Heating Problems Main Cause of Winter Fires, Chief Lyman Observes. COLD WAVE COMPLICATES FIGHTING FIRES

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WPCNR PUBLIC SAFETY ROUNDUP. January 3, 2018:

White Plains Fire Chief, Richard Lyman provided details on the Sunday fire at 16-18 Park Avenue (shown as it looked today at noon), that took White Plains firefighters five hours to bring under control. Chief Lyman issued this statement:

“The fire at 16-18 Park Avenue is still under investigation to determine the cause. The fire was called in at 12:10 pm and was called under control at 5:30 pm.
“Cold weather complicates fighting a fire making it more difficult to extinguish. Water used to put the fire out freezes on the ground, ladders, roofs, firefighters and other surfaces creating a tough work environment.
“Hoselines and fire nozzles can freeze rendering the lines inoperable. Low temperatures and wind chill can cause hyperthermia and frostbite. Despite the difficult work environment the crews did a fantastic job under the circumstances.
Attached are two fact sheets from the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) regarding home heating fires and Fire Overview in the US.
Home heating fires are the second leading cause of fires in the US.
Cooking is the number one cause annually.
However during the months of December, January and February heating is the leading cause of fires.
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Charts from the National Fire Protection Association

 

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Photos of the Day: County Executive Latimer Signs Executive Order Banning Gun Shows on County-Owned Property. Board of Legislators Says they Will Move to Legislate the Ban in Perpetuity

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COUNTY EXECUTIVE GEORGE LATIMER ARRIVES AT COUNTY CENTER FOR NEWS CONFERENCE ANNOUNCING BANNING OF GUN SHOWS ON ALL WESTCHESTER COUNTY-OWNED PROPERTY. GUNSHOWS ARE STILL PERMITTED TO BE STAGE IN PRIVATELY OWNED FACILITIES.

“Westchester County government should not be in the business of advancing the sale of weapons and other items often sold at gun shows – plain and simple,” said Latimer. “This is not a restriction on gun shows in the entire county, but rather just on public land.”

Text from the Executive Order states that “WHEREAS, reactional County facilities always serve our residents best when used for sporting events, concerts, trade shows, and educational opportunities for our youth. Gun shows are not what taxpayer financed property should be used for.”

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DEPUTY COUNTY EXECUTIVE KEN JENKINS SAID HE WAS PLEASED THAT THE EXECUTIVE ORDER ECHOED THE LEGISLATION HE INTRODUCED IN 2016, TO BAN GUN SHOWS WHICH WAS VETOED BY FORMER COUNTY EXECUTIVE ROBERT ASTORINO. ASTORINO HAD REINSTATED GUN SHOWS, RESCINDING THE ORIGINAL BAN PUT INTO EFFECT BY COUNTY EXECUTIVE ANDY SPANO IN 1999 AFTER THE COLUMBINE SHOOTING.

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WHITE PLAINS DISTRICT 5  COUNTY LEGISLATOR BENJAMIN BOYKIN, SAID THE BOARD OF LEGISLATORS WOULD INTRODUCE LEGISLATION ASSURING THE EXECUTIVE ORDER WOULD BECOME COUNTY LAW “IN PERPETUITY.”

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VARIOUS COUNTY LEGISLATORS EACH SPOKE ON THE MENACE OF GUN VIOLENCE IN THEIR DISTRICTS AND PRAISED THE EXECUTIVE ORDER AS RETURNING TO “WESTCHESTER VALUES.”

MR. LATIMER SAID BANNING GUNSHOWS WAS ONE OF THE ISSUES THAT THE MAJORITY OF VOTERS STRONGLY SUPPORTED, NOTING HIS WINNING 57% OF THE VOTE COMPARED TO 43% FOR HIS OPPONENT, MR. ASTORINO, AND HE, LATIMER WAS FOLLOWING THROUGH ON THAT PROMISE.

HE ADDED THAT THE GUN SHOW HELD LAST JANUARY IN THE COUNTY CENTER CONTAINED CONFEDERACY MEMORABILIA  AND NAZI PUBLICATIONS WHICH HAD SPARKED WIDESPREAD CRITICISM OF THE GUN SHOW.

