WHITE PLAINS WESTCHESTER DAILY NEWS SERVICE VISITS SINCE 2000 A.D. 25TH YEARl REPORTING THE NEWS YOU NEED TO KNOW News Service Since 2000 A.D. 2026 WILL BE OUR 26TH YEAR OF COVERING WHITE PLAINS NEW YORK USA . John F. Bailey, Editor (914) 997-1607 wpcnr@aol.com Cell: 914-673-4054. News Politics Personalities Neighborhoods Schools Finance Real Estate Commentary Reviews Policy Correspondence Poetry Philosophy Photojournalism Arts. The WHITE PLAINS CITIZENETREPORTER. TELEVISION: "White Plains Week" News Roundup, 7:30 EDT FRI, 7 EDT MON & the incisive "People to Be Heard" Interview Program 8PM EDT THURS, 7 PM EDT SAT on FIOS CH 45 THROUGHOUT WESTCHESTER AND, ALTICE OPTIMUM WHITE PLAINS CH 1300 Fighting for Truth, Justice and the American Way. TOP 10 VISITORS FROM AROUND THE WORLD :1. USA. 2.BRAZIL3.VIET NAM 4. CHINA 5. JAPAN 6.UK. 7.CANADA. 8.INDIA. 9.AUSTRALIA 10.IRELAND 11.GERMANY 12..ARGENTINA 13.BANGLADESH 14.RUSSIA. 15.NEWZEALAND. 16. FRANCE. 17.MEXICO. 18.UKRAINE. 19.SOUTH AFVRICA. 20. IRAQ.
THE RITZ-CARLTON WHITE PLAINS ON OPENING IN NOVEMBER 2007 (WPCNR ARCHIVE)
WPCNR MAIN STREET JOURNAL. By John F. Bailey. June 25, 2020:
After 13 years overlooking Renaissance Square, The Ritz-Carlton White Plains,will close September 10, to upgrade the Ritz to a “contemporary, luxurious” Marriott International Autograph Collection Hotel in early 2021.
Glacier Capital Partners of Montana, the owners, (an equity fund
company) published plans to renovate the hotel into a Marriott International
Autograph Collection Hotel early in 2021 this week.
Rendering of new reception area planned for the Autograph Collection Hotel to appeal to today’s tastes. (Glacier Photo)The new Salon rendering off the reception area of the new renovation planned.
For about 10 months, White Plains will be without the major upscale hotel attraction that has delivered, style and chic to the central downtown.
When White Plains put on the Ritz in 2007, it was the crown
jewel of the Louis Cappelli-envisioned Renaissance Square complex that
coronated the White Plains Renaissance period of 2003-2007. Mr. Cappelli envisioned
and bult the City Center complex and then the twin glass towers of the Ritz-Carlton palace, that distinguish the Westchester
County skyline from the Hudson to the Sound. (You can see the towers in the
signature skyline of White Plains New York USA at the top of this page.)
The 5 years of construction by Cappelli Enterprises (from start
to finish of both complexes in sequential order, made White Plains the talk of
the County. The two projects have sustained White Plains for 13 years through
the slow recovery from the Wall Street/ derivatives crash of 2008, and still do
that during the current slowdown of building projects lagging for lack of
financing across the city. Only Mr. Cappelli’s construction of 55 Bank Street
is nearing completion of the half dozen projects approved by the city since
2007.
Marriott describes the Autograph Hotel experience as “inspired by a clear vision, soul and story.” It currently has 192 hotels in operation worldwide.
The Notice of Closing filed by Glacier with the New York Department of Labor, stated 183 employees would be laid off as a result of the closure for reimagining the vision of a contemporary luxury destination.
GOVERNOR CUOMO AND GOVERNORS MURPHY OF NEW JERSEY AND LAMONT OF CONNECTICUT ANNOUNCING 14 DAY QUARANTINE ON ARRIVALS FROM 9 STATES BEGINNING MIDNIGHT TONIGHT
WPCNR CORONA VIRUS NEWS. From the Governor’s Office. June 24, 2020:
Governor Andrew M. Cuomo, New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy and Connecticut Governor Ned Lamont today announced a joint incoming travel advisory that all individuals traveling from states with significant community spread of COVID-19 quarantine for a 14-day period from the time of last contact within the identified state.
The states are Alabama, Arkansas, Arizona, Florida, North and South Carolina, Washington, Utah, and Texas.
This quarantine – effective midnight tonight – applies to any person arriving from a state with a positive test rate higher than 10 per 100,000 residents over a 7-day rolling average or a state with a 10% or higher positivity rate over a 7-day rolling average.
New York, New Jersey and Connecticut will continually update and publish on their respective websites a list of states to which the new advisory applies. This information will be updated regularly.
