Money Chill

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WPCNR QUILL & EYESHADE News & Comment by John F. Bailey January 31, 2014:

Money.

Everbody is talking about. The Governor is promising property tax refunds if the school district and the city holds their tax levies under a 1.5% increase.

White Plains is starting to think about it.

The Mayor’s Budget and Advisory Committee is going to meet February 10 at 7:30 and they will be briefed on the effect of the Affordable Health Care Law, After Retirement Benefits, including retiree health insurance, and Governor Andrew Cuomo’s tax relief proposal.

A funny thing about those tax relief proposals of the governor—in order to have tax payers get a refund of any property taxes, the city has to keep the rise in its tax levy to 1.5%. Last year the allowable cap was 2%.

This year’s current adopted budget predicts a 4% rise in expenses, salaries, benefits, pension costs in 2014-15.  Hopefully that will not happen.

Tell you why:

A 4% rise in expenses amounts to a $7 million increase in the overall $171.2 Million budget to about $178.2 Million.

To cover a $ 7 Million increase in the budget the property tax levy has to hit $60 Million, which would raise the property tax rate per $1,000 of assessed value to $216 from the present $192, a 12% property tax increase.

On a $650,000 home in White Plains this amounts to $3,559 in city taxes compared to $3,163 that owner is paying the city this year. That’s a $400 increase.

A 13% increase in the levy is unthinkable. It is far from the 1.5% cap. That 13% is not counting any retroactive increase an arbitrator may impose on the city in settlement of the police arbitration.

Perhaps the city will come to their financial senses and not roll over the budget as they do almost every year.  Of course a ¼% raise in the sales tax would cover that $7 Million increase nicely, wouldn’t it? They had better crank up that sales tax request to our legislators soon.

If they increase the levy 13% , the property tax rate could be 12%  higher. This is what happens when you roll over.

In order for the city to get their property tax rebate from Governor Cuomo, this year,  the city has to cut millions out of the payroll—read jobs –or raise the sales tax. If parking revenues are down, and I would bet they are, it will compound the problem.

Governor Cuomo’s promise of continued property tax refunds to our citizens if the city of White Plains saves 1% a year for three years 2015-16, 2016-17 and 2017-18 does not appear possible.

That is not happening with this administration or an administration around New York State. The 1.5% tax levy cap and the governor’s property tax rebates proposal appears to ignore the history of city budgeting at least in White Plains this city has cut the budget once in 14 years.

The city, in order to avoid raising the tax levy beyond the 1.5% cap (1.5% on a 53.3 Million dollar levy is $799,500, has to find more revenue. Will they raise parking rates? Raise sales tax to fund a rollover budget? Or layoff?

They need to find some money now. The effects of business as usual are chilling.

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Frigid weather in Westchester County ups Oil consumption up 25% in December-January

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Ahh the joys of huddling around a fire when the thermostat must be turned down.

 

WPCNR THE BIG HEAT. By John F. Bailey. January 31, 2014:

My fuel supplier has been filling up my oil tanks once every two weeks this month. I asked a sales person from my oil company if consumption of fuel oil from their customers was up due to the unusually cold January weather.

They told me fuel oil consumption  of their oil customers is up 25%.

I checked and since December 19, I have used 24% more fuel oil than I did in early December.  This is with keeping my thermostat at 65 during the day and lower at night.

We used 177 gallons of fuel oil in the last two weeks of December  and 177 between January 7 and January 24, compared to 142 gallons delivered December 19. That is 24% more.

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Come in, She Said I’ll Give You Shelter from the Cold. How to Get County Homeless Services

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From the Westchester County Department of Communications. January 28, 2014:

The Housing Office of the Westchester County DSS provides temporary shelter to homeless families, singles and childless couples.

The office partners with not-for-profit agencies who provide case management services in shelter facilities, transitional residences and emergency apartments.

