CASH FOR GUNS MARCH 22!

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CASH FOR GUNS

$25.00 for non-working and antique firearms $50.00 for rifles and shotguns

$75.00 for handguns

$100 for assault weapons

Payment will be made by Debit Card at the site.

Saturday, March 22, 2014

9:30 A.M. TO 12:30 P.M.

City of White Plains Fire Department Headquarters

219 Mamaroneck Ave., White Plains, NY 10605

 

Frequently Asked Questions:

      How do I bring a gun to the drop off site?

Guns must be UNLOADED, and placed in plastic, paper bag or box.

    Can I transport the firearm in a car?

Yes, but it must be UNLOADED and in the trunk in a plastic or paper bag, or box.

 When do I get the debit card for the firearm?

After the UNLOADED gun is received and screened by the officers you will be issued a debit card in the appropriate amount.

  Can I surrender a non-working rifle or shotgun or pistol?

Yes, all are accepted

     How many firearms can I surrender? 

As many as you wish to provide.

   Can any member of the public surrender a gun?

Licensed gun dealers, and active or retired law enforcement officers are not eligible for this program.

  

NEW YORK STATE ATTORNEY GENERAL’S OFFICE with

CITY OF WHITE PLAINS DEPT. OF PUBLIC SAFETY

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Westchester NY Attorney General’s Office Announces White Plains Department of Public Safety Gun Buyback SATURDAY March 22

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WPCNR POLICE GAZETTE. From the New York Attorney General’s Westchester Office Assistant N.Y. Attorney General In Charge,Gary Brown March 11, 2014:

Assistant N.Y. Attorney  General  Gary Brown (who is in charge of the New York Attorney General Westchester Office announced on Radio WVOX today that the U.S. Attorney’s Office and the White Plains Department of Public Safety will stage a no-questions gun buyback program at the White Plains Fire Headquarters from 9:30 A.M. to 12:30 P.M. Saturday morning March 22. The Attorney General Office has confirmed this morning that the date is March 22 .

Mr. Brown said all guns are acceptable and those turning in firearms will be paid in debit cards. Mr. Brown announced the news at the close of his radio program this afternoon on WVOX Radio. Details will be forthcoming.

In previous New York Attorney General Gun Buybacks, the process worked this way:

During the buyback program, people will be paid with debit cards when they turn in a gun to law enforcement officers. Each gun turned in will be screened before any money is given out. Guns must be transported to their drop-off site unloaded and in plastic or paper bags or boxes.

Antique and nonworking firearms will net $25. People will be paid $50 for rifles and shotguns and $75 for handguns. Those turning in assault weapons will receive $100. Licensed gun dealers and active or retired law enforcement officers are not eligible for the program.

Attorney General of New York, Eric Schneiderman in announcing the New York State gun buy back program previously said:

“By encouraging gun owners to turn in their weapons through our cash-for-guns program, we’re removing deadly firearms from locations where they can be stolen or otherwise misused, keeping them out of the wrong hands.”

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Sustainable Playland Announces 15% reduction of Field House No new rides until 2018

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From the Westchester County Board of Legislators. (Edited)March 11, 2014:
At today’s Labor Parks Planning Housing Committee meeting of the Board of Legislators, legislators learned that Central Amusements International (CAI), which SPI is contracting to run the amusements and “Aqua Zone” at Playland, will wait until Year 4 in the PIP to totally remake the beach front area with water rides and other attractions.

Plans to erect the new Field House are still planned for Year One and the field house has been reduced 15% in size.

Legislator Pete Harckham (D-North Salem), chair of the Westchester County Board of Legislators (BOL) Labor/Parks/Planning/Housing Committee (LPPH), brought together today executive staff of Sustainable Playland, Inc. (SPI) and members of the Astorino Administration for a BOL committee review of the Playland Improvement Playland (PIP).

During the meeting, BOL Majority Leader Catherine Borgia (D-Ossining), who last year commenced the review of the Astorino Administration’s plans to revitalize Playland while chair of the BOL Government Operations Committee, continued to push SPI and the Administration to provide comprehensive revenue projections and details of SPI’s financial plan showing how the multi-year PIP will be able to move forward, and what contingencies will be in place if projected revenues are not realized.

