.

Candidates: Mr. Charles J. Falciglia, Mr. William G. Faulkner Mr. Michael V. Lawler Mr. Jack W. Schrepel Hosted by the Leagues of Women Voters of Westchester, Rockland, Putnam, and Dutchess Counties REGISTER HERE
U.S. Congressional District 17 Virtual Democratic Primary Candidate Forum
Monday, August 1, 2022* / 7:00 p.m.

Candidates: Ms. Alessandra Biaggi, Mr. Sean Patrick Maloney,

Hosted by the Leagues of Women Voters of Westchester, Rockland, Putnam, and Dutchess Counties REGISTER HERESUBMIT QUESTION FOR CD 17 CANDIDATES*Date changed from July 27 to August 1
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SUSTAINABLE WESTCHESTER HIRES TRANSPARENT ENERGY TO HOLD NEW AUCTION, SEEK LOWER FIXED RATE BIDS. ASSURE RESUMPTION BY NOVEMBER 1

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SUSTAINABLE  DELAYED 2022-23 CONTRACT AFTER SUSTAINBLE FIRST SOUGHT ESCO BIDS FOR NEW CONTRACT RETURNED “TOO HIGH” BIDS ACROSS THE BOARD, MARKET INSTABILITY

WPCNR THE POWER STORY. By John F. Bailey. July 19, 2022:

Sustainable Westchester has turned back to Transparent Energy the national leader in online energy procurement to hold another auction for lower fixed rates using the national analysis and comparative profiles of energy suppliers relied on by Transparent Energy.

The bringing of Transparent Energy on Board was first announced by Transparent Energy July 1. The company said in a release to energy suppliers it had been appointed to conduct auctions for a Sustainable Westchester Request for Proposals for energy bids with a target date of having a new fixed energy rate by November 1.

The new contract was verified by Transparent Energy.

That Sustainable Westchester has reunited with Transparent Energy that has negotiated the recently expired contract now being fulfilled (by state law) by Con Edison at approximately  9 cents per kilowatt hour compared to 7.48 cents per klw hour, the prior Sustainable Green energy rate. That costs a Sustainable  green rate customer using 800 kwh hours in July, $77 compared to $56 in June, $20 more. If that green rate customer uses 900 kwh hours (with the extreme heat this month), they pay approximately $81—compared to $68 at the 7.48 cent June rate, $13 more.   If you use   1,000 kwh hours that costs $90 at the 9 cents average Con Ed rate now, compared to $75 at the old June 7.5 cent rate, $15 more, plus taxes

Maria Genovisi, Marketing Consultant for Sustainable Westchester responding to WPCNR inquiries issued this  written statement:

All is well here at the organization despite the temporary pause in the Westchester Power program

The pause is temporary and, in fact, we are going to bid for the new contract in the coming days.

The result of that successful effort would mean that the program would start again in the fall (likely November).

This lead time from contract bid award to start is related to compliance requirements for notification and outreach.

The events that precipitated the pause had to do with energy market pricing due to the global events, consumption concerns, etc. The timing for the new contract coincided with these energy market shifts.

Although we worked toward solutions for several months, ultimately we, along with the approval from participating municipalities, we recommended that in order to try to secure the best economic value and terms for the next contract the prudent course of action would be to temporarily pause the program.

Importantly we do also want to clarify that Con Ed had nothing to do with the pause and did not take over those accounts in a way that was anything but compliant with the law.

 They as the default designated energy supplier (by the State) have the accounts shift back to them. In fact, all in all, we have and do work well with Con Ed from an operating level.”

That Sustainable Westchester has reunited with Transparent Energy is interesting. Transparent Energy negotiated the recently expired contract two years ago.

Currently municipalities in the 28 communities in the consortium previously supplied their electricity by Sustainable are now being fulfilled (by state law) by Con Edison at approximately  9 cents per kilowatt hour compared to 7.48 cents per klw hour, the prior Sustainable Green energy rate.

That costs a Sustainable  green rate customer now today using 800 kwh hours in July, $72 compared to $56 in June, $16 more than the old green rate of 7.48 cents a kwh.

