Agreement on Playland Closer, Not Signed.Dotted I’s, Crossed T’s Contract Reache

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From the Westchester County Department of Communications. April 4, 2013:


 


Contrary to previous reports, a contract between Westchester County and Sustainable Playland has not been signed.


 


The two entities have, though, reached a 10-year agreement with an option for an additional 10 years to run Playland beginning in October this year.


 


            Once signed and fully executed, the “Asset Management Agreement” will shift responsibility to SPI to operate, manage and maintain the county-owned park as of Oct. 1, 2013, assuming the new operator has obtained all of the approvals and permits that are required, including any needed from the county Board of Legislators. 


         


 




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Petitioners Against PlaylandTakeover Decry Loss of 14 Rides,Midway

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WPCNR PLAYLAND ROUNDUP News & Comment by John F. Bailey. APRIL 3, 2013 UPDATED 7:00 A.M. E.D.T. April 5, 2013:


Thursday, the County Executive’s major announcement about Sustainable Playland answered a lot of questions. But, not much has changed.


Late Wednesday afternoon a group opposed to the Sustainable Playland plan, change.org listed 14 well-known attractions plus the midway that Sustainable plans to eliminate from the park.


The Sustainable wrecking ball will eliminate the Log Flume, Flying Witch, Playland Plunge, Double Shot, Catch a Wave, Starship 2000, Thunderbolt, Wipeout, Go Carts, Family Flyer Roller Coaster, Auto Scooter Bumper Cars, and Sky Skater as well as Midway buildings dating from the 30s, which hold game concessions, the House of Mirrors and the Zombie Castle ride.


By WPCNR count this would leave the Dragon Coaster, Kiddieland, the Merry-go-Round, the Steeplechase, the Ferris wheel. Playland loses much (about half of the present amusements) of its charm and old-time feel for just another park.


One of the statements in the video is Sustainable Playland vision gives you more park, less paving. Exactly.


It also loses a great deal of parking capacity (about 50%). So, how are you going to sustain the clamor for beach and amusement on those 90 degree days when you cannot handle the parking? Remember parking was all the way outside of Playland and down Playland Parkway on those sweltering days two summers ago. The parking plan is actually seeing less people using the park, perhaps better “heeled” with fatter wallets. 


Another annoyance is the county high admission price which is anything but family friendly. Having just seen the latest Sustainable Playland video on their website, I wonder about statements that say this will bring the family back to the park. Well if it did not cost over $30 bucks plus parking per rider in the family, you might not have that problem. Secondly, the new mission is to make the park more usable all year round, replacing half the park with a field house and play fields. Plus, upscale concessions.


 “Message” statements appear in the video about making the park more attractive to Westchester residents for which it is intended.


To wit:


“I saw an opportunity that even back in the laste ’70s, Playland wasn’t what it originally was, certainly, and it wasn’t serving the recreational needs of Westchester County.”


“We looked at an expanded ice rink. We looked at bringing new food facilities with higher quality food facilities. We looked at bringing the idea of indoor and outdoor fields to Westchester County, which is in great need of those fields.We looked at the idea of amusements and where the amusement business is going and could an amusement park that was focused on family rides, as opposed to the big thrill rides thrive, and in all cases that the elements that were very thoughtfully put together really have demand in the market, we feel are both market-supportable and more importantly financially sustainable.”


“The (new) sources of revenue includes sponsorships, public event revenues involving private sector companies, concession revenues enhanced way beyond what the numbers were before.”


“We plan on investing several million dollars to bring this park back. The truth is, it actually includes eliminating a small portion (14 rides,Midway, funhouses)of some of the ride attractions.”


“It’s a fantastic business (Field House) if you find the right location. You really need the demand and it’s possibly one of the best areas in the country to build something (indoor fields)because there’s so much demand around here (for fields). (waving at parking lot),if we put it up right over there which is the plan, it won’t be much different for any of the (Rye) residents over there.So that’s kind of exciting too. It is an empty parking lot expecially at this time of year so it’s exciting to sort of have year-round use for this facility.”


“There are some folks talking about investing $13-14 Million in one element of this plan. The overall investment will be about 33-1/2 Million dollars. When people are willing to put up significant dollars that’s a real validation of the plan.”


“The input of the community is what is making this such a great place.”


“This is the kind of park that for decades,is going to be relevant to Westchester residents. But it’s also sustainable in a sense that it is going to be the right thing for the environment at this location.”


“What I think is important (about the plan)to recapture and preserve is the original elegance and original continuity the park originally had.”


“Sustainable Playland is poised to bring the families back to Rye Playland.”


“It’s time really for Playland to be rethought. It’s time for it to become a better neighbor. It’s time for it to be a better integration into the way the county needs to use this property for recreation.”


“We’ve established a broad base of support both at the bottom level with the rank and file people, the users, to the senior level with some of the people of heads of businesses, heads of government, and localities that we have here to be able to come together and set their differences aside and actually think about what is in the best interests of the people in the county of Westchester.”


