SCHOOL DAYS: WHITE PLAINS SUPERINTENDENT RICCA SETS THE SCENE FOR OPENING DAY TOMORROW INTRODUCES VIDEO ABOUT THE SCHOOL DISTRICT–VIEWABLE THIS AFTERNOON

Hits: 189

12-SCHOOL NUMBURS

WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS.From Dr. Joseph Ricca, White Plains Superintendent of Schools. September 4, 2018:

It’s here – another beginning to an exciting school year in the White Plains City School District!

We are just about to roll out the buses and welcome over 7,000 White Plains students eager and excited for the first day of school tomorrow September 5th.   As you may know, we will be the first school district in New York State to use electric buses, since our bus company has added five of them to its fleet.

This is an exciting “first” and it’s fitting that White Plains is leading the way. Additionally, thanks to the overwhelming support of our community during last May’s public vote, we will transport eligible high school students to school at no extra cost for the first time in our district’s outstanding history.

We’ve had a busy summer, hiring more than 50 new teachers and improving our physical plant with updates and projects in all of our buildings.  All of our cafeterias are now air-conditioned so that students in every building have an area available for relief from the heat.

We are very proud to report that summer schools produced 10 additional High School graduates and enhanced the education of hundreds of our younger students. Even during the summer months, our schools are vibrant and busy places of learning!

In August, we engaged in a three day Strategic Planning process to update our district priorities and strategies.  Sixteen stakeholders, from district and community constituencies, participated in this important process which will help to guide us as we continue to move forward as a learning community.

Our annual planning process continued with a two-day retreat for administrators and three days of orientation sessions for new staff members.

All staff will convene today, September 4th   for the annual Superintendent’s Conference Day.  We will “premiere” our new district informational video, “White Plains Public Schools – the educated choice.” 

You will find a link to this on our website, Facebook and Twitter pages later on this afternoon. We hope that you will take a look at it and share it with our community members as well.  Five-and ten-minute versions will be available for you to show to your organizations at community meetings.  We’d like everyone to be as proud of our schools as we are!

Don’t forget about our first home football game of the year – under the lights this Friday night, September 7th, 6 pm, at Loucks Field, against Mount Vernon.  Go Tigers!

As always, please contact me if you have any questions or comments and don’t forget to follow us on Facebook (facebook.com/wpschools) and Twitter (@drjosephricca and @wpschools).

Thank you very much for your continued support! We are #WPProud

Respectfully,

 

Joseph Ricca

Posted in Uncategorized

Labor Day is a Memorial to Strikers Who Died. Here’s to Eugene Debs, John Mitchell–Heroes of Labor. Labor Day Celebrates those who Struggled, Died to Fight and Restrain Inhumane Working Conditions, Millionaire Murderers, Exploitative Owners and Won. It is 2018 and We Need Them Again

Hits: 0

WPCNR NEWS AND COMMENT. By John F. Bailey. September 3, 2018. Reprinted from the CitizeNetReporter Archives:

It is Labor Day 2018.

Teachers throughout the state continue to be under fire for not teaching effectively. Teacher union leaders protest against calls for change and possible elimination of tenure. Yet the latest test scores of the new assessment tests have been delayed until late September. Good and late and of no use at all in helping articulate more effective curricula.

Yet corporate and bureaucratic advocates of the Common Core are not held accountable for the inexplicable test results of 2017 that still show 60% of New York State students are unable to read or write English effectively entering high school. It cannot be all the teachers’ faults. We only have those test results to go on because the 2018 results are not out yet

Perhaps it is the poor local grade by grade tests used in every school district in the state?

Don’t our state senators and assemblypersons and hands-on governor want to find out what the assessment problem is? No. They did not when they had the chance

Why is it our State Senators and Assemblypersons and the Governor opted out of finding out why Johnny and Jane can’t read after 8 years of elementary and middle School? That is irresponsible. Buck-passing. Kicking the can down the road. Ducking the responsibility for a State Education Department and a Board of Regents that demonstrate a nose-in-the-air distaste for facts, truth, and accountability.

Labor across the nation is fighting back against low pay enforced by union-busting state governments under the dole of corporate robber barons of today.

Public enmity against unions is popular, especially the practice of jacking pensions by getting more overtime in the years just before retirements. I say it’s time to look at the city leadership and the state leadership and hold them accountable. They are the leaders and they do not lead. (Let me, rephrase that, Mr. Cuomo leads more than any other elected official in the nation, but he has to lead more on this education and pension problem).

No politicians talk about the offensive practice  of decrying  union pensions, while accepting political jobs after a politician leaves office  or is defeated, that politicians and political parasites have to get waivers for to retain their pensions, and they are routinely able to acquire such waivers to get 6-figure jobs in the private or public sector and still collect their pension, and do very little for those taxpayer dollars.