If that green rate customer uses 900 kwh hours (with the extreme heat this month), they pay approximately $81—compared to $68 at the 7.48 cent June rate, $13 more.   If you use   1,000 kwh hours that costs $90 at the 9 cents average Con Ed rate now, compared to $75 at the old June 7.5 cent rate, $15 more, plus taxes

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WPCNR TUESDAY DATELINE: REPORTER’S COMMANDMENTS # 23
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GOVERNOR HOCHUL STEPS UP SHARK PATROLS OFF LONG ISLAND BEACHES

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Typical of Tiger Sharks now coming closer to shore off Long Islands Beaches in waist high shallow water and 150 yards off shore, the distance covered by the left field foul line in Yankee Stadium. Shark attacks occurred on June 30 off Jones Beach; July 3 at Smith Point Beach, July 7 off Ocean Beach, Fire Island and July 13 at Smith Point and Seaview Beach (Perspective by WPCNR SHARK FILE FILM)

WPCNR SHORE PATROL . From the Governor’s Press Office. July 18, 2022:

In the wake of shark attacks in shallow waters off Long Island Governor Kathy Hochul today directed the Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation, the Department of Environmental Conservation, and the State Police to implement heightened patrols and surveillance of shark activity, including drone and helicopter monitoring, along the Long Island State Park Beaches due to recent shark encounters in the Atlantic Ocean waters off of the South Shore.

The Governor also directed state agencies to expand public outreach efforts on shark safety resources and education to help beachgoers stay safe.  

“As New Yorkers and visitors alike head to our beautiful Long Island beaches to enjoy the summer, our top priority is their safety,” Governor Hochul said. “We are taking action to expand patrols for sharks and protect beachgoers from potentially dangerous situations. I encourage all New Yorkers to listen to local authorities and take precautions to help ensure safe and responsible beach trips this summer.” 

At the Governor’s direction, State Parks will increase lifeguard staffing through overtime at ocean beaches by 25 percent.

This will translate to approximately two to four lifeguards within each field, which will boost surveillance for sharks and other marine life from the shore, by surfboats, and through an enhanced drone beach surveillance program.

There will also be additional surveillance measures through expanded drone availability, increasing from one to three available drones at Jones Beach State Park and one to two available drones at Robert Moses State Park, and Hither Hills State Park will be assigned its first drone.

Park Police also have one drone available to respond as needed. Drone surveillance capabilities at Long Island State Park beaches will also expand from the current four miles to 11 miles. 

Additionally, State Parks has acquired extra drone batteries and rapid battery chargers to extend the duration of available drone surveillance. Long Island State Parks has 13 certified drone operators, with six more operators expected to complete certification in the coming weeks. 

Other new actions include: 

  • Deploying Park Police patrol boats to search the water. 
  • Dispatching New York State Police helicopter patrols over the South Shore waters. 
  • Distributing outreach materials focused on education via social media, DEC listserv, and website to the public. 
  • Bolstering federal, state, county, and local partnerships to share resources and information about potential shark sightings and better support correct identification of sharks and other fish. 

Under State Park shark safety guidelines,

Swimming is suspended following a shark sighting so the shoreline can be inspected by drone.

Swimming is only allowed to resume at least an hour after the last sighting in order to better protect beach visitors.

 All sightings are referred to the Long Island Coastal Awareness Group, which consists of 180 individuals from municipalities, agencies, and private beach operators stretching from Queens through Long Island.

State Park lifeguards are continuously scanning and patrolling the waters and are on the lookout for any sharks or other potentially dangerous marine life. 

To minimize the risk of shark interactions, the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation advises the following shark safety tips

  • Avoid areas with seals. 
  • Avoid areas with schools of bait fish, often characterized by fish splashing on the surface, diving sea birds, or the presence of marine mammals such as dolphins. 
  • Avoid areas where people are fishing. 
  • Avoid swimming in the ocean at dusk, dawn, or nighttime. 
  • Avoid murky water.   
  • Avoid isolation. Swim, paddle, kayak, and surf in groups. 
  • Swim close to shore, where your feet can touch the bottom. 
  • Always follow the instructions of lifeguards and Parks staff. 
  • Adhere to all signage at beaches
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6,926 NEW COVID POSITIVES IN WESTCHESTER FIRST 16 DAYS OF JULY. LAST JULY HAD 415. 10,000 POSSIBLE BY AUGUST 1.

