Zip Cars Zip into White Plains

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WPCNR TRAFFIC NEWS. From Zipcar Media Relations. (EDITED) June 27, 2012:


Zipcar, Inc., the world’s leading car sharing network announced the expansion of the Zipcar car sharing service into the City of White Plains Tuesday. The new Zipcar program will provide White Plains residents, businesses and visitors with increased access to affordable, convenient transportation options that are proven to reduce congestion and emissions.


The Zipcar program is ready to go for persons holding a ZipCAR Membership Card, launching with eight vehicles in three locations in downtown White Plains:



  • White Plains Center Garage at 237 Martine Avenue
  • Hamilton-Main Garage at 365 Hamilton Avenue
  • Bronx Street Lot at 3 Hamilton Avenue adjacent to the White Plains Train Station

Persons must have a ZipCar Membership ($60 a year, plus non-refundable Application Fee), and need to reserve a car online, via Smartphone or FaceBook. The cars may be rented for as little as $9 an hour in New York and $83 a day. To rent a ZipCar on the weekend, the fees are $14 an hour, and $125 a day.


 Billing is handled via the credit card you register with the company when applying for your membership. Since there are no attendants at the ZipCar locations, access is gained by applying your ZipCar Membership Card on a barcode on the windshield of the vehicle. (The is in the vehicle.) Jessica Margolis-Pineo, a spokesperson for ZipCar noted that though the rates are higher than other rental car services, ZipCar pays for all gas, and provides insurance included in the cost of the rental.


Zipcar worked closely with the City of White Plains to determine the best locations for the Zipcars, which will be in areas with heavy foot traffic, access to public transportation and the offering of convenience for area members.


“We’re thrilled to welcome Zipcar to the City of White Plains, as another step toward providing alternate transportation options to residents. Zipcar is a convenient and environmentally responsible way to travel and offers residents who live in downtown White Plains an affordable alternative to owning a personal vehicle,” said Mayor Thomas Roach.


As an environmentally friendly transportation option, Zipcar will help to reduce White Plains’ carbon footprint. National studies have shown that each car shared takes 15 privately owned vehicles off the road, and that vehicle miles traveled per driver is reduced nearly 40 percent when car owners switch to car sharing.


Zipcar also provides White Plains residents a cost-effective alternative to car ownership. Research firm Frost & Sullivan estimates that car sharing can reduce the total transit costs for its members by 70 percent, and Zipcar members report saving an average of $600 per month compared to owning a car.


“We’re excited to be expanding our presence in Westchester County to provide residents and employees of local businesses in White Plains with access to all the convenient, sustainable and cost-effective benefits of car sharing that our members appreciate,” said Charlie Irons, Zipcar New York’s general manager. “This expansion is an extension of our successful Zipcar program in New York City, where many people depend on Zipcar every day to run errands, attend business meetings, visit friends and take road trips to explore all that the tri-state area has to offer. We hope this new program in White Plains will help residents and those who commute back and forth between New York City to get out and Zip by giving them access to a car without the high costs and hassles of car ownership.”


The Zipcar program in White Plains is available to local residents and visitors, as well as to employees of local businesses through the company’s “Zipcar for Business” program that offers discounted driving Monday through Friday. Zipcar for Business helps businesses save money, meet environmental sustainability goals and reduce parking requirements by providing their employees with access to Zipcars for business meetings and more.


Gas, reserved parking spots, insurance, roadside assistance and up to 180 miles per day are included in the hourly and daily Zipcar rates. Cars can be reserved for as short as an hour or for several days. For more information, including how to become a Zipcar member in White Plains, please visit www.zipcar.com.


About Zipcar
Zipcar is the world’s leading car-sharing service with more than 700,000 members and 9,000 vehicles in urban areas and college campuses throughout the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom and Spain. Zipcar offers more than 30 makes and models of self-service vehicles by the hour or day to residents and businesses looking for an alternative to the high costs and hassles of owning a car. More information is available at
www.zipcar.com. Photos and b-roll footage are available for media purposes at www.zipcar.mediaroom.com.

