Sunrise Rises Again at the Zoning Board of Appeals–WednesDAY!

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WPCNR NEIGHBORHOOD WATCH. From the Carhart Association. January 6, 2014:
The Zoning Board of Appeals will hear an appeal Wednesday January 8th at 7PM by Sunrise of an interpretation made by Commissioner of Building Amadio on August 14thn(2013) that an “alcoholism facility” does not meet the criteria of a “community residence”.
Should the ZBA over-turn this decision, then Sunrise would need to submit a new Application and begin the process all over again to tae the Nathan Miller Nursing Home on DeKalb Avenue and turn it into an alcohol-drug rehab facility.
Should the ZBA uphold Amadio’s decision, then Sunrise would almost definitely go back to federal court and re-file their discrimination against the disabled lawsuit against White Plains.
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Slippin’ and a Slidin’ Floods White Plains Hospital ER–Got Salt?

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WPCNR WEATHER SCOOP. From White Plains Hospital Medical Center. January 6, 2013:

The combination of snow, rain and plummeting temperatures can create a nightmarish scenario for anyone walking, even if it is just a few feet. A simple walk to your car or along a sidewalk where there is “Black Ice” can result in serious problems including sprains, fractures, and brain injury.

                        White Plains Hospital, for example, experienced a roughly 50 percent spike in Emergency Room visits on Sunday that can be attributed to the yo-yo-like temperatures. In one hour, in particular, 41 patients were registered for treatment in the ER.

Because temperatures are expected to free-fall today, Hospital staff members are expecting another busy evening. (As of 4 P.M. the temperature in White Plains was at 40 degrees and falling.)

In adults ages 65 and older these types of injuries can be serious: One out of three adults falls each year and they are the leading cause of both fatal and nonfatal injuries, according to U.S. Centers for Disease Control. There were 2.3 million nonfatal injuries in 2010 that resulted in more than 662,000 hospitalizations and cost $30 billion in treatment. Common injuries include fractures of the hip, spine, arm, leg, ankle and hand while more serious spills can even cause traumatic brain injuries.

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Cold Air Precautions

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WPCNR WEATHER SCOOP. From the Westchester County Department of Health. January 6, 2013:

With dangerously cold temperatures forecast until Wednesday morning, the Westchester County Department of Health reminds residents to take precautions against hypothermia and frostbite and to take care when heating their homes using alternate heating sources.

“If you have an elderly or ailing neighbor who lives alone, please check on them when the weather is so cold,” said Westchester County Executive Robert P. Astorino. “With the weather so cold, people should be very cautious when traveling outdoors. Wear lots of layers, do not leave skin exposed and limit your time outside.”

If a safe temperature cannot be maintained inside your home, make temporary arrangements to stay elsewhere. Libraries, municipal buildings and malls are good places to warm up and the Department of Social Services can provide emergency shelter around the clock at 995-2099.

“Low temperatures can be life-threatening, especially for seniors, infants and people who are at increased risk for hypothermia,” said Health Commissioner Dr. Sherlita Amler. “I urge residents, especially those households with seniors or infants to keep their thermostats set at no less than 68 degrees during the daytime to avoid accidental hypothermia.”

Seniors and infants less than one year of age should never sleep in a cold room and should be dressed warmly to maintain body heat.

Warning signs of hypothermia in adults include stumbling, mumbling, fumbling and grumbling, shivering, slurred speech and confusion. Infants with hypothermia may appear sluggish, with very low energy and bright red, cold skin. If you think that someone is suffering from hypothermia or frostbite, call a medical provider immediately. Frostbite is another cold weather concern and is especially dangerous because it often happens with little warning. Numbness can occur so quickly that the individual, unaware of being frostbitten, may remain outside, increasing the chance of permanent damage. Older people, and those with diabetes, are especially vulnerable to frostbite due to impaired circulation.

Tips to prevent frostbite and hypothermia:

  • Start with synthetic or silk thermal underwear to wick moisture away.
  • Add fleece or wool sweaters or sweatshirts to trap heat and keep cold out.
  • Top it off with a waterproof or water-repellent jacket and pants.
  • Add gloves, scarf, a hat that covers the ears and sturdy shoes or boots with good traction.
  • Go indoors when you begin to feel cold.

