18 Environmental Groups Reaffirm Support for French American School of NY Move to Ridgeway property

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WPCNR SOUTH END TIMES. From The French American School of New York. November 14, 2013:

With the environmental review in its final stages, a broad-based group of 18 environmental organizations and leaders including the Nature Conservancy, Scenic Hudson, Riverkeeper and the Pace University Academy for Applied Environmental Sciences have affirmed their strong support of the French-American School of New York’s (FASNY) plan to a create a new school and a 73-plus-acre open space conservancy in White Plains at the defunct 130-acre Ridgeway Country Club.

The letter signers stated that the letter sent to White Plains Mayor Thomas Roach and the city’s Common Council and forwarded to the White Plains Superintendent of Schools Tim Connors and the Board of Education, was written “to voice our continued strong support for the project – both to create a new educational campus and the Greens to Green Conservancy.”

The letter states that “the school itself would bring tremendous educational and economic benefits to the city and its residents.  By introducing a world-class bilingual educational institution to the city, FASNY would add diversity and strength to the educational options in White Plains and the region,” and adds that the signers “wholeheartedly endorse the conversion of a failed golf course into a publicly accessible nature preserve.  With no cost to the city, this would provide significant passive recreational and quality of life benefits to White Plains, its citizens and the region.”  The open space would be protected by a permanent conservation easement.

A previous letter of support from 16 environmental groups was sent to the city leaders in September 2012 at an earlier stage in the extensive and thorough environmental review process of which the Mayor and Common Council are the lead agency.  The new letter, including four new supporters, calls for the city to prepare “a fair and constructive (environmental) findings statement in support of a project that complies with all governing laws and offers a unique chance for city leaders to leave a legacy of a healthy, economically vibrant and livable White Plains for future generations.”

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Assemblyman Buchwald Stages Small Business Forum to Hear Local Businesses

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WPCNR ALBANY ROUNDS. From Assemblyman David Buchwald’s Office. November 13,  2013:

Assemblyman David Buchwald is encouraging small business owners and interested residents to attend his small business forum to facilitate an exchange of ideas. Buchwald recently spoke at the Business Council of New York State’s annual meeting, where he delivered a forceful message on the need to revitalize local economies. He’s hoping this forum will create a better understanding of the priorities and concerns within Westchester County’s business community.

“I’m happy to be organizing a Small Business Forum to bring together business owners and professionals across my district,” said Assemblyman Buchwald. “Hearing the priorities and concerns of the small business community firsthand helps me and the small business operators around the table to gain a greater understanding of the economic climate, and will be meaningful in helping to affect changes on the State level. I’m encouraging anyone interested in contributing to our discussion to attend.”

The forum will take place on Tuesday November 19th, 8:30 -10:30am at the Mount Kisco Public Library’s Community Room, located at 100 E. Main Street in Mount Kisco. Light refreshments will be served. Small business owners and residents are asked to RSVP by contacting Alex Roithmayr, Community Liaison for Assemblyman Buchwald, at 914-244-4450 or roithmayra@assembly.state.ny.us.

“By bringing together small business owners, professionals and local residents, I’m hopeful that we will open a dialogue in our community and bring forward good ideas that we can build upon,” said Assemblyman Buchwald.

 

 

 

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Sustainable Playland Presents Sports Complex Developer for Playland December 11 at Rye Library

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WPCNR PLAYLAND GO ROUND. From Sustainable Playland. November 13, 2013:

Sustainable Playland, the would-be developer of Playland will make an informational presentation about the sports component of the SPI plan to reinvigorate and restore the park. Representatives of Playland Sports will be on hand to outline their concept for an exciting new year-round, state-of-the-art sports facility that will provide opportunities for a range of athletic activities for all ages.

New Date for Community Meeting
Wednesday, December 11 from 7-9 pm at the Rye Library 

 

 

 

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Ordinary Extraordinary Men and Women Passing the Torch.

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Wayne Bass, Commissioner of Recreation and Parks opens the Veterans Day Ceremonies Monday at the White Plains Rural Cemetary

WPCNR STARS AND STRIPES. By John F. Bailey. November 12, 2013:

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I attended the Veterans Day Ceremony in White Plains Rural Cemetery Monday.  I met Ross Marsico,(above) the 90 year old  veteran of World War II who fought with the Third Army in France, Belgium and Germany. He was wounded by shrapnel, spent 45 days in a hospital THEN returned to active duty.

