Powassan Virus in deer ticks found in New Jersey, Southern Connecticut– COULD CAUSE MENINGITIS ENCEPHALITUS FIOS NEWS 1

Hits: 116

WPCNR HEALTH ADVISORY. From FIOS 1 News, New Jersey and news reports. April 15, 2015: 

FIOS News 1 is reporting that ticks in New Jersey have been found to carry the Powassan virus that has been found to cause meningitis and encephalitus disease if you are bitten by a deer tick. You can see that report here:

http://www.fios1news.com/newjersey/powassan-tick-virus#.VS-iJz-6_G4

 

As of this morning the Westchester County Department of Health has not issued a health advisory, however, the tick season is upon us and you should be aware of a potentially more serious disease found in ticks this spring in the tri-state area. No tick counts have been issued yet, (those will be begin to be reported May 1) but protective clothing (no shorts, no short sleeves) should be seriously considered if you are going into woods, on picnic grounds, athletic fields, anywhere where ticks can be found.

 

The Louis Calder Center Biological Field Station in Armonk was reported this morning  by the Journal News that ticks have been found in the Westchester area to carry the powassan virus according to Thomas Daniel, entomologist at the Vector Ecology Laboratory.

Daniel warns that unlike lyme disease which takes several months to develop, powassan virus can start very quickly and be fatal in 10% of the cases. Daniel told The Journal News symptoms of Powassan virus can be fever, headache, vomitting, weakness, confusion, loss of coordination, speech difficulties, seizures.

The Center for Disease Control suggests to protect yourself from picking up a tick you should wear protective clothing covering the skin (obviously wearing shorts, going barefoot, sitting barelegged on grass is not encouraged.) Insect spray is also recommended.

 

 

 

http://www.fios1news.com/newjersey/powassan-tick-virus#.VS-iJz-6_G4

Posted in Uncategorized

OPWDD –RECEIVES 3.2% Increase in Budget in 2015-16 from the Governor

Hits: 118

WPCNR DISABILITIES DAILY. From Kerry Delaney, Acting Commissioner of the New York State Office for People With Developmental Disabilities. April 15, 2015:

WPCNR has obtained a letter from the OPWDD explaining the new funding OPWDD will receive in the new New York State Budget and how it will be used as follows:

Dear Friends and Colleagues:

With the recent enactment of the 2015-2016 State budget, we have some very good news to share about what we will be able to do this year to further our system transformation.

Governor Cuomo’s leadership has ensured that our system will receive a 3.2 percent increase in this year’s budget for services and supports for people with developmental disabilities and I’d like to tell you a little more about how our funding will be used.

The budget provides $124 million to develop needed supports and services. These opportunities range from employment and day services to residential opportunities for people who need 24-hour services.

Four million dollars of this funding will be specifically targeted to helping individuals living at home with caregivers who can no longer support them and need residential supports.

To assist in our ongoing efforts to help individuals move from developmental centers and intermediate care facilities to more integrated homes in the community, the budget commits another $42 million to developing needed community services for these individuals.

OPWDD has also received $177 million from the federal Balancing Incentive Program which will be used to expand the availability of services for individuals with developmental disabilities and their families. This funding will allow us to make system-wide improvements to enhance our services and supports in the community. With this money, we are working with providers to support innovative practices ensuring that people can live and work in the community, supporting our system’s transition to managed care, and enhancing the delivery system through the use of technology and data.

Recognizing that access to and availability of transportation is a significant obstacle to ensuring community living, the budget gives OPWDD the resources to examine and recommend improvements to transportation services so that individuals can live in the most integrated settings possible and have access to work and other activities in their communities.

To ensure that you are aware of our transformation progress, OPWDD will issue reports on future housing and service needs, recommendations of the Transformation Panel, Front Door process improvements, review of our residential registration list and efforts to assist individuals in their transition from sheltered workshops.

Finally, the budget also provides resources to support a salary increase for direct care, support, and clinical staff of non-profit agencies which follows on the heels of another increase provided in last year’s budget that went into effect in early 2015.