Heating your home with a generator, space heater or stove can pose risks. Never use a generator inside your house or in partly enclosed areas such as garages, basements, porches, crawlspaces, sheds, carports or breezeways, even if your windows are open. Generators should only be operated outdoors, away from open windows. Using a generator indoors can kill you in minutes. Carbon monoxide in the generator’s fumes can build up and cause carbon monoxide poisoning, which can be fatal. Also remember that barbeque grills and camp stoves produce carbon monoxide and should only be used outdoors. Ovens also produce carbon monoxide and should never be used to heat your home.

  • Use fireplaces, wood stoves, or other combustion heaters only if they are properly vented to the outside and do not leak flue gas into the indoor air space.
  • Always follow the manufacturer’s instructions when using space heaters and wood burning stoves.
  • Ensure adequate ventilation if you must use a kerosene heater.
  • Use only the type of fuel your heater is designed to use – don’t substitute.
  • Do not place a space heater within three feet of anything that may catch on fire, such as drapes, furniture, or bedding, and never cover your space heater.
  • Never place a space heater on top of furniture or near water.
  • Never leave children or pets unattended near a space heater, fireplace or wood burning stove.

If you lose power, call your utility company. Con Edison can be reached at 1-800-75-CONED; NYS Electric and Gas can be reached at 1-800-572-1131 for electrical outages and 1-800- 572-1121 for gas.

For more information on cold weather safety, contact the Westchester County Department of Health at (914) 813-5000 or visit our website at www.westchestergov.com/health. You can also follow us on Twitter @wchealthdept or like us on Facebook at Facebook.com/wchealthdept.

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13TH YEAR OF WHITE PLAINS WEEK STARTS NOW! WRAPS UP 2013-PREDICTS WHAT’S COMING ON THE NET NOW

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Four inch Snowfall with Drifts to 5 or 6 inches Afflicts White Plains, High Pressure Moves Back In

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As of mid morning, the 4 inches of snow with mini drifts  that fell over night  was over, but the garbage had to go out . Temperature as of noon was 18 degrees with a 5 to 10 knot breeze and clear cold weather with dazzling sunshine was in control. High pressure was moving in, creating severe clear cold conditions. Ebersole Rink was scheduled to open for public session at 3 P.M.

As of mid morning, the 4 inches of snow with mini drifts that fell over night was over, but the garbage had to go out . Temperature as of noon was 18 degrees with a 5 to 10 knot breeze and clear cold weather with dazzling sunshine was in control. High pressure was moving in, creating severe clear cold conditions. Ebersole Rink was scheduled to open for public session at 3 P.M.

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Snow on New York’s Upper East Side created virtually impassable side streets. The scene on East 90th Street.

 

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Robert Astorino Sworn in for Second Term as Westchester County Executive

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Inauguration

WPCNR COUNTY CLARION LEDGER. From the Westchester County Department of Communications. January 1, 2013:

County Executive Robert P. Astorino  was sworn in for a second term today by Judge Robert A. Neary  at a ceremony in his office on the 9th floor of the Michaelian Office Building in White Plains. Joined by his family, including wife Sheila  and rheir three young children ( Ashlin Grace, Kiley Rose and Sean),

Astorino hosted a New Year’s Day open house reception for hundreds of Westchester residents. The event, also at the county executive’s office, was open to the public and sponsored by Friends of Rob Astorino.

“I represent every part of this county and every person in this county,” said Astorino following the ceremony. “Everything we do every day when we come to work here is to better this county, to make it easier for people to live here and raise their family here, and for businesses to open up and to flourish. So that’s what we will continue to do every day.”

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Affordable Health Care in Business Day 1: Only 4% of Companies with 50 or Less Workers have Signed up for Health Plans.

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WPCNR HEALTH NEWS. From the Business Council of Westchester. (Edited) January 1, 2014:

On the phasing in of the 2014 Affordable Health Care Act, the vast majority of responding Westchester companies responding to a Business Council of Westchester Survey,  report that they are already offering insurance to their employees.

However, just 4% of Westchester companies with less than 50 employees report that their company has already enrolled in the NY State of Health Exchange, and only 13% are planning to do so in 2014.

