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WPCNR MAIN STREET JOURNAL.From Benjamin Boykin, County Legislator, District 5. March 22, 2022:
The City of White Plains and the White Plains Business Improvement District (WP BID) have secured “Harriet Tubman – The Journey to Freedom” sculpture for display in White Plains.
The sculpture will be placed in Renaissance Plaza (aka Fountain Park) for public viewing from April 1 through June 30. This location in the heart of downtown White Plains ensures the sculpture will have high visibility and will be easily accessible to the public.
The City and the WP BID will create and promote a calendar of programs and events to highlight the sculpture’s presence. This calendar will include City and BID-sponsored events, as well as a number of programs and events sponsored by community organizations, such as:
An outdoor showing of the Movie, Harriet, on Court Street on Saturday, May 21
A tribute concert to Harriet Tubman in Renaissance Plaza on Wednesday, June 22 featuring the Sounds of A&R aka SOAR, an evening of Soul, R& B, Gospel and Jazz
The annual Juneteenth Parade and Festival sponsored by the White Plains Juneteenth Heritage Committee on Saturday, June 11
The 9 foot high, 2,400 lb. bronze sculpture was created by artist Wesley Wofford of North Carolina. Originally commissioned for a private client, the sculpture has more recently been made available to the public and has traveled to a number of locations around the United States.
Frank Cavaliere. (Photo Credit, McHoul Funeral Home, Inc.)
WPCNR MILESTONES.From Greenburgh Town Supervisor Paul Feiner. March 21,2022:
The Town of Greenburgh has created a GoFundMe page to support the children of Frank Cavaliere. The page is at: https://www.gofundme.com/f/cavalierechildren
Donations may also be mailed to “LISA CAVALIERE” and mail to: GreenburghPolice Department, c/o Jared Rosenberg, 188 Tarrytown Road, White Plains, NY 10607. Make checks payable to “LISA CAVALIERE”.
Frank was a dedicated and well-liked Greenburgh Police dispatcher for almost 29 years. He passed away on February 5, 2022 due to Covid.
Because of the overwhelming number of department members out sick due to the Omicron variant of Covid-19, Dispatcher Cavaliere filled in for an additional 8 tours between December 25th and 31st, for a total of 57.25 extra hours in overtime.
During this time dispatcher Cavaliere was exposed to employees who had subsequently tested positive for Covid-19.
Frank has two children, his daughter Ashley (14) and son Zackary (11). He loved listening to Ashley sing and play keyboard, and he loved playing and watching football with Zackary. On his days off from work he would do Bible study with his family. Frank loved God with all of his heart.
The last text Frank sent to his wife before being placed on the ventilator read: “Remember how the true God works. James 1:16-18 and John 1:13.”
Funds raised will be used to support the children. His wife Lisa will oversee the donations to make sure that every dollar raised will be put to good use for them, and to help pay for future education expenses.
Frank was a dedicated public servant.
As a police dispatcher he made sure that those who needed services of our Greenburgh police department received them. His efforts saved many lives. He was always available to help the police when they needed his assistance – in the two weeks before becoming ill with Covid he worked well over 100 hours, pulling double shifts most days, and sometimes averaging only four hours of sleep.
He lived an hour away from work. But, always put the town and our residents first. On December 31st he returned home from work and was coughing violently. He was admitted into the hospital on January 8th, and placed on a ventilator on January 23rd. His kidneys failed on January 25th, and on February 5th at 9:30 P.M., he entered the kingdom of Heaven.
Frank always put others first. He put his own life at risk to work during this pandemic.
He took calls from others who were affected by Covid who may have survived the virus that ultimately took his life. He did so to support his children and to make sure all their needs were met. He is no longer here to do this.
Please show your appreciation by making a donation to Frank’s family so his children can have a good life. We also hope that his family (wife and children) will be comforted knowing how much Frank meant to the Greenburgh community.
WPCNR CORONA VIRUS MONITOR.From the New York State Coronavirus Tracker. Analysis by John F. Bailey. March 20, 2022:
In the second week back from the winter vacation, the traditional time those who can take short vacations, and students socialize, Westchester County new infections of covid rose to 890 new persons testing positive during the week of March 13 to Saturday March 19.
This figure is up 53% from the 582 new infections March 6 to 12. Prior to last week, Westchester had diminished new cases 10 consecutive weeks.
The 890 new persons testing positive for covid meant that Westchester averaged 127 new persons a day testing positive last week. Two weeks ago, Westchester reported 754 cases for the week of February 27 to March.
Those 754 cases spread new covid cases to 1 and a half other persons by Saturday the 19th ( 890 divided by 754).
At this rate, Covid is slightly gaining in infecting. It may not be more contagious, or maybe it is, or maybe the relaxed atmosphere — more socialization by young persons on vacations from school, or relaxed socializing by adult in restaurants, due to March Madness. There is always the possibility that this will not continue and start to go down again. It had better do that.
The spread is far more ominous in New York City five boroughs where all five combined to raise covid new positive infections 38% in a week!