I thank Governor Cuomo for his leadership and his support of individuals with developmental disabilities, and I look forward to working with you as we continue to transform, restructure, and enhance our service delivery system.

Sincerely, Kerry A. Delaney

Acting Commissioner

 

Posted in Uncategorized

County Exec Negotiated Deal with Standard Amusements without Consulting City of Rye. Mayor Sack not told of deal. Reserves comments prior to his City Council Analysis

Hits: 83

WPCNR PLAYLAND GO ROUND. By John F. Bailey. April 15, 2015 UPDATED April 16, 2015:

Michael Kaplowitz,Chairman of the Board of County Legislators was not told of the impending agreement being negotiated by the Astorino Administration with Standard Amusements to run Playland for 15 years.

Neither was the Mayor of the City of Rye where Playland is.

According to Mayor Joe Sack, of Rye in a  written statement to WPCNR Wednesday afternoon:

“I did not learn about the particulars of the proposed agreement until after the press conference.  From the city of Rye’s perspective, we are most concerned about any environmental impacts of the proposal upon our community.  We look forward to reviewing the proposal, and articulating our position in the near future.”
The Journal News also reported this morning in an article by Mark Lungariello that County Executive Robert P. Astorino said the county would work with the City of Rye but the County would “have the final say.”
Apparently the county will be working with the cityof Rye now since they did not inform the Mayor of a plan for his own city while the county was negotiating the Standard Amusements contract.
Sack told the Journal News reporter in this quote “Just because it’s (Standard Amusements plan) a lesser scale, doesn’t mean the issues have gone away. The county is still having a little bit of trouble digesting the lessons they learned or should have learned the last go-round.”
Standard Amusements, in a 4-page preprinted full color handout, “The Renaissance of Rye Playland” given to the media at the Tuesday morning news conference held by County Executive Robert Astorino, wrote:
“Mr. (Nicholas) Singer (of Standard Amusements) and his team look forward to additional dialogue with community leaders and any citizens concerned about the future of beloved Playland.”
Joe Sack
Posted in Uncategorized

Process to vet Standard Amusements Playland Proposal Being Developed by Board of Legislators

Hits: 110

WPCNR PLAYLAND GO-ROUND. By John F. Bailey. April 15, 2015:

Matt Richter, spokesperson for the County Board of Legislators this morning told WPCNR that two county legislature committees, Labor, Parks, Planning and Housing, chaired by Legislator Peter Harckham, and Budget and Appropriations, chaired by Legislator Sheila Marcotte  will be the lead committees evaluating the Playland proposal presented by County Executive Robert P. Astorino yesterday.

Richter said a 90-page piece of legislation was being reviewed by Harckham’s committee in a meeting this morning.

He said no schedule has been set yet for meetings, the agreement with Standard Amusements announced yesterday, that was negotiated privately by the County Executive staff, according to Board of Legislators Chairman Michael Kaplowitz who said he knew nothing about the deal before the news conference.

Asked  why the Standard Amusements deal is different from what Sustainable Playland had proposed that the Board of Legislators was concerned about, leading Sustainable to withdraw its plan, Richter said it was “profoundly different,” saying that the problem the Board had with the Sustainable Playland proposal was that Sustainable needed to sign contracts with operators (one of them was Standard Amusements) to secure financial investment in the park.

Asked if Standard Amusements has provided specific financials on the operation of the park yet, Richter said they had not.

Asked, if the agreement was approved by the County Board when Standard would pay the $2.5 Million upfront money as part of the proposal, Richter said that was not clear yet. Richter said that Standard had an opt-out option that they would evaluate the Playland operation this summer. In October, Standard would decide whether they would stay and operate, and if they chose to not continue, they would pay the County $500,000.

