County Counts on 3.5% Sales Tax $$ Growth in New Budget.

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WPCNR QUILL & EYESHADE. By John F. Bailey. December 14, 2012:


Westchester County will not make its budgeted sales tax projection for 2012, missing projection at this time by $4 Million.


The new 2013 budget just passed anticipates that overall county sales tax receipts will increase about 3.5% to $476 Million, generating a county share of $376 Million of those receipts the county shares with the towns.


The county will generate $460 Million in sales tax receipts in 2012, (if the County pace of 2% growth in sales taxes through the first eleven months continues through December).


The $460 Million falls $4 Million short of the county 2012 budget projection of $464,763,517 in sales tax revenues. The $460 Million figure is not too shabby. The figure approaches the county record sales tax handle of $462.9 Million in 2007.


Going into December, the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance reports Westchester County has received $411,066,686.92 in receipts.


If shoppers in December continue their present 2% pace, the County will generate $955,865 more sales tax dollars than it did in December 2011 ($47,793,228), for a total of $48,749,093. To hit the $464 Million budgeted sales tax receipts target, taxable sales in December would have to go 10%.


If that 2% trend does sustain itself this December, it will come within $975,000 of the all-time record December county sales tax collection of $49.7 Million in 2007. 


If that $49 Million figure comes in, the county will generate $459,815,779 in sales tax revenue, leaving a $4 Million gap in the county budget this year in its share of the County sales tax.


According to Ned McCormick, County Director of Communications, the official press release on the new county budget issued in November,budgeted $364 Million for its share of the sales tax receipts for this year (2012). The present 2% trend indicates the county will be about $4 Million short of that.


McCormick told WPCNR the new 2013 Westchester County budget calls for a 3% increase in county share of sales tax receipts from $364 Million (the county government share of the county sales receipts it shares with the towns)to $376 Million.


The new county 2013 budget anticipation of sales tax revenues of $376 Million would require the countywide sales tax receipts to rise to approximately $476 Million, a gain of 3.5% over 2012, where sales tax receipts have averaged 2% a month.

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City Sales Tax Continues Flat in Nov. Off $953G, (4-1/2%) First 5 Months

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WPCNR QUILL & EYESHADE. From the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance. December 13,2012: 


White Plains retail and restaurants continued their stale sales tax receipt performance in November, according to WPCNR analysis of November sales tax receipts received Thursday from the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance.


The city collections for November, perhaps held back by the 14-day distruption of shopping inflicted by Hurricane Sandy, were off .07 per cent, 29,756 less than November of last year.


In the first five months of the 2012-2013 fiscal year the city is down 4-1/2% in sales tax collections, and is running $953,083 behind the first half of last year at the five month mark, $19,915,761 from July through November this year compared to $20,868,843 July-November 2011.


Should the city hit the $5 Million sales tax receipts in December, (it collected $4,933,879 in December, 2011) the city will be back on track to meet its budget sales tax goal of  $45 Million by June 30, 2013.


The city averaged $4.2 Million a month in sales tax income January to June of 2012. If that trend holds the city should hit over 51 Million in sales tax receipts for fiscal year 2012-13, easily meeting budget, and getting just enough to replenish the takeaway from fund balance  to take care of anticipated labor settlements expected from arbitration with police and fire unions.


After eleven months of its 2012 fiscal year, Westchester County Sales Tax Receipts are running 2% ahead of last year.

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The Democrats Strike Back: Budget Passing Flawed.No Legal Moves Yet

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From the Westchester County Board of Legislators. December 13, 2012 (EDITED):


County Board of Legistors Leader, Ken Jenkins acknowledged Thursday in a news release that if the budget process were to be procedurally “cleaned up,” the outcome would still be the same, with the Republican-led, Astorino-fed budget being approved. Nonetheless, Jenkins called on BOL Minority Leader Jim Maisano (R-New Rochelle) to meet with him as soon as possible to work on legally approving the budget. He stopped short of suggesting any legal action to stop the budget.


Two Democratic leaders of the Westchester County Board of Legislators maintained that the 2013 County Budget presumably passed by legislators aligned with County Executive Rob Astorino is procedurally flawed, and additionally warn there are tremendous negative implications for county residents and business owners if it stands.