 

Harckham announced last month an ambitious schedule for the PIP review in the LPPH Committee, culminating with a committee vote on May 13, 2014. Next Tuesday LPPH Committee members will make a Playland site visit to see where the Field House will be erected, and also to see how much of the Parking Lot will be affected by the renovations and new structures.

On Wednesday, March 19, at 7 PM, the LPPH will host a Public Hearing in the BOL Chambers on the Playland Improvement Plan.

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County Legislator Benjamin Boykin and councilpersons Nadine Hunt-Robinson and Milagros Lecouna present at CNA tonight.

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 WPCNR SOUTH END TIMES. From the Council of Neighborhood Associations. March 11, 2014:

The next meeting of the Council of Neighborood a is scheduled for Tuesday, March 11, 2014, 7:30 pm, at Education House (downstairs Meeting Room), 5 Homeside Lane, WP (off North Street). Please mark your calendar.

Our guest speakers will be the Hon. Ben Boykin 2nd, newly elected Westchester County Legislator, District 5, and the Hon. Nadine Hunt-Robinson, newly appointed WP Common Councilwoman. There will also be a brief presentation by Councilwoman Milagros Lecuona, who will discuss the meds safety/ disposal crisis.  A question and answer period will follow their presentations.

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School District Proposes $198.9M Budget: Tax Increase 2.90%. No Cuts in Staff. Includes Provisional Settlement of Teachers Contract.

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. By John F. Bailey. March 10, 2014:

The School district tonight proposed a 2.84% increase over this year in a $198.9 Million spending  budget that increases taxes 2.90%.

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This would mean a  $250 tax increase for a home assessed at $15,000, and about a $288 to over $300 tax increase for homes assessed higher: a 2.9% tax increase.

The budget keeps the same level of staffing in all ranks, including teaching staff.

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Asked if the budget provides for the settlement of a new contract with the White Plains Teachers, Assistant Superintendent for Business Fred Seiler told WPCNR, “We attempted to plan for what we think the settlement might be.”

Seiler said he believed there were 28 retirements in the teacher ranks, 21  who were at the highest salary ranks,  which enable the district to replace them without next year with lower paid replacements which helped keep the budget in check. He said the teachers union and district were still in the fact-finding stage, but each knew the position and the allowance for the settlement was based on that.

In his presentation, Seiler said the district is adding one additional teacher at the elementary level  to keep the class size at an average 22 students,  varying from 19 to 20, 23, 24, 25 and at the high school  and middles schools the class varies from 24 to 27. They are adding half of a full-time teacher to Dual Language science, and Project Lead the Way  and a parttime teacher to the AVID program.

The budget is compliant with the 1.46% tax levy cap decreed by the state.

The district received a $2,146,707 increase in state aid which includes  a $505,763 deferred not to be repeated, and benefits included because White Plains numbers of students receiving free and reducrsd lunch, more student enrollment and extraordinary needs (such as English as Second Lanaguage students) have increased.

Seiler said more state aid might be forthcoming when the state completes its budget April 1. Last year more aid did come White Plains way, but it was not used to cut taxes, it was spent on additional services.

Since declining 1.21% in 2010-11. The only year it declined in the last 14 years,  the budget has increased 1.o9%, 1.77%, 2.42% and 2.84%.

There was no public comments made on the budget  during the comment portion of the public hearing.

Dates for the public to be heard on the budget coming up:

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The Musical of the Century! WBT Ragtime revival is The Rage!

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FaTye and Brittany Johnson as Coalhouse Walker and Sara the icons of Ragtime at the revival in Westchester Broadway Theatre

 

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Not One, But Two Romances Ladies and Genlemen, that Tug Your Heart Strings. Victoria Lauzun as Mother and Joey Sanzaro as Tateh. How they come together is just one of those things

CNR STAGE DOOR. Theatrical Review by John F. Bailey.  March 8, 2014:

Strolling, tennis playing residents of New Rochelle, toiling immigrants, Negroes creating a new music, legends  J.P. Morgan, Henry Ford, Harry Houdini and anarchist Emma Goldman colliding together seamlessly, up close and personally, tragically and inspiring!