This oblique attitude subtlely projected by these quotes has an uncomfortable feel to it to me.


You see this video first on the Sustainable Playland website, and it gives to me the feeling that somehow Playland is now attracting the wrong kind of crowds: perhaps too poor, not from Westchester, and perhaps not white enough, not rich enough. That the park is rundown.Its elegance has been lost.


Wait..and tearing down half the rides and midway is going to preserve that elegance?


It is not.


This is a myth that the park is rundown.


Despite the $30 and up per person to use the rides, the park still attracts families of all walks of life, creeds, and ethnic persuation. The crowds are very diverse. Playland despite the county absurdity of worrying about it losing $3 million a year, (which the county burns regularly at the blink of an eye)is a place so many people love.


They love it because it is safe. It is people-friendly (or used to be before the county started viewing it as suddenly not an asset). Everybody smiles all day at Playland unless it is raining. People black, white, tan, all get along.


Does snooty Westchester not like that?


When these rides go for good, and this whole Sustainable concept is created, (and it is not going to happen all at once–who wants to go to a perpetual construction site? Will they allow soccer games on the great lawn? Will they have an affordable ice casino?


Will admission to the park be reasonable? Will the restaurants be Tikki Bar and Seaside Johnny expensive, or Nathan’s Famous? That is the question.


This may be a sophisticated park when it finishes up, but Playland instead of the living, breathing human park of memories will become a curiosity with no soul.


Why kill the Midway? The clang of bells, the colorful stuffed animals to win, the politically incorrect shooting and hoop-tossing, win-a-bear-for-your-date galleries, that is history, excitement–that makes childrens’ eyes widen…the sights the sounds you never forget it or fail to enjoy it.


Kill the midway and you take the soundtrack out of Playland. Playland involves you. This outfit wants to turn it into a passive park that appeals to the sophisticated, the wealthy and the white, and make a lot of money doing it.


Robert Moses, to his everlasting credit, opened up beaches to the poor and introduced the concept that the masses needed recreation that was reasonable. Now, that idea is passe’.


Now parks have to be places where chablis and brie can be consumed in quiet out of a hamper without the cacophony of real life, real people.


I like what was done by the persons connected to the Highland who are in this group, but let’s face it — the High Line in Manhattan is passive. It is for strolling. Same with Central Park.


And the Zombie Castle, the Hall of Mirrors — they never fail to amuse your kids or your date. But, no they are unsophisticated the swells say. 


Financing behind Sustainable Playland has not been made public.  (In the news conference completed yesterday, investments by other Sustainable Playland partners were announced.) 


A call from WPCNR to Sustainable Playland spokesfirm, Thompson & Bender to ascertain how Sustainable Playland is doing raising the millions of dollars they promise to pay the county for their first year of their lease, was not responded to.


Sustainable Playland also has not commented at all or made any public effort to deal with the cleanup of Playland, due to open May 11. That is a blunder on their part from a public relations standpoint. Why do doublework? If the County is going to fix up the ice casino, why do it, if Sustainable Playland is going to redesign the interior. Sustainable Playland should ante up in this time of crisis, don’t you think? They should show us their “fund balance.”


Playland Boardwalk and fishing pier and ice casino appear to have been untouched by county worker hands since the big storm and look much the same as they did in November. Five and a half months of good work time have been wasted by county inability to get moving on the repairs due to bureaucratic bickering between the legislators and the County Executive. It seems to this reporter that the county is trying to kill this park for good.


A press release Wednesday afternoon from a group opposed to Sustainable Playland takeover of the park, which will essentially based on the amazing number of rides they are going to remove that have long been part of park lore, notes:


An internet petition against Westchester County’s chosen future operator of Playland Park, Sustainable Playland Incorporated (“SPI”) removing rides and reducing the size of the amusement park continues to grow and gain support. To date, the electronic petition, located at Change.org (http://www.change.org/petitions/save-playland-amusement-park) has received over 2000 signatures, at least 740 of which are from Westchester County residents.



Most of the remaining signatories are tri-state area inhabitants or people with local ties to Westchester that currently use the amusement park. Many comments by the signatories are left publically accessible on the petition website. Comments state that as users of the current amusement park, the signatories are not apt to travel to Playland to spend money at a reduced amusement park combined with more locally appealing amenities such as the ball fields and the great lawn proposed within SPI’s plan.



SPI, who announced further details of a contract with the Westchester County Executive to take over management of the park, seeks to remove 30% of the amusement rides and approximately 50% of the amusement park area to create passive parkland and green space. Based on the presentation of SPI’s plan (http://westchesterlegislators.com/pdf/PlaylandPresentationSustainable_Playland.pdf)




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FBI Charges State Senator, NY Councilman, Spring Valley Officials

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WPCNR FBI WIRE. From the Federal Bureau of Investigation. April 3, 2013:


Preet Bharara, United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, and George Venizelos, the Assistant Director in Charge of the New York Field Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), announced Tuesday the unsealing of a complaint charging New York State Senator Malcolm Smith, New York City Council Member Daniel Halloran, and four others with bribery, extortion, and fraud charges.