“We have looked at the budget document closely and reviewed the manner in which it was supposedly passed by our colleagues on the Board, and our conclusion is that the result is flawed because of potentially disqualifying procedures during its enactment,” said BOL Chairman Ken Jenkins (D-Yonkers). “Important questions will need to be answered before County leaders can unequivocally say that they have reached a satisfactory and final conclusion in the budget process.” 


“Still, this budget is not right for Westchester, and it sets forth a number of dangerous precedents for the county’s residents and business owners,” added Jenkins. The Democratic caucus intended to send the County Executive’s budget back to the BOL’s Budget & Appropriations Committee to make modifications based on discussions between the BOL leadership and the Astorino Administration, as the two sides were only $15 million apart on a $1.7 billion budget.



Chief among these “dangerous precedents” is the decision to finance operating costs with bonding and the funding cuts in the neighborhood health centers, child care subsidies, youth services and senior nutrition programs.



“Residents will be put at risk by these cuts—this is what the experienced professionals in the safety net sectors told the Board of Legislators time and again during the public hearings on the budget,” said BOL Majority Leader Pete Harckham (D-Katonah). “Trying to save a few dollars when lives are at stake is bad policy.”



Also, the elimination of funding in the Republican-led, Astorino-fed budget for safety net jobs and programs means drastically reduced services that “will end up costing County taxpayers much, much more in the long run—anyone knows that,” said Harckham. “This Tea Party-type approach to cutting safety net services will make it even harder for our low-income workers to remain on the job and our seniors to grey in place.”



The budget additions and deletions proposed by the BOL Democratic caucus would have resulted in the same zero percent increase in the County tax levy as the Republican-led budget—and an even more fiscally responsible plan for 2013 by not borrowing for tax certioraris and pension costs.



“Every financial analyst around knows that borrowing for annual operating costs is how municipalities race to fiscal ruin,” said Jenkins. “What really protects the County’s triple A bond rating is fiscal prudence, like smart spending and cost cutting to keep taxes down while maintaining a healthy tax base.”



The argument against the BOL’s suggested use of $11 million from the fund balance—that it imperils the County’s AAA bond rating—is a smokescreen for reckless budget cuts, said Jenkins, who noted that the Astorino Administration already used millions from the fund balance this year to pay a pension bill and has notified the BOL that it will need an additional $8.8 million from the fund balance by the end of December to “even out” the 2012 books. Further debate would have to the identification of additional revenue sources.



“All in all, the Republican legislators’ budget, which actually emanated from the County Executive’s office, is no real improvement on what the County Executive first proposed,” said Harckham. “It’s still cruel, still fiscally irresponsible and chock full of political pork. Any budget that approves retaining over fifty political patronage jobs and funding slots for forty more political pals at the expense of over a hundred hard-working experienced professionals should not be tolerated by the people of Westchester. The County Executive and his partners on the Board of Legislators need to explain why political pork is more necessary than the well-being of our residents. So far, that argument is missing.”


 


 

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Mayor to Con Ed: Bury WP Feeder Lines; Better Info; More Crews to High Out Areas

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WPCNR THE POWER NEWS. By John F. Bailey. December 12, 2012:


 


The Mayor of White Plains told the Council of Neighborhood Associations Tuesday night that Consolidated Edison is considering putting major feeder cables underground to prevent the widespread outages of the October 29 Superstorm Sandy.


 



 


Mayor Thomas Roach of White Plains, fresh from a meeting with Consolidated Edison representatives today, outlined for White Plains Council of Neighborhood Association membership of 20 persons Tuesday night, the reasons White Plains residents remained without power for up to two weeks in the October 29 Superstorm Sandy.


 


He said that two main feeder cables aloft, on Post Road and on North Street  were taken down which he said cut off power to Highlands and the Gedney Farms neighborhood, two of the hardest hit areas.


 


He explained that the outages in the metropolitan area were so widespread, covering Brooklyn, Staten Island and most of Manhattan, that crews they would usually draw on to supplement their Westchester could not be drawn on to supplement their Westchester repair force.


 


The Mayor told the gathering that Consolidated Edison met with the today to listen to his and his commissioners’ suggestions on how Con Ed could improve its response to future storm hits.