 

Posted in Uncategorized

Buchwalds Welcome Anna Rose Buchwald

Hits: 1090

 

Lara,DavidandAnnaBuchwald

WPCNR MILESTONES. April 15, 2015:

New York State Assemblyman David Buchwald and Lara Buchwald of White Plains are proud to announce the birth of their first child, Anna Rose Buchwald.
Anna was due on April 15, 2015, but she had other ideas and arrived on March 16, 2015, weighing 6 pounds, 2 ounces. Anna stayed in the neonatal intensive care unit at White Plains Hospital for just over five days. “The professionalism of the nurses and doctors at White Plains Hospital’s NICU could not have been better,” said Assemblyman Buchwald.
Mother and daughter are both doing well, and the whole family is enjoying the start of spring. “The birth of our beautiful, precious daughter makes me even more optimistic about the future,” said David. “When I look at Anna, I can’t help but redouble my efforts on behalf of the environment, education, and women’s equality.”
For the first time in his Assembly career, David missed votes while at the hospital with his wife and daughter. One of those votes was on his own bill to improve New York’s Freedom of Information Law. Nonetheless, the bill passed the State Assembly 147 to 0.
Assemblyman David Buchwald represents the 93rd Assembly District in Westchester County, which includes the towns of Bedford, Harrison, Lewisboro, Mt. Kisco, New Castle, North Castle, North Salem and Pound Ridge as well as half of the City of White Plains.
Lara Samet Buchwald is a litigation associate at the law firm of Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP.
Posted in Uncategorized

Standard Amusements County Exec Choice to Run Playland. County Board Given 60 Days to Approve it. Deal Virtually Matches Sustainable Playland Plan

Hits: 3857

WPCNR PLAYLAND GO ROUND. By John F. Bailey April 14, 2015;

County Executive Robert P. Astorino announced that last night his administration had signed an agreement with Standard Amusements to run Playland beginning in 2016.

Standard has agreed to invest $25 Million in new rides, restaurants and attractions within 5 years of taking over the park (with Westchester County still retaining ownership). Standard will pay the county $2.5 Million upon signing of the agreement which the Board of Legislators has 60 days to approve. Chair of the Board, Michael Kaplowitz told WPCNR it was the first he had heard of the surprise signing and said the Board would begin its due diligence on the proposal.

In addition, when Standard  would pay the County $300,000 a year the first five years, and when Standard has recouped its investment, it would give the county 7.5% of the profits.

The deal was endorsed by county consultant Dan Biederman of Biederman Redevelopment Ventures, who was the consultant to Sustainable Playland, Mr. Astorino’s first choice of operator of the park, which had also considered Standard Amusements as its operator. The deal is essentially the same with the exception that no permanent field house or fields would be built .

However, the County Executive said there would be “temporary (open air) fields” put in place with artificial turf on the parking lots or other areas during the spring and fall. The City of Rye had vehemently protested the Field House concept, how they will react to this piece of the proposal is not known since the Mayor of Rye was not at the news conference for comment.

More to come.

 

 

 

Posted in Uncategorized

County Executive Opts His Children Out of ELA Assessments.

Hits: 308

WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. Statement From County Executive Robert P. Astorino. April 14, 2015:

Today, Sheila and I join over 100,000 parents across New York in opting our children out of the Common Core tests, as is our right.

Our kids deserve better than Common Core, an experiment conceived in secrecy with no public hearings or testing. There are no consequences for opting out. The scores will not affect student records.

We support higher standards for our kids, but that’s not Common Core, despite what we’ve often been told.

The standards are of “poor quality.”  Those aren’t my words; those are the words of the Math and English Language Arts content experts on the validation committee. But their concerns were expunged from the final record.

Also ignored are experts’ concerns that:

  • The standards are developmentally inappropriate in the early grades
  • No K-12 teachers were involved in writing the standards
  • High-stakes testing as the sole assessment for both student and teacher performance is both unfair and wrong

I share these concerns, as well as the concern that this is education policy guided at the federal level and not the local level as historically has been the case.

As parental concerns and frustrations continue to fall on deaf ears, the numbers opting out of the tests will continue to grow.

The Governor, Legislature, Education Commissioner, and Board of Regents must restore local control of our schools. Common Core needs to be replaced with better standards developed with input from teachers and parents and vetted and tested in a fully transparent process.