Homeless programs are designed to lead the homeless population toward permanent housing and independence. The WCDSS Housing Office provides the following services:

  • Placement and Payment – The office handles the placement of homeless in Westchester County and payment to agencies who provide services.
  • Housing Resources Development – The office has oversight of homeless units and facilities as well as construction and renovation projects and other building-related issues of homeless facilities.
  • Case Management Services – The office oversees casework services to the homeless provided by the not-for-profit agencies and provides direct casework services to the hard to serve population.

Applying for services

Eligibility for temporary shelter and services is determined at the social servicesdistrict offices, depending on where you last lived in the county of Westchester. They are open Monday – Friday, 8:30 a.m. – 5 p.m.

Warming/Drop-in centers located throughout Westchester

The following warming/drop-in centers for single individuals seeking shelter from the cold are open and may be contacted directly. Families seeking shelter after hours or during weekends should contact DSS Emergency Services at (914) 995-2099.

Click on a facility’s street address for a location map and link to create directions.

Peekskill and Surrounding Area
Jan Peek Shelter
(Co-ed facility)
200 North Water St.
Peekskill
(914) 736-2636
Accessible by Bee-Line bus route # 14,15,16,17
White Plains and Surrounding Area
Samaritan House Shelter

(Female only facility)
33 Church St.
White Plains
(914) 948-3075
Accessible by Bee-Line bus route # 1,5,6,13,14,15,40,41
Oasis Shelter
(Co-ed facility)
19 Washington Ave.
New Rochelle
(914) 633-0101
Accessible by Bee-Line bus route # 7,42,45,60,66
Open Arms Shelter
(Male only facility)
86 East Post Rd.
White Plains
(914) 948-5044
Accessible by Bee-Line bus route # 1,5,6,13,14,15,40,41
Yonkers and Surrounding Area
Sharing Community
(Co-ed facility)
1 Hudson St.
Yonkers
(914) 963-2626
Accessible by Bee-Line bus route # 1,2,3,4,5,6,8,9,25,30
 
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The Magnificent 7s

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WPCNR NEWS & COMMENT. By John F. Bailey. (This column was originally published in 2003, observing the Space Shuttle Columbia tragedy):

Twenty-eight years ago  today marks the day in 1986 when the crew of the Challenger Space Shuttle perished when the Challenger exploded seconds into its launch on a cold day in Florida, much like this one.

There have been tragedies associated with striving for the stars and being the best, achieving the best, working for the good.

This Saturday, February 1, is the eleventh observance of the day the Columbia Space Shuttle was lost upon reentry after 19 days in space in 2003.

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The Crew of the Challenger, 1986: The Magnificent 7 : Back row:  Ellison S. OnizukaSharon Christa McAuliffeGreg Jarvis, and Judy Resnik. Front Row:  Michael J. SmithDick Scobee, and Ron McNair. All were killed when Space Shuttle Challenger blew apart 73 seconds after liftoff on this day, January 28, 1986.

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The Crew of the Columbia. They died February 1, 2003: Left to right, Rich Husband, Laurel Clark, Kalpani Chawla, William McCool, Mike Anderson and IIan Ramon

Those are the persons who keep the dreams alive by their deaths and personal sacrifice. I wrote the following after the explosion of the Columbia Space Shuttle upon reentry after 19 days in space in January 2003.

Saturday’s fatal Columbia Space Shuttle accident killing all 7 astronauts aboard when the historic spacecraft broke up over East Texas at daybreak Saturday morning begins a period of national mourning. 


The expected media speculations have started, guessing at the cause of the reentry that went bizarrely, awfully wrong.


The truth is the civilized world takes absolute scientific miracles for granted. We do not appreciate the courage and skills of the men and women creating the future.


Those of us with cell phones, internet connections, high-speed trains, satellite communications and entertainment (all products made possible by the space program), do not realize the magnitude of daring achievements that you and I have come to accept to be executed like clockwork.

I first learned of Columbia’s fate late Saturday afternoon when my wife mentioned that instead of sports programming being videotaped on our television, there was coverage of a live NASA event on ABC.

As I watched the close of Mr. Jennings’ coverage at about 3 PM, he signed off with no recap, no names of astronauts, and some parting words about what he thought was the cause of the disaster.