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Westchester County reels from new infections under reported due to low test rate, swelled by 9,921 infections the month of June. Infections have risen in 14 of last 16 weeks since April 1

WPCNR COVID VIRUS SURVEILLANCE. From New York State Covid tracker. Observations & Analysis by John F. Bailey. July 18, 2022:

The New York State Covid Tracker reported 2,512 Westchester residents tested positive for covid the week ended Saturday, July 16, the last 7 days, with the bulk of new positives recorded Tuesday through Saturday. with Westchester reporting 358 new positives a day average.

The New York State Covid Tracker reported the 7 day average positives for the county per 100,000 persons was 32.

For those of you who do not know the population of Westchester County (1,004,471) that works out to 321 a day positive across the county. The actual numbers last week were more than that: 358 a day on limited testings averaging 3,350 tests a day last week ended Saturday (all of which are Lab certified positive, home tests do not count in those figures) The positive test percentage of those tested last week was 10% for Westchester County.

This suggests to me that if you tested 10,000 persons and the lab processed the tests you’d find 1,000 positives a day which would explain why the persons testing positive continues to grow.

More disturbing a figure is the momentum of covid infections the last three months. New infections have gone up in 14 of the last 16 weeks.

THE 19 TOWNS AND CITIES IN WESTCHESTER

WITH 100 NEW INFECTIONS JULY 7-14:

TOWN/CITY ACTIVE CASES NEW CASES DAILY

YONKERS 1,230 95

MOUNT VERNON 460 49

NEW ROCHELLE 426 33

WHITE PLAINS 370 23

GREENBURGH 323 24

YORKTOWN 233 10

MOUNT PLEASANT 178 8

NORTH & NEW CASTLES 174 12

MAMRNK TOWN VILL, LARCH 171 16

TARRYTOWN/SLEEPY HOLLOW 169 12

CORTLANDT 164 19

OSSININGS 158 10

HARRISON 140 8

EASTCHESTER 137 4

PEEKSKILL 130 13

SOMERS 127 11

RYE CITY AND RYE BROOK 120 14

PORT CHESTER 106 7

SCARSDALE 101 6

TOTAL, 19 TOWNS 4,917 AVG. DAILY NEW CASES 2 WEEKS:: 388

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SILENCE.

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John Bailey. The CitizeNetReporter

WPCNR THE SUNDAY BAILEY. News & Comment By John F. Bailey. July 17, 2022:

Silence is what we get when the money of the citizens is the spoils up for grabs in this state.

Silence.

Not a peep has been heard from our “representatives” in Albany, the “leaders” of towns in which we live, in Washington Halls of Congress where they “represent us” about what may be the apparent end of   Sustainable Westchester-Westchester Power the New York State solution to combat climate change.

Power companies are big blue elephants walking across the poker table of high stakes energy supply and by a highly interesting series of cost increases and direct mail campaign pricing Sustainable Westchester out of the energy business.

I am stunned  at this ripping us off again because the ESCOS and Con Ed are big and the Governor, our State Senators, our State Assemblyman, our County Executives and our Mayors and Town Supervisors have not gotten on the phones to Con Ed on television and chewed them out or launched show cause orders to stop this obvious anti-competitive strategy. Who hatched this strategy? Did legislators know about it? Did Governor Hochul know about it?

Silence.

That is also what we are getting from Sustainable Westchester,too.

The representatives of Sustainable Westchester I used to speak to on their operations are apparently no longer available.

Sustainable has turned over their customers to Con Edison beginning July 1.

So now my electric rate will pay the average rate right now of 9 cents a kilowatt hour for 800 kw of  Con Ed electricity in July, about $16 more and if with the hot weather I go up to 850 kwhs of electricity, I will pay $20 a month more. However the delivery charge will go up, too. Not a lot of money, the damage is long term and possibly irrepairable.

There is no guarantee the rates won’t go up more with the Con Ed juice.

I wanted to ask Sustainable if they are preparing a lawsuit against this being priced out of the market because of “rising costs.”

This is outrageous. Demand for their services (ESCO Power) has not gone down. How about  the ESCOS cutting their profit margin rather than rising costs to keep it intact?

Sustainable Westchester is the organization residents of White Plains have been paying 7.48 cents a kilowatt hour (this year’s rate) for 6 years for green energy based power.  