The charges against the defendants arise from an undercover investigation of three distinct but related bribery schemes involving public corruption. In the first scheme, Smith allegedly arranged for cash bribes totaling $40,000 to be paid to Vincent Tabone and Joseph Savino, two New York City Republican county leaders, as part of an effort by Smith, who is a Democrat, to appear on the Republican primary ballot as a mayoral candidate in the 2013 election.


Halloran is alleged to have received approximately $20,500 in cash bribes to act as an intermediary with Tabone and Savino on Smith’s behalf. In the second scheme, Halloran allegedly received approximately $18,300 in cash bribes and $6,500 in straw donor campaign contribution checks in exchange for agreeing to steer up to $80,000 of New York City Council discretionary funding to a company he believed was controlled by those who paid him the bribes.


The final scheme involved Spring Valley Mayor  Noramie Jasmin and Joseph Desmaret, deputy mayor of the Village of Spring Valley in Rockland County, and their alleged receipt of financial benefits, including Jasmin’s receipt of a hidden interest in a real estate project and Desmaret’s receipt of approximately $10,500 in cash bribes, in exchange for official acts. All six defendants were arrested Tuesday morning and appeared Tuesday in White Plains federal court before U.S. Magistrate Judge Lisa Margaret Smith.



According to the allegations in the complaint unsealed  in White Plains federal court:


Scheme to Bribe New York City Republican Party Committee Leaders


Under New York State law, a person seeking to run for a citywide position in New York City may not have his or her name listed as a candidate on the ballot if he or she is not a registered member of the party having the primary contest unless he or she receives the approval of at least three of the five chairmen of the county committees for that party. The approval is given in the form of what are known as Wilson Pakula certificates, which are signed by the approving chairmen.


Smith, a Democrat, was first elected to the New York State Senate in March 2000 and represents the 14th Senatorial District in Queens, New York. He is chairman of the Independent Democratic Conference of the State Senate and, among other positions, has served as the State Senate’s minority and majority leader. Smith has spoken publicly about his desire to run for mayor of New York City in 2013.


Halloran, a Republican, was elected to the New York City Council in 2009 and represents the City Council’s 19th District in Queens, New York. Halloran ran unsuccessfully for the United States Congress in 2012. Tabone and Savino are New York City Republican Party officials. Savino is the chairman of the Bronx County Republican Party, and Tabone is the vice chairman of the Queens County Republican Party. Their duties include endorsing candidates for public office and voting on Wilson Pakula certificates.


In November 2012, Smith agreed with Halloran, an undercover FBI agent posing as a wealthy real estate developer (the UC), and a cooperating witness (CW) to bribe New York City Republican Party county leaders in exchange for their issuance of Wilson Pakula certificates that would enable Smith to run as a Republican candidate for New York City mayor in 2013. When asked by the UC what he wanted in exchange for his help securing the certificates, Halloran said that he wanted to get his “mortgage situation resolved,” and that if Smith was elected mayor, he would expect to be named deputy police vommissioner if he asked for the job. He also solicited and received from the UC and the CW approximately $20,500 in cash for himself.


In furtherance of the scheme, Halloran arranged for the UC and the CW to meet Tabone and Savino and negotiated the amounts of the cash bribes to be paid by the UC and the CW to Tabone and Savino on Smith’s behalf. Halloran told the UC and the CW that, “You gotta get [Savino] business but put 25 in an envelope….Tabone is 25 up front, 25 when the Wilson Pakula is delivered.” After his meeting with the UC and the CW, Savino accepted $15,000 in cash and agreed to accept another $15,000 after he formally approved Smith’s appearance on the 2013 Republican ballot for New York City mayor. After meeting with the UC and the CW, Tabone accepted $25,000 in cash and agreed to accept another $25,000 after his committee approved Smith’s appearance on the 2013 Republican ballot for New York City mayor.


In exchange for the payment of bribes to Tabone and Savino by the UC and CW, in his capacity as a New York State Senator, Smith agreed to help obtain $500,000 in New York State funds for road work that would benefit a real estate project in Spring Valley that Smith understood was being developed by a company controlled by the UC and CW (the company).


Bribery of Halloran to Steer City Council Discretionary Funding


Since August 2012 to the present, Halloran accepted approximately $18,300 in cash bribes and approximately $6,500 in straw donor campaign contribution checks from the UC and the CW in exchange for agreeing to steer up to $80,000 in New York City Council discretionary funding to the company.