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George Latimer Sworn in as County Executive. Signs Request for State Comptroller Review of County Budget

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Latimer and Judge Gretchen Walsh

George Latimer is sworn in as Westchester County Executive Monday afternoon by Judge Gretchen Walsh. For a video of the swearing in go to this YouTube link below, or copy and post in your browser. Photos,Video Special to WPCNR by Peter Katz.

https://youtu.be/LOOKAFZhYDE

WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From the Westchester County Department of Communications. January 1, 2018:

With the overarching themes of the day being transparency and restoration, newly sworn-in County Executive George Latimer issued a series of “day one” actions that signal an administration focused on giving the people of Westchester their County back.  Actions included:

  • Sending a formal request to New York State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli to perform a full and open fiscal review of policies and procedures.
  • Issuing an Executive Order removing the names and likeness of the County Executives from all County signage.
  • The issuance of the “Good Neighbor” policy to better involve municipalities in decisions that impact their communities.
  • The formation of a task force aimed at revisiting shared-services in the County.
  • The announcement of the #MyWestchester social media campaign aimed at celebrating the County.
  • The announcement of his two-week intensive “Tour of Change.”

Latimer signs review request to DiNapoli

As one of his first official actions, County Executive Latimer signs a request to New York State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli to do an audit of the Westchester County Budget. Photo Special to WPCNR by Peter Katz

On the fiscal review, Latimer said this is the most pressing issue:

“This will help pull back the curtain and show just exactly where we are.  We have a long road ahead of us – together – and to get on that road we need to know exactly where we are going. I look forward to working with the Comptroller and the people of Westchester on analyzing the results of the review and where we need to go next.”

As for removing the names and likeness of the County Executives from all signage, Latimer said this applies to all directional, informational and promotional signs and applies to all County elected officials.

The only exception would be for the office building where one is based.  Latimer said he is simply giving the County back to the people.

“These parks were here long before I came into office and will be enjoyed by residents long after I leave,” said Latimer, “Westchester’s natural beauty does not belong to one person. Westchester residents don’t care who gets credit for a project or who was in office when it happened, they just want to know that the needed work is done and that’s exactly how I intend to operate.”

Under the “Good Neighbor” policy, the County would be required to make a formal presentation of any significant proposed action on county land at a regularly scheduled, televised meeting of the local governing body (City Council, Town Board or Village Board).

The locality would have 60 days before the action would be implemented, to allow for a local public forum to gather public input from residents. Then the locality would submit a memo of support, neutrality, or opposition to the action before the county acts.

“Government is for the people, by the people – and that means including all stakeholders in its decision making. This policy will not only lead to greater cooperation but also to more successful projects thanks to the input from residents who they will impact most.” said Latimer.

Also affecting municipalities will be the issue of shared services.

Last year, Governor Cuomo announced an action plan for County governments to assemble the municipalities that make it up to create shared-services plans that will show real savings to the taxpayers.

For a County of its size, the plan formulated by Westchester lacked the originality – and savings – that other smaller counties came up with. Latimer is focused on the formation of a task force aimed at revisiting just how much local Westchester governments can share services.

“It’s on us in government to find ways to deliver the services all Westchester residents rely on- while doing it in the most cost-effective manner possible,” said Latimer. “To do this, all of us need to get back to the table and examine where we can consolidate without diminishing.”

Lastly, County Executive Latimer announced a social media campaign aimed at showing the world just who we are in Westchester County.

The #MyWestchester campaign asks residents – from all over the County – to share images, videos, and anecdotes about what makes them proud to call Westchester home.

“Westchester is home to so many wonderful people, businesses, parks, waterways and a whole host of other things that make it such an ideal destination for folks to live, work, visit and raise a family here. This is a way to show our pride. Keep an eye out for some of my posts, and I will be sure to share some favorites. Westchester is a special place and we are eager to show it off.”

Today, the oath and the series of announcements concluded with Latimer announcing his two-week “Tour of Change” Campaign where he will be making announcements on issues discussed in his campaign all over the County.

 

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Hope for a Gentler Kinder Classier Year of Being Better, Achieving More and Keeping the American Dream Foremost in Our Hearts

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A New Year to Work With and Work on Ourselves

The Crisp New Year emerged with the morning sun out of the east this morning, giving all everywhere the gift of a new day, a new year to introspect, reconstruct, and refurbish our psyches and spirits and fortify our hearts to brush up our selfosphere and mental environment and continue to build our own personal dialectic of living.