Coincidentally, Con Edison has been attempting to lure customers away from Sustainable Westchester since last fall (in the last year of the current Sustainable Contract.

More revolutionary about Sustainable Westchester  is their successful ability to sign up 28 cities and towns in Westchester for their program which uses aggregated pooling of purchasing power of towns and cities to lower energy costs and stabilize them for all residents of those communities at the same rate a month for two years.

I love the low green rate.

The power companies hate it.

 The purchasing power Sustainable Westchester wields or (used to wield)  in Westchester in one of the nation’s largest electricity markets has hurt power companies especially the big ones in the revenue tanker.

 Simultaneously, the program has seen green energy sources supply (at last look) 30% of the power to the New York Grid, in 6 years! If this continued another 6 years the source of green energy could grow to more than half the source of electricity in the state.

The traditional coal and natural gas Electric Supply Companies, are going to be hurting and have to supply the dirty states still functioning on mostly dirty energy sources.

Sustainable Westchester in a letter sent to leaders including Mr. Paul Feiner, announced three weeks ago, they were “pausing” because their Electrical Supply Companies have on mass apparently all their energy costs of supply power green or dirty sources had gone up.

The prices they ESCOS were offering Sustainable Westchester for the new 2-year contract did not, Sustainable said in their letter to leaders enable Sustainable deliver a feasible green rate or traditional mix of dirty sources with green power that Sustainable could maintain for two years.

No leader, no agency, no State Senator or Assemblyperson, or Governor Kathy Hochul have jumped on this blatant Standard Oil robber baron techniques of manipulating suppliers who all coincidently despite different customer bases, different supply demands, different revenues and expenses, are all paying the same for energy costs to make the electricity.

What? Can you believe this? You can’t make this stuff up?

Apparently our representatives do.

No senate assembly hearings have been suggested.

No congressional hearings called for.

No Public Service Commission reaction.

At least this deserves “concern” on the part of Governor Hochul, State Senators Andrea Stewart Cousins and Shelley Meyer.

Please.

Wake up and smell the coffee once.

The future of the planet is at stake and Sustainable Westchester has contributed much to achieve progress in cleaning up greenhouse gases in a short period of time.

As a public service, I’d like to refresh, honorable representatives what the Sherman Antitrust act says:

The Sherman Antitrust Act

This Act outlaws all contracts, combinations, and conspiracies that unreasonably restrain interstate and foreign trade. This includes agreements among competitors to fix prices, rig bids, and allocate customers, which are punishable as criminal felonies.

The Sherman Act also makes it a crime to monopolize any part of interstate commerce. An unlawful monopoly exists when one firm controls the market for a product or service, and it has obtained that market power, not because its product or service is superior to others, but by suppressing competition with anticompetitive conduct.

The Act, however, is not violated simply when one firm’s vigorous competition and lower prices take sales from its less efficient competitors; in that case, competition is working properly.

Where is the New York State Attorney General Letitia James on this one.

Where is the Department of Justice? The New York State Federal Prosecutor should look into this blatant, aggressive raising of prices on mass massively to purchase of power beyond their reach. John D Rockefeller used just this technique resulting in the growth of Standard Oil from 1870 to 1902, so much that his company was broken up by the “Trust-Buster,” Teddy Roosevelt.

The power of the big dollars Sustainable controls to purchase their energy supply from Electric Supply Companies (ESCOS is the acronym masking of the power industry)  promote building up solar, wind and water power, and combine aggregate spending power of towns and villages to build a statewide purchasing power to lower energy costs and stabilize them for the people who pay the bill.

Since last fall Con Edison  has mailed millions of New York area customers this mailing—solidly behind clean energy. The pitch says you can switch to clean energy with Con Edison through their new electricity producer, Clean Choice Energy. I have received this mailing about 4 times, so it must be successful in wooing customers from the Sustain Westchester choice.

Combined with this new announcement of the Sustainable Westchester pausing and turn over their customers to Con Ed!

As any detective will tell you there is no such thing as a coincidence in a favorable result to an interested party or parties that benefit from the result.

