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TONIGHT JOHN BAILEY INTERVIEWS ANGELO AND HIS SON THEIR 47 YEARS, 7 DAYS A WEEK CAREERS IN PIZZA AND MAGNOTTA’S RESTAURANT — A PIZZA LANDMARK THAT IS CLOSING THIS SUNDAY AUGUST 18.

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. From the New York State Education Department Communications. August 15, 2019:
The long anticipated 2019 Grades 3-8 assessment scores of (the second year of the newly implemented state assessments will be released tentatively the last week in August.
The Department issued this statement to WPCNR:
“The 2019 Grades 3-8 assessment scores will be released later this summer, on a timeline more similar to 2017.
“In 2018, because of the switch from three days of testing to two, and the resulting need to conduct a new performance standard review, the statewide scores were released about a month later than usual (Editor’s note: 2018 Results were released September 26.2018)
Because the 2019 tests are the same design as 2018, there was no need for a standards review and are being released on a timeline more similar to 2017. (Editor’s Note: Release date in 2017 was August 22, 2017)
Cut scores will be released with the scores, as they have been in years past.”
According to WPCNR’s news releases from the NYSED released the last three years, the last test results that were released in a timely manner so curriculum coordinators could react to them and address weaknesses in grades performances was in 2016, when test results on the former Pearson-created tests were released July 29.
In 2017, the Pearson tests were released August 22, which would mean by the statement that they could be released anywhere from Thursday August 22, Friday, August 23, or over the weekend , or sometime in the 4 days August 26 to 29, the week going into Labor Day Weekend.
WPCNR observes that the 2019 results will arrive too late for school district planners to adjust their academic plans beginning the school year.
Editor’s reminder: White Plains Schools start for students September 3, the day after Labor Day
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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From The Westchester County Department of Communications. August 15, 2019:

County Executive George Latimer and Ron Tocci (right) join veterans at Community Outreach Program kickoff event. (Photo, Westchester Department of Communications)
On Wednesday, Legislator Kitley Covill (D – Bedford, Lewisboro, Mount Kisco, North Salem, Pound Ridge, Somers), County Executive George Latimer and the County Veterans Service Agency welcomed veterans and family members to Westchester’s first Community Outreach Day, held at the Mount Kisco American Legion.
In the coming months, the County will hold additional such days as it continues its efforts to provide opportunities to veterans, in addition to the ongoing services available at the Veterans Service Agency’s main office in White Plains.
These events not only celebrate our veterans, but also offer meaningful assistance. Veterans, or a spouse or caretaker for a veteran, can learn what services and resources are available, and take advantage of County and VA personnel who are on site to facilitate applying for and getting the benefits that have been earned.
For veterans unable to attend these events due to a disability, Legislator Covill has worked with the Bedford Veterans Advisory Committee to reach veterans in need of assistance with their benefit applications.
In a new initiative, annual letters are being sent to veterans who are long-term Medicaid recipients, letting them know that if they are having difficulty accessing their VA benefits, accredited representatives will fight for them — helping them understand their options, expediting applications and filing appeals. This new initiative will help the County in supporting our veterans.
Examples of benefits veterans may be eligible for include: healthcare counseling, including mental health; employment assistance; disability compensation for veterans disabled by injury or disease incurred by or aggravated during military service; and additional pension support for permanently disabled or low-income veterans.
Legislator Covill said, “The veterans in Westchester County served on our behalf, and it is important for us to have resources available in District 2 to help them obtain the benefits they earned. The staff present on Wednesday know how the systems at the VA work and can navigate the application process, helping our veterans efficiently and on the spot. In addition, this letter campaign will help us to better assist those of our veterans who are unable to attend events such as this. I look forward to meeting our veterans at the event.”
David Zapsky, Chair of the Bedford Veterans Advisory Committe, said, “As Chair of the Bedford Veterans Advisory Committee, I want to thank Westchester County for its outreach efforts. Veterans who served our country have earned benefits, but sometimes, either through process frustrations or unawareness, do not receive those benefits. One of our members, Mark Sindeband, worked tirelessly with other veterans and County Legislator Covill to renew efforts and give all veterans an opportunity to obtain VA benefits in an efficient manner with the professional help available at the Westchester County Veterans Service Agency.”
County Executive George Latimer said, “In Westchester County, many veterans are eligible for services they may not even know exist. While veterans are always welcome to the main office in White Plains, we know that logistically this may not always be possible. That is why our Veterans Service Agency is committed to going out into the community to meet vets where they are.”
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| Dear Friends and Neighbors, For the first time since 2010, the Westchester County Department of Planning has issued a new version of A Roof Over Your Head, a question and answer guide filled with practical information on housing resources in Westchester County. Whether you are a tenant, landlord, homeowner, an elderly person or a person with a disability, the publication serves as a compilation of answers to many of the most commonly asked questions about housing. The 50 page Guide has been updated to provide additional resources in the Appendix, including contact information and hyperlinks to websites where available. The Guide is available in both English and Spanish, and can be found at homes.westchestergov.com/resources/. Hard copies are also available.For more information please call Jane Lindau, Director of Housing, Westchester County Department of Planning, at (914) 995-1920. |
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WPCNR MILESTONES August 13, 2019:
Last night, the call went out. The call for the last combo.
Angelo Magnotta picked it up with his trademark “Magnotta”s and I said, “This is Bailey here.”
“Hi John what can I do for you.”
” I’d like a large pizza, two slices plain, 2 slices mushrooms, two slices pepperoni and two slices, sausage, onions and peppers.”
Though in the old days (when Brenda Starr was not a vegannette), I’d order the CitizeNetReporter special “Sausage, pepperoni, mushrooms, peppers and onions,” the “New York Philharmonic of pizza” where every piece was elegantly cooked, not overdone, the onions succulent, the pepperoni not blasted or burned, and just right and played their parts perfectly to the mouth’s audience.
And Angelo answers as always, “You got it, John 10 Minutes.” Magnotta’s is that place everyone knows your flavor, and your name.
So I vaulted to the CitizeNetReporter Red Rider I went to pick up the last combo I’ll get from the Maestro Angelo Magnotta, conductor of the ultimate pizza concerto.
The combo in a hurry.
Hot and piping, perfectly separated by Angelos signature clean cut with an authority Roll-o-Chop, and not one unspecified ingredient out of place on a piece where it is not supposed to be! You could get it delivered or pick it up.