Mr. Marsico returned to the USA and spent 30 years as an active policeman in Harrison. He was honored as the 2013 Veteran’s Day Honoree

Mr. Marsico is a native of White Plains, just turned 90 yesterday, is an outstanding person to have the honor to meet. When he was asked questions how he felt about being  honored, he said he just represented all the other veterans and every day people who had served, that it was not about him. Then he teared up.

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Veterans day makes you tear up.

Chaplain Bob Donnelly of American Legion Post 135 in the invocation observed that the gathering was there to honor persons who had written a “blank check to the United States of America, good for everything including their life in service to their country.”

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Adele Zucker(above , Past President of Jewish War Veterans Ladies Auxiliary, said  Veterans day was to honor the veterans who came back and have contributed so much to their hometowns in addition to their military service. 

Chaplain Bob Donnelly noted that when he returned from the Vietnam war he was spat upon by a woman in an airport and called a baby killer, and observed today’s veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan  conflicts are much more respected.

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Then came brief  inspiration remarks by the Mayor, Tom Roach, who proclaimed Monday Veteran’s Day in White Plains  and U.S. Marine Corps Staff Sergeant Jason Freeland(below)

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Sergeant Freeland, in his most recent tour, was responsible for training Afghan army and police recruits. He is now head of recruiting for the Marines in White Plains. He mentioned how honored he was to be among the veterans attending, and how it was their and those like them who service that make it possible for him and today’s servicemen and women to perform and live up to the veterans’ example. This  truth was echoed again how you serve matters and it is an inspiration to those who come after you.

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Mayor Roach with Commandant Jack Collins of American Legion Post 135  places the Mayor’s Veteran’s Day Board Wreath at the Soldiers and Sailors Monument.

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The Home Defense Wreathis placed by members of the White Plains Police and Fire Department

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Dennis Jones, left, places the White Plains Historical Society Wreath. Joan Steere , Regent of the Daughters of the American Revolution placed the final commemorative wreath.

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The White Plains Middle School Band played Anchors Aweigh, The Caissons Go Rolling Along, The Marines Hymn, Semper Fidelis (Coast Guard), and Off We Go Into the Wild Blue Yonder (Air Force). Crisp. Inspiring, evoking the rich traditions and pride and sacrifice of the American armed forces.

As the gathering left, the tent was folded, and the crowd drifted away, until another Memorial Day another Veterans Day.

I remained and watched the tombstones of the Revolutionary War Dead…names no longer readable on the stones, they still spoke as one.

Cemeteries like the White Plains Rural Cemetery inspire by the testimony of the simple stones, the tiny flags denoting veterans and the stones too of every day people of long ago who lived well. As I read their stones I wonder what their lives were like their thoughts, their actions in that long ago time.

Cemeteries are not places of regret, but, instead inspiration to ignite in us, with their  memories, to continue to work on our own lives and live up to the examples of persons like the veterans still with us and those who have departed.060

Rifle Salute to the Departed Veterans by American Legion Post #135, was followed by Taps, played by Bob Freis

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The veterans are getting older.

James Dwyer of American Legion Post 135 was scheduled  to read Flanders Field. He could not  due to illness according to Commander Jack Collins. This is the touching poem penned in World War I, Mr. Dywer would have read. He could not, so I will publish it for him.

In Flanders fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses, row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.

We are the Dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie
In Flanders fields.

Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders field

 

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WP Observer: Bramson Political Career Seen at End. Democrats Tread Water in WP

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WPCNR LETTER TICKER. November 12, 2013:

Dear John:

A few thoughts on a couple of the election races.

For County Exec:  Noam clearly was running a race for Nita’s (Lowey’s) seat.  I’ve spoken to people on his campaign team and they agreed with my advice from the time he got the nomination, run on local issues.  Astorino has plenty of mistakes and flaws to lose in a county with as large a registration gap as we have here.

Hit him on the losses in funding for Social Services, fights with the unions, the dysfunction with the Board.