How about stopping that very nice perk? Money for nothing. And politicians cry about labor contracts? Please.

Look back at the history of the labor movement, workers have always had to fight and die to make progress.

Because management is not fair, equitable, or humane. They don’t care about you as a person. They use you up. Use you. And when you get hurt. Too bad. And now our feckless Supreme Court has taken away the class action suit.

Business and government “internships” today are a nice word for slavery without whips.

Labor Day first made its appearance when low wages and long hours were protested against in the mid-nineteenth century during the American Industrial Revolution.

Management works for themselves, always.

Oregon instituted the first Labor Day in the 1870s, and New York in the 1880s.

The National Labor Day Holiday came about because of national outrage over two violent strikes that were ended by armed intervention by the military and private detectives, the notorious “Pinkertons.”

Let’s go back to the 1890s and learn what Labor Day is all about. It’s not about a day off. It is a memorial day. It’s not about “good job.”

The gay 90s were not so gay if you were a union worker.

They were a time when the so-called robber barons thought nothing of bringing out private security forces to shoot strikers. They  lowered wages with no mercy. It was all about them, their mansions, their fortunes, their tax-free profits. (No income tax before 1913, folks).

In the Homestead, Pennsylvania steel factory strike in 1892Andrew Carnegie, the steel baron, wanted to lower wages to make the Homestead factory  more profitable. (Instead of pulling down statues, they should change the name of the Carnegie Institute. Mr. Carnegie was no saint.)

Steelworkers in Homestead Pennsylvania, made $10 a week, working 12 hours a day, 6 days a week, as much as  84 hours a week.

Carnegie’s Deputy  Chairman Henry Frick wanted to pay them less, and attempted to bring in non-union laborers to replace them.

Two thousand union workers barricaded the plant.

Frick hired Pinkerton Detectives to disperse them. On June 29, 1892, “Pinkertons” killed 7 union workers with gunfire, and injured “countless” others and three Pinkertons were killed.

The Governor called in the National Guard to restore order. The armed intervention broke the Amalgamated Association union.

After this, according to “Steelworkers in America” by David Brody, wages of steelworkers at Homestead declined 20% from 1892 to 1907 and workshifts went up from 8 hours to 12 hours (96 hours a week). 

What a great fellow, Carnegie. What a humanitarian! That’s your robber baron. He’d fit right in with today’s Wolves of Wall Street, wouldn’t he? He’d be in the Trump cabinet.

This union-killing in Pennysylvania was followed by the 1894 Pullman Strike in Pullman Illinois.

George M. Pullman, the creator of the sleeper car, housed his workers in Pullman City, Illinois, and charged them rent. 

In the depression of the early 1890s, in 1893 wages at the Pullman Palace Factory fell  25%, but Pullman did not lower his rents to his workers.

The rent, if not met, was deducted from worker pay.Pullman was a garbage person.

A nice guy, George Pullman.  He could run a bank today, couldn’t he?

On May 11, 1894 workers with the American Railroad Union under the leadership of the great  Eugene V.  Debs, started a wildcat (unauthorized) strike in protest of Pullman’s policies.

On June 26, 1894, union members refused to service trains with Pullman Cars in their consist, to leave Chicago, delaying the U.S. Mail.

Twenty-four railroads in an organization called the General Managers Association announced that any switchman who refused to move rail cars would be fired.

Mr. Debs and his union stood their ground.

Debs said if any switchman was fired for not moving Pullman Cars, the union would walk off their jobs. On June 29, 50,000 union men quit.

Union supporters stopped trains on rails West of Chicago.

President Grover Cleveland was asked by the railroads to use federal troops to stop the strike.

Railroad management began characterizing the union as violent and lawless, calling Debs “a radical.”

When Debs went to Blue Island to ask railroad workers there to support the strike, rioting broke out, tracks were torn up. Railroad cars were burned.

The Attorney General of the United States Richard Olney, at the urging of the railroad owners, obtained an injunction July 2 that declared the strike illegal.

When Debs’ union members did not return to work, when they did not return to work—-

President Cleveland sent federal troops into Chicago.

Strikers stopped trains, destroyed switches and burned railroad cars.

Troops opened fire on strikers  attempting to stop a train traveling through downtown Chicago.

Debs and his union leaders were arrested for disrupting the delivery of mail.

Twenty-six civilians were killed.

Because the mail could not be delivered. Because the mail could not be delivered…how pathetic.

Debs, the union leader, stopped the strike.

Debs was sentenced to six months in jail and the union was disbanded. To my knowledge no federal troops who killed civilians were prosecuted.

A number of railroad workers were black listed and could not get a job on a railroad in the United States.

It was the first time federal troops were used to break up a strike.

Pullman workers were forced to sign a pledge they would never strike again.