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FBI CHARGES 22 MEMBERS OF YONKERS GANG WITH NARCOTICS TRAFFICKING, FIREARMS VIO

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WPCNR FBI WIRE. Special to WPCNR From the Federal Bureau of Investigation. June 27, 2012:


Preet Bharara, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Janice K. Fedarcyk, the Assistant Director in Charge of the New York Field Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Charles Gardner, the Commissioner of the Yonkers Police Department, and George N. Longworth the Commissioner of the Westchester County Department of Public Safety, announced today the unsealing of three separate indictments charging a total of 22 defendants with a series of crimes, including the distribution of narcotics and the use of firearms in Yonkers, New York.


A two-count indictment, United States v. Mark David et al., charges 20 members and associates of the Strip Boyz street gang with conspiring to distribute, and possess with intent to distribute, crack cocaine and marijuana, and the use of firearms in relation to that conspiracy. Two additional indictments charge two Yonkers residents with conspiracy to distribute crack cocaine as well as substantive counts of distribution of, and possessing with intent to distribute, crack cocaine.


U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara stated, “Violent street gangs are a blight on our neighborhoods, and our crackdown against them continues unabated. We cannot and will not allow them to cast the shadow of guns and drugs over our streets and jeopardize the safety of our residents. Today’s arrests once again underscore our commitment to solving this problem. ”


FBI Assistant Director in Charge Janice K. Fedarcyk stated, “Violent gangs, such as the Strip Boyz, wreak havoc in our communities by selling narcotics, possessing weapons, and being in violent disputes with rival gangs. As alleged in the complaint today, the Strip Boyz were no different in their operating procedures, except that some of their members took to social media to brag about their illegal and often brutal activities. The FBI, along with our law enforcement partners, is committed to investigating and getting gangs like the Strip Boyz off our streets.”


Yonkers Police Commissioner Charles Gardner stated, “These indictments involving members of the Strip Boyz—a local drug distribution network, will remove several violent individuals from our community and improve the quality of life for the residents of this northwest Yonkers neighborhood. This investigation is a prime example of the value of joint federal and local law enforcement agency initiatives and how these collaborative efforts can make a difference in improving public safety. The Yonkers Police Department is very grateful to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of NY and the FBI Violent Crimes Task Force for partnering with us in addressing this violent criminal activity occurring in our city.”


Commissioner George N. Longworth of the Westchester County Department of Public Safety stated, “Gang activity and the crime and violence associated with it will not be tolerated in Westchester County. The Department of Public Safety is committed to working with our law enforcement partners to eradicate gang activity wherever it occurs.”


The following allegations are based on the Indictments unsealed today in White Plains federal court:


The Strip Boyz is a drug trafficking organization/gang whose members have, since at least 2001, sold crack cocaine and, to a lesser extent, marijuana, in and around the Schlobohm Housing Project on Schroeder Street in Yonkers, New York. Members and associates of the Strip Boyz worked together to ensure that they all profited from the gang’s drug sales. They also shared firearms and used them to protect their territory from encroachment by rival gangs. The Strip Boyz and members of other gangs from Locust Hill Avenue have been engaged in a long-running, violent dispute with other Yonkers street gangs, including the “Elm Street Wolves,” the “Cliff Street Gangsters,” and “Two Guns U” from Riverdale Avenue. Certain members of the Strip Boyz committed acts of violence, including beatings, stabbings, and shootings, to protect their drug territory. Certain members of the Strip Boyz also created, performed, recorded, and distributed—including on social media websites such as Facebook and YouTube—rap music that celebrated their illegal activities.


Twenty members and associates of the Strip Boyz—MARK DAVID, 23; CALVIN BAILEY, 21; LAQUAY COKLEY, 20; JOSE CRUZ, 26; WAYNE CUSTIS, 21; MELVIN DIAS, 25; TREMAINE GARRISON, 21; DAIQUAN HENDERSON, 22; MICHAEL HENDERSON, 23; LEANELL HINES, 21; DAWONE HODGES, 28; ERIC LOCKHART, 28; DARRYL McFADDEN, 22; HARRY QUINTANA-CRUZ, 21; JOHN SLADE, 27; AKEEM SMITH, 21; PAU.S.INSON, 39; JOEL URENA, 24; JOSHUA VILIAN, 27; and GREGORY WILLIAMS, 26—are charged with conspiring to distribute, and possess with intent to distribute, crack cocaine, and marijuana from 2001 up to June 2012. Twelve of these defendants are also charged with using, carrying, possessing, and discharging firearms during the narcotics conspiracy.