I’ll say what he should have said.


Columbia’s seven astronauts who died — we know their names: they were 
Columbus, Magellan, Cook, Lewis, Clark, the Wrights, Lindbergh, De Laroche, Earhart, Markham, Gruber, Chaffee, Grissom, White, Gargarin, Komarov, the Challenger Crew, the crew of Soyuz 11. They are a handful of the hundreds of brave men and women who went into the unknown.

America’s Spacemen and women and the explorers before them are the people who trust in their ability and their vessel to expand the world’s horizons, to know the unknown, whose legacies build a better world. Whose deeds inspire and achievements are the catalyst for achievements to come.

From Cook’s fragile vessel which sailed the Pacific, to the marvel that was the Columbia, the captains courageous who sailed the Roaring 40s, blazed the Oregon Trail, discovered how to fly, and flew the oceans, journeyed to the stars, knew the risks they were taking.

 
The media  trivializes their courage, their skills, and the difficulty of what they did and wanted to do, to concentrate on the causes of their failure, as if knowing the cause will make their loss acceptable.

The Magnificent Seven


I do not know the Challenger crew. I just see their smiling faces in their photograph, and I regret the loss of every one. They had achievement on their faces, pride in their demeanor. Their eyes shown with the glow of being alive and striving to do the great things they set out to do.

Civilization has been created because of people like the crews of The Challenger Magnificent 7 and of the Columbia’s Magnificent 7, not the incompetence we see demonstrated daily today where technology is concerned.

The Columbia itself had flown 26 missions since launching in 1981. It was guided and outfitted with the best 2003 communications and equipment had to offer.

Not like Captain James Cook’s bark, Endeavour, a 100-foot ship powered by sail that conquered the “space” of his time, the Pacific Ocean. It was the Columbia’s Magnificent Seven’s Endeavour. They were tracked, they were backed up, but they perhaps more than anyone here on the ground knew the high dangers of the shuttle mission.
Liftoff, as their predecessors, The Challenger crew fell victim to, is fraught with risk.

Reentry, which needs to be negotiated at precisely the right angle of attack, is equally risky. Soyuz 11’s spacecrew of Dobrovolskiy, Volkov, and Patsayev died in 1971 on reentry, when the Russian cosmonauts took too long to descend.


No guarantees in real life. Machines sometimes run out of miracles.


The magnificence of the explorers’ sacrifice and dedication, is that they accept the risk of “the endeavor.”

They accept the challenge, bear it alone, seizing challenge with an indomitable spirit and confidence, facing death when it comes with the satisfaction that they made the effort, and I suspect analyzing, coping, trying to fix it until the end, the very end. Then never give up.

Columbia’s Magnificent Seven, after 16 days in space, are gone now. My sorrow is with their families who will miss these Magnificent Seven, and who know in their hearts that they died trying to reach the pinnacle of their aspirations.

They are only human.

They tried their best, achieved their best, and experienced what they longed to experience. They dared to live the great adventure.

Not all of us have the courage to follow our longed-for adventures and make them real. You can watch movies that attempt to give that experience by transference. That’s why, I believe, you and I take it so personally when we lose heroic personalities of our time. We wonder what they are like. We glorify them, rightly so.

Follow Me! 

I wonder how those two Magnificent Sevens felt, how satisfying it must have been, to be at your best, doing what you love, coping with the risks. I envy them that.

The Challenger and Columbia Crews are the Miracle.

In reality it is not machines that conquer, it is the intrepid personalities, each unique, each contributing, who perform the miracles with God’s help. That they fall short is an example to us, not to take ourselves, our fates, or our existences for granted.

This is true of the everyday people we take for granted: the firefighter, the policeman, the train engineer, the airline pilot, the construction worker. All are highly trained disciplined workers, executing precise tasks for which the non-expert has no feel or understanding . What makes for the desire to achieve? What is out there or up there that leads them on?

The Feel of the Unknown

I took Anne Morrow Lindbergh’s biographical adventure diary, Listen! The Wind down from the bookshelf.