For example, at a meeting on September 7, 2012, at which Halloran and the UC discussed Halloran’s need to raise money for his congressional campaign, Halloran agreed to hire someone of the CW’s choosing for a congressional staff or some equivalent position and to help him raise money for his campaign. During the discussion, Halloran said, “That’s politics, that’s politics, it’s all about how much. Not whether or will, it’s about how much, and that’s our politicians in New York, they’re all like that….And they get like that because of the drive that the money does for everything else. You can’t do anything without the f—ing money.” During the meeting, the CW paid Halloran $7,500. Near the end of the meeting, Halloran remarked, “Money is what greases the wheels—good, bad, or indifferent.”


In furtherance of this scheme, Halloran wrote two letters on New York City council letterhead about this funding, one to civic organizations and the other to the company. Despite suggesting in these letters that work would be done by the company to support the allotment of up to $80,000, Halloran agreed with the UC and the CW that the company would provide no services.


Bribery of the Spring Valley Mayor and Deputy Mayor


Noramie Jasmin and Joseph Desmaret were sworn in as mayor and deputy mayor of the Village of Spring Valley, New York, in December 2009. From September 2011 through the date of the complaint, Jasmin and Desmaret accepted financial benefits from the UC and the CW in exchange for official acts. Desmaret accepted approximately $10,500 worth of cash bribes from the UC and the CW in exchange for, among other things, his vote in favor of a sale of land owned by Spring Valley to the company a company he believed was controlled by the UC and that would be used to build a community center (the “real estate project”).


In exchange for her vote awarding the real estate project to the company, Jasmin demanded a partnership interest in the company, stating, “So for me, it’s better for us to partner, that’s what I said to you before; a partnership will be best.” When the CW later suggested that Jasmin have a 20 percent stake in the project, she replied, “Partnership is 50-50, right?”


In support of the scheme, Jasmin coached the UC on how to make his presentation to the Spring Valley Village Board of Trustees about why the board should award the real estate project to his company. She also coached two other individuals, whom she understood were associates of the UC and who would pose as competing developers, but who were actually undercover FBI agents, on how to make their presentation to the Village Board. In addition, both Jasmin and Desmaret agreed to steer to the UC’s company the New York State funding for road work that Smith agreed to help the CW and the UC obtain.


Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said,


“Today’s charges demonstrate, once again, that a show-me-the-money culture seems to pervade every level of New York government. The complaint describes an unappetizing smorgasbord of graft and greed involving six officials who together built a corridor of corruption stretching from Queens and the Bronx to Rockland County and all the way up to Albany itself. As alleged, Senator Malcolm Smith tried to bribe his way to a shot at Gracie Mansion-Smith drew up the game plan and Councilman Halloran essentially quarterbacked that drive by finding party chairmen who were wide open to receiving bribes. After the string of public corruption scandals that we have brought to light, many may rightly resign themselves to the sad truth that perhaps the most powerful special interest in politics is self-interest. We will continue pursuing and punishing every corrupt official we find, but the public corruption crisis in New York is more than a prosecutor’s problem.”


FBI Assistant Director in Charge George Venizelos said,


“Elected officials are called public servants because they are supposed to serve the people. Public service is not supposed to be a shortcut to self-enrichment. People in New York, in Spring Valley—in any city or town in this country—rightly expect their elected or appointed representatives to hold themselves to a higher standard. At the very least, public officials should obey the law. As alleged, these defendants did not obey the law; they broke the law and the public trust. There is a price to pay for that kind of betrayal.”


* * *


Charts containing the names, ages, residences, charges, and maximum penalties for the defendants are below.


Mr. Bharara praised the investigative work of the FBI. He also thanked the Rockland County District Attorney’s Office and the Spring Valley Police Department for their invaluable assistance to the investigation.


This case is being handled by the Office’s White Plains Division and Public Corruption Unit. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Douglas B. Bloom and Alvin Bragg are in charge of the prosecution.


The charges contained in the complaint are merely accusations, and the defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.


* * *
United States v. Malcolm A. Smith et al.































Defendant Residence Age
Malcolm Smith Queens, New York 56
Daniel Halloran Queens, New York 42
Vincent Tabone Queens, New York 46
Joseph Savino Rockland County, New York 45
Noramie Jasmin Spring Valley, New York 49
Joseph Desmaret Spring Valley, New York 55






































Count Charge Defendants Maximum Penalty
One Wire fraud and Travel Act bribery
conspiracy
Malcolm Smith, Daniel Halloran, Vincent Tabone, Joseph Savino Five years in prison
Two Wire fraud Malcolm Smith, Daniel Halloran, Vincent Tabone, Joseph Savino 20 years in prison
Three Hobbs Act Malcolm Smith 20 years in prison
Four Wire fraud Daniel Halloran 20 years in prison
Five Mail fraud Noramie Jasmin 20 years in prison
Six Mail fraud Joseph Desmaret 20 years in prison

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WP Budget Under Cuomo Cap. Raises Taxes 4.2% to Cover Soft Sales $$, Pension

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WPCNR COMMON COUNCIL CHRONICLE-EXAMINER. By John F. Bailey.  April 1, 2013:


The city Budget Director, Michael Genito, delivered the proposed 2013-14 city budget to the Common Council this evening, calling for a 2% increase in the city property tax levy on an overall 3.1% increase in spending to $171.8 Million(up from  $166.7M last year).