 

 

Posted in Uncategorized

11% of Children Held Out of ELA Tests today. (347 of 3,150 eligible held out) Parents are Assured Their Children will be Cared for at their schools if Parents Prefer them not to take the ELA tests Beginning Tuesday AM

Hits: 109

WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. By John F. Bailey. April 13, 2015 UPDATED 4:05 P.M.:

Superintendent of Schools said on a recording of the White Plains TV People to Be Heard program with John Bailey today that as of 3 P.M. 347 students across grades 3 through 8, representing 11% of an estimated 3,150 students in White Plains elementary and middle schools eligible to take the ELA test today, were held back by parents from taking the test.

(The program in which Mr. Connors discusses the test controversy and the school budget may be seen Thursday evening at 8 PM on WPTV Cablevision Channel 76 in White Plains or Verizon FIOS Channel 45.)

Three parents speaking during the Public Comment  session at the Board of Education meeting last night raised strong concerns that parents should opt out of the English Language Arts Assessments being given district-wide Tuesday morning in Grades 3 through 8.

One parent from George Washington cited there was confusion as to whether children should not go to school if they were opting out which she had heard, and said this was creating an inconvenience for parents.

Interim Superintendent of Schools Timothy Connors said that parents could keep the children home, but if they sent them to school with instructions the children were not to take the assessment test, that the respective schools would supervise the children while other students took the test.

Superintend of Schools Connors in an impassioned speech implored district parents to write letters to the State Education Department calling for change in the way assessments were administered. He said the tests were important, but felt there should be less tests, given every other year. He also sought to dispell fears that the district would lose school aid if less than 95% of students did not take the test. He said he expected that statewide less than 95% of students would take the tests, which could result in New York loss of federal aid dollars.

 

 

S

 

Posted in Uncategorized

School District Ups Budget $1.2 Million to $205.8 Million. Does Not Cut Tax Increase. Will Add Teachers for Pre-k, Special Ed, Bilingual Education, Repair parking lots, paths and curbs. Says School Aid Spent on New Personnel is Safe for Another Year. Superintendents,Managers and Administrators Given Pay Increases.

Hits: 0

 

WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. By John F. Bailey. April 13, 2015 UPDATED  4:20 P.M. E.D.T. WITH PRELIMINARY INFORMATION ON SALARY INCREASES:

Fred Seiler, Assistant Superintendent for Business for the White Plains City School District announced last night at the monthly Board of Education meeting, that after preliminary review, the School District is raising the 2015-16 School Budget $1.2 Million from the previous $204.6 Million to $205.8 Million.

The previously proposed tax rate of $613 per thousand dollars of assessed valuation remains the same.

Seiler said after preliminary discussions the district is investing what he calculated as $1.2 Million as follows: About $500,000 of foundation aid that will be used for “more space needs,” $250,000 into Special Education Out of District (because the numbers of special ed students placed out of district are growing) in hiring new teachers (the number of new hires was not specified but might translate into 2 full-time teachers that WPCNR calculates as $100,000 each including benefits).

Seiler also said the Superintendent felt an additional $150,000  should be spent on bilingual education that might mean 2 teachers by WPCNR calculation, plus “a portion” of the new aid to cover new fees and increases required by the Affordable Health Care Act.

Finally of the new aid, Seiler said $179,000 would go into the repair of district parking lots, sidewalks, driveways and curbs that have received “a significant amount of damage this winter.” Mr. Seiler said Frank Stefanelli, the District Facilities and Operations Manager  characterized  the district road and sidewalks as having a “tough winter. ” 

Seiler also said some investments would be made into high school/middle school locker rooms, cafeteria tables, security cameras, and other improvements.

He said spending would go up 2.95% the tax levy 2.1% and the tax rate 2.25% ($600 to $613).

In a separate action, the district approved a new pay agreement for Superintendent Cabinet members and Managerial and Confidential Staff (about a dozen persons)  without stating details publicly. WPCNR is working on acquiring those new salary levels.