 


The Mayor said he suggested Con Ed should bury their major feeder cables to areas as a way to prevent widespread areas in an area from being affected. The Mayor reported Con
Ed reps said they were “looking at that.” The Mayor told CNA  “for a resident to bury their cables would cost 8 to $20,000, and they quickly forget about that option.”


 


Mayor Roach said he urged Con Ed  not  routinely assign one cut and clear crew to every town or area, but to speed the most crews to areas that have the most outages, which according to the Mayor they did not do.


 


Mayor Roach said he urged Con Ed to be more specific with their communications to customers who are out, identifying what the problem is. He said most of the frustrations he dealt with when he spoke with White Plains storm victims was they did not get specific answers from Con Ed. When they got information, they were relieved he said.


 


Roach described Consolidated Edison as currently conducting interviews with municipalities throughout the area to get officials’ suggestions on how the next power restoration performance could be improved.


 


“They’re conducting those municipality interviews now, and are going to analyze them and then come back (to officials) and make suggestions as to what they could do.” He said the burying of feeder cables is something that is being considered, it is a ways off, he cautioned.


 


On other topics in the meeting tonight, Roach answered a question about changing traffic patterns downtown, by saying the city would be looking at making some boulevards two-way streets, saying that the one-way streets contributed to much of the cut-through traffic in the close-in neighborhoods. He said he wanted to expand bike lanage around town. 


 


He said police would soon be giving tickets to motorists who stop at intersections across the marked out crosswalks.


 


He said he was committed to making the city a safer place to walk for residents of the down, saying “years ago, the idea was to move traffic fast through the downtown. Now those times have changed.”


 


The one question asked about city finance concerned pension costs. Roach said the city faced a 3% increase in pension costs in next year’s budget and intended to pay for them out of current revenues, rather than borrow to meet the city pension obligation.


 


The Mayor said the new Esplanade Garage the city is building for $17 Million is scheduled to be completed by the end of next year, but he did not want to be held to that date. He said the hotel on Main Street is expected to be open this summer because it uses modular construction which allows rapid construction once the steel is up.


 


He congratulated all city employees on their dedicated performance during the Superstorm Sandy Recovery, and shared comments from recovery crews from Utah and Mississippi who told him personally “these (White Plains residents) are the most hospitable people I’ve ever met,” and another told him, “your people are so gracious.”

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Teachers, School District to Meet on a Developing New Contract in January

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. By John F. Bailey. December 11, 2012:


Superintendent of  Schools Dr. Christopher Clouet told WPCNR Monday night that the School District and the White Plains Teachers Association, have agreed to meet again in hopes of striking a new contract after the first of the year. The Teachers Association has twice voted down two contract proposals in the last six months,52%to 48% on the first vote, and resoundingly by a 2 to 1 margin last month.


Presently the district and the Teachers Association are working without a contract. Clouet told WPCNR teachers are currently being paid under the terms of the Triborough Amendment, which calls for teachers to receive the “step increases” in place at the end of the 2011-12 contract, but teachers who have reached taught 20 years or more (the maximum number of years in which step increases are paid) do not receive any pay increase.


Teachers received a 2-1/4% salary increase over and above their step increase in February of this year. 

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London Bank Forfeits $227 Million for Money Laundering

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WPCNR FBI WIRE. From the Federal Bureau of Investigation. December 10,2012:


Standard Chartered Bank, a financial institution headquartered in London, has agreed to forfeit $227 million to the Justice Department for conspiring to violate the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA). The bank has agreed to the forfeiture as part of a deferred prosecution agreement with the Justice Department and a deferred prosecution agreement with the New York County District Attorney’s Office for violating New York state laws by illegally moving millions of dollars through the U.S. financial system on behalf of sanctioned Iranian, Sudanese, Libyan, and Burmese entities.


The bank has also entered into settlement agreements with the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) and the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.


The announcement was made by Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division; Ronald C. Machen, Jr., U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia; New York County District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance Jr.; George Venizelos, Assistant Director in Charge of the FBI New York Field Office; and IRS-Criminal Investigation (IRS-CI) Chief Richard Weber.