The threat of the federal government stopping strikes lead to an end of strikes for at least 8 years.

President Cleveland, though, was facing reelection in 1894.

And, here’s how Labor Day became a national holiday.

Union leaders and citizens were alarmed at his handling of the strike.

As PBS put it in a documentary in 2001: “But now, protests against President Cleveland’s harsh methods made the appeasement of the nation’s workers a top political priority. In the immediate wake of the strike, legislation was rushed unanimously through both houses of Congress, and the bill arrived on President Cleveland’s desk just six days after his troops had broken the Pullman strike.

1894 was an election year.

President Cleveland seized the chance at conciliation, and Labor Day was born. William Jennings Bryant ran for the Democratic Party and the Populist Party in 1896, losing to  Republican William McKinley.

Then came a sea change in the great coal strike of 1902, when another “exemplary” capitalist J. P. Morgan fought the coal workers.

It happened in the coal fields of Easton, Pennsylvania, when the United Mine Workers headed by John Mitchell struck the coal operators  pushing for an 8-hour day.

The coal operators employed private police and the Pennsylvania National Guard to protect non-union workers.

President Theodore Roosevelt summoned the parties to the White House to bring settlement of the dispute by arbitration. After 6 months, the coal miners won a 9-hour day and a 10% increase in wages.

T.R.’s personal intervention lead to Selig Perlman, economist and labor historian at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, saying “this was perhaps the first time in history a labor organization tied up for months a strategic industry without being condemned as a revolutionary menace.’

The 1902 leadership of Teddy Roosevelt resulted in elimination of private police forces long used  by management to combat workers, when Governor Samuel Pennypacker became Governor of Pennsylvania. He created the Pennsylvania State Police in 1903, the first in the nation to supplant the independent organizations hired by management that were little more than strong-arm men.

The lesson of Labor Day is to remember the bravery of the union leaders who put their members first, did not make deals, did not sell out their members,(and I might add, sucomb to politicians’ whining) and held out for the good against managements that were neither kind, humane, fair, or appreciative of their workers’ contribution to their corporate success.

Management never  is. They talk a good game but it’s all talk.

So American workers should remember the struggles and the leadership of Debs and Mitchell. And the strikers and civilians who were shot down in the street.

They introduced a new era of workers’ rights at the cost of their lives.

The battle against worker exploitation never ends.

Posted in Uncategorized

FEINER: POSTAL SERVICE LOCALLY A DISGRACE. SCHOOL BUS PASSES UNDELIVERED IN GREENBURGH. ABC NEWS: POSTAL SERVICE TO CLOSE 3,700 REVENUE LOSING POST OFFICES NATIONALLY. LOCALS SOUND OFF IN LETTER DULUGE

Hits: 0

WPCNR THE FEINER REPORT. By Paul Feiner, Greenburgh Town Supervisor. September 2, 2018:

Editor’s Note: This weekend ABC News reported the U.S. Postal Service announced it was seeking to close 3,700 money-losing postal offices nationwide.

Paul Feiner, the Greenburgh Town Supervisor, filed this report on the deterioration of postal services in his town, and provided some comments from his constituents. Mr. Feiner is the only politician to my knowledge who has consistently reported the “unreliable” post office service in his town and of course, elsewhere in Westchester County.

Should postal services close down, it raises the question of how you send mail, something local politicians might want to ask their Senators and Representatives. Just an issue that might want to be explored, just sayin’.

Now, Mr. Feiner’s report:

 In recent years I have complained about postal service problems. The service is not reliable.  Earlier this year the US Postal Service responded by hiring a Westchester Postal Service manager who is working very hard – addressing individual problems and getting results for some people. A new Hartsdale postmaster was hired. Have received fewer complaints than I was receiving at the beginning of the year.

But–postal service problems continue.  It’s not only a local problem. It’s a national problem.   The following are just a few of the complaints I received from residents and businesses in recent days (most are a few days old).

If the Postal Service doesn’t get their act together more and more people will stop using the mail and the Postal Service won’t survive.

We can’t depend on mail delivery for checks, bills, prescriptions.  There have been stories in the national media about mail being thrown away.

What should be done?
The US Congress should hold public hearings on the postal service problems and come up with specific recommendations. I believe that the US Postmaster General should visit Greenburgh and Westchester -and hear, first hand, what the complaints are.

Something needs to be done.

Every complaint I receive is not only sent to the Westchester district manager, regional manager but is also sent to the United States Postmaster General, other high ranking officials at the US Postal Service and to our Westchester congressional delegation. I have sent hundreds of complaints to them in recent months.

PAUL FEINER

 

E MAILS RECEIVED TODAY, YESTERDAY AND THE PAST TEN DAYS (JUST SOME OF THE COMPLAINTS RECEIVED)

I DELETED NAMES OF THOSE WHO SENT COMPLAINT TO ME FROM THIS POSTING

Good Sunday morning Paul.