Ragtime tells America’s story as touching, heart-breaking and as dramatic as it gets:

The sound of distant thunder
Suddenly starting to climb…

It was the music
Of something beginning,
An era exploding,
A century spinning
In riches and rags,
And in rhythm and rhyme.
The people called it Ragtime…
Ragtime!
Ragtime!
Ragtme!

I have been reviewing shows at the Westchester Broadway Theatre for 14 years.

The Standing Ovations Studios rambunctious, irreverent, in-your-face overwhelmer of a revival of the 1998 musical Ragtime , that officially opened Friday night in Elmsford is the best production WBT has ever presented that I have seen. Easily it is the most involving and emotionally connecting.

Ragtime gives  theatre goers all this top-of-the-line 40-member cast has—right from the anthem Ragtime .  The anthem  I quite above   introduces the colors of America at the turn of the 19th century from white New Rochelle residents lofting tennis balls  to immigrants from Latvia, Ireland,and Blacks up from the south from the Robber Barons and architects of America’s success to  all seeking success in America.

It never lets up on the audience from its hour and 20 minute first act to its 55 minute second act at rolls like an express train of emotions…it overwhelms with 32 songs—by the second time Broadway composing team of Composer Stephen Flaherty and lyricist Lynn Ahrens who executed a 4-song  audition score for original producer Harold Prince and beat out 7 other  4-song writing teams to win the task of writing this score. The score won a TONY as Best Original Musical Score in 1998. Their first hit was Once On an Island in 1990, then the musical score for the Disney movie Anastasia, followed by their winning the competition to compose Ragtime.   Their latest work, Rocky, The Musical premiers next Friday in New York City.

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Part of the Ensemble sing What A Game at the Polo Grounds in New York. Made possible through the ingenious manipulation of set , music and choreography

Director John Fanelli and Set Designer Steve Loftus takes us back to the future with clever use of an arched set and revolving stage that simulates assembly lines in Detroit, the Polo Grounds, a court room, docksides.  We even have a model T Ford.

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Coalhouse Walker (FaTye) comes to tea in New Rochelle greeting Mother (Victoria Lauzun

While choregrapher Greg Gramham has created ensemble numbers that do not look like dances they actually move the plot. And move it does. In a musical of this length and breadth the scenes never lag, you never yawn during songs that take you by the heart and soul.  The audience was enthralled, brought to tears, warmed, shocked, they connected with the characters  through the magical book of Ahrens & Flaherty put E.L. Doctorow’s novel on the stage.

The musical explores how prejudice against blacks and immigrants and denial of justice from by the suburban community of New Rochelle results in tragedy that turns Coalhouse, the ragtime musician into a violent activist.

FaTye,  a fixture with Standing Ovation Studios,  gives his best performance I have seen him do. When he reconciles with Sarah played by Brittany Johnson, his girl, who has taken refuge in a New Rochelle family home…their duet Wheels of a Dream warms the heart, and their chemistry delivers. The tragedy inflicted upon the couple tugs on your heart and will not be soon forgotten.  Their second duet, Sarah Browneyes gives breathing life to what two people mean to each other.

Joey Sanzaro below plays Tateh, a Latvian immigrant with his daughter,  delivers  as believable a role in an ongoing cameo scenario I have seen in a long time. He is touching, tough, self-starting, showcasing the palette of skills demonstrated by the immigrants who came with nothing, and made something of themselves.  You root for him.

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The heroine who is the other storyline in this massive juggling of historical themes that hit home today is Victoria Lauzan above whose diamond contralto  puts the heartbeat into the “connectors” of the show (and believe me all the songs are good and connective).  From her Goodbye My Love (to her husband who is leaving on a polar trip with Admiral Perry), to the disdainful What Kind of a Woman (sung when she finds Sarah’s baby abandoned in her garden in New Rochelle, and she decides to take the baby in). Then Ms. Lauzan as she gradually realizes how sheltered she has been delivers a haunting anthem in the bring-down-the-house Second Act:  You Can Never Go Back to Before. which she sings with Mr. Sanzaro (above)

History you say you want history, drama?