To support the increase, the budget department recommends raising the city property tax rate to $192.22 per $1,000 of assessed valuation. This according to Budget Director, Michael Genito raises the city tax on the median assessed value home ($13,000) an additional $104.


Pension payments make up $1.9 Million of the $5.1 Million increase in the overall city budget, and sales tax, which the city estimates is down $350,000 (8%) at this time, make up most of the increase in the budget.  The city is budgeting less sales tax for 2013-14, $45.4M compared to $46.5 Million this   year, that was revised downward at the end of last quarter.


WPCNR estimates that the city, if they meet last year’s sales tax revenues in March, April, May and June, will collect $49 Million in sales tax revenues, down from approximately $51 Million from total sales taxes last year. Approximately $5 Million of that $51 Million was by law placed in the tax stabilization fund created to replace city fund balance.


The Common Council will review the proposed budget at a series of 4 meetings on April 8, April 15,April 22, and April 29. A Public Hearing on the budget is proposed for May 7, and adoption of the budget May 20.

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The Best Day of the Year

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Sports

WPCNR Press Box. April 1, 2013: Today the Bronx Bombers return to Yankee Stadium. The Metropolitans return to Citi Field. In the honor of Opening Day, WPCNR brings back this original celebration of the best day of the year.



WRIGLEY FIELD CHICAGO 1975


That’s the Great Pete Rose at the Plate PHOTO WPCNR SPORTS




OPENING DAY is better than Christmas Day,
When you look out the window and you know they’ll play,
Whether dreary gray or billiant spring sun’s ray
Opening Day means the Big Show is back today.



In decades past, Opening Day was for fanatics starved,
Eager for the sharp crack of ash on horsehide carved;
The flutter of pennants snapping in northwest winds
Atop ramparts of inviting arches of walls, and sculpted friezes wistfully escarped.


Fans lucky to get away with ducats
Marvel at grown men in boys’ flannels and sharp whites pristeen,
Back to play in April’s warm zephers in NY blazened caps,
Dashing specks of white warming up on the sprawl of the greenest green.

Motor cars panting in good-natured traffic jams on Major Deegan,
Or down
Yawkey Way, on 35th and Shields or Waveland’s jam.
Through your windows you see the first glimpse of the storied Park,
The place where ball is played, where ghosts of Ted, Babe, Duke
Mel, Spahnie, Whitey, Mickey, Willie, Yaz, Minnie and Sandy lark.

Paying a White Plains fine to park, passing stogie smoking old men
at the same gates for a hundred years,


Now out into the street
You go, aroma of roasting chestnuts, pungent cigars sweet,
Cries of “scorecard heah” “programs,heah” shout out, neath light towers to heaven.

Fans in cap and uniform, little boys and girls gawk in awe hoping to make the Anthem
Never seeing such sheer walls, topped with the legend “GameToday 1:30 PM.”
Clutching slim cardboard tix to Section 14 Upper Deck up to the turnstiles
Festooned with souvenirs more dear as diamonds, beyond, the lure of endless aisles.

Into the press of crowd, the grizzled usher, RIPS YOUR TICKET.
Turnstile turns, clicks, and into the castle of ball you go
Into the rotunda greeted with magic signs dazzling the senses —
UPPER LEVELS SECTIONS 1 to 39, 2 to 40

Hawkers shout –Voices of Flatbush — colorful books in hand


“Yearbook heah,” “Dodger Yearbook here,” “Hot dog, heah,”
Assail your ears up ramps you walk to the sign “NEXT HOMESTAND”



Walking the catwalk,sliver of blue is first look of the magic sphere
Into the sunlight splaying the vast rake of the mighty grand stand.

Spread out below are knights of the diamond in white hues
Cavorting, snapping throws across immaculate red clay
As majestic fungo bats CRACK! sending spheres soaring towards filling bleachers a mile away,
Bunting flutters from the deck’s rails red, white and true blues.

Old glory unfurls on the highest pole in center field
Colorful signs deliver the manly flavor of the only real game,
GILLETTE To Look Sharp, The Red Sox use Lifeboy, Schaefer It’s A Hit
Hey, Neighbor Have a Gansett, White Owl Cigars, Hit Sign Win Suit

From old familiar walls, to Gladys Gooding on the organ
Friendly old green scoreboard displaying
Today’s games around the big leagues BETTER THAN CNN
CHI CLE BOS DET, CHI STL, NY WAS make you king for a day.
Two Bits for a scorecard, usher wipes your seat, ballpark fills your heart.

