City to Acquire 3rd Side-Load Garbage Truck. Recommends Buying Seaberg Bldg.

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WPCNR CITY HALL CIRCUIT. By John F. Bailey. July 26, 2012:


The Capital Projects Board voted to acquire a new sidearm-loading garbage truck Thursday afternoon for $275,000, while eliminating purchase of two rear-loading garbage trucks. John Callahan, city Corporation Counsel, confirmed the truck was the third truck to be acquired by the city, pending approval by the Common Council.


Eileen Earl, the long-time consultant to the financial department explained the new truck is being acquired for the efficiency and labor-saving it has shown in the one year trial of the first truck.


Mr. Callahan in the meeting, also announced the city has reached an agreement to acquire 200 Westchester Avenue, (known as the Seaberg Building) adjacent to the city Department of Purchasing at the eastern “gateway” to the city. The building will be acquired for $465,000 (pending approval by the Common Council), plus $25,000 for renovation, and $5,000 closing costs for a total purchase of  $495,000. Michael Genito, the city Commissioner of Finance told WPCNR the cost of the building would be financed over twenty years.


Earl said the city had been trying to acquire the building for about twenty years since the Seaberg food operation previously located there closed.The building is being purchased from Consortium Properties, LLC. She offered the opinion the building had long been an “eye-sore” on Westchester Avenue.


Commissioner of Public Works, Joseph Nicoletti said the building would be used for storage of water department equipment, currently stored out of doors. He said the purchase gives the city access to the DPW lot off South Kensico Avenue, from Westchester Avenue. Nicoletti said the city would renovate the exterior of the building to match the facade of the city-owned Department of Purchasing building.


The purchase is the third such land investment approved by the Capital Projects Board in a month. Previously the city decided to build a parking garage adjacent the Esplanade for $17 Million; purchase the Gerber Building for $2.7 Million and now the Seaberg piece for $495,000.


Asked what the city was eyeballing for acquisition next, Callahan did not indicate whether other properties were being eyed by the city or not.

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No Plan to Decide BRT Until Input Is In. 60 Experts to Judge Bids. Tolls In Air

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WPCNR TAPPAN ZEE BRIDGE NEWS. By John F. Bailey. July 25, 2012. Part 2:


WPCNR provides this wrap-up of the rest of the LoHud Editorial Spotlight discussion with Governor Andrew Cuomo’s Tappan Zee Team. To see the discussion in its entierty go to http://www.livestream.com/editorialspotlight/video?clipId=pla_0d5dea02-9da5-4214-9941-30bdb19206c2&utm_source=lslibrary&utm_medium=ui-thumb:


Optimism for an  increase in funding from the Federal Government was expressed by Thruway Authority Executive Director Thomas Madison, that with new funding passed this year by congress made available for the TIFIA program(Transportation Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act, the state may be able to fund more with TIFIA than the $2.2 Billion they are asking for now. But this appeared to be wishful thinking, with nothing concrete.


Larry Schwartz, the Secretary to the Governor, said the effect on tolls for the bridge is still being evaluated, expressing the hope the tolls would be comparable to similar bridges in the area.


As an aid, WPCNR calculated in February that to finance $6.2 Billion through the TIFIA program,  at its current rate and pay the maintenance costs of the new bridge, tolls would have to go up to $11.50 a Trip. To read that commentary go to  www.whiteplainscnr.com/article9023.html


No timelines were given as to how soon a decision would be made on the bids from bridge contractors on the costs of building the new bridge.  The Governor’s office is now assembling an evaluation team of about 60 persons, what New York State Thruway Executive Director called “the best and the brightest from around the world,” to evaluate contractor bids due to be submitted tomorrow.


Larry Schwartz, the Secretary to Governor Cuomo said the names of the “Evaluation Team” would be announced by the Governor’s office when they are finalized. It was noted that the Federal Government would also have to approve any construction using Federal money.


Schwartz said that the possibility of using Route 119 as the dedicated bus lane through Westchester County ( long promoted by the Tappan Zee project for Bus Rapid Transit in previous meetings) has not been discarded, but the imput of all communities had to be considered. He noted that Thruway project affecting White Plains at Exits 7 & 8 had dragged 25% longer than it should have taken and the impacts of establishing BRT lanes on 287 would subject that area and its citizens to more inconvenience for years.  


Schwartz returned to the theme of gathering input from communities, decision-makers and government officials, and the need to reach consensus together on how to execute rapid transit through the counties, and to determine the need for it. He did not dismiss the data already gathered by the Thruway Authority engineering teams on transit data.


Brian Conybeare, the newly appointed representative to deliver the message of the administration, said it would be his job to disseminate key information to the public as the Governor’s Office makes decisions. He said the public could ask questions via phone at 1-800-855-TZBRIDGE or go to the new website made live today at www.newnybridge.com


The Governor’s Tappan Zee Bridge Team today gave the impression that indicated months of meetings and discussion lie ahead for the Tappan Zee Bridge Project which to move ahead requires more meetings with more people, scores of government officials and stakeholders in the project.

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White Plains Sales Tax $$ UP 9.6% At Fiscal Close—

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WPCNR QUILL & EYESHADE. By John F. Bailey. July 25, 2012:


 White Plains completed its fiscal year June 30 with a 9.6% real gain in sales receipts, setting an all-time high in sales tax collections of $50,972,671.36, compared to $46,494,447 in 2010-11, a gain of a real 9.6% year to year.


White Plains had been riding a 15% gain in sales tax collections through May, however June receipts were off 15.3% at $4,218,196.45  ($762,780 less than June 2011’s record $4.9Million).