But Noam seemed to think that his advisors in DC (District of Columbia)  knew more than those of us here and ran on strictly national issues; important yes, but not going to resonate for CE (County Executive).  The race was his but he seemed to snatch defeat out of the jaws of victory.  Look for this to be close to a death knell for his future elective career outside of New Rochelle.

Here in White Plains, the Republicans have no chance of winning any race at all (just like the Democrats back when I was growing up here in the 50’s and 60’s) until they can attract any candidate who has a public personality like Bob Hyland, their last candidate who actually had a chance of winning.

The local party is all but nonexistent, their leadership has all but disappeared since Frank Cantatore left as chair.  The Democrats know all of this and just let insiders have all the spots because they know that all they have to do to win is put up someone who is breathing.

As long as there is no (even halfway) effective opposition to them they will continue to put up the favored few and keep real, new ideas out of the public eye.  They seem to favor keeping control of WP as more important than actually doing something to benefit the citizens of WP.

Other than the two above, I really did not follow other elections as much as I have in the past.

Jonathan H. Appel

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The First Armistice Day.

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WPCNR STARS AND STRIPES. First published on WPCNR in November,2001:

Ninety-five years ago today, representatives of  the Allied Powers and  the Central Powers met in a railroad coach outside Paris and agreed to an armistice, ending World War I, the so-called “War to end all wars,” a war in which 10 million persons died.

Since that day, November 11 has been set aside as first Armistice Day, later changed to Veterans Day. White Plains CitizeNetReporter salutes and remembers and thanks our veterans on this day which recognizes how special they are.

On October 22 (2001) at “Washington’s Headquarters,” in White Plains, the Jacob Purdy House, the White Plains Historical Society recognized America’s first veterans. These were the men of White Plains who defended Chatterton Hill and Miller Hill from the advancing British army under General Howe.

GUNSMOKE REMEMBERS THE FIRST VETERANS. The militia men and volunteers who defended White Plains at the Battle of White Plains in 1776 were commemorated October 21, 2001 with a volley of remembrance at Jacob Purdy House.WPCNR PHOTo
An elite reenactment contingent of British troops gathered about the flagpole overlooking White Plains below. Old Glory was raised on the flagpole. A volley of gunfire from 18th Century muskets saluted the fallen from that long ago battle. The names of the residents of White Plains who died on those hills 225 years ago were solemnly read from a podium at the steps of the old red home.

The names of three White Plains citizens killed in the World Trade Center attack were added to this distinguished list of America’s first veterans, as Jack Harrington, President of the White Plains Historical Society oversaw the ceremonies.

It strikes WPCNR that these three 2001 citizens were much like those first veterans who defeneded White Plains in 1776. Those first veterans lay down their plows or crafts and took up arms when their town and country was threatened. Some citizens lost everything when British troops burned parts of White Plains after the battle.

We remember our fighting men and women on Veterans Day, because most of them were every day citizens called to duty who went out and did something they did not know they could do. Perform acts of heroism, bravery, losing their lives for the American way. Many were just kids themselves. For example, most B-17 pilots over Germany in World War II were in their early twenties.

NAMES OF AMERICA’S FIRST VETERANS ARE READ AT ENTRANCE TO JACOB PURDY HOUSE. Jack Harrington, President of White Plains Historical Society solemly conducts reading of the White Plains Honor Roll at Battle of White Plains ceremonies.WPCNR PHOTO

We can in no way, or through no motion picture know what any veteran experienced. The veterans who still are with us do not like to talk about their combat experiences. And they do not. One veteran of D-Day, asked what he thought of Saving Private Ryan and the realism of it, said the real D-Day was worse. However, veterans we have interviewed remark that they think of their combat experience every day. It is always with them.

It is inconceivable to me that I could ever be able to do what these men and women did. I would like to hope I could. However, the veterans have. They left ordinary lives as office workers, factory workers, farmers, accountants, and what have you and were able to go to war and “rise to the occasion,” or as they say today, “step it up to the next level.” The highest level.