You’ve got it:

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Nadine Zahr as Emma Goldman (left) doing another deft cameo roll as the anarchist with one of her recruits, Todd Ritch, the younger brother who is inspired to fight for justice for Coalhouse and the oppressed workers

You meet Henry Ford (Todd Allan Little) , J.P. Morgan (Steven Stein-Grainger), Emma Goldman the activist (Nadine Zahr), and the Notorius Evelyn Nesbitt, Cali LaSpina (The “Wheeeeeeeeeeeeee” girl).

The audience loved this show mounted as best  as any I have seen at the WBT. Only seven Actors Equity Members grace this 40-performer ensemble and you would never know it.

The orchestra laid a seamless ragtime beat into most of the soungs, and laid an unobtrusive supportive bed for the songs, that performers sung with a clarity that was as professional sounding as you could wish for. Even the children performers you could understand.

The audience rose to its feet. The Show had them at first spotlight.

For box office information, contact 914-592-2222 or go to www.BroadwayTheatre.com.

Ragtime lives for all-time through May 4. Cautions: gunshots, violence, emotional situations  that can affect younger children and adults. But that’s our country folks.

Don’t take my word for it. After the show ended some comments overheard by yours truly: “Just incredible,” “what a great show.” The speakers appeared so entertained they did not want to leave.They just stood there saluting this effort.

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It is as Ms. Nesbit (Cali LaSpina of Scarsdale, above, “the Wheeeeeeeeeeeeeeee! Girl” shown performing “The Crime of the Century” with vampy, impish delight) would put it,

“It’s the Musical of the Century”

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WHITE PLAINS WEEK ROLLING NOW ON THE INTERNET

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THE  WHITE PLAINS TEAMSTERS GET 2% FOR THREE STRAIGHT YEARS

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WPCNR WEEKEND WEATHER SCOOP-From National Weather Service

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  • Friday: Mostly cloudy, with a high near 36. East wind 7 to 9 mph.
  • Tonight: Partly cloudy, with a low around 26. North wind 7 to 9 mph.
  • Saturday: Increasing clouds, with a high near 45. Northwest wind 6 to 9 mph.
  • Saturday Night: A slight chance of snow showers after 1am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 29. Northwest wind around 8 mph. Chance of precipitation is 20%.
  • Sunday: A slight chance of snow showers before 11am. Partly sunny, with a high near 41. Northwest wind 9 to 15 mph. Chance of precipitation is 20%.
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Buchwald: Support Grows for Pension Takeaway if Convicted of Corruption for Anyone Regardless of Service

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AssemblymanBuchwaldPressConference1[1]WPCNR ALBANY ROUNDS. March 6, 2014:

Assemblyman David Buchwald (D-Westchester) announced at a press conference on Wednesday that a bipartisan group of over 60 Assembly co-sponsors, including all freshman members, have signed onto legislation he introduced that would permit stripping state pension benefits from any public official convicted of a felony where the public’s trust has been violated (A.7173).

 Assemblyman Buchwald’s bill is an amendment to the New York State Constitution aiming to strengthen the current “Public Integrity Reform Act,” which only strips pension benefits of convicted officials of when he or she first held office.who first entered the State pension system after the law took effect in November 2011. Buchwald’s bill would apply to any public official, regardless.

To view the press conference Clip, go to : http://assembly.state.ny.us/user/cis/BuchwaldPublicIntegrityBill3-5.mpg

“When an elected official is sworn into office, he or she must sign a solemn Oath

Assemblyman Buchwald was joined by Chairman of the Ethics and Guidance Committee Assemblyman Charles Lavine (D-Glen Cove), Senator George Latimer (D-Westchester), Assemblywoman Shelley Mayer (D-Yonkers), and members of the growing coalition in the legislature who co-sponsored the legislation.

“Government officials who betray the public trust should not collect a pension in the same way as those who serve honorably, and I’m pleased that over 60 members of the State Assembly agree with me,” stated Assemblyman David Buchwald. “No matter how serious the offense, current law still assures most public employees that their state pensions cannot be challenged. I promised Westchester families that I wouldn’t stand for this type of behavior.”