Salary Increases for Administration

According to the City School District, Cabinet Members Scott Persampieri, Assistant Superintendent for Human Resources and Fred Seiler, Assistant Superintendent for Business will receive a 2% increase, effective 7/1/15.

The Board had previously approved a 3% increase for Cabinet Member Jessica O’Donovan, Assistant Superintendent for Curriculum and Instruction, effective 7/1/15.

Managerial & Confidential staff members will receive a 1.5% increase, effective 7/1/14, and a  2% increase, effective 7/1/15.

An agreement with the Administrators & Supervisors Association will be on the next Board agenda for approval. However, since the contract has not been approved yet, it is not know what their increases will be.

A more detailed presentation on the budget is coming up on May 19.

The $613 per thousand tax rate raises the school tax on a $650,000 White Plains Home from $9,900 in 2015 to $10,099 –a $200 increase. (That is calculated with a STAR Exemption of $1,585 deducted from the Assessed value. The increase is 2.25%, again ¾ a percentage point above inflation.

It is unclear whether the new aid has to be spent or can be used to lower the tax rate, had the school district chose to do so.

Mr. Seiler told WPCNR last night that the total school aid this year was $20,174,000 up from $15,548,000 this year. This is an increase of $4,626,000. The printouts from the State Education Department state the White Plains school district aid this year is $22,618,997. WPCNR hopes to find out why there is a discrepancy between the state figure and the district figure.

Given the new budget figure increase, if the school district continues to raise the budget 3% a year, future budgets will look like this:

2015-16: $205.8 Million

2016-17: $212 Million

2017-18: $218.4 Million

2018-19: $224.6  Million

2019-20: $231.3  Million

Posted in Uncategorized

Two Titanics Passing in the Night. City and School Budgets Sail On in Red Ink Sea. School District Dithers on $4.7 Million Windfall

Hits: 103

WPCNR Quill & Eyeshade. Commentary By John F. Bailey  Originally published May 10, 2006 UPDATED TO TODAY April 12, 2014:

It was 103 years ago this weekend, the RMS Titanic was steaming across the iceberg strewn North Atlantic.

 

The greatest ship ever built at the time had received dire warnings of icebergs in its path, yet it was slicing through the waters at 21 knots (25 miles per hour) on instructions by the White Star Line manager, J. Bruce Ishmay, to set a new transatlantic speed record.

 

An ill-fated quest, for the Titanic struck an iceberg 103 years ago this Tuesday night and sunk 2 A.M.  April 15, 1912.

 

Last  Monday evening, the Mayor of White Plains presented his budget increasing the budget $3 Million to $179.1M to the Common Council.

 

Meanwhile, in another part of town… not too far away the interim  Superintendent of Schools Timothy Connors has offered a budget increasing school spending again $4.6 Million  to 204.6 Million.

WPCNR notes last Monday was a missed opportunity for both leaders to call for  a public town meeting of the minds and exchequers, perhaps form another task force to combine portions of their budgets  as they sail on a financial sea afloat with financial icebergs:

The Captains of the two “ships of the city,” the School District Titanic  (because it has the bigger budget and the constituency that cares the most, and the City Hall as the Carpathia (the Titanic rescue ship),  could have taken that public relations (at the very least gesture)  last Monday  night as an opportunity to entertain possible solutions to steering around their twin financial icebergs:

 

The first iceberg is the city “roll-over-and-play-dead, never-met-a-certiorari-I-didn’t-grant” response to certioraris popular 7 years ago that crippled the city tax roll. Though filings for refunds by busnesses have fallen off due to the long recession, those companies are due to come back and take back more to reflect their assessments the last 4 years. They do it because they can.

The second iceberg is the school district reluctance to trim staff, attack its bureaucracy, and trim the automatic increase they deliver every year minimum in the school budget. Previously up to 2006-07, the district was raising the budget 6 to 7% a year.

Now the recession and the Governor Cuomo tax cap have cut that annual rollover to around 3%. It’s still a lot.

No, the mutual reaching out between the School district and the City of White Plains did not happen in White Plains last Monday night.