The tri-state measure will use uniform parameters and messaging on highways, airports, websites and social media across the three states. The three states will also ask hotels to communicate the 14-day quarantine to guests who have traveled from one of the impacted states.
VIDEO of the Governor’s remarks is available on YouTube here and in TV quality (h.264, mp4) format here.
First, I want to personally thank the governor’s on behalf of myself and behalf of all the people of the State. They’ve been extraordinary colleagues through this situation. We’ve been mutually supportive, they’ve been mutually helpful beyond the normal government relations or political relations. This was a situation that nobody had really faced before and I am thankful that they were personal comforts and sources of strength for me in being able to talk through this situation with them and come up with coordinated plans really made a difference. There were no states that were handed a worst hand, if you will, when this started than our states.
Remember what happened. We had some of the highest infection rates because we had people coming from Europe who brought the virus. They traced our virus in this region back to Europe and we had a federal government that told us the virus was in China, it’s in China, it’s in China. It wasn’t in China, it had left China and went to Europe and then it came here from Europe. January, February, March 3 million Europeans came in to our region of the country and they brought the virus. By the time we found out, by the time the federal government figured it out, we had viral spread all through the community.
We had the highest numbers to deal with in the country and you look at where we are now, we did a full 180 degrees. We went from the highest cases, the highest viral transmission rate to some of the lowest rates in the country. No one else had to accomplish as much as we had to accomplish in such a short period of time. No one else had to bend the curve as much as we had to bend the curve. When people take a deep breath and the political rhetoric dies down, those are going to be the facts.
I applaud my colleagues for doing an extraordinary job. We now have to make sure that the rate continues to drop and that’s what keeps me up at night and I’m sure keeps them up at night. We have to make sure we’re doing everything and we’re diligent and our citizens are diligent. We also have to make sure the virus doesn’t come in on a plane again. We learned that lesson. Been there, done that.
We’re announcing today a joint travel advisory. People coming in from states that have a high infection rate must quarantine for 14 days. We have a calibration for the infection rate and any state that goes over that infection rate, that state will be subject to the quarantine.
It’s only for the simple reason that we worked very hard to get the viral transmission rate down. We don’t want to see it go up because a lot of people come into this region and they could literally bring the infection with them. It wouldn’t be malicious or malevolent, but it would still be real.
We are jointly instituting that travel advisory today because what happens in New York happens in New Jersey, happens in Connecticut. I think it’s right, I think it’s smart and I’m glad that we’re doing it together. We’ve done a lot of good things together and hopefully we’re on the other side of this mountain and we’ll continue to see the numbers go down and we’ll continue to see the economic activity go up.
With that, I’m going to turn it over to my neighbor, Governor Phil Murphy. Phil, thank you again for everything Thank you for what you’ve done, not just for New Jersey, thank you for what you’ve done for New Yorkers. There’s no doubt that our partnership has made it better for both states. So thank you very much, Governor Phil Murphy.
Governor Murphy: Andrew, thank you and I echo your words of thanks and deepest appreciation for the partnership with you and with Ned. We live in the densest neighborhood in America, we’ve been clobbered by this virus. No region in the country has paid a bigger price with the loss of brothers and sisters. We’ve lost just under 13,000 members of our New Jersey family. New York has paid an enormous price. Connecticut has paid a big price as well. I can’t thank you enough for your partnership, guys.
We need to do things right inside the four walls in our respective states. We need the federal government, but boy, have we needed our neighbors and I can’t thank you and Governor Lamont enough for your partnership and the spirit of teamwork in this extraordinary chapter in our states and our nation’s history.
My echo is simple: This is a smart thing to do. We have taken our people, the three of us, these three states, through hell and back. The last thing we need to do right now is subject our folks to another round. This virus is risky enough on it’s own in terms of the potential to flare back up. So, doing something common sense as this is to say to folks, “Listen. It’s time for personal responsibility. If you’ve been in a state that has a high infection rate, do the right thing and that and that is taking 14 days and self-quarantining. It’s the right thing to do. It’s the common-sense thing to do. It’s the responsible thing to do.”
So I’m honored to be alongside my fellow governors today in support this notion wholeheartedly and I know the details will come from our respective health departments on exactly what this means, but it’s a really smart common sense, step, particularly as we have the three states have really broken the back of this virus. Thank you again for a for everything and for having me today.
Governor Cuomo: Thank you – thank you very much, Governor Murphy and again I do believe we’re all on the other side of the mountain, but we do determine what happens. It’s what our people do. It’s our policies and it’s not over until it’s over and I think this will be it will help us all. Thank you very much, Phil. And our other colleague and partner, Governor Ned Lamont from Connecticut. Governor, thank you very much for your partnership. Thank you for the personal support and personal friendship you’ve given me. Nobody wanted to go through this but you see sometimes in life when the pressure is on, you see the best and the worst in people and society and I think we saw that here and one of the high points, one of the best facets that came out of this was strong people got stronger, and strong relationships got stronger. And New York and Connecticut and New Jersey really stood together and I want to thank you very much. Governor Ned Lamont.