The legislators and leaders of this state,  with one exception, Paul Feiner of Greenburgh, have

  •  Averted their eyes,
  • Suspended their press staffs not so much as issuing  a  handwringing statement
  • What might appear to us as a subtle bigger effort to end aggregate combining of purchasing power to lower the costs of electricity and encourage clean green energy of solar, wind and water driven power does not raise an eyebrow, a voice?

The objective might be overall appears to be to control  the spread of the green sources and make money from them themselves and in the process, rake back the revenue they have lost to Sustainable Westchester the last 6 years, and prevent customers from paying less for electricity.

That is not in our interest, the payer. Not in the public interest.

It shows you where your representatives are.

Not in your corner.

They are in Power interests corner.

In the last three weeks we learned through Mr. Feiner telling us about it: the “pause,”or is it an outright  as foraging herd of big blue elephants walks across the state power grid  poker table with muddy feet, sending us back to electric monopoly and free reign over the supply costs through the ruthless strategies of Standard Oil of the 1870s: price controls, price fixing, and iron-handed tactics against small upstart competitive oil companies, and secret deals with railroads to enforce his interests.

I waited two weeks before I wrote this, waiting for more than one elected official other than Mr. Feiner to assure us this is not the end of Sustainable Westchester and the program will continue in the state.

Nothing.

Silence.

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STATUS OF MONKEYPOX IN WESTCHESTER COUNTY USA 12 ACTIVE CASES: MPOX VAX AVAILABLE IN WHITE PLAINS MONDAY. VACCINATION SCHEDULE ISSUED BELOW

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COUNTY EXECUTIVE GEORGE LATIMER GIVES UPDATE ON

MONKEYPOX IN WESTCHESTER.

VACCINES ONLY GIVEN TO PERSONS OVER 18 IF YOU SHOW SYMPTOMS OF DISEASE. ONLY PEOPLE . MUST CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT MONDAY 12 NOON 914-813-5000. 2 SHOTS OF THE POX VAX REQUIRED WITHIN 4 WEEKS

Watch the full News Conference Here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V_yUTpx30KE

WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER From the Westchester County Department of Communications. July 16, 2022 UPDATED 5:45 P.M. E.DT. BY EDITOR:

County Executive George Latimer and Health Commissioner Dr. Sherlita Amler confirmed Friday there are 12 active cases of orthopoxvirus, also known as Monkeypox, in Westchester. To prevent further spread of the virus, the Westchester County Health Department will be holding Monkeypox vaccine clinics starting Monday. The County is focused on getting the symptomatic tested, vaccinating those exposed and educating the public. 

The county has received supplies of the monkeypox vaccine and will begin administerting the first shots Monday at various locations. Only persons 18 or older are cleared for the vaccine. According to Dr. Amler you must be diagnosed with symptoms of the disease to receive the vaccine. Dr. Amler said the vaccine unlike the covid vaccine can act as a “prophylactic” and cure the disease. The disease if untreated with the vaccine can last 4 weeks.

Pictures of a monkeypox victim showing how the disease affects the skin (Provided by Editor)
Close up of a typical Monkeypox pustule (upper left) should you get the disease (Provided by Editor)


Latimer said: “While the risk for Monkeypox remains low for Westchester County residents, we want everyone to be aware that this virus can spread from person to person. Monkeypox can be transferred from the time symptoms begin, until the rash has fully healed and a new layer of skin has formed. If you feel you are exhibiting symptoms of the virus, we encourage you get vaccinated as soon as possible.”

Amler said: “We should not be alarmed, but we should stay informed about the symptoms and how the virus is spread. Residents should seek care immediately if they present symptoms consistent with Monkeypox, such as rashes or lesions. This will help us to prevent a further spread of the virus in the County.”

Dr. Amler said the disease can also be picked from the clothing an infected person with Monkey Pox as worn.

Testing for Monkeypox is done by swabbing a lesion. To be tested a lesion must be present, or an individual must have had an exposure in 14 days or fewer. Testing is now being processed at commercial labs in New York State, and results are returned within 48 hours.

The Monkeypox vaccine is a two dose vaccine with 28 days between doses for adults 18+. Westchester County received 450 doses of MPX vaccine from New York State in the first batch, and 520 doses in the second batch. The County Health Department is working with New York State to obtain more vaccine.