She was the young bride of the aviator-pioneer, Charles Lindbergh. She navigated for him in his aircraft, and ran his radio communications on his many exploratory flights around the world.

In a passage she describes a night flight over the ocean, in which she was operating the radio for her husband Charles, who was at the controls. Mrs. Lindbergh is describing the feelings she has as she tries to tune in the South American coast at sea in the dark of night in 1933, 80 years ago.

The feeling, the courage of the adventurer, the explorer has not changed. This is described unforgettably by Mrs. Lindbergh:


“Night was the hardest. It would be all right once it was day. I kept saying…We began to hit clouds. I could tell without looking up, for the plane bumped slightly from time to time, first one wing down and then the other. And the moon blackened out for short periods.

Then for longer periods. I could not see to write my messages. I stiffened, dimly sensing fear – the old fear of bad weather – and looked out. We were flying under clouds. I could still find a kind of horizon, a difference in shading where the water met the clouds. That was all. But it seemed to be getting darker.

Storms? Were those clouds or was it the sky? We had lost the water. We were flying blind. I turned off the light quickly (to give my husband a little more vision), and sat waiting, tense, peering through the night. Now we were out again. There were holes through which one could see the dark sky. It was all right, I felt, as long as there were holes.


More blind flying. This is it, I thought is what people forget. This is what it means to fly across the ocean, blind and at night. But day is coming. It ought to be day before long… Daybreak! What a miracle. I didn’t see any sign of day and yet it must be lighter. The clouds were distinguishing themselves more and more from water and sea.


Daybreak—thank God—as if we had been living in eternal night—as if this were the first sun that ever rose out of the sea.

Note: This column originally appeared February 1, 2003 on WPCNR.

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SURVEILLANCE VIDEO ON DEMAND MOVES AHEAD

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WPCNR COMMON COUNCIL CHRONICLE-EXAMINER. By John F. Bailey January 28, 2014:

White Plains Common Council  heard from Police Chief James Bradley last night about  “tweaks” to the entrance/exit video surveillance requirements ordinance  being contemplated by the Council to be passed in February. The new ordinance, tabled two months in succession,  requires liquor stores, pharmacies, restaurants, Service Station Mini-Markets, delis,  check-cashing services and pawn shops and bars staying open past midnight  to record identifiable face images of patrons entering and exiting their premises that would be available on demand by the Department of Public Safety for review.

 Chief Bradley assured the Council  police would work with the current surveillance  video technology  present stores have  “perhaps simply pointing them (the cameras) in the right direction,” he said. Concerns had been raised that equipment would cost establishments over $1,000 to install.

The chief gave the impression the Department “would probably grant certificates of compliance” if the equipment provided acceptable images of faces of patrons entering and leaving the premises. 

The Chief said even though the ordinance as revised does not say a subpoena or warrant has to be required in advance for police to obtain the surveillance footage  (on demand) during an ongoing investigation, the police would formally file a subpoena.

The chief left the assumption that  presumably the owner would be more than happy to turn over the surveillance footage when a crime or incident was connected to his/her property.

What is different about the new ordinance is the Building Department has  been written out of the  ordinance and will not have the same instant access to the video as the police and fire bureaus. The Chief said the police would visit all establishments they judge affected by the ordinance, inspect the video equipment they have or what they need and work with the establishments for the 8 frames a second speed the ordinance requests. Karen Pasquale, asked why 8 frames a second said that was the speed the Police Bureau equipment runs.

The video footage still “must be available to the White Plains Building and Public Safety Departments for inspections (as distinct from review of footage), at all times, during which the business is open to the public to ensure compliance with requirements set forth in this chapter.”

The Chief also noted that instead of “continuous “ surveillance recording, the surveillance may start “on motion,” that is, the camera rolls when motion is detected. This requirement, one of the criticisms leveled at the ordinance by the owner of  Vino 100 who spoke about this at the last Common Council “Citizens to Be Heard” segment. 

Closing the brief discussion, Councilwoman Milagros Lequona commented, as the owner of Vino 100 did last month, that liquor stores and grocers outside the BID district were affected and they should be reached out to.