TYRONE HALL, 23, is charged with conspiring to distribute, and possess with intent to distribute, crack cocaine in Yonkers from January 2012 up to June 2012, and with possessing crack cocaine with the intent to distribute the crack cocaine on several occasions during that time period. Finally, JONATHAN MILES, 23, is charged with possessing crack cocaine with the intent to distribute it in April 2012.


The indictments are the result of a long-term investigation conducted by federal, state, and local law enforcement officers working with the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York. As part of that investigation, in March 2009, this office obtained indictments charging three members of the Elm Street Wolves—Gregory Fuller, Davon Young, and Thomas Chambliss—with the January 2008 murder of a narcotics dealer in northern Yonkers. Fuller, Young, and Chambliss were each convicted after trial of murder, conspiracy to distribute crack cocaine, robbery, and firearms offenses and were sentenced to 100, 65, and 45 years of imprisonment, respectively.


In August 2011, 66 Yonkers gang members—47 members and associates of the Elm Street Wolves, 12 members and associates of the Cliff Street Gangsters, and 7 other individuals—were charged with narcotics trafficking and firearm offenses. Four of the Elm Street Wolves defendants were also charged with the murder of Christopher Cokley, a leading member of the Strip Boyz. Twenty of these defendants, including all 12 of the charged members and associates of the Cliff Street Gangsters, have pled guilty, and 15 of them face mandatory minimum sentences of between 10 and 17 years of imprisonment. The remaining cases are not yet resolved, and the charges against them are merely accusations, and the defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.


* * *


Nineteen of the defendants charged in the indictments unsealed today were arrested today or have previously been taken into custody. Three others were still being sought as fugitives. The defendants arrested today and presented in White Plains federal court this afternoon. The Strip Boyz case is assigned to United States District Judge Edgardo Ramos. The charges against each defendant and the corresponding maximum potential penalties are outlined in the charts attached to this press release.


Mr. Bharara praised the outstanding investigative work of the FBI and the Yonkers Police Department. He added that the investigation is continuing.


The prosecution is being handled by the Office’s White Plains Division. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Andrew Bauer and Ilan Graff are in charge of the prosecution.


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


 


















Count Charge Defendants Maximum Penalties
1 Narcotics conspiracy (Conspiracy to distribute and possess with intent to distribute five kilograms and more of cocaine) CALVIN BAILEY LAQUAY COKLEY JOSE CRUZ WAYNE CUSTIS MARK DAVID MELVIN DIAS TREMAINE GARRISON DAIQUAN HENDERSON MICHAEL HENDERSON LEANELL HINES DAWONE HODGES ERIC LOCKHART DARRYL MCFADDEN HARRY QUINTANA-CRUZ JOHN SLADE AKEEM SMITH PAU.S.INSON JOEL URENA JOSHUAN VILIAN GREGORY WILLIAMS Life in prison Mandatory minimum: 10 years in prison
2 Possession of a firearm during and in relation to a drug trafficking crime CALVIN BAILEY LAQUAY COKLEY JOSE CRUZ WAYNE CUSTIS MARK, DAVID TREMAINE GARRISON DAIQUAN HENDERSON MICHAEL HENDERSON LEANELL HINES DAWONE HODGES ERIC LOCKHART DARRYL MCFADDEN Life in prison Mandatory minimum: 10 years in prison, consecutive to any sentence












Count Charge Defendant Maximum Penalties
1 Narcotics conspiracy (Conspiracy to distribute and possess with intent to distribute 500 grams and more of cocaine) TYRONE HALL 40 years in prison Mandatory minimum: Five years in prison











Count Charge Defendant Maximum Penalties
1 Narcotics possession (Possession with intent to distribute cocaine) JONATHAN MILES

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Council Approves $11.3 MILLION To Close City Dump. Composting, Recycling to Retu

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WPCNR COMMON COUNCIL CHRONICLE-EXAMINER. By John F. Bailey. June 26, 2012:


Thirty-seven years after contamination was first discovered in the city landfill, the Common Council voted this morning to spend $11.3 Million to close and cap the dump to comply with a New York State Department of Environmental Conservation consent order.