MAYOR DELFINO UNVEILS HISTORICAL SIGNAGE AT BATTLE HILL. In another effort to commemorate America’s veterans, Mayor Joseph Delfino, working with New York State and local groups unveiled a series of permanent historical signs in Battle Hill-Whitney Park October 28 detailing the Battle Hill and Miller Hill battle grounds of the Battle of White Plains. It is the first effort to produce a heritage trail in the City of White Plains. Other markers of historically significant areas of the city are planned in the near future.WPCNR PHOTO

How should Armistice Day be observed? Well, a thought about the sacrifice of these veterans and those who died perhaps brings new vibrancy and dedication to the ideals for which they fought. A thought to what they considered important enough to leave a safe existence to fight for valiantly at great risk and high valour reinforces those sacred American standards: freedom, the pursuit of happiness, free speech, the big little things.

We should value the sacrifice of our local public defenders, the police, the firefighters, the enforcement officials who routinely do this to keep the fabric of American society safe. Thank you.

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With Final Unofficial Results in, Republicans Appear to Break Veto..Democrats Unofficially Win 10 Seats. GOP, 7

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WPCNR CAMPAIGN 2013. November 8, 2013:

All results have officially been counted by the Westchester County Board of Elections by the end of Thursday afternoon, and with absentee ballots still to be counted,  we believe the Republicans have the lead in Districts 10 and 14, appearing to take away the Democratic Party ability to overrule a County Executive veto in 2014.

If final official results hold up, it means the Democratic Party no longer will hold a super majority which allows them to override a County Executive veto. With Michael Kaplowitz, Democrat from District 4  and Virginia Perez, Democrat from District 17 a bipartisan factors in passing last year’s budget, as well as new budget cutter Catherine Parker, Democrat-Elect in District 7, Democrat unity on policy may not be as harmonious as it has been in the past.

Catherine Parker in District 7, appears to have ousted Republican John Verni, 6,475 votes to 6,087.

In the District 10 dogfight, incumbent Republican Sheila Marcotte comes from behind, apparently at this time, beating the Democrat Challenger, Mary Jo Jacobs, 6,254 votes to 5,819.

 

In District 14, Republican incumbent, Bernice Spreckman pulled away from Rocky Richard, the Democrat, 3,950 votes to 3,161.

As of this hour the Democrats appear to have won Districts 2, 4,5,7,8,9,12,13,16, and 17.

The Republicans are apparent winners of Districts 1,3,6,10,11,14,15.

 

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County Association Develops a Wish List for County Executive Rob Astorino

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WPCNR CAMPAIGN 2013 from the Westchester County Association. November 6, 2013:

The Westchester County Association has released a wish list for creating a vision for Westchester. They say, “We hope that Mr. Astorino will take it to heart and start working towards these goals:”

1. Leadership

Set goals. Take action. Spend political capital on what’s important. The country’s current political impasse only emphasizes how important collaboration is, and our need to focus on the big picture.

2. Rethink Housing

Business wants to be where talent is. We need to attract and retain young knowledge workers. Westchester needs more affordable housing, more 24/7 communities where people can work/live/play. Today’s young creatives are not “Rob Petrie.” That image is our past, not our future.

3. “Brand” the County

Silicon Valley. The Big Apple. Create an image for Westchester that captures the vitality and innovation we offer. Good things happen when people live and work here. Their lives are better. Let’s make Westchester its own destination.

4. Promote the County

The County is “off the radar screen” of the nation’s site selectors, according to Mark Sweeney, a leading site selector, who spoke at “Rethinking Westchester: A Blueprint for Smart Growth.” The County government has to invest in economic development and market our location to the world.

5. Wrestle with the Tax Bear

Develop a sound fiscal policy that retains our County’s high credit rating but still provides necessary services. Push back against unfunded state mandates. Strive for efficiencies. We need property tax relief.

6. Fix Our Infrastructure

You can’t build a 21st century economy based on a mid-20th century infrastructure. We need to improve wireless coverage and electrical capacity, and repair or rebuild aging roads and water systems. To do this, we have to embrace public private partnerships so that the private sector can share in both the cost and the risk.

7. Streamline Bureaucracy; Embrace Rezoning

Westchester’s plethora of governing bodies is a red-tape nightmare for developers. While there is a role for government regulation, the County should create an office to cut through the red tape and fast-track development. At the same time, municipalities need to revisit their town codes and allow more repurposing of existing facilities as well as rewrite codes that reduce access to wireless broadband. Our priorities have changed over the past 60 years. Government needs to catch up.