Penciling lineup 422B, 1 SS, 14 1B, 4 CF, 39 C, 6 RF, 23 LF 19 3B 36 P
Smell of beer, peanuts and pretzels.


Nippy air, warm rays sink into your face feels nice,
Starters wheel,deal, kicking high on sidelines fueling expectancy

Men in blue, arms folded solemnly conduct the home plate regimen
Casey, Ralph , Walter, Joe and Sparky exchange lineup cards and knowing
Ground rules by heart, go over them for ritual’s sake.
Announcer entones “Good afternoon, Ladies and Gentlemen,


Welcome to Yankee Stadium.”

“Please rise for the playing of our national anthem,”
Nancy Faust at organ note by note peels baseball’s theme song
Rising on the breeze, uniting do-rag and ball cap,
Fedora, ponytail and bouffant in the spirit of the great game.

Grass is never greener on opening days
Strikes are louder, the long drives electrify in alleys
Beers with THICK hig creamy heads, taste crisp cold mellow best brew all year
Smashes laser through short and in the gap in raucous rallies



Magicians without wands start 6-4-3s,


Backhand sure hits losing their caps


“Oh what a play’s” crackle on WGN with “CUBS WIN’S”


Jack and Mel, Vince, Red, Curt and Murph are back at the mikes to turn mundane days Into joy with a ninth inning elixir and “happy recaps”


Thunderous ROARS accolades the 2-out winner again creating big kids’ grins.



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An Easter Sunday Memory

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As I puttered around the house, getting ready for an Easter Sunday dinner, I thought back over the years to a time when this holiday was more meaningful to me than it is today, and created this verse:




Sunrise Service


In the crisp bite of early dawn


Roused by the ever loyal mom


To a warm breakfast then driven to a school rendezvous on the way


To play Jesus Christ is Risen Today .


Up and through the dark back road to old Flag Hill above the Saw Mill


We were driven, six chosen musicians to play fanfare


Celebrating the resurrection of long ago as first rays of dawn broke the chill.


After we played our brassy peal of annunciation


The pastor announced simply, “He has risen” and said an invocation,


On the downbeat from our instructor,


We played the joyous hymn and song burst forth


From the tiny band, voices vibrant beyond talent


Took up the simple refrain, “Je US CHRIST has riSEN toDAAY”


With each verse our brass tones played fuller, bolder triumphant


Expanding our chests with pride, courage and steadfast melody.


From crisp wind no longer did we cower.


Sun blaze rose in the east across our town,


Upon the last jubilant coda, the echoes did sound


Descending across the valley below and above to the high tension tower


In somber words the pastor’s message told the story


Of empty tomb, of the incredible happening


And for the rest of the day we who had played


Announcing the news in song and peal of brass


Had recreated that time of myth that has endured in faith


The thought of which renews us still that our time here will not from memory pass.


In the holiday dinner that would follow,


Cousins, aunts and uncles would gather


With the matriarch of the family.


Today we are scattered,


Do not gather together as we did then in harmony


Still I feel the warmth of those Easters past


When those who have departed we think of once more


And how they created a family that would last.




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Two Down Two to Go. Ryan 2, Jenkins-0, Bramson-0. 4 Cities to go.

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WPCNR CAMPAIGN 2013. Special to WPCNR from County Legislator Bill Ryan. March 30, 2013:


 


Democratic district leaders in Peekskill have given overwhelming support to County Legislator Bill Ryan in the race for the Democratic nomination for Westchester County Executive.


 


Of Westchester’s six Democratic city committees, two, Peekskill and White Plains (Ryan’s home city), have now held endorsement votes. Both cities endorsed Legislator Ryan’s candidacy.



 


“I am thrilled with the results of the Peekskill vote and I’m grateful to the district leaders who have put their confidence in me to work hard as we move forward with this race,” Ryan said in a statement.


Candidates were given an opportunity to address the committee and answer questions before the vote.  Ryan emphasized his experience as an eight-term member and Chairman of the Westchester County Board of Legislators, a NYS Assemblyman, President of the NYS Association of Counties and a Director of the National Association of Counties in Washington, DC.


“Our county is a great place to live, work and raise a family,” Ryan aidded. “To make sure that continues, Westchester needs the strong, capable leadership I can provide as county executive.”


Winning the only city in northern Westchester is significant since none of the candidates for county executive live in the area.  Two are long-time residents of southern Westchester and Ryan has resided in White Plains for twenty-five years.  Many in the press have speculated how candidates would fair beyond their current home communities.


 

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School District Knew of School Aid Increase in January. Not a Surprise.

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. By John F. Bailey. March 29, 2013:


 As the Board of Education prepares to finalize the school budget, they have a unique opportunity to lower White Plains School Taxes for 2013-14, if they want to and if they did not already spend it on speculation they would be getting it.