 The Advisor to the Mayor Karen Pasquale said the reason the ordinance was originally put on the consent agenda, was to alert persons the city was thinking about making this law in the city, and to  gather their reaction to it. 

However, WPCNR notes that at the time this ordinance appeared for the first time on the agenda, the Mayor made no detailed remarks on the Council meeting telecast, introducing the ordinance, what it did  and that the city was eagerly waiting for citizen input. No public hearing was scheduled on the ordinance. In his brief reading of the ordinance definition when it appeared two months ago (not the full ordinance), he did not ask for community input on the ordinance nor did he specifically read the ordinance for their reaction. The ordinance was presented privately to the downtown Business Improvement District, mostly made up of property owners who expressed a favorable opinion of the ordinance.

The former Common Council President told me the council expected the ordinance to be voted on next Common Council Meeting.

RECREATION FEE NEWS

Wayne Bass, Commissioner of Recreation and Parks spoke briefly about fee changes next year in Recreation and Parks. He told me  admission to the ice rink would go up $1 ($7 a public session for residents), and that a fee would be charged for local teams wanting a city field for practices for $40 an hour. 

Asked about the city plans to pay to “bubble” enclose the tennis courts at Delfino Park, Bass said the city is looking for a corporate entity to construct the bubble and manage the courts.

 

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BUCHWALD: ASSEMBLY PASSES WOMEN’S EQUALITY ACT– UP TO THE STATE SENATE NEXT

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WPCNR ALBANY ROUNDS. From White Plains  Assemblyman David Buchwald. January 27, 2014:

In an effort to provide equality and justice for all New York State citizens, Assemblyman David Buchwald (D-Westchester) today proudly announced Assembly passage of the full 10-point Women’s Equality Act (WEA). The legislation (A.8070) addresses pay inequity, sexual harassment, pregnancy discrimination in the workplace, human trafficking, domestic violence and family status discrimination, and strengthens women’s health and reproductive rights.

“It’s disheartening that women are still faced with economic barriers and inequalities in everyday life,” said Assemblyman Buchwald. “We must send a forceful message that we will not tolerate discrimination. I strongly urge the State Senate to do the right thing this year by passing all 10 points of the Women’s Equality Act.”

Assemblyman Buchwald also noted that in today’s economy, women need more economic security – not less. In New York, women make just 84 cents for every dollar earned by men, creating a substantial yearly pay gap of roughly $8,275 between men and women working full time for the same level of work.[1]

“Equal pay and equal opportunity for women are not just issues about fairness,” said Assemblyman Buchwald. “These are also issues that impact our economic growth and the financial security of middle-class families. I have said this before, and I will continue to speak loudly for women’s equality – it’s time we act.”

Assemblyman David Buchwald today attended the Family Planning Advocates Day of Action and met with the local branch of Planned Parenthood to show his support for the Women’s Equality Act.

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WHITE PLAINS WEEK INTERNETS NOW–WITH PEOPLE TO BE HEARD brought to you by the Gotweiler Iceberg Company of Walla Walla Washington. Having a party? Bring home a Gotweiller iceberg for all the ice your guests will ever need.

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COLD, HARD EDGE NEWS 

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WINBROOK REBUILD BEGINS

WEATHERING THE WEATHER

EDUCATION COMMISSIONER KING DOES NOT ANSWER THE STATE SENATE

THE LATIMER-LITTLE “RELEASE-THE-ASSESSMENT-TEST-RESULTS” LEGISLATION

WHY GOVERNOR CUOMO’S IMPOSSIBLE DREAM TAX FREEZE CAN’T HAPPEN HERE

GANNETT DEBUTS NEW FORMAT WITH MORE NEWS

TEATOWN RESERVATION BRINGS IN FED RIFLEMEN TO MASSKILL FORAGING DEER

ALL THE NEWS NO ONE ELSE TELLS YOU IS ALWAYS ON

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School Budget Pushing $200 Million. $200 Average Tax Increase. No Budget Cuts Yet

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. By John F. Bailey. January 24, 2014:

The first School District Community Forum held  Thursday evening at the White Plains High School to start the school district budget process introduced a 2014-15 possible school budget of $199,200,000 without settlement of the White Plains Teachers Contract and year to year increase of 3%, double the rate of inflation.