How is the NY State of Health Exchange website to navigate?

  • Of the people who visited the NY State of Health Exchange website, about two-thirds claimed it was relatively easy to navigate the site, but most were not fully satisfied with the healthcare offerings.
  • Of the people who visited the Federal Affordable Care Act website, just 15% responded that it was easy to extremely easy to navigate the site.
  • More than 30% of the respondents had attended a free The BCW healthcare workshop, and nearly 7 out of 10 attendees found the workshops to be very informative and well-organized to extremely informative and well-organized.

The findings came from a section of a survey conducted by the Westchester Business Council Survey dealing with federal and state health care issues.

 

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Governor Persuades Con Ed to Freeze Electric Rates for 2 Years, gas and steam, 3 years

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WPCNR THE POWER NEWS. From the Governor’s Press Office. December 31, 2013:

Governor Andrew M. Cuomo today announced a joint agreement with the Consolidated Edison Company of New York, Inc. that includes a two-year electric delivery rate freeze and a three-year gas and steam distribution rate freeze starting on January 1, 2014.

The agreement also requires the utility to make significant investments to strengthen the resiliency of the energy grid, improve energy efficiency, and accelerate the transition to a cleaner, more distributed energy system. This agreement stems from the Governor’s call last October for the Public Service Commission (PSC) to reject the utility’s proposed rate hike.

“This is a clear victory for consumers and businesses, particularly those who suffered through power outages from Superstorm Sandy last year,” Governor Cuomo said. “New Yorkers deserve stable power rates and a reliable electric system that is clean and fortified to withstand and respond to the impacts of future extreme weather. With this groundbreaking settlement, we have achieved both of these critical elements for ratepayers in New York City and Westchester County. I commend all parties, including the PSC staff, consumer and environmental groups and Con Edison for their efforts.”

Additionally, the settlement provides for significant investments in resiliency and system hardening; increases in gas safety measures and increases in leak prone pipe replacements; expansion of the low-income program; and increase investment in and focus on oil-to-gas conversions, which will reduce polluting air emissions, and distributed generation.

In addition to the customer-friendly rate freeze, other benefits for Con Edison customers include:
· Improving and increasing the discounts associated with the low-income electric and gas programs;
· Ensuring quicker reconnections of residential electric service by providing the company resources to expand its capability to reconnect most customers the same day they are eligible for reconnection of service;
· Strengthening performance measure targets for customer service; and
· Expanding performance measure targets for gas safety violations.

 

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On People to Be Heard on the NET NOW: The State of Suicide with the Head of Research for the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention

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Carl Paladino and the Buffalo Board of Education–The Billion Dollar Budget District

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WPCNR ALBANY ROUNDS. A Memorandum on the state of the Buffalo Public Schools and alleged lack of intervention from the State Education Department from former Candidate for Governor of New York State, Carl Paladino (who lost to Andrew Cuomo in the race for Governor in 2010. December 29, 2013:

This year the White Plains City School District may be flirting with bursting the $200 Million barrier in the 2014-15 school budget. The following memo was written by Carl Paladino documenting what he describes as irresponsible management of his own Buffalo Public Schools. The problems he discusses are strikingly similar to the problems White Plains faces on a more narrow scale.

It is a cautionary tale as White Plains is facing more budget shortfalls, a 2/3 minority student body and a lowered tax levy cap. Here is the memo written by Mr. Paladino:

Below is a memo that I sent to the Buffalo Board of Education (BOE) and Superintendent last week outlining the deplorable condition of the finances and some of the bad decision making of the Buffalo Public Schools (BPS) which requires your immediate attention. 
 
The BPS is being mismanaged by a Superintendent and majority of the Board of Education who illustrate no sense of fiscal responsibility.  They do not have the experience or education necessary to administer a $1 billion annual budget. Their cavalier attitude resulted many bad and irresponsibly careless decisions.

The attached original district reorganization plan, proposed by outside objective consultants, called for a $5.7 million cost savings by way of a reduction of 90 jobs in the bloated administrative bureaucracy. 

The plan was then   manipulated into an estimated $3 million additional cost by the Superintendent at the behest of sisterhood BOE members. Cloaked in secrecy, without any transparency, bad decisions by the sisterhood and their Superintendent illustrate that they have defied the Peter Principle and risen to elected or appointed office well above their level of competency.
 