White Plains either has a “surprise”  $1.3 Million windfall in state education aid  which they could  use to lower the 3.1% tax levy proposed on White Plains taxpayers, or it’s money the school  has expected to be in the 2013-14 budget all along even though it was only proposed in Governor Andrew Cuomo’s proposed budget in January.


According to Fred Seiler, the Assistant Superintendent for Business for the district, the district counted on this aid all along in formulating their budget. The $1 Billion in new school aid, was announced last week as “new” by Governor Cuomo and the leaders of the legislature, including $1.3 Million for the city school district.


Fred Seiler told WPCNR the aid increase of $1.3 Million announced by New York State Assemblyman David Buchwald last Tuesday for White Plains was counted on as part of the 2013-14 budget . Seiler said when you take into account the decrease in building aid which he described as inaccurate, the 9.54% increase touted by Mr. Buchwald’s only amounts to a $35,000 overall increase.


WPCNR asked Mr. Seiler if the school knew the $1.3 Million was a “windfall” or if it was a sure thing that was coming to the district.


Seiler said that in January the district assumed the Governor’s proposed budget of a statewide increase in state aid in January was “a worst case scenario,” and anticipated White Plains receiving aid along the lines of what the legislature just approved though he did not say how much .


In the most recently distributed Superintendent’s Budget of $192,950,000 on the district website, the district does not reflect the $1.3 Million, listing 2013-14 state school aid as $14.1 Million (see it at


http://www.whiteplainspublicschools.org/cms/lib5/NY01000029/Centricity/Domain/56/budget/2013-14PrelProposedBudget031113.pdf


This figure may be a consolidation, other cuts of other state aid sources may be cutting the overall increase reported by Assemblyman Buchwald as $15,287,127, an increase of 9.54%


During the last three months we have heard much from school districts agonizing across the state, as well as the White Plains district wringing hands over loss of state education aid and the need for more of it—lots of it from Yonkers to Yaphank.


The City Schoo l District in February and March public meetings showed slides obliquely blaming the state for not giving White Plains more school aid on the amount of school aid expected, putting up slides noting state school aid to White Plains was only going up $387,476, and in another slide, state aid to White Plains was going up only 2%, $275,000. WPCNR points out, at no time, was it made clear this included expected additional $1.2 Million in state aid. Now Mr. Seiler says it did.


Assemblyman Explains: School District knew the money could be coming.


The $1.3 Million was announced with much ballyhoo by Assemblyman David Buchwald in a Tuesday news release after the accompanying euphoric praise heaped upon the legislature last week for announcing $1 billion in new state aid for education, though 90% of that aid had been originally proposed in January and made clear to the school district in January.


The school district if they did count on it as their budget expert, Fred Seiler says, chose not to make the budget reflect, or deducted other losses of revenue from it, it is not clear yet how they figured it in.


School District Made Aware, Assemblyman confirms.


WPCNR asked Mr. Buchwald if the school districts (White Plains and others) had been made aware that that Governor Cuomo’s proposed increase in aid of $500 Million could not be counted on. In legislation passed this week, that $500 million was increased by the Democrat-held assembly by $400 Million to a total of $936 Million.


Buchwald, writing from the Assembly floor Thursday afternoon gave WPCNR this exclusive statement:


“The Governor had proposed a budget back in January. It contained a non-building aid proposed increase in funding of $1,204,278 for the White Plains City School District. There were of course no guarantees that the elements of that budget proposal would have passed, however the school district may have taken it into account when crafting their original budget. The final formula number of $1,331,926 is I am pleased to say even higher.”


Buchwald continued, observing ,


“It is also important to note that some of the categories of school aid in the governor’s original proposal were based on preliminary data, and so a direct comparison between the two numbers could be misleading. For example, the proposed (state) budget listed $2.284 million in BOCES and special services aid to the White Plains district. The final budget shows $2.185 million in that category. However, the school district may well have known that their actual figures were below the Governor’s preliminary estimate, and so the school district might not have budgeted for a full $1,204,278 increase.:


WPCNR also asked Buchwald if there was really any doubt the legislature would go along with the Governor’s initial proposal in January for $500 Million in new school aid, and announced it just to make political points:


Buchwald wrote in a statement:


“The legislature did not take a position on the budget in January. Under our system in New York State government, the Governor proposes a budget in January. There are items in the Governor’s budget that are now being included in the final budget (last week) without changes, items that were cut or eliminated, and items added to. That is all done in March (assuming we’re on time, which we are), culminating in the Assembly adopting budget bills today (Thursday, the 27th).


Education funding was an item that was added to.


I am not the one to ask about how the Governor’s proposed budget is used in the preliminary budgets created by school districts. I would note that by passing a budget on time, we are giving school districts the full opportunity to submit budgets to the voters that can take into account this increased funding.”


WPCNR sent e-mails to six of the seven School Board members asking if the board, now knowing of this increased school aid would choose to lower the proposed tax increase of 3.1%–probably about a $100 to $200 saving on middle market homes by WPCNR figuring, and if they would not, why not?