A criminal information was filed today in federal court in the District of Columbia charging Standard Chartered Bank with one count of knowingly and willfully conspiring to violate IEEPA. Standard Chartered Bank has waived the federal indictment, agreed to the filing of the information, and has accepted responsibility for its criminal conduct and that of its employees.


“For years, Standard Chartered Bank deliberately violated U.S. laws governing transactions involving Sudan, Iran, and other countries subject to U.S. sanctions,” said Assistant Attorney General Breuer. “The United States expects a minimum standard of behavior from all financial institutions that enjoy the benefits of the U.S. financial system. Standard Chartered’s conduct was flagrant and unacceptable. Together with the Treasury Department and our state and local partners, we will continue our unrelenting efforts to hold accountable financial institutions that intentionally mislead regulators to do business with sanctioned countries.”


“When banks dodge U.S. sanctions laws, they imperil our financial system and our national security,” said U.S. Attorney Machen. “Today’s agreement holds Standard Chartered Bank accountable for intentionally manipulating transactions to remove references to Iran, Sudan, and other sanctioned entities and then further concealing these transactions through misrepresentations to U.S. regulators. This $227 million forfeiture should make clear that trying to skirt U.S. sanctions is bad for business.”


“Investigations of financial institutions, businesses, and individuals who violate U.S. sanctions by misusing banks in New York are vitally important to national security and the integrity of our banking system. Banks occupy positions of trust. It is a bedrock principle that they must deal honestly with their regulators. I will accept nothing less; too much is at stake for the people of New York and this country,” said District Attorney Vance. “These cases give teeth to sanctions enforcement, send a strong message about the need for transparency in international banking, and ultimately contribute to the fight against money laundering and terror financing. I thank our federal partners for their cooperation and assistance in pursuing this investigation.”


“Standard Chartered Bank regularly engaged in prohibited banking practices, took steps to conceal the illegal conduct, and misled regulators about the pattern of illegality,” said Assistant Director in Charge Venizelos. “New York is a world financial capital and an international banking hub, and you have to play by the rules to conduct business here.”


“To protect and uphold the integrity of the American financial system, it is essential that we ensure global banking institutions obey U.S. laws, including sanctions against other countries,” said IRS-CI Chief Weber. “Criminal Investigation, the world’s preeminent financial investigative agency, was proud to be part of this law enforcement team working collaboratively with our federal and local partners to hold Standard Chartered Bank accountable for their criminal actions. When we work together, it’s a force multiplier, and it is government working smart. It’s what taxpayers expect of us.”


Standard Chartered Bank (SCB) operates a branch in New York (SCB New York) that provides wholesale banking services, primarily U.S.-dollar clearing for international wire payments. SCB New York also provides U.S.-dollar correspondent banking services for SCB’s branches in London and Dubai. According to court documents, from 2001 through 2007, SCB violated U.S. and New York state laws by moving millions of dollars illegally through the U.S. financial system on behalf of Iranian, Sudanese, Libyan, and Burmese entities subject to U.S. economic sanctions. SCB knowingly and willfully engaged in this criminal conduct, which caused SCB’s branch in New York and unaffiliated U.S. financial institutions to process over $200 million in transactions that otherwise should have been rejected, blocked, or stopped for investigation under Office of Foreign Assets Control regulations relating to transactions involving sanctioned countries and parties.


According to court documents, SCB engaged in this criminal conduct by, among other things, instructing a customer in a sanctioned country to represent itself using SCB London’s unique banking code in payment messages, replacing references to sanctioned entities in payment messages with special characters and deleting payment data that would have revealed the involvement of sanctioned entities and countries using wire payment methods that masked their involvement. This conduct occurred in various business units within SCB in locations around the world, primarily SCB London and SCB Dubai, with the knowledge and approval of senior corporate managers and the legal and compliance departments of SCB.


In addition to evading U.S. economic sanctions, SCB made misleading statements to regulators to further conceal its business with sanctioned countries. In August 2003, SCB wrote in a letter to OFAC that the use of cover payments for transactions related to sanctioned countries was contrary to SCB’s global instructions. In fact, SCB used the cover payment method to effect billions of dollars in payments, lawful and unlawful, through SCB New York originating from or for the benefit of customers in Iran, Libya, Burma, and Sudan—all U.S. sanctioned countries—and continued to do so after the letter was sent.