To paraphrase the great philosopher Yogi Berra: if you don’t know where you’re going, you’ll never get there.

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The Heartbeat of America is the Electorate–Ignore it at Your Peril

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 WPCNR CAMPAIGN 2013 News and Comment By John F. Bailey. November 6, 2013:

Robert Astorino won going away over Noam Bramson whose concession speech resonated with the self-pity typical of a candidate who felt he was entitled to the job and had expected to win.

He should have won. He was groomed to win. He was the darling of the Democratic Party machine. He placed his campaign in the hands of the Democratic National Committee based in Washington who talked about everything but local issues.

Bramson seemed all along to not make adjustments in this campaign he stayed on all the way even when it was obviously not resonating with the voters of his own party.

He came across to me as not a take-charge guy. He came across in debates with Mr. Astorino as a man without the courage of his convictions, and quite frankly, someone who was watching things in New Rochelle not doing things. He never defended his record or why New Ro taxes had to go up. Mr. Astorino was killing him on that tax record and the political geniuses in Washington did not adjust. Why? Because they did not know anything about the local county issues. The Democratic Party thinks its license to tax is given to them by God.

This is a dousing of cold water. Even with the endorsements of Andrew Cuomo, St. William Clinton and Senator Charles Schumer, made no difference with Mr. and Mrs. Westchester.

The Astorino message hammered home his record of lowering taxes slightly. It worked. Very reminiscent of the George Bush campaign of 1988 remember  “Read my lips. No new taxes.”

This means, and this is a bitter pill for Democrats, they have to move their philosophies more to the center and right. That is a kick in the head to the mantra of help, compassion, money for nothing, cash for concrete, Commissionerships, Deputy Commissionerships, Deputy to the Deputy Commissionerships, and Administrative Commissioners to Commissionerships.

Is this a vote against the unfortunate and helping people?  No.

It is a cry for help from the middle class that says we can’t afford a thousand dollars a year in tax increases. It is a demand that politicians stop invoking IITRTD “it is the right thing defense” to justify more partronage jobs and programs.

That of course has not filtered down to White Plains yet, where the Mayor Tom Roach has won with 78% of the vote, and the White Plains Rollover-the-Budget Common Council was returned intact . By “rollover the budget” I mean running budgets that did not cut for the last four years.

Council members, John Martin, Beth Smayda and John Kirkpatrick were elected by a 20% to 14% margin over three challengers .  There is unrest out there though. White Plains elected officials now have this smug sense of endorsement from the voters.

Claudia Murphy hopefully, the closest challenger to the affable John Kirkpatrick, is all the Republican Party has to start rebuilding the shambles the County Republican Party has made of its White Plains organization. In order to challenge, you have to lead. Murphy hopefully will stay in as the loyal opposition. Encarnacao the other candidate is to be saluted for  being mad as Hell and not  taking the taxing  any  more.

The tax pain in White Plains is not severe enough yet apparently to afflict the powerful and the comfortable. The disenfranchised voter must continue to afflict the powerful and the comfortable. However, they have no one to blame but themselves because 70% of registered voters stayed home and did not vote in White Plains.

Other big losers were Working Families Party and Indepenence Party. As it turns out, all their “support” did nothing for Noam Bramson. Those parties are not relevant.

The victory of Benjamin Boykin over Miriam Levitt-Flisser in District 5 a strong candidate indicates to me that the touchy-feely message Boykin articulated is not without effect. Boykin’s laid back personality and sense of what is right that he delivers so well and earnestly resonated with White Plains.

I hope he develops more an edge on the County Board of Legislators, asks more questions, demands more answers earlier on issues than he has shown in the past. If anything, the County Board does not ask enough questions or demand enough information. It is the hot air Board.

The Playland and the Affordable Housing Settlement  festering issues are a good example of what he should be asking questions about starting now. You have a new political life, Ben Boykin, feel empowered The Board of Legislators needs a bulldog, not a politician.

What can we say about the next four years of Robert P. Astorino? Will he hold the line on taxes, can the Board of Legislators stay out of the courts with Astorino? Can they work harder? More to the point, how much lower can the taxes get? Can patronage be stopped, probably not.