Let me give you some details.
Governor Lamont: Hi, but it’s not going to leave on that airplane. It only goes by working together with New York, New Jersey and the other states in our region are to make sure that we maintain the protocols, the social distancing, the masks, everything we have done successfully over the last few months to bring our positivity rate to less than three percent.
And I got to say, I am blessed to have you guys as fellow governors as well as Rhode Island and Massachusetts, the northeast region has taken this seriously. And that’s allowed us has a region to power through and get our positivity rates very low. But we’re not an island. And as we look around the rest of the country, you know, we have seen not just spikes, but we’ve seen real community spread of a better than 10 percent positivity rate in a number of these states that we’re talking about right now, and if was limited to you know the nursing homes, or the prisons are something containable perhaps we would not be as concerned, but right now we’re seeing places within some of these states where we have a positivity rate of a 20, 30, 40 percent. In many cases younger people, folks who travel, 18 to 35 who are maybe not at risk themselves but are highly infectious.
So, you know working with Phil and Andrew over the last you know week or two, we reluctantly came to the conclusion, that this is what we’ve got to do to make sure that our region stays safe and our state stays safe as we make sure that we can safely get our businesses back in our schools back up and operating this fall. We will be monitoring this carefully. We’ve got the quarantine in place will be doing publicity and social media, reaching out to the travel agents, doing everything we can to tell people, if you come to Connecticut, you come to New York, you come to New Jersey, you come safely and you follow the protocols starting with a quarantine. Andrew, Phil, great being with you guys.
Governor Cuomo: Governor Lamont, same here. Thank you very much and hopefully we’re on the other side and we stay on the other side. Governor, thank you very much. Ned, thank you.
Okay, let me give you a couple of more details on this the infection rate formula will be 10 per 100,000 on the seven-day rolling average or 10 percent of the total population positive on a seven-day rolling average. So, any state that has an infection rate above that would require 14-day quarantine.
As of today, the states that are above that level are Alabama, Arkansas, Arizona, Florida, North Carolina, South Carolina, Washington, Utah, Texas. That’s as of today. The states themselves can change as the infection rate changes. And we will update daily what states are above that infection rate. But as of today, those of the states that are above the infection rate. And again, it’s just common sense it’s. It’s the spirit of community.
If you’re in a place that has a high infection rate, we understand that and we’ll help you any way we can and we’ve been helpful in reaching out to every state across the nation. But we don’t want to see the infection rate increase here after what we’ve gone through, and that’s the 14-day quarantine. That is a uniform policy across the three states. Each state will be responsible for the enforcement of that policy within their state.
Let me give you a couple of other faxes as we are here on day 116. The number of hospitalizations is 1,071, that’s the lowest level of hospitalizations we have seen since this nightmare began. Again, when I say we’re on the other side of the mountain, sometimes I’m talking to myself, I’m often talking myself, but this is the mountain I’m talking about. We’re on the other side on the decline. We just don’t want to see us reverse and we are at the lowest level we have been on hospitalizations since this started. We paid a very dear price for it.
Our tests, we did 58,000 tests yesterday, highest number of tests in the United States. Without to test, you don’t know where you are. We are at 1.1 percent positive. You can see the testing by region and all the regions are constant since the reopening, including New York City, which we’re watching very carefully. But we watch it on a day-to-day basis and right now all the numbers look good.
Within New York City, we look at the numbers by borough. We also look at the hot spots in the boroughs. We know that there are some zip codes that are much higher than other zip codes. So we also study those hot spot zip codes. The number of deaths is 17 today. This is right about where the lowest numbers have ever been. Again, that’s more great, great news. And again we don’t want to see these numbers reverse. Number of lives lost on the three-day average, again, is just about as low as it’s ever been. So, all the numbers are good. What we’re doing works. Our approach has been vindicated and the phased reopening by data works.
I said from day one I think these states, this theory over handling it politically, that people had a political theory of how to deal with the virus, you can’t have a political theory on how to deal with the virus. You can’t. It’s a virus. It doesn’t respond to political theory. It responds to science and data. So we’re going ahead with our metrics and our phased reopening. Five regions are set to enter phase four on Friday. Those are the five regions on the map.