Fred Seiler, Assistant Superintendent for Business in his Power Point show noted that in order for the district to present a budget under the the 1.5% Tax Levy Cap, the district would have to cut $800,000 or  a half percent of the total projected expenditure of the budget.

WPCNR calculates this would mean roughly the cutting of  approximately  20 employees low on the pay scale and longevity ranks, depending on how many retirements might be taken in the coming months.

Potential new school aid of $1,000,000 was projected without building aid.

All exemptions from the 1.46 %  increase allowed in the tax cap levy have been figured.

The district is allowed  to raise its levy $4,037,959 to $197.437,959 plus another expected $1 million in school aid.

The Governor’s tax levy cap once again is apparently being followed to the cent by the City School District with no intention of trimming expenses any more than they absolutely have to do.

The effect of the Governor’s tax levy the last three  years it has been in effect has not had the effect of cutting the White Plains School Budget at all.

Instead the district keeps as much of their programs, administration and teaching staff in place as they can without actually taking creative cuts to cut more expenses than they absolutely have to cut.

The public is invited to submit comments leading to the next and final budget forum on March 19 on how the district should cut their $800,000 to present a budget in compliance with the tax cap to reach the “cap compliant” budget of $198.4 Million.

If the 2014 city assessment roll remains the same, (the roll will be released March 1),The effect of this proposed budget will raise the school tax on the $650,000 average White Plains home $227, and raise the school tax rate from $583 per $1,000 of assessed valuation to $598 per $1,000. This would take the school tax for the average home to about $9,900 in 2014-15.

Of course more school aid from the surplus that Governor Andrew Cuomo is touting could lower the tax rate if the school district chose to do so. Last year, when more school aid was received at the last moment, they just increased the budget to $193.4 Million and kept the tax rate where it was $583.21 per $1,000 of assessed valuation.

A problem in all the calculation is the labor impasse with the White Plains Teachers Association. A settlement on wage increases for teachers at the top of the pay scale (who are ineligible for step increases) is the sticking point.

Teachers still in the step raise sequence receiving those steps this year as well as perhaps raises or lack thereof in the step increase schedule is a thorny issue. With more than have half of White Plains teachers last year not covered by the step, this is the bulk of the teacher salary total, and such an increase  plus retroactive pay if negotiated as part of the settlement would have to be covered some how in the 2014-15 budget, or start in the 2015-16 budget–which will be a whopper.

Next year, if the school district continues its rollover spending ways without trimming substantially the district could increase $10 Million.

Comments on how to cut the budget should be directed to the White Plains City School District, 5 Homeside Lane, White Plains NY.

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Senator George Latimer Addresses Education Commissioner John King on the Common Core Issues.

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WPCNR ALBANY ROUNDS. Special to WPCNR  From the Office of State Senator George Latimer, 35th Senate District. January 23, 2014:

Thursday the New York State Senate Committee on Education met with New York State Education Commissioner John King.

Here are for your viewing State Senator George Latimer’s exhange with Commissioner King on Common Core and testing issues:

m.youtube.com/watch?feature=youtu.be&v=phnbWyc-2×4&desktop_uri=%2Fwatch%3Fv%3DphnbWyc-2×4%26feature%3Dyoutu.be

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TITANIC COMPLETES SUCCESSFUL MAIDEN VOYAGE TO NEW YORK. POWERFUL CAST’S VOICES RAISE TITANIC INSPIRE AUDIENCE WITH ADMIRATION, HOPE, PERSEVERENCE!

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WPCNR STAGE DOOR. Theatrical Review by John F. Bailey. January 23, 2013:

The new and improved 2014 Titanic set sail with majesty, and unfurled whip-snapping pennants of hope on the emotional voices of a strong ensemble  and haunting staging on the high seas of the Westchester Broadway Theatre Thursday evening .