The problem with mail delivery in Hartsdale is really quite serious and is not improving despite all the hoopla you and Nita Lowey display.  It is Labor Day week-end and my grandson’s bus tag and pick up/drop off information from the school (Greenburgh) transportation still has not been delivered.

I spoke yesterday with the director of the transportation department – yes, on a holiday week-end.  He told me all bus tags were mailed out in mid-August and many, many people did not receive them – I am one of them.

How am I supposed to put my grandson on his school bus and get to work when I have no information about it.  I believe the transportation department that information was mailed.  I am very certain it is sitting in a bin in the Hartsdale post office.  You really need to get something done about this.

Denise
Dear Mr. Feiner,
I have just spoken to the Board of Ed. concerning two very important pieces of mail that have not been delivered, but have been sent out.  They are concerning my son’s first grade teacher and the school calendar.  All the other Moms have received them.  They are two weeks over due. 
   Can you please contact the responsible parties. We have had numerous problems with our mail in the past and recent past. This is unacceptable. 
 
Sincerely,
 
Sandra
Dear Town Supervisor Feiner,
I have read that we have problems with the USPS mail delivery in Greenburgh. On most days I receive someone else’s email on East Hartsdale Avenue.
As as example yesterday I received mail from 68 EHA,  though I live at 45EHA. I was kind enough to personally walk the mail to 68EHA. Apparently no attention of care is exhibited by the mail carriers.
I could have dropped in the mail box but don’t know if the recipient would receive it.
I didn’t want to discuss with my mail carrier since they could take out retribution on me by not delivering my mail to be properly.
 This seems to be a systemic problem and want to make you aware of it by sending you the attached photos/mail of the mail delivered.

I am reaching out to you because I read your communication re: mail problems that you issued a few months ago.  We have been having problems with your mail here in Irvington for at least the past 3 years and I have made a few complaints to the Irvington post office.   Complaints have included
– receiving other peoples’ mail, including mail not even from our street and sometimes not even from our town
– delivery occurring very late in the day – almost always after 6PM, sometimes as late as 8PM
– not receiving our own mail – ( have had several past due bills because I did not receive the original bills
– at the time of my son’s bar mitzvah three different families left cards with checks in our mail box when their children were not able to attend the part – – all three envelopes were taken from our mailbox and never returned to us
These pictures represent mail that was delivered to us Thursday evening some time after 7:30.   As you can see, in addition to getting our own mail we got mail delivered to 4 different families including one family in Elmsford.
Among the misdelivered mail were 2 bills, which, if I had been lazy, I could have just tossed in the trash (but of course did not).    Most of the mail contained type written addresses which should have easily been scanned and read by any mail sorting device that might be used by the postal system.
This is really a disgrace.   I have lived in White Plains, West Harrison and North White Plains over the years and it wasn’t until I moved to Irvington that I started encountering problems.   I have spoken to my neighbors just on my immediate street and they have had the same issues as well.
If you can weld any influence in improving the situation it would most definitely be appreciated my me and the rest of my neighbors.
Sincerely,
Stacy
 Good afternoon to whom it may concern yesterday August 31 was one of the worst experiences I had dealing with the postal service. I first received an email that my package can Could not  be deliver because  the mailman could not get in my front door however I received my mail in my mailbox.
That same night when I got home I saw a bin of mail in my lobby with all the undeliverable mail and all the mail that was put in the outgoing mail  box Sitting in a  us postal mail  bin my lobby.
Photos attached I find this very disturbing not only was my Nila delivery but others peoples mail was left out to the public.  From  a concerned Postal customer Stephen
Something is terribly wrong here with the mail.
We are not getting our mail and it’s 6:30 and no sign of anyone delivering mail. I understand Marcus left the route and two girls have taken over the route but we are not getting mail. Mail has been found on the sidewalk and a neighbor picked it up and brought it over to the person. Please look into this matter as it is serious. Besides medication there are bills that are not coming and then being charged late fees. Thank you.
Good morning Paul,
 
Hope all is well.  I have written you previously about the USPS, and you have responded, thank you.
 
In the past month, our company, ( DELETED NAME OF COMPANY FOR THIS POSTING), have had checks from our customers, commercial and residential, returned to them undeliverable from various towns, cities in Westchester County. 
Our address they used was correct,  and we confirmed that with them when they finally received their checks back. Today we received 2 phone calls from commercial customers that had their checks for us were returned, undeliverable, with our correct business name & address. 
 
I know mistakes happen, but I feel that this is a growing trend.   When our regular mail lady who we love and are NOT complaining about, we always receive all mail, 1st class , etc.  When she is on vacation, we intermittently receive 1st class mail.
 