From the second week when masks were declared not mandatory, March 6 to March 13, 4,740 new positives were reported in the entire city, an average of 677 a day. That week New York City was experiencing new infections for the 7 days, of 381, 393, 634, 883,669,1,087 and 693 already rising
Last week from March 13 to 19 the covid surge continued to spread across the city. Last week, 6,526 persons were infected with covid a 38% increase in the five boroughs of New York from March 13 to March 19. This compared to the 4,470 the previous week, (the second week of returning to schools in New York City in an approved maskless school system) . The infection rate in New York City (all 5 boroughs) was 932 new cases a day compared to 677 a day two weeks ago.
Since no demographics are being released on infections, there is no way to tell whether infections are coming from the schools, the 20-somethings, 30-somethings, 40-somethings, or older-somethings. That would be important for Mayor Eric Adams to know. I am sure this is known to the authorities, but the public should know, too.
The Nassau-Suffolk counties are not as infected with new covid cases, so it is a mystery where the new cases are coming from. Nassau and Suffolk Counties have infection rates of 2% and 1.7% average, and averaging about 200 cases a day, compared to hundreds of cases in each county in February this year and thousands of cases in each county in January of this year. The present rise is not covid carelessness in Nassau and Suffolk Counties this time.
In the Westchester County Mid-Hudson Region, Ulster County had more cases than Westchester County, 198 to Westchester 102.
Westchester averaged 127 new covid positives a day for 7 days. Rockland 34 day, Orange—22 per day, Ulster County, 42 new covid cases a day; Dutchess County, 21 a day , Sullivan 2 a day, Putnam and Putnam 8 a day.
Nassau County averaged 126 new covid positives a day and Suffolk County 98.
WPCNR THE SUNDAY BAILEY.News & Comment by John F. Bailey. March 20, 2022:
WORK CONTINUES ON CONGESTION PRICING, THE PLAN TO CHARGE VEHICLES THAT ENTER MID- AND LOWER MANHATTAN DURING PEAK TRAFFIC HOURS.
THE MTA AGENCY IS IN THE MIDDLE OF A FEDERAL ENVIRONMENTAL REVIEW AND THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE TOLLING INFRASTRUCTURE IS SCHEDULED TO BEGIN IN 2023.
Why in the world does this plan, to make New York City a place nobody nowhere will want to drive into– need an environmental review?
I can tell you what no environmental review can ever predict is the attitude of the people that will perhaps contribute more to polluting the environment than the present situation.
First, if more people do not come back to riding trains to fund the MTA “dartboard budgeting” plans to help the MTA (now filling trains at 50% capacity) and continue to drive in despite the tolls, this is going to pollute the atmosphere more. How much more? No one can predict that. I am coughing already in the neighborhoods above 60th Streetwhere the exhaust fumes of cars will congest-up at the tolls
You have no way of judging whether this astounding plan will get people out of their cars, especially with the MTA admission in a cheerful press release last week that the subways need cleaning up and better security. I thought they were cleaning the trains nightly the last two years, didn’t you?
But consider what has happened since masks came off in the schools when the winter break ended and masks could come off in restaurants and businesses. New York City Boroughs have gone up to 1,023 new covid infections in 6 days since we returned to “normal”.
If the new variants spoke of in theNew York Times today, come into New York, this will create a new factor. Persons will be highly reluctant to take trains and expose their faces to anyone possibly maskless rider. Will there be mask enforcement if someone gets on and takes the mask off? There has never been mask enforcement anywhere I have seen in Westchester County.
Why should we believe the MTA in saying this congestion tolling starting at 60th Street all the way to the battery, effectively cutting off half of Manhattan to drivers, inflating can even begin in 2023. We have not seen a plan of where the tolls will go, that I know of.
BUT TAKE A GOOD LOOK AT THIS GRAPHIC demonstrating the areas where entry into the city with your car will be subject to a toll.
THIS SAYS TO ME THE ENTIRE SOUTH HALF OF MANHATTAN IS GOING TO BE TOLLED. This will be unbelievable to see. One way streets eastbound coming off the West Side Highway and one-way westbound streets accessible from the FDR Drive via Triboro Bridge (I refuse to call it the RFK Bridge) and of course the two way main crosstown conduits,Canal Street, 14th Street, 23rd Street, 34th Street, 42nd Street, 59th Street , (I think 52nd Street is two-way, too), would have to be tolled two-way (what a decision!)
Now the other decision: how many toll gantries or whetever will be placed on the one-ways? Every one? Otherwise you have discretion tolling. If you do not toll every one-way street south of 60th Street, you will have so much congestion from 60TH you will have to hire humans to direct the turns onto the North South bound avenues.
There are 12 North South avenues in Manhattan. I believe six are one way North, or South, and Broadway, Park Avenue, Fifth Avenue Broadway, 8th Avenue are two way North and South. They would have to be considered for tolls at where they end in the north and the south. What backups!
HOW MANY AND WHAT KIND OF AUTOMATIC TOLLING GANTRYS OR CAMERAS or EZ PASS READERS ARE GOING TO BE NEEDED. I asked the source of the MTA press release what kind of tolling apparatus would be installed, and if they had been ordered yet and how many? I am still waiting for an answer.