 

“When an elected official is sworn into office, he or she must sign a solemn Oath stating that they will uphold the laws and the Constitution that govern New York State,” said State Senator Neil Breslin (D-Albany) who carries the bill in the State Senate (S.1133). “This Oath sets the highest standard for integrity – the public’s trust. A violation of that trust, while in office, demands pecuniary as well as criminal penalty. The current law only regulates officials that joined the pension system after 2011. It is critical that we enact a law that applies to all public officials. The public deserves nothing less.”

“Decency dictates that tax dollars should not indefinitely support the well-being of lawmakers who violate their office,” said Susan Lerner, Executive Director of Common Cause/NY. “Common Cause/NY applauds the members of the Assembly who put the public interest first, and calls on all members of the Legislature to follow suit and amend the Constitution so that, in appropriate situations, corrupt lawmakers don’t collect a public pension. Honest people have nothing to fear.”

Additionally, this is a concept that has been recently embraced by Preet Bharara, U.S. Attorney in the Southern District of New York. At a September Moreland Commission hearing, Mr. Bharara was quoted as saying “The common-sense principle is a simple one: Convicted politicians should not grow old comfortably cushioned by a pension paid for by the very people they betrayed in office.”

A public official in the State of New York can currently accept bribes, steal public funds or engage in numerous other forms of public corruption and yet still feel secure in the knowledge that even if convicted of these serious crimes and thrown in jail, there will still be a state pension check sent their way every month for the rest of their lives. However, Assemblyman Buchwald noted that with enthusiastic bipartisan support of this legislation, including from all Assembly freshman, a new day is coming in Albany.

 

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Non Profits Employ the Most Workers in Westchester County

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WPCNR LABOR NEWS. From Nonprofit Westchester. March 6, 2014:

Nonprofits are a multi-billion dollar industry and make up the largest employment sector in Westchester County, according to a report released  by Nonprofit Westchester (NPW) and The Johns Hopkins Center for Civil Society Studies.

The study, entitled “Westchester County Nonprofits: A Major Economic Engine,” found that 53,987 people, or 13.6 percent, of the county’s total workforce is employed by nonprofits. That’s one out of every seven workers. Additionally, this sector generated $6.9 billion in revenues and paid roughly $2.7 billion in wages and compensation – including hundreds of millions in federal, state and local taxes.

“We’ve always known that we provide many essential services and are critically important to the regional economy,” said Joanna Straub, executive director of Nonprofit Westchester. “With this study, we have concrete data that shows just how vital we are and how much we contribute to Westchester County.”

The $15,000 study, funded by the Westchester Community Foundation, includes five major economic findings. They include:

  • At 53,987 workers, the county’s nonprofit sector employs more than retail, tourism, local government, construction, finance, real estate or other industries. In fact, nonprofits employ more than six times as many workers than the county’s real estate and information technology fields, more than three times as many as the finance industry, and 10 percent more than local governments.
  • Health organizations, such as hospitals and nursing homes, were significant areas of employment in 2013 as were colleges and universities.
  • Nonprofits generated nearly $6.9 billion in revenues and spent approximately $2.7 billion in wages. The compensation, in turn, translated into roughly $311 million in federal taxes, $104 million in state income taxes, and $21.8 million in local income taxes.
  • Between 2003 and 2013, employment in this area grew by 8.4 percent, adding 4,203 jobs, particularly in health services and elementary and secondary education. Compared with an anemic 1.2 percent growth in all areas of the economy, growth in nonprofits trumped other segments.
  • Other information in the study concluded that increased competition and overall wages were a mixed bag. Wages in this sector were below those in the for-profit and government sectors – by roughly 1/3 in both cases.  However, nonprofit wages are higher in fields where nonprofits and other sectors compete, suggesting that nonprofits are concentrated in low-wage fields.

The Westchester Community Foundation, which develops, manages and distributes philanthropic funds in a manner that is responsive to donor interests and community needs, funded the study because they believed it was important to show the wide economic reach and impact of nonprofits.

“It’s important that organizations, governments and members of the public understand the true value of nonprofits in Westchester County,” said Catherine Marsh, executive director of the Westchester Community Foundation. “These results show that nonprofits are not only respected service providers, but also create a wide range of economic opportunities.”            

For more information about Nonprofit Westchester or to read a copy of the study, visit www.npwestchester.org or call 914-332-6679.

 

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