The Mayor and Superintendent met in separate sites in the same city. Much as the Titanic wallowed for two and a half hours before sinking while the ship California, a mere 3 miles away from the Titanic ignored the distress calls, and five other ships within two hours’ sail, passed her by. Only the Carpathia, 40 miles away steamed to Titanic rescue.

 

Neither Captain of the two city ships seem particularly interested in working seriously to a joint solution to the laissez faire budget trends of either financial ship.

A joint committee of city and community and school representatives wallowed for a year trying to find services that could be consolidated and managed only to save an estimated $75,000 a  year in savings for the school district (on a $184 Million school budget) with the city handling the district vechicle maintenance. The city throws away that money on studies in the blink of an eye when it suits them and pays millions to outside legal firms.

One City Captain, the Mayor, does not jawbone businesses who file certioraris, has not explored a quid pro quo that could protect city taxpayers from bleeding certioraris from business.

Before the Bradley-Roach administration took office, In 2006 in the last year of the “Renaissance”  in the city, statements were made that the city  has had 1,000 businesses have come to the city. I did not get a list then from the city.

Realtor Worry about White Plains Exodus

 

These days businesses are trying to leave White Plains as soon as they can, because the rents are too high. The Westchester Mall which was so out of touch with the city that they raised parking rates in their garage, almost doubling them, only to find to their horror that people were not coming at the same pace, quickly rescinded the parking rates to the old levels. Now the Mall is starting a renovation. People do not need renovation, they need money. I say they should eliminate parking fees in their garage and see what happens.

While the other Captain, Timothy Connors,  the interim Superintendent of Schools, will give the district helm to a new leader in July. With Connors restoring labor peace with a new teacher contract, the new Superintendent is off the hook.   It is not his problem to steer the ship.

That new superintendent will be confronted with the need more than ever  to institute an aggressive program to cut school district budget growth because the Governor wants them to.

 

Both City Captains seem to be imitating spending policies, while feeding taxpayers, human coal into the boilers of their respective city financial engines, burning up senior citizens’ retirement savings, raising taxes inexorably, and keeping what they call “needed” services in place.

The question is when will they run out of coal (taxpayers)?

Now what could be gained by a public meeting of the Mayor and the new Superintendent of Schools? You never know.

Can the Mayor show some numbersmanship to take hold of his budget? It continues to grow unchecked due to blind faith in development falling short of expectations, while the development creates new spending needs that outpace development benefits. Tax breaks and sales tax exemptions are cast upon them like bread upon the waters.

Can a new School Superintendent embark on budget projections and spending cuts in anticipation of city certioraris before rather than after the fact? Could a certiorari “giveback” penalty be enacted by the city fathers to make cert-filers think twice before “cert-ing”?

Could the city cut its budget just a tad?

Will the Common Council refuse to give raises to Commissioners this year? Will they demand cuts? Perhaps more than a token cut might be made?

Cuomo 2nd and 3rd year  2% rebates a big challenge for the leaders who do not have “cut” in their minds To give White Plains taxpayers a rebate next year (2016-17) the city has to present a cut-spending plan.  I do not see them doing that. This year would be a good year to start doing that.

 

The Common Council goes into its annual hand-wringing show of worrying over the city budget the next month.

Here’s something they should talk about;

In order to deliver 1% savings on taxes in 2015-16 to generate 2% taxpayer property tax rebates under Governor Cuomo’s tax rebate plan aimed at making local governments responsible for property tax reform (and not the state) , the city must cut spending 1%.

That will be a new trick the Council has not done in only one year,  the 14 years I have covered the city.

Based on the budget Mayor Tom Roach presented last week, he is passing that buck literally to the Common Council to cut  the budget $1.79  Million next year to  qualify residents for the tax cap in 2016-17. If they cut the proposed budget they are taking up Wednesday,. they would get a jump on next year. I would think that would be wise, wouldn’t you?

Maybe they will not have to cut that much, though, maybe some expenses are exempt under the fine print of the Albany legislation. That may be further explained. But even a $1 cut is difficult for this council to make. They don’t pay attention.