As first reported by WPCNR early yesterday afternoon, the Common Council this morning reconvened after Monday evening’s Special meeting on the Gedney Lanfill bonds, and in a formality (necessitated by David Buchwald’s not being able to attend in person Monday evening), passed an $11.3 Million bond project to pay for closing the Gedney Landfill. The vote was 6-0, with Councilman John Martin recusing himself, City Clerk Ann McPherson reported to WPCNR this morning.


Last night, Commissioner of Public Works Joseph Nicoletti, explained to the Common Council, how he was able to negotiate the price of cleaning up and capping the dump down from the !2.2 Million low bid to $10.1  Million with a 5% contingency fund for cost overruns, $100,000 to cart compost and recycling materials offsite and $350,000 in engineering services from  the city engineering consultants, EKRF.


 Nicoletti said the approximate $2 Million in savings came from deciding not to cart away the asphalt residue that currently is in the dump and to use the remaining asphalt to cap the dump as well as negotiating “sub-contractors” with the chosen bidder. Nicoletti said leaving the asphalt in the dump was significant. Asked if the asphalt wasn’t contaminated, Nicoletti assured the council “There is no polluted materials that have to be taken out of there (the dump).”


Councilwoman Milagros Lecouna expressed concern about cost overruns, saying from her experience, 5% contingency (for overruns) is low. Nicoletti said the contractor selected, ELQ Industries is “well aware” of that.


Nicoletti said work would begin first at the Our Lady of Sorrows softball field which the DEC requires to be resodded due to ashes left from decades ago that are close to the surface of the field. Nicoletti said the field is expected to be completed by September but would be unusable until grass grew in. The entire project of the dump capping and closing is expected to be completed in September, 2013, subject to DEC approval.


Michael Genito,Commissioner of Finance, told WPCNR short term notes would be used to finance the project, so if the project comes in for less money or over the contingency of 5%, the city could bond for less money or more. The municipal bonds will be general obligation bonds,over a period of 20 years (according to the legislation approved) and not closely-held bonds, Genito said.


Last night Mayor Roach said the project was being undertaken because the city had to do it so it was no longer a responsibility for future generations.  Council President Beth Smayda and Councilwoman Lecouna complimented Roach on moving the project to a resolution.


The city and the Department of Environmental Conservation have known about the TCE  (TriCloral Ethylene) contamination located some 16 to 20 feet below the surface of the dump, that, the DEC has determined has been  leaking into the Mamaroneck River for decades. TCE is a known cancer causing agent. TCE is a known ingredient of dry cleaning fluids that had been dumped into the site by a previous business adjacent to the dump


The work according to the city backup material “includes the regrading and creation of additional storm water drainage channels, as well as required security system enhancements (closed circuit cameras, fencing, etc.) and at the Church of Our Lady of Sorrows, the site of an inactive ash fill, the addition of a soil layer and subsequent re-establishment of a playing field.”


The project has been three years in the starting (undergoing 94 monitoring wells, and two retooling of closure plans at the request of the DEC) since the city entered into a consent order with the New York State Department of Conservation in June, 2007.


The extent of the TCE contamination was exposed by photographs and DEC papers made public by the White Plains activist, Carl Albanese. Mr. Albanese video taped Monday evening’s meeting, the only television camera there, as the city elected to vote on the bond separate from the regularly televised Common Council meeting of July 2. The meeting was hastily called Friday, and this reporter was not notified. Also, the amount of the bond was not included in the original agenda appearing on the city website Monday.


Mr. Nicoletti told WPCNR that after closing is approved by the DEC, the city would move recycling operations and composting back to the dump. He said there would be some area to use for other purposes in addition to re-establishing recycling and composting.

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Review of the Supreme Court Arizona Immigration Law Decision

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS LAW JOURNAL. By James Maisano, Esq. June 26, 2012:


I have been focusing on a few important U.S. Supreme Court decisions that were being closely watched by the legal and political worlds.  Over the past week, the Supreme Court has released three of these decisions:


Arizona v. U.S.


The Court confirmed that “the Government of the United States has broad, undoubted power over the subject of immigration and the regulation of aliens . . . the federal power to determine immigration policy is well settled.”  However, the Court did open the door for states to assist the federal government in the enforcement of immigration laws.