The cardboard carrier is secure, the pizza beneath just the right fit, with no curl-up edges or melt on the inside top of the carton. On the way back in the dispatch car, the aroma of the sizzling ingredients simmering for you to anticipate taste buds’ delight.
It became a tradition in our family on Friday nights. A tradition that waned in the days after the children left home. But Monday evening we made it a must to have the children back for one last combo. I opened it to the glory within:

Good God almight which way do I steer? Brenda Starr lifted out the pieces one by one, impressed by the master conductor’s touch! Each piece lifted out clean and structurally secure. The combo pieces high piled with just the right even layers not top heavy and descending luxuriously into the mozarella, mushrooms thinly sliced vying for your attention (“Eat me! Eat me!). Peppers mingling with the peppers like a party you’re late to and you’re in a hurry to mingle and score. My God.
Angelo is retiring this week after 47 years of service to the pizza aficianados of White Plains and he and the whole Magnotta’s atmosphere will be missed. Fred the Postman, who always was there on Friday’s when I picked. Angelo’s wife and then his own son. And Angelo would greet you and say “Hi John, How are you? What’s happening?”
You should stop on by tonight and pick up you own last combo.
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WPCNR PHOTOGRAPHS OF THE DAY. AUGUST 12, 2019:
Brenda Starr suggested we go to this Hudson River Museum exhibition Sunday, and we walked in the past of 1950s,60s and 70s New York. It was all there: friendly neighborhoods, the unique jazz clubs of Greenwich Village, the street life, the protests, the activism. It is a unique experience to view our New York City in candid, action photographs that even in black and white reflect the enthusiasm and hope of New Yorkers, the way we got along back then.
Also on view in the museum is a photo exhibition of Yonkers through the years when Yonkers was far different than it is today.
Ms. Starr and I recommend it. Mr. Snitzer’s photographs are on view through Tuesday through Sunday, 12 noon to 5 PM.
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YouTube link for wpw 8-9-19 — https://youtu.be/C_q510gwAYswhiteplainsweek.com
wpw link... http://www.whiteplainsweek.com/