On phase four, we have low risk outdoor arts, low risk indoor arts entertainment, museums, film and movie production, higher education and professional sports. By the way, the spring training for the Yankees and the Mets starts July 1 in the great State of New York. I spoke with the Yankees and Mets organization today and confirmed that we are on track. And our Health Commissioner is going to be working with Major League Baseball on the protocols that are in place. Phase four, we are going to increase the number of people who can be at a religious gathering from 25 to 33 percent. We’ll also increase the number of people who can be in a social gathering from 25 people to 50 people.
We are continuing to study of malls, movie theaters, and gyms. There’s new information that comes out on this virus every day and anyone who thinks this is a static situation is wrong. So we are continuing to study the most recent developments. We’re looking at what happened in other states. There are some reports that malls, bars, certain social clubs with air conditioning that air conditioning may not be cleansing the air of the virus and just recirculating the virus. So we are studying that and as soon as we get some more information we will make an informed decision.
MTA subway system was up to the highest number of riders since this started. The MTA subway system, you know, there can be a silver lining in the middle of a storm. The system is cleaner than ever. I am a lifelong New York City boy, board New York City person, and I’ve seen the subways, and we’ve had numerous discussions on how to clean. “The subways are dirty and they should be cleaner.” They are cleaner than they have ever been period – period. I defy anyone to find a time when the subways have been cleaner.
Remember, we were talking about trying to clean them, get out the old newspapers, coffee cups, et cetera. We were for years stymied to help the homeless who are on the subway system, which was really a terrible crisis for the homeless and for society. They are now cleaner than ever. They are literally disinfected. Forget cleaning, they are literally disinfected and that is a positive that has come out of this, and I applaud the MTA for doing this. To disinfect the subway was not a simple task. You had to figure out how. What equipment, what technology, what’s safe, what chemicals, what’s safe for the employees to put down, what’s safe for the riders the next morning. But they did it.
On the reopening, we had a great debate in this nation as to how to reopen. Well, reopen fast, reopen fast, government shouldn’t be in the way, this is all overblown, this is just the flu, reopen, reopen. Okay. Some states did that. There was a different theory, theory that I advocated, the state followed, which is it’s a virus, don’t use political rhetoric, use science and metrics, and phase the reopening by the data. The results are in. We tested both theories. The arguments over. Two different theories, we tested them. And now we know what happened.
The reopening, done smartly, done intelligently, done on the data, is better for the public health, we saved lives, and it’s better for the economy. It was never a choice between saving lives and reopening the economy. It was always, you have to do both or you do neither. The concept that you could open recklessly, see the virus transmission go up, and think that was going to be good for the economy, was bizzaro land. And you see that today because you see states with an increase in viral spread, it’s up to about 27 states that now have an increase in the virus spread, and you see the stock market going down every time the virus goes up. Why? Because it was never one or the other. And now you see countries around the globe saying we may not want to travel to the United States because of the virus. The only way to get the economy back was to have a smart reopening plan. That was always, always true. And now, the proof is in the pudding. Because we’re seeing it all across the board. And what New York is doing is counter to what you see across the nation. They are going up, and we are going down. 27 states going up.
So, nationally, we should admit the reality. Denial is not a life strategy. It never is. Those 27 states are going up, more people are being infected, and more lives will be lost. They’re offering excuses. “Well, it’s because we’re doing more testing that the numbers are going up.” That is just factually not true. The numbers aren’t going up because you’re doing more testing. The numbers are going up because more people are getting sick. You know how more people are getting sick? More people are going into the hospitals. When more people are going into hospitals, you know what it means? It means more people are getting sick. And don’t tell the American people anything different. They know that when people go to a hospital, it’s because people are sick. And you look at Arizona, you look at Texas, you look at all these states, you know what you see? You see an arrow going up, because it was misguided to say we’re going to reopen the economy. What you’re doing is you’re putting people’s lives in jeopardy, and you’re hurting the economy.
New York is the exception. Dr. Fauci, who is, in my opinion, one of the sane and smart voices in Washington, yesterday said, that New York is an example of actually doing it right. In New York, we have to remain vigilant. Everybody has a role to play. Individuals, businesses, and government. Look, this is a different moment in history. Government has to work now. This is not normal politics. Political rhetoric, tweets. This is government actually having to perform a job. Government, people expect government to work now. You see how engaged people are, how they’re following government? And they know when it works and when it doesn’t work. Their complaint with the federal government right now? They have been incompetent in how they handled the situation, because they have been, and local governments have a role to play.
We have to keep that infection rate down. The key to that is the local governments being diligent on compliance, and I had this conversation with local governments all across the state five times a day. The state is in charge of opening or reopening. The state put the metrics in place, the state closed down the businesses, the state is responsible for reopening. Local government has no authority. That took a big political burden off the local governments. Nobody wanted to shut down the economy. The President didn’t want to shut it down. Nobody wanted to tell people to stay home.