The Phase I Plan for MPX vaccine distribution is as follows:

ProviderDoses
Westchester Medical Center100
Open Door Family Medical Center100
White Plains Hospital/Family Medicine Clinic10
St John’s Riverside Hospital’s Hope Community Center.100
Westchester County Department of Health50
Remaining Supply90

The Phase II Plan for MPX vaccine distribution is as follows:

The Westchester County Health Department will hold clinics on Mondays from 12-3 p.m., and Wednesdays from 4-7 p.m. at 134 Court Street, White Plains. This is by appointment only, and individuals must attest that they meet the criteria. To make an appointment, visit the Health Department Website or call 914-995-5800.

All positive cases of a County resident are required to be reported to the Westchester County Health Department, who will conduct contact tracing. If the contact meets the criteria, they should reach out to the Health Department or one of the other locations listed above to be vaccinated. 

Westchester County is working closely with its LGBTQ Advisory Board and The Loft to educate the public and reach those who are most at risk.

Mr. Latimer said there were currently 1,470 persons nationwide who have monkeypox. Of that 1,470, 414 are in the State of New York and 389 of them are in New York City. Westchester as of 6 PM Saturday evening was reported to have 16 cases, (four more since Friday morning.

For more information on Monkeypox, visit: health.ny.gov/Monkeypox.

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WHITE PLAINS WEEK THE JULY 15 REPORT ON WWW.WPCOMMUNITYMEDIA.ORG RIGHT NOW WITH JOHN BAILEY AND GUEST ANCHOR, WESTCHESTER NEWSMAN BOB MARRONE NOT ONE BUT TWO ANCHORS TO STEADY THE SHIP

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JOHN BAILEY AND BOB MARRONE AND THE NEWS TONIGHT TOGETHER AGAIN!
WESTCHESTER RADIO AND WESTCHESTER TALK RADIO NEWSMAN BOB MARRONE–OPINIONATED, INFORMED, INSIGHTFUL, BLUNT WITH SEASONED PERSPECTIVE
ELECTRIC SHOCK! SUSTAINABLE WESTCHESTER STOPS SUSTAINING–CON ED GETS YOUR BUSINESS NO LEADER EXCEPT PAUL FEINER TALKS ABOUT THIS? CRIMMINY!! WHERE IS THE GOVERNOR, LEGISLATORS, SENATORS, CONGRESSPERSONS, STATE SENATORS, ASSEMBLY PERSONS ON THIS DEAL?
The JANET DIFIORE DEPARTURE AS CHIEF JUSTICE OF THE COURT OF APPEALS IN NY
WHITE PLAINS WEEK FIGURES OUT YOUR NEW ELECTRIC BILL FROM CON ED THIS MONTH
COVID ON CRUISE IN WESTCHESTER COUNTY– NEW YORK STATE
COUNTY EXECUTIVE COVID BRIEFING OF THE WEEK
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White Plains, Scarsdale Mamaroneck Democratic Parties HOLD ZOOMED Primary Forum for 16th Congressional District Monday, July 18 PRIMARY IS AUGUST 23.

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The newly drawn 16th Congressional District shown on the left, with four candidates running). The State Senate Districts 35 & 37 are on the right (uncontested on the right)

WPCNR CAMPAIGN 2022. From The White Plains Democratic City Committee July 14, 2022:

The Scarsdale Democratic Town Committee and the Town of Mamaroneck Democratic Committee will sponsor an online candidate forum for the Democratic candidates for Congress in the newly redistricted 16th Congressional District on Monday July 18 from 7:30-9 p.m. The new 16th CD will cover much of Westchester County and The Bronx.

All four candidates have agreed have agreed to participate in the Zoom webinar that will be moderated by Scarsdale Democratic Chair Myra Saul, Mamaroneck Democratic Chair Verena Arnabal, and White Plains Democratic Chair Tim James. They will draw from questions submitted by members of the three committees.

The participants are: incumbent Rep. Jamaal Bowman, Westchester County Board of Legislators members Vedat Gashi (District 4) and Catherine Parker (District 7), and attorney Mark Jaffe, CEO of the Greater New York Chamber of Commerce.

Voters and other interested parties are invited to join the forum by registering in advance at https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_MSrtHBs2R2iZGzDCAcSPhw.

After registering, registrants will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar.

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