During an extensive examination of all transactions at, by, or though SCB New York to detect suspicious activity, SCB failed to disclose to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and New York Department of Financial Services that it was processing billions of dollars of non-transparent payments for customers in sanctioned countries. As a result of SCB’s failure to disclose these transactions, the regulators were misled about the nature and extent of SCB’s business with sanctioned countries.


SCB’s agreement to forfeit $227 million will settle forfeiture claims by the Department of Justice and New York State. In light of the bank’s remedial actions to date and its willingness to acknowledge responsibility for its actions, the Justice Department will recommend the dismissal of the information in 24 months, provided the bank fully cooperates with, and abides by, the terms of the deferred prosecution agreement.


Under the terms of its settlement agreement with SCB, OFAC’s penalty of $135 million will be satisfied by $227 million forfeited in connection with the bank’s resolution with the Justice Department. OFAC’s settlement agreement further requires the bank to conduct a review of its policies and procedures and their implementation, taking a risk-based sampling of U.S. dollar payments to ensure that its OFAC compliance program is functioning effectively to detect, correct, and report apparent sanctions violations to OFAC.


The case was prosecuted by Money Laundering and Bank Integrity Unit Trial Attorney Clay Porter of the Criminal Division’s Asset Forfeiture and Money Laundering Section and Assistant U.S. Attorney George P. Varghese of the National Security Section of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia. The case was investigated by the FBI’s New York Field Office and IRS-Criminal Investigation’s Washington Field Division, with assistance from OFAC.


The Money Laundering and Bank Integrity Unit is a corps of prosecutors with a boutique practice aimed at hardening the financial system against criminal money laundering vulnerabilities by investigating and prosecuting financial institutions and professional money launderers for violations of the money laundering statutes, the Bank Secrecy Act and other related statutes.


The Department of Justice expressed its gratitude to OFAC, under the leadership of Director Adam J. Szubin and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

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TZB Mass Transit Thruway Task Force Has Roach,Paulin, Cousins

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WPCNR TAPPAN ZEE BRIDGE NEWS. From the New York State Thruway Authority. December8,2012 (Edited):


As agreed to last fall, in Governor Andrew Cuomo’s promise to the County Executives of Westchester, Rockland, and Putnam Counties to include mass transit as part of any new Tappan Zee crossing,, in return for their support for building a new Tappan Zee Bridge, New York State Thruway Authority Board Chairman Howard P. Milstein  announced Friday the 29 members of the Mass Transit Task Force to look at transit options for the new bridge to replace the Tappan Zee.


The membership includes Mayor Tom Roach of White Plains; Amy Paulin, one of White Plains two  Assembly representatives and Andrea Stewart-Cousins, one of White Plains two State Senators.


The Mass Transit Task Force will work to identify short, medium and long term transit solutions for the bridge and the I-287 corridor in Westchester and Rockland Counties; develop funding strategies to implement and sustain transit operations; and create a corridor management plan to ensure a viable transit program.


The members of the Mass Transit Task Force are:



  • Rob Astorino, Westchester County Executive
  • Scott Baird, Nyack Chamber of Commerce
  • David Carlucci, Member, New York State Senate
  • Peter Casper, New York State Thruway Authority            
  • Harriet Cornell, Chairwoman, Rockland County Legislature
  • Jan Degenshein, architect and planner, former Chairman, Rockland Business Association
  • Jonathan Drapkin, Hudson Valley Pattern for Progress
  • Tish Dubow, Mayor, Village of South Nyack
  • Kristine Edwards, New York State Department of Transportation
  • Drew Fixell, Mayor, Village of Tarrytown
  • Marsha Gordon, Business Council of Westchester County           
  • Ellen Jaffee, Member, New York State Assembly
  • Thomas Madison, Executive Director, New York State Thruway Authority            
  • Joan McDonald, Commissioner, New York State Department of Transportation
  • John Nonna, Board Member, Westchester League of Conservation Voters
  • Mary Ellen Odell, Putnam County Executive
  • Amy Paulin, Member, New York State Assembly
  • Karen Rae, Deputy Secretary to the Governor for Transportation
  • Tom Roach, Mayor, City of White Plains
  • Mark Roche, ARUP Engineering
  • Christopher St. Lawrence, Supervisor Town of Ramapo
  • Brandon Sall, Board Member, New York State Thruway Authority
  • Larry Salley, former Westchester County Transportation Commissioner
  • Mary Jane Shimsky, Member, Westchester Board of Legislators               
  • Andrea Stewart-Cousins, Member, New York State Senate
  • C. Scott Vanderhoef, Rockland County Executive
  • Veronica Vanterpool, TriState Transportation Campaign
  • Jen White, Mayor, Village of Nyack
  • Robert Yaro, President, Regional Plan Association