I took the responsibility for shutting, the state has the responsibility for reopening. Local government can’t shut anything. Local government can’t reopen anything. They can’t shut a school, they can’t open a school. They can’t shut business, they can’t open business. That’s all the state’s responsibility and I assume it 100 percent. I get 100 phone calls every day from angry people who want this open or this open or this open. Okay, local governments have a responsibility. They have to ensure compliance. Social distancing, mask wearing, businesses following the rules. Bars, restaurants, people on sidewalks, local government has to do that.
I understand it’s not easy. I understand it’s not popular. Welcome to government in the middle of a global crisis. They have to do that job and they have to be competent at doing that job. The worst case scenario is what Governor Murphy just said. After we’ve gone through hell, imagine if we have to go back and do it again. The other piece of the equation is people have to do their part.
You know who bent the curve in New York? New Yorkers. Nobody else. They wore the mask and did the social distancing. They did it. Weather is warm, the news is good in New York. Yes, it is, but that does not mean people can now relax. The news is good because we did what we had to do. The news is good because we were New York tough and smart and united and disciplined and loving.
WPCNR CAMPAIGN 2020By John F. Bailey. June 24, 2020 UPDATED WITH ABSENTEE BALLOTS RECEIVED NUMBERS in Assembly District 93 and Congressional District 17, 10:55 AM:
The outcome of most Westchester Assembly and Congressional Races is on pause.
With vote counting suspended as of 2:00 AM not much had changed since midnight when voting counts were stalled out with machine counts.
According to news reports about 99,000 Westchester absentee ballots are to be counted beginning June 30, the date by law that the Board of Elections has to wait for all absentee ballots to arrive in case they were mailed very close to or on the primary date
In the races, the Westchester County election results by poll count at this time with tens of thousands of absentee ballots to be counted show the following:
In the races, Mimi Rocah in the race for Westchester District Attorney led Anthony Scarpino, the incumbent D.A. by a 2 to 1 margin.
Christopher Burdick, Bedford Town Supervisor lead Kristen Browde of Chappaqua by 130 votes ( 1,421 to 1,291) for the 93rd Assembly District.
Jamaal Bowman lead Elliot Engel in the 16th congressional district, with most of Westchester still to be counted.
Mondaire Jones had 50% of the vote for the 17th Congressional District. Howver, according to Candidate David Buchwald as of Saturday: There were 17,800 absentee ballots received in Westchester and 4,000 in Rockland County, and Mr. Buchwald tells WPCNR those numbers are sure to go up.The totals as of 10:30 AM..NOT CHANGED SINCE MIDNIGHT:
CATHERINE F PARKER 433 3%
MONDAIRE JONES 6,803 49%
ADAM P SCHLEIFER 1,717 12%
ALLISON H FINE 426 3%
ASHA CASTLEBERRY 799 6%
BUCHWALD 1,347 10%
EVELYN FARKAS 1,912 14% %
Office Totals 13,827 100%
The totals for the Assembly Race representing White Plains awaiting absentee ballots tally which will not start to be counted until June 30.
KRISTEN BROWDE, speaking to WPCNR this morning estimated there would be 14,000 absentee ballots to be counted in the 93rd race.
Election machine totals have been completed, Browde said, but the total votes below do not comprise the early vote totals which are counted separately on another page on the County website. Browde told WPCNR, the race tightened a little from the early voting but the margins are pretty much the same.
Office ASSEMBLY DISTRICT 93:
KRISTEN P BROWDE 1,291 29%Early Votes 355 Total 1,646
CHRIS BURDICK 1,421 32%Early Votes 413 Total 1,834
JEREMIAH F PEARSON 935 21%Early Votes 360 TOTAL 1,295
ALEX ROITHMAYR 427 10%Early Votes 84 TOTAL 511
MARK JAFFE 307 7% Early Votes 127 TOTAL 434
Office Totals 4,381 100%
DISTRICT ATTORNEY
ANTHONY A SCARPINO 9,668 32%
MIMI ROCAH 20,837 68%
Office Totals 30,505 100% OfficeCONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT 17
However the absentee ballots, as three candidates pointed out in WPCNR interviews over the weekend, will determine the result. The Board of Elections results are at this link:
WPCNR GREEN WHITE PLAINS.From the Mayor’s Office. June 24, 2020:
The City is excited to announce the extension of the White Plains Greenway Walking Trail and pleased to be able to provide this park enhancement for its residents. The Greenway provides a protected path for individuals and families to enjoy a walk in a natural setting.