IT HAS TO BE EASILY 200 EAST WEST STREETS DEVICES AT EITHER END; AND IF YOU DO NOT HAVE EZ PASS YOU HAVE TO PHOTOGRAPH LOG AND MAIL THE TOLL TO THEM.
IS THIS CRAZY OR WHAT. AND SINCE THEY HAVE NOT ORDERED THE DEVICES, TO MY KNOWLEDGE, THEY ONLY HAVE 9 MONTHS. THIS IS UNBELIEVABLY NAÏVE PLANNING.
FORGET ABOUT DRIVING IN FOR OFFBROADWAY PRODUCTIONS IN THE VILLAGE; DRIVING IN TO STROLL THE HIGH LINE, SHOP MIDTOWN, LET ALONE BROADWAY SHOWS. At perhaps $9 a car plus the parking garage, it will cost perhaps $40 just to get in and park.
For me to take Brenda Starr and I into Manhattan under congestion pricing, adding $9 to the parking garage fee of $30 (at a discount garage), I’d say to make congestion pricing get people to switch to the trains, in theory you should charge the cars more than $9 to make taking the trains the more affordable alternative. They have to charge $10 more than a Roundtrip train ticket, perhaps $20 more. There is no understanding or thinking in structuring this pricing, that I can see, (it’s too low).
“WE ARE SEEING EXTREMELY STRONG RIDERSHIP EAST OF THE HUDSON OVER THE PAST COUPLE OF WEEKS,” said the MTA in its press release two weeks ago.
The reason for congestion pricing? The press release (you can read it on this website) said:
“THE CONGESTION (in midtown) IS HARMING OUR ABILITY TO DELIVER KEY SERVICES…WE HAVE TO HAVE BUSES. WE HAVE TO HAVE AMBULANCES AND OTHER EMERGENCY VEHICLES BE ABLE TO GET AROUND…WE HAVE TO MAKE IT POSSIBLE FOR ALL THE DELIVERY TRUCKS THAT ARE NOW THE REALITY OF OUR MODERN ECONOMY TO MAKE THEIR WAY AROUND. THAT IS WHAT, AMONG OTHER THINGS, IS PRESSING US TO ADOPT A CONGESTION-PRICING SYSTEM.”
People like driving in because they do not like riding the trains. They never have. They use them because they can drive their cars to the station park and avoid the higher price of paid monthly parking in the city. Congestion pricing will not make New York City more attractive to companies considering Manhattan.
Now, if the environmental review has still yet to be completed, and when it is completed they conclude the effects of congestion pricing will not create adverse impacts on the environment, it is poppycock.
Any environmental decision based on optimistic predictions not based on performances in the past, and Pollyanna outcomes you want to happen is an enablement. Often careless environmental reviews will create unanticipated, perhaps disastrous consequences.
PAUL FEINER BEING INTERVIEWED BY DON SIMMONS OF WVOX 1460 AT THE WVOX ST. PATRICK’S DAY PARTY THURSDAYAT MIRAGE RESTAURANT
WPCNR THE LETTER TICKER.From Paul Feiner, Greenburgh Town Supervisor. March 19, 2022:
New idea a student run news program about the town
Looking for mentors with background in journalism and students who would like to host a monthly news program about the town—e mail pfeiner@greenburghny.com if interested.
Most people move to Greenburgh because of our excellent schools and the fantastic educational opportunities offered to students. Although the town is independent of the school districts we have tried, over the years, to complement the work the school districts offer students.
Town Clerk Judith Beville and I have co-sponsored an excellent summer internship program for students for over a dozen years. Last year we expanded programs for young people by offering students the opportunity to work with the Zuckerberg Institute -students have helped struggling Greenburgh businesses survive–using their social media and creative skills. These programs continue in 2022. The Theodore Young Community Center also offers students great opportunities to excel.
A new idea: Would like to start a student run news program about the town. Students will host a monthly cable TV news program about Greenburgh.
INTRODUCING SNN, “The Student News Network”
They will report on the work of the Town Board and of different departments in town government. the “student news network” will provide viewers with info on local controversies and proposed legislation.
They will interview civic leaders and residents and could also provide viewers with commentary. They will give viewers both sides of issues.
Their news stories will not be censored by the town –we hope the student journalists will be fair and objective and provide residents with a source of good local news.
We also want to teach the students about journalism, provide students who are interested in the field with a great learning opportunity.
To make this happen—we need student reporters. And, we need mentors who have experience in journalism.
E mail me at pfeiner@greenburghny.com if you are interested. Students interested in this opportunity should also advise what grades they are in. We may want to create different Greenburgh student news network programs for students at different grades. Mentors should highlight their background.
You can call me at 438 1343 (cell) to discuss.
The success of our democracy requires scrutiny of government actions. The more oversight the better. Creating a new student news network could be an exciting initaitive.
Want to emphasize that Greenburgh Student News Network reporters will work with mentors and there will be no effort by town officials to influence the reporting.