As a small business owners, who have been in the same location for 24 years, who rely on their customers’ payments to keep doing business, this is a frustration that we don’t think is acceptable.  I know you are in regular contact with the USPS due to many complaints. 

As of this minute,7:13am Friday, no mail was delivered Thursday, August 23rd.   I’m certain of this because I left a letter to be picked up, and there is a bar code in my letter box that must be scanned at the end of the route.  No storm, no rain , no mail!

 

Posted in Uncategorized

SCHOOL STARTS WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 5 IN WHITE PLAINS NY USA. YOU CAN LOOK FORWARD TO A LOT EASIER ACHIEVEMENT TESTS THAN STUDENTS IN 1895 in Salina, Kansas took 123 Years Ago. Bring back those SchoolMarms!

Hits: 0

SCHOOLMARMS

WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. From Carl Paladino. September 1, 2018:

Editor’s Note: Carl Paladino, the Buffalo NY political activist and long time critic of the Buffalo school system, posted this to his wide mailing list: the test that 8th graders in 1895 in Salina Kansas had to pass to prove they were ready to move up. It is one of the most insightful comments Mr. Paladino has ever sent along.

I daresay, I could not past this test. Those schoolmarms were tough!

1895 8th grade final exam

Take this test and pass it on

 
What it took to get an 8th-grade education in 1895.

Remember when grandparents and great-grandparents stated that they only had an 8th-grade education? Well, check this out. Could any of us have passed the 8th grade in 1895?

This is the eighth-grade final exam from 1895 in Salina, Kansas, USA.
It was taken from the original document on file at the Smokey Valley Genealogical Society and Library in Salina, and reprinted by the Salina Journal.

8th Grade Final Exam: Salina, KS – 1895 

Grammar (Time, one hour)

1. Give nine rules for the use of capital letters.

2. Name the parts of speech and define those that have no modifications.

3. Define verse, stanza, and paragraph

4. What are the principal parts of a verb? Give principal parts of ‘lie,”play,’ and ‘run.’

5. Define case; illustrate each case.

6 What is punctuation? Give rules for principal marks of punctuation.

7 – 10. Write a composition of about 150 words and show therein that you understand the practical use of the rules of grammar.

Arithmetic (Time,1 hour 15 minutes)

1. Name and define the Fundamental Rules of Arithmetic.

2. A wagon box is 2 ft. Deep, 10 feet long, and 3 ft. Wide. How many bushels of wheat will it hold?

3. If a load of wheat weighs 3,942 lbs., what is it worth at 50cts/bushel, deducting 1,050 lbs. For tare?

4. District No 33 has a valuation of $35,000. What is the necessary levy to carry on a school seven months at $50 per month, and have $104 for incidentals?

5. Find the cost of 6,720 lbs. Coal at $6.00 per ton.

6. Find the interest of $512.60 for 8 months and 18 days at 7 percent.

7. What is the cost of 40 boards 12 inches wide and 16 ft. Long at $20 per metre?

8. Find bank discount on $300 for 90 days (no grace) at 10 percent.

9. What is the cost of a square farm at $15 per acre, the distance of which is 640 rods?

10. Write a Bank Check, a Promissory Note, and a Receipt

U.S. History (Time, 45 minutes)

1. Give the epochs into which U.S. History is divided

2. Give an account of the discovery of America by Columbus

3. Relate the causes and results of the Revolutionary War.

4. Show the territorial growth of the United States

5. Tell what you can of the history of Kansas

6. Describe three of the most prominent battles of the Rebellion.

7. Who were the following: Morse, Whitney, Fulton, Bell, Lincoln, Penn, and Howe?

8. Name events connected with the following dates: 1607, 1620, 1800, 1849, 1865.

Orthography (Time, one hour) 
[Do we even know what this is??]

1. What is meant by the following: alphabet, phonetic, orthography, etymology, syllabication

2. What are the elementary sounds? How classified?

3. What are the following, and give examples of each: trigraph, subvocals, diphthong, cognate letters, linguals

4. Give four substitutes for caret ‘u.’ (HUH?)

5. Give two rules for spelling words with final ‘e.’ Name two exceptions under each rule.

6. Give two uses of silent letters in spelling. Illustrate each.

7. Define the following prefixes and use in connection with a word: bi, dis-mis, pre, semi, post, non, inter, mono, sup.

8. Mark diacritically and divide into syllables the following, and name the sign that indicates the sound: card, ball, mercy, sir, odd, cell, rise, blood, fare, last.

9. Use the following correctly in sentences: cite, site, sight, fane, fain, feign, vane, vain, vein, raze, raise, rays.

10. Write 10 words frequently mispronounced and indicate pronunciation by use of diacritical marks
and by syllabication.

Geography (Time, one hour)
1 What is climate? Upon what does climate depend?