2018 will be a hardworking year to attempt to repair the shambles of the spirit during the most bitter year in memory.

Bask in the crisp freshness and spirit of this first new day and begin the work of making ourselves better, burying the sorrow, smiling at our memories and seizing the tiller, setting sails and steering through the chop of life tacking against the wind, always sailing to the sun, drifting through the nights ahead to reflect on what we achieved during the day, where each of us could have done better and appreciating the uniqueness of every individual.

Did we do well today? How can we do better tomorrow? Are we proud of what we did today? Did we do good? If you do good, you sleep the satisfying sleep that “knits up the raveled sleeve of care.”

Cast off!

Set the sails and launch yourself on the sunlit sea. The snow-covered prairie. The vibrant metropolis.

It is your world, your year, your year to do good.

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WHITE PLAINS HOLDS ITS BALL DROP IN 10 DEGREE WEATHER. CROWD SWELLS ABOUT 11:30 PM. Ball Drops. Everybody Goes Home.

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WPCNR MAIN STREET JOURNAL. January 1, 2017:

When festivities began with music entertainment at 10 PM Sunday evening, New Year’s Eve in White Plains ,about 25 persons were jumping up and down to the music.

Within the next hour it had grown to about 100 persons. By midnight, balldrop time, about a block from Main Street up past Martine Avenue from the live television feed was filled with people which from our television vantage point was impossible to estimate accurately.

Perhaps many had weathered the 10 degree weather inside the restaurants and came out for the bitter end of 2017.

It was the coldest night I can remember for this festivity that has been going on since 2003.

2017, a bitter year ended on a bitter note.

The telecast from Times Square on CNN hosted by Andy Cohenand Anderson Cooper was devoid of excitement. There was no chemistry between the two hosts who had no idea it seemed what was going on. They made no comments about the size of the crowd which was very silent and decidedly unfestive. Of course this had to be the weather. There was a lot of jumping up and down down there, too.

This pairing of Cooper and Cohen was a fiasco. There was no sweeping shots of the crowd. There was no comment on whether the crowd was down in size from previous years. Jokes ran into bad taste late in the broadcast with comments about Tom Cruise’s anatomy. Please.

The ball dropped with a colorful tasteless blaze of color from the Times Tower much like the tasteless year we just experienced.

 

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Governor Cuomo Announces minimum wage,family leave policies

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WPCNR ALBANY ROUNDS. From the Office of Governor Andrew M. Cuomo. December 31, 2017: Governor Andrew M. Cuomo today announced the second increase toward a statewide $15 per hour minimum wage and the launch of the nation’s strongest paid family leave policy.

In 2016, the Governor signed landmark legislation to restore economic parity and social justice to working families in New York State. Building on seven years of championing progressive policies for New York, the Governor’s paid family leave policy is the strongest and most comprehensive package in the country and will help employees maintain financial stability, and the minimum wage increase will reestablish economic justice and fairness across the state.

“New York has made major strides in the fight for economic equality, social justice and workers’ rights and with the rollout of this historic minimum wage increase and the strongest paid family leave program in the country, we continue to protect the wallets of middle class New Yorkers,” Governor Cuomo said. “New York believes in a fair day’s pay for a fair day’s work and no family member should have to choose between caring for a loved one or losing their job – this victory will help restore fairness and equality to working families across New York.”

Middle Class Tax Cut

Under Governor Cuomo’s leadership, New York continues to reduce state taxes to record lows for middle-class New Yorkers. These new lower state tax rates will save middle-class taxpayers nearly $6.6 billion in just the first four years, and annual savings are projected to reach $4.2 billion and benefit six million filers by 2025.

As the new rates phase in, they will be the state’s lowest middle-class tax rates in more than 70 years. In New York City, taxpayers will see an average state tax cut of $235 in 2018 and an average state tax cut of $653 when fully phased in in 2025.

Paid Family Leave

Beginning tomorrow, January 1, 2018, New York State will begin the strongest, most progressive and most comprehensive paid family leave policy in the nation.

New Yorkers will be allowed to take job-protected paid time off to bond with a new child, care for a loved one with a serious health condition or help relieve family pressures when a loved one is called to active military service abroad. When fully phased in, New Yorkers will be eligible for up to 12 weeks of paid time off.