The Greenway is located on the site of the former New York, Westchester, and Boston Railroad. The system operated from 1912 to 1937 and ran through White Plains. The White Plains portion of the line was acquired by the City in 1949. The old railway bed was used informally as a pedestrian path for many years. In 2012, the City officially renamed the Greenway in honor of Jack Harrington, a community activist and preservationist. Jack was instrumental in founding the White Plains Greenway Committee in 1996, which worked with the City to transform the railway line into a walking trail. For this reason Jack was known around town as the “Father of the Greenway.” This original portion of the Greenway runs from Gedney Way to Ridgeway to the Scarsdale border and may be accessed on Gedney Way and Ridgeway.
The “new ” portion of the path runs from Bolton Avenue under the Gedney Way train bridge and connects to the existing path just south of the Gedney Way entrance. It meanders (to preserve existing trees) roughly following the old New York, Westchester & Boston Railroad tracks. End to end, with the new addition, it is approximately 1.5 miles long (3 miles round trip). Historical markers along with remnants of the original bridge and building foundation have been retained for the public to enjoy. You can access the new section of the Greenway from either Bolton Ave or Gedney Way. At Gedney Way, head south at the trail entrance, then go left at the fork to loop around under the old train bridge.
All work on the new portion of the Greenway was performed using City Department of Public Works manpower, and using available materials from other City projects. Work began in the winter, paused briefly during the Pandemic, and has just been completed. Kudos to the Department of Public Works! Special thanks to Rich Stangarone who, as Superintendent of Highway and Grounds, took a special interest in this project. He is also retiring this month after 38 years with the City, so this was a wonderful project to end his illustrious career!
Line at White Plains High School Tuesday morning, 8:45 AM. (Not in Greenburgh) Lines in Mamaroneck, New Rochelle polling places were waiting long past 9 PM television reports showed. As of midnight the majority of races had very low percentages of districts reporting and absentee ballots estimated to be counted stacked up at the Board of Elections in White Plains New York USA
EDITOR’S REQUEST FOR YOUR PRIMARY EXPERIENCE IN WHITE PLAINS; WPCNR would like your comments on how polling place voting went in White Plains. Just write wpcnr@aol.com. Letters must be signed, however you may request anonymity and it will be respected. If you voted by absentee ballot, tell us about that experience.
WPCNR THE LETTER TICKER. From Paul Feiner, Greenburgh Town Supervisor. June 24, 2020:
NUMEROUS COMPLAINTS ABOUT 2020 PRIMARY ELECTIONS
Received many complaints about the primary election. Please be advised that the town of Greenburgh does not oversee primary elections. The elections are overseen by the Westchester County Board of Elections.
The primary election on June 23rd had numerous problems. Some residents did not receive absentee ballots that they had requested. There were long lines at the polling places on June 23rd.
See the e mail from a resident below who was still waiting to vote at 11:01 PM (two hours after the polls were supposed to close). Machines malfunctioned.
Some residents complained of the lines and did not vote. Voters waited two hours in some instances to vote.
One of the 5 polling places had no air conditioning. At some locations inadequate crowd control.
I had joined others in objecting to the significant reduction in the number of polling places in Greenburgh. We have 81 districts. In the past there were over thirty polling places. On Tuesday there were 5. No wonder why there were long lines.
(EDITOR’S NOTE: White Plains has 42 election districts usually covered by numerous polling places, yesterday there were 3.)
I continue to worry whether all absentee ballots will be counted. The postal service is unreliable. I had suggested that the Board of Elections figure out a way to confirm the receipt of the ballot to the voter. This would enable voters who think they voted to vote in person if the ballot is not received.
If voters won’t have confidence in the integrity and fairness of our election system our democracy will be in trouble. I urge the Board of Elections and NYS to conduct a comprehensive review of the 2020 primary election and to make sure that the problems that existed never happen again.
We must never reduce the number of polling locations in the town.
One shouldn’t have to wait an unreasonable time to vote.
Voters should receive confirmation when the ballot is received from the Board of Elections. This would provide voters with the opportunity to vote in person if the ballot was not received.
The Board of Elections should prepare a report -what went wrong and what will be done to make sure that the problems we just experienced won’t happen in November.
These are some of the complaints I received.
COMPLAINT NUMBER ONE –LONG LINES -WAITED TILL AFTER 11 PM TO VOTE Sent: Tuesday, June 23, 2020 11:01 PM To: Paul Feiner Subject: Waiting still to vote in Greenburgh COMPLAINT NUMBER TWO- MALFUNCTIONS WITH MACHINES, LONG LINES, LACK OF AIR CONDITIONING
I am incredibly disappointed and alarmed at the conditions at the Woodlands HS gym when I went to vote this evening at 6P. Not only was the wait 90 minutes, but the conditions were unsafe.
The gym had inadequate power so that no fans or air conditioning was possible; there was no ventilation. There were elderly and infirm individuals with canes there who were made to stand for the entire time and not afforded any accommodation.