2. How do you account for the extremes of climate in Kansas?

3. Of what use are rivers? Of what use is the ocean?

4. Describe the mountains of North America

5. Name and describe the following: Monrovia, Odessa, Denver, Manitoba, Hecla, Yukon, St. Helena, Juan Fernandez, Aspinwall, and Orinoco.

6. Name and locate the principal trade centers of the U.S. Name all the republics of Europe and give the capital of each.

8. Why is the Atlantic Coast colder than the Pacific in the same latitude?

9. Describe the process by which the water of the ocean returns to the sources of rivers.

10. Describe the movements of the earth. Give the inclination of the earth.

Notice that the exam took FIVE HOURS to complete.

Gives the saying ‘he only had an 8th-grade education’ a whole new meaning, doesn’t it?! 

No wonder they dropped out after 8th grade. They already knew more than they needed to know.

No, I don’t have the answers!

Posted in Uncategorized

WHITE PLAINS WEEK ON THE INTERNET

Hits: 374

1-opener-ANNIVERSARY

 

ON THE INTERNET NOW

YOUTUBE:

 
 

WESTCHESTER’S MOST NEED-TO-KNOW NEWS

ON

THE HEAT WAVE WILTS WESTCHESTER-101 IN THE SHADE

WHY JUDGE RULED FOR THE CITY AND FASNY

THE RUSH TO SHARE SERVICES PLAN–EXCLUSIVE VIDEO OF PUBLIC HEARING ON LATIMER PLAN 

THE SCHOOL DISTRICT’S ENROLLMENT–WILL IT HANDLE THE GROWTH WITHOUT CONSTRUCTION?

GOVERNOR CUOMO SHOWS OFF THE NEW EASTBOUND CUOMO BRIDGE SPAN–TOO LATE FOR LABOR DAY WEEKEND

JIM BENEROFE ON TWO NEW TRUMP BOOKS

THE BULLY PULPIT–BETSY DEVOS ON SEXUAL HARASSMENT

AND MORE!

REPEATED MONDAY AT 7 FIOS CH. 45, ALTICE CH. 76

AND

www.wpcommunitymedia.org

Posted in Uncategorized

SATURDAY at 7 SEIU 32BJ TO BE HEARD ON PEOPLE TO BE HEARD 7 PM COUNTYWIDE ON FIOS CH 45 AND ALTICE CH 75 IN WHITE PLAINS. AND RIGHT NOW ON THE INTERNET–YOU TUBE AND WHITE PLAINS WEEK DOT COM

Hits: 393

IMG_9237

THE LABOR DAY WEEKEND SPECIAL

NOW ON THE INTERNET INSTANTLY AT

AND

PEOPLE TO BE HEARD

INTERVIEWS

 Lenore Friedlaender,

Assistant to the President of 32BJ SEIU

John Ryan,

Superintendent at 11 Westview Ave in White Plains Member of the Residential Contract Bargaining Committee Dealing with the the Building and Realty Institute of Westchester and the Mid-Hudson Region Inc. AFFECTING 150,000 Westchester Residents 

WHAT UNION WANTS.

EFFECT OF A STRIKE

WHAT PUBLIC CAN EXPECT

EFFECT OF SUPREME COURT DECISION REQUIRING ARBITRATION TO SETTLE INDIVIDUAL COMPLAINTS, PROHIBITING CLASS ACTION SUITS

THE EFFECT OF THE DECISION OUTLAWING DEDUCTION OF UNION DUES FROM NON-UNION EMPLOYEES

THE SETTLEMENT OF

THE DISPLACED WORKERS LAWSUIT AGAINST THE BUILDING NEXT TO CITY HALL

7 PM SATURDAY NIGHT

VERIZON FIOS CH. 45

ALTICE CH. 76

 ON THE NET NOW AT

www.wpcommunitymedia.org

Greenburgh Towns Not Accepting Tax Payments as Charitable Donations

Hits: 184

WPCNR THE FEINER REPORT. By Greenburgh Town Supervisor Paul Feiner. August 30, 2018:

Earlier this year the NYS Legislature authorized local governments and school districts to accept charitable donations in lieu of tax payments so residents would be able to get a tax deduction.  The town will be collecting school taxes for the school districts (which are independent of the town) in September.

The new state law requires school districts that choose to opt into the law to pass a resolution in order for the town to accept charitable donations.

I sent a few letters to each of the school districts within the town. None of the school districts in Greenburgh will be accepting the donations for the September tax payments.

Last week the federal government took action steps to make it harder for residents to get the deductions.

I also contacted fellow Town Supervisors in Westchester. School districts throughout the county have also decided not to implement the charitable tax deduction option. Only two communities, to the best of my knowledge, have signed on so far: Scarsdale and Rye Brook.