The city, though appears to be taking its cue from the School District 25 year traditional habit of spending and the city is playing great catch up ball.

Let’s look at the way it was 8 years ago: the City combined operating budget for 2006-2007 was $146.3 Million. The city budget was growing at 5.2% a year 2% over the inflation rate at that time. This year  is the first year the city has even come close to getting their budget increase down to the inflation rate.

 

According to John Callahan, the City Corporation Council, this is the rate of city growth in taxes the last four years by the tax rate per $1,000 of accessed valuation:

FY 2010-11: $167.82  UP 6.9%

FY 2011-12: $176.11  UP  4.9%

FY 2012-13: $184.47 UP 4.75%

FY 2013-14:  $191.74  UP  3.9%

FY 2014-15: $196.14  UP 2.3%

LAST MONDAY—THE COUNCIL RECEIVED THE NEW BUDGET RAISING THE TAX RATE TO

$200.74 UP 2.4% about 1% MORE than the inflation rate. Again No Cuts here,  Ladies and gentlemen.

 

This is what happens when you spend more than your revenues and bet on the next big check, borrow for the future against the present.

 

Not only that but they are betting on the sales tax receipts equaling last year total, $51.8 Million. Currently with February and March figures still not in from the State Department of Taxation and Finance, they are $4 Million off through the first 7 months of the year. Cross your fingers.

 

Meanwhile in the Southend of town…

The School Budget last year came $100,000 short of a highwater mark $200 Million a year Budget.

 

A week ago the school district learned they would receive $4.7 Million more in school aid, $22.8 M comparedto $17.8 Million more than equaling the previously calculated $3.5 Million tax levy increase they have put into the proposed 2015-16 budget. They have not cut a penny out of the budget.

 

Supposedly tomorrow Monday they will say how they will use the $4.7 Million in increased aid. They could choose not to raise the tax rate at all for this year, which would be a welcome change. Or they could choose to spend it on buildings and upgrades. If they choose to hire more teachers and other personnel (there are already 15 new hires in the $204.6 Million budget they are proposing), they will have to increase the budget for those additional hires if school aid is cut next year.

 

They also could do something about the biggest single area of spending increase: Special Education, that bill went up 11%.

 

When Superintendent Connors first came to the district  in 2002-03, replacing Saul Yanofsky, he saw the increase in Special Education student population that would affect the district. He suggested to the Board of Education the district establish their own “Special Educaton Academy” at the time. Mr. Connors told me at the time he thought the district could do that with a $5 Million investment, and keep more students within the distrct. The Board of Education exercising their usual lack of foresight and vision turned him down.

 

Is now the time to use that $4.7 Million to establish that academy that could keep White Plains special ed students here in White Plains instead of spending $100,000 approximate to send our students out of the district, while earning tuition from other districts who would send their special ed students to us?

 

The district could also use that $4.7 Million in additional aid to establish new English Language Learners academy and Reading Remediation efforts. And, whether the assessment tests are too hard or not the fact remains that only 50% of white students passed the 8th grade 2014 ELA Assessments.

 

Put another way, half the white students heading into high school cannot read or understand how to work with the English Language, if we believe the Assessment test was created by the best education test creators Pearson could find.

 

Or, the district could cut the tax increase down to zero…and keep our taxes where they are and keep the budget where it is $200 Million. They always say they need more state aid to keep our property increases down. Now they do.

 

It is conceivable that rising expenses will bring additional budget increases well beyond $209 Million in 2016-17 very quickly to keep the School District Titanic steaming ahead with a full compliment of crew .

 

If the school board continues raising the budget 2.4% (assuming 1.5% inflation in rising expenses to the district a year,( a conservative estimate), look where the school budget will go in 5 years

2016-17: $209.6 Million

2017-18: $215.6 Million

2018-19: $220.5 Million

2019-20: $225.3 Million

 

Scary isn’t it?

Interim Superintendent of Schools Timothy Connors in a memo to the School Board two years ago on the effects of Governor Andrew Cuomo’s “shared services plan,” due from the city and the school district June 1, 2015, wrote:

“For the White Plains School District, the 1% would equal a required savings each of $1,670,627 or $5,011,881 over 3 years.”