God was clearly watching that no one collapsed in extremis. I left there after 90 minutes tachycardic, dehydrated and with a temperature of 100.
1. One of the registration machines that printed the ballots kept shutting down b/o inadequate power.
During the period of time I was there at least 30 votes were lost from people/families who couldn’t tolerate the conditions and left. We complain about voter suppression occurring in less progressive areas of the country only to have the same thing occur here.
This is unconscionable and not what I expect from NY state or Westchester County. I hope we can expect better in November.
A 32-year Hartsdale resident and most unhappy constituent,
COMPLAINT NUMBER 3 INADEQUATE HELP TO CONTROL CROWDS–CROWD CONTROL PROBLEMS
Very disappointed by the long lines, slowly moving registration , disorganized voting at Woodlands.
Not enough help .. there should be more help here to crowd control considering the limited number of voting centers due to Covid.
This will hurt our democratic voting turnout Also very hot in this gym People are not happy !!
COMPLAINT NUMBER 4 – DID NOT RECEIVE ABSENTEE BALLOT Good morning,
I am writing again to inform you that Primary Day is here and I still have not received my absentee ballot. I have been in touch with the Board of Elections on several occasions and was told the ballot is coming from Rochester and I will get it on time.
Obviously, this is not true.
As an 82 year old senior citizen who has always voted, I am quite disturbed by this situation. I thought this matter should be brought to your attention. Thank you.
WPCNR SCAM-A-RAMA.By John F. Bailey. June 23, 2020:
Electricity consumers beware this new scam yours truly encountered moments ago. I got a local number call 914-717-9845. The message was simple, and I paraphrase it here:
“You were overcharged by your third party supplier. You are entitled to a rebate check. Please press 1 to receive your rebate check.”
All electricity users should beware of this ploy. I, of course, did not press “1” because I know I pay a rate so much lower than the utility in the area. It is impossible to be overcharged. (Only the utility does that.)
It is fool’s gold, in my opinion, because it is preying on what everybody wants….a check, any check.
GOVERNOR CUOMO ANNOUNCES $65 MILLION NY FORWARD CHILD CARE EXPANSION INCENTIVE
WORRY: 1.2 Percent of Yesterday’s COVID-19 Tests were Positive
Governor Andrew M. Cuomo today announced that $65 million in federal CARES Act funding is available for child care providers statewide through the New York Forward Child Care Expansion Incentive program.
The funding available includes:
$20 million to assist childcare program with reopening and expansion of capacity by providing materials to support a more socially distant model, and for supplies and activities associated with reopening and expansion. This may include partitions, short term rental of space, etc.
$45 million in childcare Reopening and Expansion Incentive funds to pay for 50% of the cost of a newly opened classroom (maximum grant amount of $6,000) as an incentivize to open the classroom. The temporary funds will phase out over the second and third months as more parents bring their children back into childcare.
Throughout the pandemic, 65 percent of OCFS-licensed and -registered child care programs remained open, many serving families of essential workers. The funding being made available today will help to bring closed programs back to operation to serve families returning to the workplace.
“New York went from one of the highest infection rates in the country to one of the lowest because we made decisions based on science – not politics,” Governor Cuomo said. “We’re seeing in other states what happens when you just reopen with no regard for metrics or data – it’s bad for public health and for the economy, and states that reopened in a rush are now seeing a boomerang. We do about 60,000 tests per day – more than any state or country on a per capita basis and approximately 1 percent of tests are coming back positive. We do this testing religiously, and we watch the rate and calibrate our reopening by that rate. The Hudson Valley moves to phase 3 today and Long Island will go to phase 3 tomorrow.
“As we move further into the reopening and more parents go back to work, we’re also making sure child care programs across the state have the support they need to reopen safely,” Governor Cuomo continued. “By providing support for expanded classrooms that allow for more social distancing and other resources, we can help keep staff and children safe.”
To be eligible for reopening funds, child care programs must have either been closed as of June 15 and have a plan to reopen within two weeks of applying or currently operating below their licensed capacity and would like to expand. The grants will be pro-rated as programs reach capacity. Programs must submit a detailed plan for use of funds and must remain open at least through the end of the year.
The maximum awards for the $20 million in Reopening and Restructuring Incentives depend on the size of the program and range from $300 to $1,600 one-time grants. Child care programs may apply to OCFS through July 15.
The governor also updated New Yorkers on the state’s progress during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. The number of new cases, percentage of tests that were positive and many other helpful data points are always available at forward.ny.gov.