RESPONSES FROM SCHOOL DISTRICTS WITHIN GREENBURGH…IRVINGTON, EDGEMONT, HASTINGS

GREENBURGH CENTRAL SCHOOLS:  consulted with counsel (Judd Siebert from Keane & Beane) and shared background information and his advice with the board. Board members requested that we discuss this issue at our 9/4/18 BOE work session. It is likely that we will wait until next year to decide whether we will implement this. However,  I will confirm this after 9/4.

HASTINGS SCHOOL DISTRICT

Per your request of August 14, our board president Doug Sundheim asked me to send you the statement that the Hastings-On-Hudson Union Free School District emailed its families regarding the school district’s position on accepting charitable donations instead of tax payments.

It is posted on our website at: https://www.hohschools.org/cms/lib/NY01913703/Centricity/Domain/4/8.7.18%20Charitable%20Donations%20In%20Lieu%20of%20Taxes.pdf

 

IRVINGTON

This is in response to your letter dated August 14, 2018 related to the acceptance of charitable donations instead of tax payments. The district consulted with our counsel and per his advice and after a discussion at our August 21, 2018 School Board meeting, the Board has decided to wait for the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to provide final guidance before taking any action.

EDGEMONT SCHOOL DISTRICT

Following up on our conversations, the Edgemont School Board voted to continue to evaluate the potential for a charitable contribution in lieu of taxes option.  We are keenly aware of the potential importance of SALT deduction work-arounds.  Indeed, the  board members are a local taxpayers ourselves.  However, we do not yet have sufficient information to decide whether we can make this option available, and want to work with you to figure out the following:

1.  Potential Legal Exposure:  The opportunity to implement a new program arises in a very unsettled area of law that pits state/local authorities against federal authorities.  We need to determine whether proceeding with a program exposes the Town or school district to potential liability, now or in the future.

2.  Mechanics:  What is the process by which a charitable contribution program would be created and implemented?  What does the school need to do?  It is complicated to create a new program from scratch — and it is essential to do it correctly.

3.  Burden & Cost to the District:  Whether and how any charitable contribution program unduly burdens Edgemont administrators and/or imposes costs on the school district certainly will affect its appeal.

4.  Best Practices:  To the extent other communities have implemented programs, what are the things we can learn/copy?

Please let me know what next steps will be to advance the discussion.  As you and I discussed, I realize there is no way to answer these questions in time to get on track for a September roll-out.  But, perhaps, we can target December (in advance of the 2nd tax payment deadline).

 

HAVEN’T RECEIVED RESPONSES FROM THE OTHER SCHOOL DISTRICTS WITHIN THE TOWN BUT PRESUME THEY ARE ALSO NOT AUTHORIZING THE CHARITABLE DONATIONS.

 

 

PAUL FEINER

Article from associated press follows…

Posted in Uncategorized

Congresswoman Lowey Convenes Conference on College Necessity Thursday in Pleasantville. 11 AM

Hits: 337

WPCNR  FUTURE FORECAST. From Congresswoman Nita Lowey’s Office. August 29, 2018:

Congresswoman Nita M. Lowey and Pace University President Marvin Krislov Convene Roundtable on College Affordability and Accessibility

 

As Washington debates the reauthorization of the Higher Education Act, local leaders explain what it means for students, parents and education institutions in our area 

The Promoting Real Opportunity, Success and Prosperity Through Education Reform (PROSPER) Act is the current legislation being considered in Congress to reauthorize the Higher Education Act. But what does it mean for current and future college students and their parents? The impact of the bill and what families in Westchester, Rockland, and the surrounding area need to know will be discussed. Some of the major changes in the PROSPER Act include:

  • Elimination of in-school interest subsidy for middle-and-low-income students
  • A new annual limit on loans for graduate students ($28,500 per year, aggregate limit of $150,000)
  • A new annual limit on parent loans
  • Elimination of loan forgiveness
  • More restrictive loan repayment options

WHO:             

Congresswoman Nita M. Lowey, 17th District New York

Marvin Krislov, President, Pace University

Dr. Belinda Miles, President, Westchester Community College

Financial Aid & Enrollment Administrators from:

Westchester Community College, Dominican College, Purchase College, Manhattanville College, Mercy College

College students affected by the legislation

WHAT:           

Discussion and analysis of legislation to reauthorize the Higher Education Act with key stakeholders.
WHEN:          

Thursday, August 30th

11:00 AM – 12:00 PM

WHERE:        

Pace University, 861 Bedford Road, Pleasantville, NY

Goldstein Academic Center, Room 100

Campus Entrance #3

Campus map

 

 

Posted in Uncategorized

Latimer Touts Liberty Lines 5 Year Deal. Saves County $20 Million

Hits: 380

WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From the Westchester County Department of Communications. August 26, 2018:

With dozens of transit workers cheering on, County Executive George Latimer and Liberty Lines announced a new five year partnership that includes $20M in savings to Westchester County taxpayers.