Your respective offices are charged with the responsibility to protect the taxpayers of Buffalo from waste and mismanagement of funds.  State law is clear in this matter.  It is improper for the BPS to use their unrestricted reserves as they are now doing.  They are required to keep 4% of the budget in unrestricted  reserve. The unrestricted reserve will be raided for in excess of $40 million this fiscal year and $48 million is now estimated for next year, which will completely deplete the reserve. 
 
There also appears to be a question about the legal use of grant funds that requires an in depth audit.  The Superintendent seems to always find grant money as an excuse for her out of control hiring and reassignment of administrative and teaching staff.
 
The next scheduled meeting of the Control Board is March 12, 2014, creating a time problem with the development of the BPS budget for the 2014-15 school year.  I request that the Control Board immediately call a special meeting and resolve to go hard as to its supervision of the BPS.  I also request that the Comptroller exercise his authority to audit the use of reserves and the use of grant monies.
 
I appeared at the December meeting of the BFSA and was surprised at the  line of  questions presented by George Arthur and Frank Messiah to Judy Elliott, the distinguished educator assigned to the BPS by the State Education Commissioner. 

It was also obvious that the Superintendent sat with a smile on her face while the intimidation went on. She offered no defense for the lady who has repeatedly defended the Superintendent’s incompetence and carried her water for months. Obviously neither interrogator had read any of Ms. Elliott’s reports or investigated the massive contribution she has made to everything good that has occurred in the BPS over the past year including the huge amount of grant money received from the State which would not have happened without her involvement. 

The BOE majority obviously set up Arthur and Messiah to marginalize the value of Ms. Elliott.  They regularly blurt out their disdain for the lady at BOE meetings. Arthur and Messiah have also spent their careers living the hypocrisy of African American leadership enjoying the fruits of power while keeping the urban poor captive in the cycle of poverty.
 
It is easier to repair strong children than to fix broken men.
 
Please feel free to share this missive with your friends and family members.

 
http://gallery.mailchimp.com/0f0270f357b133ac8910c783a/files/orig_reorg_plan.pdf
 
 
To:     Buffalo Public Schools Superintendent and BOE
From: Carl Paladino
CC:    Everybody
Date:  December 23, 2013
Re:     Hypocrisy
 
The Sisterhood of the Buffalo Public Schools Board of Education and its Superintendent are hypocrites who ostensibly condemn the cycle of poverty while in fact promoting it for their own self-serving interests of holding power and the control of money and jobs.  In positions that far exceed their level of competence, that they show no shame even for their most obvious failures.

For decades the private sector and governmental leadership, afraid of the race card and condemned to political correctness, embraced the hands off approach and left thousands of good souls behind to languish in urban decay.
 
At a subcommittee meeting of the Buffalo Board of Education (BOE) last week, CFO Barbara Smith made a shocking presentation on the horrific state of the finances of the Buffalo Public Schools (BPS) as of November 30, 2013. 
 
The budget for the present school fiscal year, approved by the prior BOE, had a $31 million operating and maintenance deficit and was only balanced after the irresponsible transfer of $31 million from reserves. During the school year, that budget deficit has now risen to $35 million and there are still additional financial burdens that need to be addressed. 
 
Implementation of a State required physical education program could cost over $2 million and a severely watered down “After School Program” After School Program could cost up to $8 million.
 
Preliminary numbers for next year are showing a $45 million budget deficit.  BPS unrestricted reserves total only $43 million. 
 
The reasons for the deficits are grossly negligent management, a lack of transparency and incompetence, with a slathering of bad attitude by both the BOE leadership and the Superintendent. 
 
The Hallmark of the “Say Yes” program was the After School Program designed to bring BPS students up to standard to prepare for college.  The agreement was memorialized in a Memorandum of Understanding executed by BOE President Ruth Kapsiak and Superintendent Pamela Brown. The cost to BPS for the first school year starting July, 2013 was $14 million which was repeatedly promised to Say Yes by the Superintendent and the BOE leadership. 
 