Today’s data is summarized briefly below:
Patient Hospitalization – 1,104 (down -18 from the day before)
Number ICU – 302 (down -28 from the day before)
Number ICU that are intubated – 204 (down -24 from the day before)
Total Discharges – 69,769 (up +59 from the day before)
Deaths – 27
Total Deaths – 24,766
Of the 48,709 tests conducted in New York State yesterday, 597, or 1.2 percent, were positive. Each region’s percentage of positive tests over the last three days is as follows:
REGION
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
MONDAY
New York City
1.20%
1.10%
1.40%
Capital Region
0.40%
0.70%
1.30%
Central New York
0.90%
0.70%
1.80%
Finger Lakes
0.40%
0.70%
1.10%
Long Island
1.00%
0.90%
1.10%
Hudson Valley
1.00%
1.00%
1.00%
Mohawk Valley
1.00%
1.40%
0.50%
North Country
0.20%
0.10%
0.40%
Southern Tier
0.30%
0.30%
0.20%
Western New York
0.80%
1.00%
1.30%
The Governor also confirmed 597 additional cases of novel coronavirus, bringing the statewide total to 389,085 confirmed cases in New York State. Of the 389,085 total individuals who tested positive for the virus, the geographic breakdown is as follows:
WPCNR CAMPAIGN 2020. By John F. Bailey. June 23, 2020:
Candidates for the local 93rd New York Assembly District are telling WPCNR that results tonight in the 5 way race between Kristen Browde, Christropher Burdick, Mark Jaffe, Alex Roithmayr and Jeremiah Frie-Pearson may come down to past the wire, because an all time record of absentee ballots in Westchester have been issued. One candidate says 27,000 absentee ballots have been issued, 5,000 in the 93rd district.
The upshot is that if the top vote getters in the 93rd district are tightly bunched, the absentee ballots will determine the outcome.
It may take to early July to count them all, one candidate says, another more familiar with the process, says a final result may not be conclusion until the end of July.
The law requires that absentee ballots postmarked by or on the primary date are valid and law requires absentee ballots have to be held for 10 days after the election date to assure all absentee ballots are in.
One candidate told WPCNR the Board of Elections may be overwhelmed with not one, but three close races, not only the 93rd district is a competitive field, but the 17th Congressional District is hotly contested. At this time it is unclear who the absentee inspectors are for each candidate, or if they have even been chosen or not.
Since Governor Andrew M. Cuomo postponed the primary to June 15, to avert spreading of the coronavirus at polling places (Westchester has only three for this election, The White Plains Board of Elections, White Plains High School and North Castle Community Center), a record number of absentee ballots were requested.
Since all three contests–Westchester District Attorney, the 93rd District and the 17th Congressional District are on the same ballot, could an absentee ballot be thrown out once and invalidated for all contests? Or does each absentee ballot have to be vetted by representatives for the candidates in each contest? Who is the ballot decider. Is there a higher authority?
So unless the candidates already have their legal inspectors lined up already, they better find them.
One candidate told WPCNR many persons as of the weekend had not sent their absentee ballots in yet. Another said the Board of Elections may be overwelmed by the sheer number of ballots sent out.
Another point: Perhaps you should have a different ballot for for each race in the future when there are multiple races with multiple candidates.
The White Plains Board of Education managed to count approximately 6,000 votes in one night last week. So the Board of Elections should be able to take this challenge in stride.
The Loucks Stadium synthetic turf field installed in 2006, is being reconstructed this summer with new synthetic turf. The cost is $1.1 Million, which was allocated as part of last year’s school budget. It is expected to be completed by mid-August.
The White Plains High School Polling Place at 8:45 A.M.Dawn on Primary Day
WPCNR CAMPAIGN 2020. fROM THE MAYOR’S OFFICE. JUNE 23, 2020:
TODAY is Primary Election Day in Westchester County. Due to the pandemic the number of polling places has been reduced to three, the Westchester County Board of Elections, the North Castle Community Center, and White Plains High School. (Editor’s Note: There are three nominating contests: the 17th Congressional District, the 93rd Assembly District, and Westchester District Attorney, located on the back of your ballot. The Democratic Presidential Primary is on the front of the ballot.)
You may determine your polling place by entering your residence address. Polls are open from 6:00 AM to 9:00 PM. Remember to wear your mask!
The most recent data provided by the county Monday indicates the cumulative number of people who have tested positive in White Plains since testing began is 1,809.The county estimates the number of active cases in White Plains to be 53. The County’s “active” number is based on positive cases over the last 2 weeks. The number of new cases each day remains very low.
Today, Tuesday, June 23rd, Westchester County enters Phase 3 of the reopening process. In this phase, restaurants and food service establishments may open for indoor dining with restrictions, and personal care services, including nail salons, spas, and massage therapy, may also open with restrictions.
Pools Open July 1
Both Kittrell and Gardella pools will open for residents only on July 1st. Reservations will be required, as will a pool pass. Check cityofwhiteplains.com, for more information.