 

That $1.7 Million is very close to what the city has to save  to get you, Mr. and Mrs. White Plains your 2% tax rebates the next three years.

Given the unwillingness to cut spending — a tradition of both the school district and the city administrations– we need an evangelical and patriotic spirit of resolution to slow the two Titanics down.

When both the city and the school district increase spending when revenues are, in the city and school district case dwindling,  something or someone has got to give.

Usually it is you and me, the taxpayer. We keep on giving more each year for less. Less performance, less progress, less everything.

Are the financial Captains and the School Board members and Common Council members going to take a look, together?

City and school district financial policy is flooding red ink all over the city books, despite contrived surpluses by counting loans as revenue, by  bonding for doubtful projects, fire sales of land we delay payment for (remember the commuter parking lot  that nobody will tell me what LCOR has paid or still owes), and assurances that development will save the day. Maybe development will. It has not so far.

Plugging the monetary gash in the side of the School District Titanic with tax increases, stopgap borrowing, while the Carpathia of the city government steams in circles instead of coming to the rescue is aggravating the revenue situation for both city and school district.

Both revenue sources are drying up on the city and the school district.

It does not take a Ph.D. or an MBA to figure that out.  Because the Ph.Ds and MBA’s have not figured it out.

 

All you have to do is look at your tax bill.

 

As a  Mayor of the past was  fond of saying, and some councilpersons and school board members still echo, “it all comes out of the same pocket.” Well it is our pockets. And you keep reaching in for more. And not giving it back when you get it.

In the future, the city has to find some way to stop the certioraris.

The city has to extract an infrastructure tax of some kind with new development

The school district must cut..

The entire city has to wake up and smell the coffee that development has to be done, but you have to extract a fair amount of taxes out of the developers and commercial taxpayers so the homeowner does not subsidize businesses…which we are.

White Plains economy in slackwater.

A WPCNR review of White Plains City retail sales tax receipts shows that the real increase in city sales tax revenues in ten years is way behind inflation.

The real increase in city development  has only risen $1.6 Million a year since 2002-2003 when the city sales tax collected was $34,413,400  in sales tax

Last Fiscal Year,  2012-13,  the city collected $50 Million in sales tax revenues, $15.6 million  or 45% more than ten years ago — even with sales tax increases.

However the Consumer Price Index in the tri-state metropolitan area according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics has gone up 158% in those ten years.

 

This I believe is sobering during a period when by inflation alone, if the retail market was being shopped and even with the action generated by the short-lived Renaissance, city sale tax only advanced at a rate  one-third of inflation in the NY-NJ Metropolitan area. That is hard to comprehend.

 

The city really needs to address this problem of shopper and restaurant-frequenter loss. Either that or the proper amount of sales taxes due is being underpaid or under reimbursed by the state for reasons God knows what. How can the downtown redevelopment White Plains has experienced deliver so little.

Mayors past and present say there is nothing they can do about the certioraris. That is not the answer. Together the two captains should get their ships together soon with the commercial businesses that are creating these financial icebergs because they can. You can hardly blame them.

The question the two captains (city leader and school superintendent to come) have to engage is:

When do the tax increases become too much for the well-meaning and generous White Plains taxpayers to bear? When will the populaces who believe all the city hall and school district hand-wringing and finger-pointing, realize what is happening and why?

Do they care?

As then- Superintendent Connors said Tuesday evening at the Council of Neighborhood Associations back in 2006 , “everything is relative,” noting that the same things were said about the budget twenty years ago.

The only answer is that the people of White Plains simply do not care about competant management. They want to believe the politicians who always claim they are mindful and always say their budgets are lean and bare bones, and they are increasing budgets “for the kids.”

It is more comfortable to go to your financial ruin when nice, smart people are saying they are doing all they can.

The alternative that they do not care is unthinkable to contemplate.

Why update a previously published article?

It shows how the more things are said that things have changed, the more they remain the same.

Posted in Uncategorized