The deal, which runs through 2023, was reached with the County paying $13M less to Liberty Lines and an additional savings of $7M from insurance costs.

The deal also calls for the shifting of insurance providers from AIG to New York Municipal Insurance Reciprocal – a not-for-profit entity – all while still providing the same services that thousands of Westchester residents rely on.

Over the term of the contract, Westchester County and Liberty Lines also agree to work together and continue to evaluate the cost of fuel. Any further savings generated from these efforts will be in addition to those already quantified.

Latimer said: “The deal we are approving today will save Westchester County taxpayers $20M over a five year span. When my Administration took office on January 1, we had on the table the willingness to negotiate a new contract.

This negotiation back and forth between the County and the company – which both sides were able to agree upon – has a definite benefit.

We talk a lot about the deficit we are facing in Westchester County, and the government and taxpayers owe a debt of gratitude to Liberty Lines for their flexibility in being willing to help close that gap.”

 

 

Posted in Uncategorized

FLASH! Judge Lefkowitz Rules Against Gedney Association in GEDNEY vs. FASNY. & City of White Plains Association Can Appeal.

Hits: 437

IMG_6856

The abandoned  former Ridgeway Country Club on Ridgeway Avenue White Plains NY USA–site of planned new French American School of New York. The school plans have cleared another legal obstacle pending possible appeal. Photo WPCNR archive.

WPCNR WHITE PLAINS LAW JOURNAL. Special to WPCNR From the French American School of New York. (EDITED) August 26, 2018:

State Supreme Court Judge Joan Lefkowitz rejected two separate legal challenges to the White Plains Common Council’s grant of Special Permit and Site Plan approval  for a reduced School on 27 acres of the 129-acre former Ridgeway Country Club in a decision handed down Friday.

IMG_6857

Future entrance to the school: Hathaway Lane, adjacent to the  abandoned clubhouse. New school facilities will be built on former fairways extending into the distance. Photo from WPCNR archive

The August 24th Court decision comes after seven years of reviews by the City and  lawsuits by the Gedney Association.

Since acquiring the Ridgeway Country Club property in January of 2011, FASNY followed all environmental reviews and made multiple revisions of its plan in order to address community concerns, including substantially reducing the scope of the project and adopting a comprehensive traffic management plan.

Based upon a prior successful legal challenge by FASNY, the City and FASNY entered into a Stipulation of Settlement in 2016, in which FASNY filed a reduced Upper School only plan for no more than 640 students that limited all construction to one parcel of the former Ridgeway site.

After a year of further review, in November 2017, the City Council approved FASNY’s revised application, and the Gedney Association and various of its supporters brought two separate legal challenges against the City Council and FASNY.

In a 26-page opinion, Judge Lefkowitz rejected the plaintiffs’ initial argument that the former Ridgeway Country Club could not be used for an educational institution because of a Covenant filed in 1925, prohibiting the use of the property for “any institution, other than a club.”

The Court held that while the 1925 Covenant “unequivocally prohibits many uses […] it contains no like prohibition of any use related to education.”

The Court rejected arguments that the 1925 Covenant’s prohibition of “noxious” uses applied to a school, noting that under New York law, in fact, “such uses are presumed to have a beneficial effect on the community in which they are located,” and that the “law has long favored free and unencumbered use of real property. ”

The Court also summarily rejected various arguments made challenging the Council’s review, finding that “[t]he Record establishes that the Common Council did take the requisite hard look at all of the potential impacts” related to the school.

The Court specifically rejected the Gedney Association’s and its supporters’ contention that the Council failed to consider traffic issues raised by the challengers’ consultant, noting that, under the controlling law, the reviewing agency “has discretion to choose between conflicting experts,” and that various of the plaintiffs’ claims were no more than “rank speculation based on hypothetical circumstances.”

“We are gratified that the Court appreciated the tremendous efforts that both we and the City of White Plains went through to make sure that our project is good for FASNY and for the community as a whole,” said Emmanuèle Vinciguerra, Chair of the FASNY Board of Trustees.

She went on to say, “FASNY would like to extend special thanks to all the members of the White Plains community who have supported us throughout these years, as well as, again, extend an open hand to those residents who had concerns about the project.”

Vinciguerra noted that “FASNY had already recorded a 51-acre publicly accessible conservancy on its property, and looks forward to sharing this incredible open space with its neighbors and other members of the White Plains community.”

FASNY’s counsel, Michael Zarin of Zarin and Steinmetz, added:  “Judge Lefkowitz’s decision confirms that the Courts will sustain environmental reviews that are the product of a careful and comprehensive review of the issues.  FASNY has demonstrated great commitment to its constituents and to the larger community, and we are very proud to have been part of this long journey.”