Those eligible for paid family leave include:

Parents during the first 12 months following birth, adoption, or foster placement of a child;

  • Caretakers for a sick spouse, domestic partner, child, stepchild, parent, stepparent, parent-in-law, grandparent or grandchild;
  • Employees with a spouse, child, domestic partner or parent who has been notified of an order of active military service abroad.

Full-time employees with a regular schedule of 20 or more hours per week will be eligible for Paid Family Leave after 26 consecutive weeks of employment. Part-time employees with a regular schedule of less than 20 hours per week can apply for Paid Family Leave after working 175 days for their employer.

Additional information on New York State’s Paid Family Leave law, along with numerous resources for employers and workers, can be found on the Paid Family Leave website. The public is also encouraged to call the Paid Family Leave helpline at (844) 337-6303 with any questions. More details are available here.

$15 Minimum Wage

Minimum wage increases are calculated based on where an individual works, by industry, and, in some cases, the size business. It is estimated that more than 2.3 million people will be positively impacted by the increase in the minimum wage statewide.

 

Today, December 31, 2017, the minimum wage rates in New York City will increase to:

 

LOCATION MINIMUM WAGE
NYC – Large Employers (of 11 or more) $13.00
NYC – Small Employers (10 or less) $12.00
NYC (Fast Food Workers) $13.50

To help inform businesses and employees, the New York State Department of Labor has several tools available on its website.

Other resources available include:

  • Minimum Wage FAQs that answer many of the most common questions;
  • The Minimum Wage Lookup tool lets employees check the minimum cash wage they must be paid by their employers; and
  • The Minimum Wage Information Request Form lets employees ask additional questions that are not already answered on the Department’s website and allows organizations to request a live presentation or webinar about the scheduled increases.

 

Updated minimum wage posters for 2018 can be found at:

For more information on New York State’s minimum wage or to file a complaint, please call the minimum wage hotline at 1-888-469-7365.

 

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WESTCHESTER COUNTY EXECUTIVE-ELECT GEORGE LATIMER TO BEGIN FIRST DAY IN OFFICE WITH TOUR OF CHANGE

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From the Latimer Transition Committee. December 31, 2017:
Westchester County Executive-elect George Latimer will kick off two-week “Tour of Change” starting on January 1.
On his first official day, Latimer will take the oath of office at the Westchester County Office Building in White Plains.
Immediately after the oath, Latimer will make significant announcements regarding issues brought up during his campaign.
He will also kick off a two-week tour of change, and the #MyWestchester social media campaign where residents will celebrate Westchester.
NOTICE: JANUARY 1 EVENT IS OPEN TO THE NEWS MEDIA ONLY. PUBLIC IS NOT ALLOWED TO ATTEND.

January 1

3 p.m.

Westchester County Office Building

9th Floor 

148 Martine Ave

White Plains, NY 10601

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TONIGHT! JOHN BAILEY INTERVIEWS THE CAST AND MASTERMINDS BEHIND THE HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE DAME WPPAC’S SMASH HIT NEW SHOW.

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WESTCHESTER COUNTY’S NUMBER ONE STAGE CRITIC

INTERVIEWS

THE STARS, THE DIRECTORS OF

THE HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE DAME

stage

 

AND ON THE INTERNET NOW

ON YOUTUBE AND WHITE PLAINS WEEK  AT THESE LINKS:

the whiteplainsweek.com link is

THE CAST OF THE HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE DAME

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JENNA DALLACCO AS ESMERALDA AND

BOBBY CASSELL AS QUASIMODO

CECILIA SNOW AND CHRIS GUZMAN,LOCAL WHITE PLAINS ACTORS IN THE SHOW AND JAMES ZANNELLI, FROLIO THE VILLAIN

MEET THE DIRECTORS AND WHAT’S IN STORE 

IN WHITE PLAINS PERFORMING ARTS CENTER

THE HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE DAME

 

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City of Rye Appeal Holds Up Playland Standard Amusements/County Deal Indefinitely. Astorino Playland Dream Fails.

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Playland two months ago: North Broadwalk Repairs of Hurricane Sandy Damage (Sustained  in 2013) finally got underway this past fall. The takeover of the park by Standard Amusements is being delayed past December 31 over a City of Rye Appeal of a court ruling that threw out The City of Rye contention it should have final approval of any changes to the park the developer wants to make. The repair  to the North Broadwalk is still not complete.