A unanimous Court (8-0 with Justice Kagan not taking part) upheld Section 2(B) of the Arizona law requiring police officers to check the immigration status of anyone arrested or detained and allowing them to stop and arrest a person if the officers have “reasonable suspicion” that the person is an illegal immigrant (known as “show me your papers”).  The Court stated there was no showing that this section conflicted with federal immigration law.


The public debate over Section 2(B) being used for racial profiling in violation of the Equal Protection Clause was not addressed by the Court here, and this issue appears to be reserved for future review, although the Court did state and accept that the Arizona law specifically bars its use in racial profiling.


On split decisions, the Court rejected other sections of the Arizona law:



  • making it a crime for unauthorized immigrants to fail to carry registration papers and other government identification (6-2).
  • prohibiting those not authorized for employment in the US to seek or perform work (5-3).
  • authorizing police to arrest illegal immigrants without a warrant where “probable cause” exists that they committed any public offense (5-3).



There was some interesting debate around the internet and media among Supreme Court observers on the rather strong and somewhat politically charged dissent of Justice Scalia, who argued that the entire law should be upheld, and it makes for some interesting reading.  Here is the link to Justice Kennedy’s majority decision and dissents:


http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/11pdf/11-182b5e1.pdf


FCC v. Fox:


A unanimous Supreme Court (8-0 with Justice Sotomayor not taking part) sided with Fox over the FCC in holding, “The Commission failed to give Fox or ABC fair notice prior to the broadcasts in question that fleeting expletives and momentary nudity could be found actionably indecent.  Therefore, the Commission’s standards as applied to these broadcasts were vague, and the Commission’s orders must be set aside.”


This is a narrow decision on due process grounds.  The Court avoided the overarching constitutional challenge to such FCC regulations on 1st Amendment grounds and held that the subject regulations (addressing nudity and profanity) were vague because the FCC failed to give broadcasters fair notice of the changes to its regulations and implementation.  Here is a link to Justice Kennedy’s decision:


http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/11pdf/10-1293f3e5.pdf


Dorsey v. U.S.  & Hill v. U.S.


In this narrow 5-4 ruling in a case addressing the evaluation of legislative history, the Court held that the federal Fair Sentencing Act, which reduced the disparities in the length of sentences for cocaine offenses, applies to defendants whose cocaine offenses occurred before the law went into effect, but were sentenced after the law’s effective date.


Here is a link to Justice Breyer’s decision and dissent:


http://www2.bloomberglaw.com/public/document/Dorsey_v_United_States_No_Nos_115683_115721_2012_BL_153786_US_Jun


This Thursday morning we will have the opportunity to review the final two cases we have been waiting for, which address Obamacare and its individual

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FBI WARNS PUBLIC OF INTERNET SCAMMERS REQUESTING INFO REPRESENTING FBI

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WPCNR FBI WIRE. Special to WPCNR From the Federal Bureau of Investigation. June 25, 2012:


Have you received a suspicious e-mail from FBI Director Robert Mueller or another FBI official? If so, it is a fake.


The FBI and the Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) have increasingly received reports of fraudulent schemes misrepresenting FBI agents, officials, and/or FBI Director Robert S. Mueller, III. The fraudulent e-mails give the appearance of legitimacy due to the usage of pictures of the FBI Director, seal, letterhead, and/or banners. The types of schemes utilizing the names of FBI agents, officials, or the Director’s name are typically lottery endorsements and inheritance notifications.


Other fraudulent schemes representing the FBI claim to be from our domestic as well as overseas offices. The schemes cover a range from threat and extortion e-mails, website monitoring containing malicious computer program attachments (malware), and online auction scams.


The social engineering technique of utilizing the FBI’s name is to intimidate and convince the recipient the e-mail is legitimate.


The FBI does not send out e-mails soliciting personal information from citizens.


Please be cautious of any unsolicited e-mail referencing the FBI, FBI Director Mueller, or any other FBI official endorsing any type of Internet activity.


To receive the latest information about cyber scams, please go to the FBI website (www.fbi.gov) and sign up for e-mail alerts by clicking on one of the red envelopes in the upper right-hand corner. If you have received a scam e-mail, please notify the IC3 by filing a complaint at www.ic3.gov. For more information on e-scams, please visit the FBI’s New E-Scams and Warnings webpage.