No Board member has responded so far to WPCNR’s question.


They could use the new aid to give back to the taxpayers or use it towards settling the teacher contract, they have options if they did not figure on spending it already.

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The Hot Cross Bun Tradition.

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WPCNR PHOTOGRAPHS OF THE DAY. A Good Friday reminder From The WPCNR ROVING PHOTOGRAPHER and joyofbaking.com April 8, 2012:



Hot cross buns
Hot cross buns
One a penny
Two a penny
Hot cross buns

If you have no daughters
Give them to your sons
One a penny
Two a penny
Hot Cross Buns


What would Easter be without that perennial baking favorite from childhood: Hot Cross Buns? Remember?


Not to mention its ecumenical partner, the traditional Challah.


English folklore includes many superstitions surrounding hot cross buns. One of them says that buns baked and served on Good Friday will not spoil or become mouldy during the subsequent year. Another encourages keeping such a bun for medicinal purposes. A piece of it given to someone who is ill is said to help them recover.[4]




The hot Cross Bun with its ever popular partner,Challah…





Remember the HOT CROSS BUNS song you played on that old Golden Record when you were a kid?



The Easter Bunny at The Westchester Takes a Break Until Next Year


Wikipedia tells us about Hot Cross Buns:


In many historically Christian countries, buns are traditionally eaten hot or toasted on Good Friday, with the cross standing as a symbol of the Crucifixion. They are believed by some to pre-date Christianity, although the first recorded use of the term “hot cross bun” was not until 1733.


It is believed that buns marked with a cross were eaten by Saxons in honour of the goddess Eostre (the cross is thought to have symbolised the four quarters of the moon);[2] “Eostre” is probably the origin of the name “Easter”. Others claim that the Greeks marked cakes with a cross, much earlier.[3]


According to cookery writer Elizabeth David, Protestant English monarchs saw the buns as a dangerous hold-over of Catholic belief in England, being baked from the dough used in making the communion wafer. Protestant England attempted to ban the sale of the buns by bakers but they were too popular, and instead Elizabeth I passed a law permitting bakeries to sell them, but only at Easter and Christmas.[citation needed]


Superstitions


 


Sharing a hot cross bun with another is supposed to ensure friendship throughout the coming year, particularly if “Half for you and half for me, Between us two shall goodwill be” is said at the time.


Because of the cross on the buns, some say they should be kissed before being eaten. If taken on a sea voyage, hot cross buns are said to protect against shipwreck. If hung in the kitchen, they are said to protect against fires and ensure that all breads turn out perfectly. The hanging bun is replaced each year.[4]

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Region Adds Jobs Slower in Feb. Ed Strong. Hospitality-leisure Weak

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WPCNR LABOR LETTER. From Johnnie Nelson, the New York State Department of Labor, White Plains:

 

For the 12-month period ending in February 2013, private sector employment in the Hudson Valley Region increased 7,800 or 1.1 percent.

 


     The final January 2013 private sector job count for New York State was validated and revised upward to 7,418,500, an all-time high.  Included in this number are approximately 300,000 jobs added to New York’s economy since the start of Governor Cuomo’s administration, making New York one of only seven states to have regained all jobs lost during the recession. 


 


The estimated job count for February will be validated in a few weeks and is subject to change with the release of March jobs data.  The preliminary estimates for February 2013 show job counts affected by -0.1 percent due to a monthlong strike by New York City school bus drivers.  The state’s private sector job count is based on a payroll survey of 18,000 New York employers conducted by the federal government.  


 


     Further, New York State’s unemployment rate remained at 8.4%.  The unemployment rate as determined by the federal government is calculated primarily on the results of a telephone survey of 3,100 households (out of more than 7 million) in New York State. 


 

 


The regional job market continues to expand, albeit at a slower pace than last year. In February 2013, private sector employment grew at 1.1 percent, or 7,800 jobs year-to-year. In contrast last year, the sector grew by a robust 1.7 percent or 12,400 jobs.

 

Nonetheless, there are still more industries in the private sector that are reporting job gains than losses. Educational and health services continued with its rapid pace, posting five consecutive months of at least a 2 percent growth or better.

 

Year over year, the education sector added 4,100 jobs for a growth rate of 2.2 percent. The region’s leisure and hospitality industry grew by 2.1 percent over the period.

 

 Growth was mostly centered in the northern part of the region, while in the lower Hudson Valley – Putnam-Rockland-Westchester area, the leisure and hospitality industry has shown considerable weakness, declining by about 3.6 percent – largest February decline since 1997.

 

 Employment gains were strongest in educational and health services (+4,100), followed by trade, transportation and utilities (+2,900), professional and business services (+2,300), leisure and hospitality (+1,500), and other services (+900). Job losses were centered in manufacturing (-1,300), financial activities (-1,000), information (-900) and natural resources, mining and construction (-700). The government sector shed 2,400 jobs over the year.

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