LITTLE LEAGUE STATE CHAMPS HONORED








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WHITE PLAINS LAW JOURNAL Special to The CitizeNetReporter. August 11, 2019:
WPCNR bas learned the French American School of New York has been granted an extension by the Appellate Court, 2nd Circuit, to perfect the FASNY brief contesting the Gedney Association appeal of the Judge Lefowitz decision dismissing the Gedney Article 78 action against the French American School of New York plan to build a school campus on the former Ridgeway Country Club pictured above) .
The French American School of New York argues that the Gedney attorneys should reproduce all the DEISs and FEIS documents) – (Draft and Final Environmental Impact Statements), which Gedney attorneys feel is unnecessary exhorbitant expense and a repetition of documents already in the court records of the case. .
The Gedney legal team predicts “looks like motion practice will ensue. this will be at least 2 years before the appeal is heard. “
The dispute is in its 8th year.
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WPCNR WATCH ON THE RHINE. From the Service Employees International Union 32BJ:
The following statement may be attributed to Lenore Friedlaender, Assistant to the President of 32BJ SEIU and the union’s leader in the Hudson Valley:
“As one of the nation’s largest unions with majority immigrant membership, we thoroughly condemn he Trump administration’s massive workplace raids in Mississippi yesterday. By arresting almost 700 men and women at their jobs, the administration has ripped apart families, communities and local economies, traumatizing thousands upon thousands of native and foreign-born residents alike, while further terrorizing immigrants of all statuses across the country.
For over a dozen years, administrations both Republican and Democratic have refrained from these massive militarized assaults on workplaces, knowing that the damage they wreak to residents of American soil is simply indefensible.
All workers — black, brown, white — deserve to be treated with dignity in the workplace, and the well-being of their children and communities should always be a top priority for government. The Trump administration, however, counts working people’s pain as their political gain.
The timing of the raids also adds reprehensible insults to this grievous injury, coming months after the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission won a lawsuit in support of abused Latinx workers, and on the very day that President Trump traveled to El Paso in the wake of a white supremacist terror attack that was apparently emboldened by Trump’s hateful words and deeds. We offer our deepest condolences to all those affected by these raids, and our solidarity to all those committed to defeating this rogue and racist administration through action in the courts, votes at the polls, and voices in the streets.”
La siguiente declaración se puede atribuir a Lenore Friedlaender, asistente al presidente de la 32BJ SEIU y líder de la union en el valle del Hudson.
“Como uno de los sindicatos más grandes de la nación con membresía mayoritaria de inmigrantes, condenamos a fondo las redadas masivas de la administración Trump en Mississippi ayer. Al arrestar a casi 700 hombres y mujeres en sus trabajos, la administración ha destrozado familias, comunidades y economías locales, traumatizando a miles y miles de residentes nativos y nacidos en el extranjero por igual, a la vez que aterroriza aún más a los inmigrantes de cualquier estatus por todo el país. Durante más de una docena de años, las administraciones republicanas y demócratas se han abstenido de estos asaltos militarizados masivos en los lugares de trabajo, sabiendo que el daño que causan a los residentes de suelo estadounidense es simplemente indefendible. Todos los trabajadores, negros, marrones, blancos, merecen ser tratados con dignidad en el lugar de trabajo, y el bienestar de sus hijos y comunidades siempre debe ser una prioridad para el gobierno. Sin embargo, la administración Trump considera el dolor de la gente trabajadora como su ganancia política. El momento de las redadas también agrega insultos reprobables a esta grave lesión, meses después de que la Comisión de Igualdad de Oportunidades en el Empleo ganó una demanda en apoyo de los trabajadores Latinx maltratados, y el mismo día en que el presidente Trump viajó a El Paso tras un ataque terrorista supremacista que aparentemente fue envalentonado por las odiosas palabras y acciones de Trump. Ofrecemos nuestras más sinceras condolencias a todos los afectados por estas redadas, y nuestra solidaridad a todos los que se comprometieron a derrotar a esta administración corrupta y racista a través de la acción en los tribunales, los votos en las urnas y las voces en las calles.”
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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. By Dr. Lata McGinn, Cognitive Behavioral Associates, White Plains, N.Y. Professor Yeshiva University. August 7, 2019:
Editor’s Note: The dog days of August are here. School begins in 4 weeks. Dr. Lata McGinn, international expert in behavioral issues and frequent guest to discuss children’s issues on White Plains Television “People to Be Heard” has put together approaches for parents and students to ease both the fears of going back to school and think positively about the new school year to smooth the transition.
Returning to school in the fall can bring excitement as well as stress and anxiety for many children. There are several things parents can do to help their children ease back into the new school year and deal with the anxiety that often accompanies that first day and even those first few weeks.
1) Help your child know that feeling anxious about going back to school is normal and don’t minimize how they feel. Don’t say, “don’t worry, it will be fine.” Instead say, “it is normal to feel some anxiety about going back to school. Everyone feels it to some extent. Anxiety is a protective emotion and it will help you prepare and get ready for school, and it will pass when you adjust to being back at school.”
2) Help them understand what the purpose of anxiety is and to listen to it rather than push the anxiety away. Say “anxiety is like an unpleasant but helpful alarm, so the alarm will keep on ringing and get louder until you figure out what it is alarming you to do and then you do it.”
3) Help them figure out what is making them concerned or anxious, so they can talk to themselves in a way that will help them to cope with it. Ask them to pay attention to what is going through their minds when they get anxious and come up with helpful things to say to themselves. If the anxiety is saying, “I am starting high school and I will not do well and won’t get into a good college,” help them to say something like, “I am understandably anxious about starting high school and am worried that I won’t do well but that doesn’t mean I actually won’t do well. I just need to make sure I prepare in advance, organize my work, make sure I have enough time to study, take away all distractions when I study, and get support when I need it.”
4) Help them gradually approach all the things that are making them anxious rather than avoiding what is making them anxious about school. If seeing their friends is making them anxious, and they are avoiding seeing them or thinking about meeting them at school, help them to create a fear ladder and slowly climb it. Say, “how about you call Matt to see if he can meet up before school, and then after that, you could meet again and include Jack and Alex too?”
5) Do something academic to prepare because the brain drain is real over the summer. If they are weak on a subject, get a tutor for a few weeks or use online forums like the Khan Academy or Crash course (a YouTube channel led by “Fault in our Stars” author John Green and his brother Hank Green) to help them prepare. It will help them get a refresher and build their confidence.
6) Help them to focus on positive things about going back to school as well. Ask them if they are looking forward to any aspect of going back to school. If seeing their friends is something they feel good about, say things like, “it will be nice to catch up with Jane. You have so much to tell her.” Of course, if seeing their classmates is anxiety provoking, pick another topic.A