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Common Council to Approve Gedney Dump Financing of $11.3 M

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WPCNR COMMON COUNCIL-CHRONICLE EXAMINER. June 25, 2012 UPDATED 12:05 P.M. E.D.T.:


The Common Council will hold a Special Meeting tonight to approve a resolution to approve $11.3 Million in financing to close and cap the Gedney landfill, completing some six years of deciding how to close it with New York State Department of Evironmental Conservation approval.


The city, according to Councilman John Martin speaking to WPCNR, has selected a lower bidder, after renegotiating.


He reports ELQ Industries of Mamaroneck has been selected to do the work. Martin told WPCNR the $11.3 Million in the bonds includes a 5% contingency for cost overruns. The company has a history of executing projects in the county which may be viewed at http://www.elqetre.com/projects.php


Martin said there is the possibility that an amount up to $2 Million may be recovered by the city from New York State from the state’s brownfield clean-up program. However, that will be a possible reimbusement when the project is completed to the Department of Environmental Conservation specificiation


The DEC had estimated to WPCNR the cost to the city of the closing and capping of the dump to be about $12 Million.  According to the backup material just acquired by WPCNR


Martin said the project is expected to be completed in one year.


He reports  the bond amount includes costs of relocating the city composting operation and recycling operation off the Gedney site while the capping operation is taking place.  


An informed source familiar with the bid told WPCNR it is less than the original bid of $14 Million, and slightly more than $11 Million.


The DEC had previously estimated to WPCNR the cost to the city of the closing and capping of the dump to be about $12 Million. 


The backup material to tonight’s meeting, just acquired by WPCNR at city hall, says the final price for construction on the dump is $10,150,000, $2,000,000 below the lowest bid of $12,261,000 (in line with what the DEC told WPCNR a month ago the DEC’s Martin Brand had told WPCNR.)The city will also be working on resurfacing the Our Lady of Sorrows softball field as part of the project.


The whole procedure of the dump cleanup cost has been closely guarded by the city, with no city officials confirming or supplying any public information about the costing process. WPCNR had been told the Common Council was furious with first bids that came in as high as $14 Million. The highest bid was $18,565,000.


At this time, the Government Access Channel,is not planning to televise the meeting, and it will not be “covered” by Swagit, the company that records city meetings and rebroadcasts them on the city website.


Also appearing on the agenda is discussion of the Draft Environmental Impact Statement on the city’s proposed Recreational District aimed at structuring how recreational tracts of land such as golf courses and city-owned tracts of open space can be developed,  discussion of capital projects and discussion of the Campus Office Zoning Amendment.


The Agenda:


The Agenda


COMMON COUNCIL


SPECIAL MEETING


June 25, 2012


5:15 P.M.


FIRST READING


ORDINANCES:


1. Communication from Chairman, Capital Projects Board, in relation to Capital Project No. C5324,


Gedney Way Landfill Capping.


2. Communication from Environmental Officer.


3. Environmental Findings Resolution


4. Ordinance of the Common Council of the City of White Plains to amend the Capital


Projects Fund by establishing Capital Project No. C5324, entitled Gedney Way Landfill


Capping.


5. Bond Ordinance dated June 25, 2012, authorizing the issuance aggregate principal


amount serial bonds of the City of White Plains, County of Westchester, State of New


York, to finance the costs of the Gedney Way Landfill Capping.


RESOLUTIONS:


6. Communication from the City Clerk in relation to a liquor license renewal, and a request


submitted by Tayag, Inc., d/b/a Gryphon’s, 49 Mamaroneck Avenue, requesting a waiver of the


thirty (30) day notification requirement as set forth in Section 64(2)(a) of the New York Alcoholic


Beverage Control Law.


7. Resolution of the Common Council of the City of White Plains waiving the thirty (30) day


notification requirement set forth in Section 64(2)(a) of the New York Alcoholic Beverage


Control Law in regard to an application submitted on behalf of Tayag, Inc., d/b/a


Gryphon’s, at 49 Mamaroneck Avenue, for a renewal of its license to sell alcoholic


beverages.