WPCNR PLAYLAND-GO-ROUND. By John F. Bailey December 28, 2017:

There will be no closure and no multi-million dollar check from Standard Amusements accepting the lease management deal to manage and makeover Playland this weekend, or sometime to come.

Standard Amusements had been given  until December 31 by Westchester to submit the first payment of  $750,000 eventually to be $2.250 Million  (as stated last April) to begin their 30 year lease on the Playland property. Standard is supposed to invest $27,250,000 in the park rides and improvements. The county was supposed to invest $30 Million in infrastructure, but this was upped in the fall to approximately $50 Million without explicit details explained.

The head lawyer for the City of Rye told WPCNR this will not happen because the city  of Rye has appealed the decision throwing out  the Rye lawsuit in August of this year.

Kristen Wilson, Corporation Counsel for the City of Rye Thursday told WPCNR the city had appealed the judge’s ruling in the suit Rye filed protesting the county right to approve all developments and changes to the park (by any lease/manager)  without the City of Rye “final right of approval.”

Asked if the Appellate Court might expedite the hearing date for the Rye appeal, Wilson said the appellate court does not routinely take cases in the order in which they are filed, but usually it can take up to a year for an appeal to come to a hearing before the  court.

Asked if the Appellate Court could choose not to hear the case, Wilson said “you are automatically given the right to appeal in New York State, and you must be granted a hearing. Only the New York State Court of Appeals chooses which cases appealed from the Appellate Court that they will hear.

“The city (of Rye) has perfected its appeal and submitted it to the Appellate Court, Second Circuit. The County and Standard Amusements have not submitted their responses (to the Rye appeal). Their (the county and Standard) responses are due in the middle of January.”

Asked if the new Mayor-elect of Rye might withdraw the suit, Ms. Wilson said she was not aware of the new Mayor’s position, but withdrawal or continuation of the appeal was up to him.

That is because the City of Rye has appealed the court ruling in August, throwing out the City of Rye suit claiming that Rye should have final right of approval of what is built and designed on the county-owned national landmark amusement park, in operation since 1929

In his last three days as County Executive, Robert Astorino’s solution for stopping the annual $3-4 Million debt service of Playland (through leasing it out to private management) has failed.

As early as last month, Mr. Astorino had assured that everything was on track for Standard Amusements coming on board with their payment by the end of the year.

Repeated rejections by the County Legislature of Mr. Astorino’s proposals to lease the park, first by the New York City High Line connected group, Sustainable Playland, Astorino’s selection that the County Legislature rejected due to lack of contractors in place ready to fix the park, and what the legislature judged was a lack of financing.

Then came the  request for other proposals, which resulted in Standard Amusements being selected by Mr. Astorino as the best group. After the legislature O.K.’s  a tentative deal with Standard,  discussions with Standard Amusements developed over who would pay for structural repair of the park infrastructure, especially the deteriorating colonnades and the swimming pool, and addition of amenities.

In the  current state of the agreement the county has agreed to pay for $60 Million of improvements on the infrastructure (double the county’s original commitment), and Standard Amusements $30 Million of improvements on the park (including new rides, restaurants, new outbuildings).

The county, by the way has already spent approximately $8 Million on the Children’s Museum on the Boardwalk there, and has not been reimbursed for that as was originally promised in the Children’s museum agreement. The Children’s Museum is open but without the extent of exhibits it has promised. The Children’s Museum was a project highly touted and approved by the County Legislature previously in the Andrew Spano administration.

Since a resolution of the legal challenge from Rye, (where County Executive-elect George Latimer lives), is a long way from being settled due to the Rye appeal, (unless the new Mayor of Rye withdraws the appeal, giving the right of final approval to the county), the deal may undergo another analysis by County Executive-elect Latimer and the new County Board of Legislators.

It is worth noting that Mr. Astorino’s efforts to wipe way Playland debt by getting a private leaser to improve the park and increase county revenue has instead ballooned county Playland debt approximately by $60 Million.

When the appeal is granted or denied, you know it will be appealed to the higher Court of Appeals so this may give the County Legislature and the new County Executive George Latimer two years to tinker with Standard Amusements on the deal, or not.

 

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