Another comment on this election: it shows that the electorate is not as gullible as politicians think it is. Noam Bramson thought he’d walk in on his registration alone. He did not take control of his destiny. He did not recognize the need to defend his record.  If you cannot tell what would have happened if you did not raise taxes, then the electorate cannot understand why you did raise taxes. A real leader justifies his or her performance. As Bill Parcels once said, “You are what your record says you are.”

Rob Astorino’s campaign ran on his record and the voting public liked it.

On the propositions in play, casino gambling is coming to New York at our peril. Will the misery inflicted on the public by this insidious industry be worth the revenue? And the public in its wisdom, saw no need to keep judges on the bench past the mandatory retirement age of 70.

Watching the returns roll in on the Board of Elections website last night, encountering Rob Astorino in a White Plains  parking lot, well it always makes me tear-up about how great free elections and the right to vote are.

Nowhere in the world is the voter and the leader closer than in this country. You meet them in diners, they are your neighbors. And when you stop feeling my leader is just like me and you are concerned about me, that bond that confidence is gone forever.

The politician has to get out there and lead by finding out how he and she is really doing in their eyes.

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3 Races in County Legislature too close to call. Roach, Smayda, Martin, Kirkpatrick Returned to Power.

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WPCNR CAMPAIGN 2013 ROUNDUP. By John F. Bailey. November 6, 2013 UPDATED 2:20 A.M. E.S.T.: 

Mayor Thomas Roach won a full four year term as Mayor in his own right Tuesday, defeating challenger Cass V. Cibelli, 6,627 to 1,907 votes, taking 78% of the vote. It appears that only 28% of White Plains registered voters came to the polls, White Plains having about 31,000 registered voters.

The new Common Council will have a slightly new look in January, with Benjamin Boykin departing for the County Legislature, having defeated Miriam Levitt-Flisser to win Bill Ryan’s former District 5 seat on the County Legislature.

Boykin won with 61% of the vote over Flisser, 5,846 votes to 3,796 as of last look at the numbers at 1:30 A.M.

I expect the Common Council  to appoint Nick Wolfe to the Council to replace Boykin. Wolfe has been serving an apprenticeship, attending council meetings for the last six months in preparation. Should Wolfe be appointed this will leave  the council with six caucasion members and one Hispanic, Milagros Lecouna.

Meanwhile Beth Smayda with 5,230 votes won her second four year term to the council. John Martin garnering 5,273 votes, won his second elected term to the council after winning a special election after having been appointed to replace Tom Roach who became Mayor when Adam Bradley resigned. John Kirkpatrick, winning 5,168 votes, secured his first elected term, after having been appointed to the Council to replace David Buchwald who resigned from the council after winning an Assembly seat last year.

Claudia Murphy  won 3,064 votes trailing Kirkpatrick by 2,104 votes; while Anne-Marie Encarnacao received 2,742 votes, and Carl Albanese, who did not campaign won 2, 445 votes. These returns are with 82% of White Plains districts in.

Democrats win 9 seats; Republicans 5, with 3 in doubt.

On the County scene, the makeup of the County Board of Legislators depends on the outcome of three races that are still close: The  7th, 10th and 14th districts are too close to call with about 20% of the votes remaining to be counted. Presently the Democrats have won 9 seats and the Republicans, 5. A veto proof majority is 12 votes.

Presently, Democrat Catherine Parker leads Republican John Venti by 180 votes with 67% counted in District 7.

Mary Jo Jacobs the Democrat is in a tie with Sheila Marcotte the Republican with 11 votes separating them and  81% of the vote in in the District 10 Race.

Over in District 14, Republican Bernice Spreckman leads Rocky Richards the Democrat by 400 votes with 77% of the votes in.

It looks as if the Democrats will pick up Districts 7 and 14 for 11 votes and a veto-proof majority with the District 10 race a bonus if they win it. However, Mike Kaplowitz and Virginia Perez the Democrats who defected and helped Rob Astorino pass his budget in 2012, could act as  Republican swing votes in a scuffle. So picking up all three districts would not necessarily mean the Democrats would have a veto proof roster.

In the Proposition Results, the first five Propositions passed statewide, including casino gambling. The proposition extending judges’ retirement age ten years was defeated.

 

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