DISCUSSION:


8. Capital Projects


9. Draft Generic Environmental Impact Statement – Open Space Recreation District


10. Proposed Campus Office District Zoning Ordinance Amendment and Comprehensive Plan


Amendment

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The Day Custer Sought Glory

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WPCNR MILESTONES. By John F. Bailey. June 25, 2012:


One hundred thirty-six years ago today in the midsummer sweltering heat of the Dakota Badlands, Major General George Armstrong Custer and 600 Cavalrymen of the U.S. Seventh Cavalry attacked a contingent of 2,000 Sioux and Cheyenne Indians encamped on the Little Big Horn River.



Statue of Major General George Armstrong Custer.  Monroe, Michigan












 


Sighting the Enemy


Custer, whose strength as a commander was willingness to engage the enemy by surprise has long been criticised by historians and military experts for disobeying the command of his superior General Alfred H. Terry, (commander of the Little Big Horn campaign), who warned Custer to wait until Terry’s forces arrived to join him before Custer launched any attack.




At this time todaY  it was the waning afternoon, 135 years ago, 1876, 225 troopers, Custer, and Mark Kellogg, the Associated Press correspondent(one of the first “embedded correspondents”) lay dead across the ridges of the Little Big Horn Valley. 


The Indians had so much respect for Kellogg’s talent, they left his body alone. To the Sioux, Mr. Kellogg was known as “The Man who could make paper talk.”


Mr. Kellogg’s foolscap (copy paper) littered the battlefield. Kellog was given a mule to ride by General Terry, and rode into battle with Custer.


That afternoon, 135 years ago today,the superior Indian force had dealt the American military its most infamous defeat to date, which would be chronicled again and again,


Custer’s accomplishments as a military commander though have suffered as a result of this alleged rash and ill-advised attack.


However, the battle is instructive for all who command, (no matter what position of command they hold), to pay attention to their scouting reports, ignore whatever person gains might be achieved by a course of action.


Allegedly, Custer had seen a possible victory lead by himself over the Sioux as a stepping stone to national office.


Instead, he died in action one of the few U.S. Army Generals to do so. 


Few know today, as the statue of General Custer in his hometown of Monroe, Michigan, says how Custer was instrumental in forcing General Robert E. Lee to surrender by blocking his retreat at Appomattox in 1865. 


Custer’s defeat may have been inevitable but the actions of Major Reno’s premature breaking off  his initial attack on the Indian encampment, disasterous retreat, did not help Custer’s chances.


Reno’s apparently premature retreat allowed the counterattacking indians to turn all their force on Custer’s force, getting behind him,  surrounding Custer and his command and killing them all within an hour.


Custer’s glory achieved through his death is a sobering reminder every year for those who ignore facts confronting them, and underestimate adversaries, and discount adverse conditions.


We should not forget though that Custer was attempting to achieve his mission.


No one can say what really motivated him 135 years ago today in the early afternoon when he launched his attack. Second-guessing is the sport of the armchair historians and military strategists who have the evidence of the result. Blame is easily distributed.


That is the loneliness of command. Combat. Decisions. Risks. Surprise. They are the stuff that leaders have to deal with.


On this day, we should look back and remember the courage it took to engage. Remember the bravery the Seventh Calvary displayed in defeat (despite Indian reports of many committing suicide).


Soldiers today demonstrate this courage every day. We need to admire that courage.


I cannot fathom what it takes to be able to be courageous like that.



Leading is not for everyone.


 











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Last Catch with Chipper

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 Last Catch with Chipper


 



 


The first catch was years ago when Chipper was five.


The catches during the middle years were singed with firey stings


When not-so-little Chipper whipped the ball and tattooed my gloveland with jive.


My suggestions, release sooner,look at target met with “shut-up Dads” eyes glaring live.


 


Today’s last catch years later, 10 months since not-so-little Chipper threw a ball


I encouraged her to take it easy on her arm, and startlingly she smiled


Instead of firing the ball at my soft glovehand, she threw easy and tall


Smiling, admitting twinges in arm, listening after all those catches gone bye.


 


Comaraderie  in communion of two gloves at last,


Slap of leather with smack of softball


Leisurely recalling days of 80-pitch practices, spirit and bombast


Dad and daughter throwing to start a season perhaps the final of all.