“Governor Cuomo is committed to making sure the new bridge we build serves the needs of the Westchester and Rockland Counties and the lower Hudson Valley,” said Thruway Authority Chairman Howard P. Milstein. “The first step is replacing the Tappan Zee, which has no transit capacity, with a new bridge that is ready to handle mass transit right away as a foundation. At the same time that we are building this new bridge, the mass transit task force will be working on finding the best transit options for local communities. Their recommendations will help us make informed decisions about what options on the bridge and in our communities make the most sense and how we can most effectively support our regional economy and address long-term transportation needs.”  


“The new bridge that is being built to replace the Tappan Zee is central to the long-term economic well-being of the entire region and mass transit will be a vital component for the bridge and the entire I-287 corridor. I am pleased to participate in the process to decide the best mass transit options for our communities and pleased also that this process is not an afterthought in the building of the new bridge. We’re not waiting five years to discuss mass transit plans, we’re moving forward now,” said Westchester County Executive Robert P. Astorino.


“Many Putnam County residents use the Tappan Zee Bridge every day and mass transit must be part of the region’s long-term strategy. I am pleased to be part of the team working to find solutions for today’s commuters and future mass transit needs,” said Putnam County Executive Mary Ellen Odell.


“Rockland County has limited choices for commuters and new transit options are essential for the long-term vitality and livability of our communities. Any discussion of mass transit on the new bridge must consider the needs of county residents, and I am glad to participate on the panel and continue to ensure that our voices are heard,” said Rockland County Executive C. Scott Vanderhoef.


The requirements for the new bridge to replace the Tappan Zee will ensure the new bridge can accommodate bus rapid transit (BRT), light rail or commuter rail.


The Mass Transit Task Force will have one year to complete its work and make recommendations.

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2 Democrats Join Republicans to Approve 2013 County Budget. Astorino Signs It.

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From the Westchester County Department of Communications. December7,2012:


                      


The  $1.7 billion Westchester County budget was approved 9-0 this afternoon by a coalition of seven Republicans and two Democrats. The remaining Democrats walked out of the Legislative Chambers.


            County Executive Robert Astorino said he was proud of the work of the bipartisan coalition that had drawn up the final budget. “This is what government should be about – people of all political sides working together to do right by the public.”


            He singled out Democrats Michael Kaplowitz and Virginia Perez for their willingness to work with him, Republican Minority Leader Jim Maisano, Gordon Burrows and their Republican caucus.


 


 


            This is the third consecutive year that Astorino has initiated and signed budgets that have reduced or kept flat the county’s tax levy on property owners. 


            The final document signed differs in the following ways from the original proposal Astorino made Nov. 14:


 


·        Additional funding will strengthen public safety, emergency services, probation and the DA’s office.


·        Other restored positions were five engineers from Public Works and three parks curators.


·        The parental contribution for subsidized day care was reduced to 27 percent, from Astorino’s proposal to make it 35 percent. 


·        An additional $200,000 was allocated to Cornell Cooperation Extension, making its total $800,000.


·        Arts in Westchester was given $500,000 more, making its total $1.25 million.


·        Other additions were made for legal services for immigrants ($220,000) and  small business loans and technical assistance ($160,000).


 


      “I can accept these changes,” said Astorino, “because the coalition made sure that it came up with a spending plan that did not raise taxes, did not under fund programs, did not hurt the county’s most needy  and did not in any way jeopardize the county’s three triple A bond ratings. I thank everyone for their hard work.”  