The Tony Award winning musical of 1997 has been retrofitted anew by its composer and lyricist, Maury Yeston and staged with inventive direction by Don Stephenson. The old girl is sailing jaunty and proud on the songs that in virtually every number uplift the human spirit – the reason we see musicals in the first place.

Seamless musical interludes to render the gaity of the fated passengers and crew  the cold beauty of the North Atlantic  starry night, the high hopes of all the classes of all the souls who sailed aboard  the most famous ship of all time  102 years ago into eternity. Subtle  lighting creates eerie special effects such as a serving tray sliding across a ball room to indicate that the ship is really sinking.

The leading lady of this show is the spirit of the Titanic herself. You are aboard her, and thankful  you are in the seats and not on the decks as she sails through the starry night.

The movie gave you one romance, this Titanic gives you four, each cameoed spot-on by Patricia Noonan as Caroline with her beau Noah Plomgren as Charles Clark who charm the audience with  I Give you my Hand, (they are running away on the Titanic to New York).The sassy, spunky Sarah Charles as Kate McGowan and John Lanfley  playing Barrett give us a tempestuous charming Irish couple that meet shipboard and do a very touching number under the starry North Atlantic night, The Proposal. 

Couples three and four are Kay Walbye and David Studwell playing the famous lifelong couple, Ida and Isidor Strauss, they shine in the melodramatic lifeboat fairwell scene in act two, Still—the bring-down-the-house number of the show.

Rounding out the romantic quarter are the social climbing Alice played by Donna English with excellent comic timing who enjoys the first class salon appointments even though the ship is sinking and her long-suffering hardware store husband,  Edgar, deadpanly drolly played by Philip Hoffman. Nothing he does is ever good enough for her. Long time marrieds will find their just-right nuances very familiar  even their duet I Have Danced  is a gay but ironic tune at the dance on the promenade deck at the close of act one.

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A strong quartet of key personalities captains this ship. The architect, Thomas Andrews (above, second from right) is played tragically by Tom Hewitt and he interplays splendidly with Adam Heller (far right) who as the villain of the Titanic tragedy, J. Bruce Ismay, chairman of the White Star Line, stage a brilliant “blame game” scene in Act II that I have never seen portrayed in any Titanic movie. 

The tempers of Andrews and Ismay flare. The panic and sense of despair is drama that grips as few musical conflict scenes do the way these two stage it. William Parry (Far left) the tragic figure of the Captain, Edward J. Smith deserves a salute from this passenger. Jeremy Ellison-Gladstone is the radio operator seated who makes the most of his plaintive sending a romantic message from a ship’s stoker. Lots of melodramatic moments that grip you in this musical!

Hewitt’s hits Andrews’  despair dead on  as he views his plans of the Titanic and sees how a slight design change could have prevented the accident is gripping. He sings out the technical solution as he describes the ship’s fate as it is sinking..

The sense of suspense leading up to the striking of the iceberg is brilliant!  There is the lookout in the crow’s nest, there is the helmsman at the bridge. Suddenly the iceberg appears reminiscent of the scene in Jaws.  The awe of what is about to happen is compelling and you have to see it.

The loading of the lifeboats is touchingly rendered highlighted by the the singing of We’ll Meet Tomorrow.

This successful voyage of the Titanic sails at Westchester Broadway Theatre through February 23. Book your First Class passage today, by calling Westchester Broadway Theatre lines at 914-592-2222, or visiting www.BroadwayTheatre.com

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You will dine on dishes that were served to the passengers of the Titanic, including Roasted Pork with Sage, mushrooms and Pearl Onions (shown above, superbly cooked, moist, I felt like an Astor); Chicken Lyonnaise, and Roasted Turkey with Savory Cranberry Sauce and Basa with Rock Shrimp Stuffing. These dishes a departure of the usual WBT fare is a great touch .

Sail on, Titanic!

 

Photos of the production, courtesy, Westchester Broadway Theatre by John Vecchiola

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