Working in good faith that the funding would be available, Say Yes proceeded to design the After School Program with community and parental group partners and even paid for forensic audits of BPS finances to point out areas where savings could be recognized to pay for the After School Program.  The audits were  presented to the Superintendent and the BOE in 2012 but then apparently summarily disregarded. When it became time to implement the After School Program, Say Yes found that the Superintendent and BOE had budgeted nothing, nil, in this year’s budget.  Yamilette Williams, an appointee brought in by Mary Guinn, was assigned to implement the unfunded program but spent months dodging phone calls and being unresponsive.
 
The initial Cross and Joftus re-organization plan called for a $5.7 million budget savings by  eliminating many unnecessary positions in the bloated, centralized administrative bureaucracy. After presentation of the plan, the savings was lost due to interference by unions and individual board members who wanted to preserve jobs for their friends and family clubs.  The final re-organization plan resulted in extra costs estimated at well over $3 million, a $8.7 million swing. 
 
The Reorganization plan, developed and changed on the run by the insular Superintendent and Leadership Consultant, created chaos and depressed morale by hiring, for critical supervisory positions, previously unemployed people from outside the region with no identifiable special qualities other than being part of the Mary Guinn friends and family club.
 
The plan also further centralized supervisory staff and instead of replacing incompetent principals with qualified achievers who earned the positions based on merit, they kept the unfit and now spend millions on consultants for on the job training on how to be a principal.
Where is their common sense?  Hire qualified people, empower them and then hold them accountable for the performance of their schools.
 
When Florence Johnson advocated segregation by saying that “African-American children should only be educated in a school system supervised by African-Americans,” she charted the course now followed by the sisterhood majority of the BOE and the Superintendent, twisting time proven rules on how to run a school system and wasting an enormous amount of time and money implementing a re-organization plan doomed to failure.
 
On the whim of James Williams, the BOE wasted millions buying its own DATA centers to replace the otherwise quality service provided by BOCES in the past because the Sisterhood majority on the BOE hate BOCES as passionately as they detest the State Education Department and the Commissioner. 
 
Millions more were wasted on BPS Joint School Reconstruction Program by simply not having a qualified specialist owner representative supervise the $1.4 billion project.
 
BPS has an overcapacity of more than 2,000 desks. The BOE and Superintendent have failed to timely consolidate schools and shut down buildings that are very costly to maintain.
 
For decades, lame BPS negotiators and BOE members surrendered basic management prerogatives, fed defined benefit pension plans and awarded comprehensive lifetime health insurance to the astute union leaders like Phil Rumore, who stood over the BPS like a vulture. 
 
BPS dysfunction is caused by (1) a lack of enforced standards, (2) centralization, (3) the election or appointment of less-than-qualified members to the BOE and (4) the appointment of the Superintendent, administrators, principals and assistant principals based on race rather than merit.  A glaring example is the illogical appointment of Chiefs of School Leadership, the supervisors for principals.  The Superintendent disregarded merit and appointed unqualified people who fit a racial profile. Most had previously failed as principals and therefore command no respect from the people they supervise, creating systemic chaos.
 
The result is a severe decay of morale, the costly hiring of consultants to teach staff how do do their jobs with no identifiable way of judging outcomes, a lack of accountability, no acceptance of responsibility and a lack of incentive for achievement.
 
The BPS today has 45 of 57 schools failing, 28 of them being priority schools that are so bad that severe and costly remedial action is required.  Last year the BPS had a 46% graduation rate meaning that 54% of the students had dropped out.  Less than 20% of black males graduated.  Nine and eleven percent of our students passed the standardized statewide English and Math tests respectively. 
 
Attendance has been a critical problem.  To improve attendance the Superintendent cleverly changed the method of collecting attendance.  A child is now presumed to be present unless specifically marked absent by the study hall teacher. After the rule change attendance shot right up when in reality it continues to be a problem.  Inept leadership creates illusion to solve problems.
 
The children, parents and community beg for inspired, committed and experienced leadership focused not on the preservation of the district but rather on the education of the children.  It is Incumbent on the community at large, the Western New York State legislative delegation and The State Education Department (SED) to disassemble the BPS and start over with a system designed to educate.
 
I will move at the next meeting that the BOE resign and request that SED appoint a special master to reorganize the BPS.

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