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DAY OF INFAMY

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Out of the Sun


A Memorial Poem




The Arizona engulfed December 7, 1941 Pearl Harbor


 



Out of the sun on the quiet Sunday they came


Birds of death blazened with red suns raining fiery havoc on Battleship Row.


One by one, ruthless planes dove, destroyed to their nation’s shame.


Thunderous explosions scattered fiery death on Sunday dawn’s glow.


 



Flames belched from bowels of stricken Arizona, America’s pride,


On Hicham Field pilots raced to planes to defend


As their birds were crippled on ground by Zeros’ glide


Gunners in turrets on ships floundering filled skies with flack’s din.


 



In search of carriers, marauders could not find


Ruthlessly strafed and bombed leaving Pearl


In smoking ruin. Ships sunk, burning as raiders flew into the Sun


The day of infamy had been ignited in the Zeros’ swirl.




The Attack Begins 8 AM December 7, 1941


 



As America listened a world away, somber FDR


Spoke of this day that will live in infamy.


America must never forget that Pearl Harbor Scar


When an unsuspecting America slept in complacency.


 



To the 2,403 perishing that day under merciless bombs


Hails of bullets, terror of torpedos out of nowhere


America must remember forces against our freedoms


Relentlessly work always to surprise with deadly bombs’ glare.


 



Vigilence is the price of freedom always to be defended


Against those who would destroy our republic from within


By dark forces in far off places we have offended.


The answer is not curtailing freedom at home rather it to champion.



The USS Arizona lies in Pearl’s waters, bleeding the lives


 


Of her men through the eerie eternal slick marking the rusting hulk.


Beneath Pearl’s waters, the blood of free people oozes from the shadowy bulk,


Bleeding forever, freedom’s spirit living eternally in lost lives remembered.



She never rests.





Note: The Pearl Harbor attack which took place 70 years ago today and its aftermath is dramatically depicted at http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/events/wwii-pac/pearlhbr/pearlhbr.htm

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Governor, In cabinet Meeting, Unveils 3 Tappan Zee Bridge Designs

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WPCNR TAPPAN ZEE BRIDGE NEWS. From the New York State Thruway Authority. December 6,  2012 UPDATED 11:40 A.M. E.D.T.:


Governor Andrew Cuomo unveiled the three designs for the new Tappan Zee Bridge yesterday at a cabinet meeting in Albany. Each of the three proposed designs comes in under the $5.2 Billion estimated costs previously.





In a Power Point Program presented at the cabinet meeting by the Governor, the least expensive design, Proposal 1 comes in at $3.14 Billion, and is favored by the Governor-appointed design panel, because of its lower cost according to Brian Conybeare, a spokesperson for the Governor.


The decision on which of the three designs is to be built will be made by the Thruway Authority December 17, Conybeare told WPCNR.


 The new double span design has suspension construction, similar to the new San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge, and the bridge crossing the Maumee River in Toledo, Ohio. You may download the power point program at www.newnybridge.com.







The Governor said the designs come in at $1 billion less than originally estimated that the company selected would be responsible for any cost overruns, and that $600 Million to $800 Million would be added to the cost of any bridge for financing, management, contingencies, and aesthetic improvements.


The first bridge achieves its saving, accoording to the power point because it calls for less dredging, can be constructed in 5 years, 2-1/2 months,  while Proposals 2 and 3 take six years to build and dredge far more of the Hudson River bed. Each of the three proposals has unique u-turns, to detour traffic off the bridge in case of a accident on the span. Proposal 3 though the most expensive is not mass transit ready, according to the Power Point and would require more costs in the future to make it mass transit ready.


The name of the construction group has been disclosed by a source close to the bridge selection committee. However, Mr. Conybeare said the name of the contractor of the preferred proposal was not reported officially.


Asked if disclosure of the contracting group giving out  “preferred proposal” (a violation of TIFIA loan application rules)could jeopardize the chances of New York State being approved for the $2.9 Billion TIFIA loan the state has applied for, Conybeare said he did not know.


WPCNR has placed a call to Amy Bernstein of TIFIA, inquiring how leaking of the contractor who submitted the Selection Committee’s preferred proposal, affects consideration of the state proposal.


The Governor said construction would be begin in 2013.


 

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