 


They called her Chipper back then , small player, big heart,


When smacked in eye by intentionally thrown ball by a little boy  in the littlest league,


She did not back away just smiled, never feeling fear in any part.


In many catches since and millions of swings never feeling fatigue


 


On that practice diamond today, tuning up old skills laid aside for new challenge,


The fleet stride returned, as aging father cranked up a few last fly balls


For the Chipper of the past, woman of present  to race  green and one-hand with deft lunge


In the rays of the fast pitch sun, a bond never realized was forged with wondress thralls.


 


With a catch-up to a gapper, to zero-in on a one-hander,


Just a dad and his grown kid playing catch again like glory days.


Shags and relays, admissions at long last that yes, some twinges in the winger,


“Dad, I’ll ice it later,” with a smile, the diamond rewarded us with more yesterdays.

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Governor Cuomo: A Great Legislative Session

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WPCNR ALBANY ROUNDS. Legislature Report From The Governor’s Office  June 22, 2012:


As a result of Governor Cuomo’s leadership, the 235th Legislative Session has been one of the most productive and broadest-reaching in modern Albany political history. 

When Andrew Cuomo became Governor 18 months ago, he was faced with a weak state economy, failed state economic policies, and a dysfunctional government that had lost the trust of the people.

The Governor set out to change the course of the state. He put politics aside, focused on getting things done, and began to rebuild our state from the ground up.


His first task was to stabilize the state and restore function to Albany.  He began by producing results on issues that had been intractable for decades. He passed a property tax cap to end the crushing burden on our families and businesses, achieved broad ethics reform that provides unprecedented transparency and accountability, and fought to secure a cleaner and more affordable energy future for New York.  Additionally, he passed the historic Marriage Equality Act, making New York the largest state in the nation to extend full marriage equality to all of its citizens.

After proving that he could make the government work for the people, throughout the past seven months, the Governor has implemented an innovative economic plan to create tens of thousands of jobs, and has fought to pass reforms that have fundamentally transformed our state. Highlights of these achievements include:



  • A second, honestly-balanced budget that moved the state toward long term fiscal balance
  • A transformational jobs program, New York Works, that will create tens of thousands of jobs and lay a foundation for the future prosperity of our state
  • A reform of the state’s tax code, cutting middle class income tax rates to their lowest levels since 1953 and relieving over 700,000 small businesses and self-employed individuals of the burdensome MTA payroll tax
  • A bold pension reform plan that will save local governments more than $80 billion over the next 30 years and help protect working families from spiraling property taxes
  • A new statewide teacher evaluation system that serves as a national model for promoting achievement and accountability and puts students first
  • The first all-crimes DNA databank in the nation, which will help prevent crimes and exonerate the innocent
  • The creation of the Justice Center for the Protection of People with Special Needs to transform how our state protects the over 1 million New Yorkers with disabilities and special needs        
  • Toughened laws to protect victims of domestic violence and combat child pornography on the internet
  • The removal of finger imaging as a requirement for federal food stamps to combat hunger, particularly among children        
  • An innovative jobs program – NY Youth Works – to address chronic, high unemployment among inner-city minority youth  

Click here to read more about the tremendous progress that New York has made.

New York is now a very different place than it was just 18 months ago. While there is still much that needs to be done, Governor Cuomo has laid the solid foundation for a new New York – a New York State that works for you and your family. 

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White Plains 2012 Graduation Rate : 88%

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. Special to WPCNR from Michele Schoenfeld. June 21, 2012 UPDATED June 23, 2011:


Thursday the White Plains High School held its annual graduation ceremonies at the Westchester County Center. They have earned the distinction of having the highest graduation rate in years: 88%, according to the Clerk of the Board of Education, Michele Schoenfeld.


Superintendent of Schools, Dr. Christopher Clouet, in a statement to WPCNR Saturday about the significant improvement, wrote:



“The economy is helping more students to focus on the need to complete high school. That in addition to the fine teaching staff and various methods we have in place to support students is helping us to achieve a graduation rate above the state and national average.”


Schoenfeld told WPCNR, “Of the 537 total students who began the school year (2011-12) as seniors, all but 65 of them are going to graduate this evening. That means that 88% of this year’s seniors will graduate.”


The graduation percentage is up sharply from the 81% of 2010-11 and the previous year before that, 75%.


 

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