Westchester County Sales Receipts in June, (the halfway mark in the county fiscal year) were off 1.4% which means the county is virtually even with last year’s sales tax collection pace ($230.1 Million to $222,991,747 after six months in 2011.)

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COUNTY TO COUNTY BRT A LONG WAY OFF. 100 TO 150 COMMUNITY MEETINGS PROMISED

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WPCNR TAPPAN ZEE NEWS. By John F. Bailey. July 25, 2012:


In a lohud.com webcast that went down after the first twenty minutes due to unexplained technical difficulties, Larry Schwartz, Secretary to Governor Andrew Cuomo, and Thomas Madison , State Thruway Authority Executive Director, made clear that a Tappan Zee Bridge cross-Rockland, cross-Westchester Bus Rapid Transit system will not become reality for years.


The form the BRT lanes promised on the new Tappan Zee Bridge will take after they touch the Rockland and Westchester shores has also not been decided. That massive undertaking will only take shape after the state conducts meetings with community officials all along the route. Schwartz emphasized the state wanted to proceed forward working directly with the communities. This, coming after the New York State Thruway has been involving communities in presentations, drawing up plans and taking their comments the last ten years, as a cost of $280 Million.


The moderator,Nancy Cutler, Lohud Rockland County Opinion Editor, asked directly if there been any decision about whether to extend the promised BRT Lane piecemeal (across Westchester County and Rockland Counties) or across the counties, Schwartz said


 ” I think the commitment is to not make any predertermined decisions but to work with the Rockland County Executive, the Westchester County Executive, their staffs, as well as the local elected officials in the community, the business community, the transit advocates, and the civic associations to figure out what makes sense, what’s needed and what will be used (ridden). “


“We’re going to have as many meetings with the community and the different stakeholders here in the lower Hudson Valley region as needed. We’re targeting now between 50 to 100 (meetings), but if we need to do 150, whatever number we need to do, this is an on-going process. Governor Cuomo has made it clear  that he wants the process to be open and transparent now and throughout the construction  phase of the new Tappan Zee Bridge. That’s why we’re here in this ongoing effort to establish an open line of communication, to get input and feedback , to learn to listen, and also to be responsive to the concerns and questions that Westchester and Rockland residents have regarding our building a new Tappan Zee Bridge.”


Schwartz promised to do a better job “in terms of our openness, our transparency, and making sure we have a constructive dialogue.”


He said..”In addition to being transparent, we need to be honest, trustworthy, straightforward  and credible. That’s the governor’s task to me and to the project team here in not making commitments the state will not be able to keep.”


Madison said the build first with transit inclusion was the best solution:  “a brand-new structure that would not preclude any transit option for the future, and this was central to the governor’s vision for moving forward with the Tappan Zee Bridge project: let’s build a bridge now; build a bridge we can afford today, but make the necessary investments today that make a commitment today that in the future we will not preclude any transit option on the bridge.”


Schwartz noted on BRT feasibility:


 “even on an incremental (construction) basis, it’s going to be cost.y that  One of the proposals we presented today was a Suffern to Tarrytown BRT System that would cost $1.9 Billion, depending on how you construct it. SomeBODY has to pay for that. We have to find the money. Governor Cuomo has made it clear we have to move forward with the bridge, and we have to do this project in the most financially feasible and affordable way, that doesn’t have an impact on the taxpayers, and minimizes the impact on the toll-payers. The governor’s committed to transit; he’s certainly committed to transit on the bridge; he’s committed on working on transit solutions off the bridge…there’s a lot of ideas out there some of those ideas are going to have significant community impacts and I think we need to do a better job of  educating and informing the community, when you build a BRT what that really means in terms of not only costs, but community impact. In 1997, they talked about widening I-287 to include HOV (High Occupancy Vehicle) lanes…there was a lot of community outcry from Greenburgh, Elmsford, and White Plains and Governor George Pataki dropped the idea.”


An engineer on the panel Mark Roach, said the key to making BRT a success was reliability which could only come from dedicated bus lanes.


When the complete discussion is available, WPCNR will follow up with more coverage of the rest of the discussion. At the time when the feed went down on Internet Explorer from the lohud site, there were approximately 325 viewers


Tonight at 6 PM at the Performing Arts Center at Purchase College, 735 Anderson Hill Road there will be another forum with state officials to discuss Tappan Zee Bridge issues. Thursday there will be one in Rockland County at the Rockland Community College Cultural Arts Theatre, 145 College Road, Ramapo.

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Gov Hires News 12’s Conybeare to Liaison on Tappan Zee Bridge. Salary:$160,000

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WPCNR TAPPAN ZEE BRIDGE NEWS. From Governor Andrew Cuomo’s Press Office. July 24, 2012 UPDATED JULY 26, 2012:


Governor Andrew M. Cuomo  announced Tuesday the appointment of Brian Conybeare to the position of Special Advisor for the Tappan Zee Bridge. Mr. Conybeare will serve as the liaison for the Governor to Hudson Valley residents and businesses, at a salary of $160,000, according Director of Public Affairs of the New York State Thruway Authority, Dan Weiller, the Albany Times-Union reported Thursday


 As such, he will be located in the Hudson Valley on full time basis conducting the day-to-day meetings with local community and business leaders, and working with Secretary to the Governor Larry Schwartz, who Governor Cuomo recently appointed to oversee the Tappan Zee Bridge project. Mr. Conybeare will play an important role in ensuring that the issues raised by residents involving the $5 billion project are heard and resolved.



“After more than ten years of gridlock surrounding the Tappan Zee Bridge project, we are moving forward to finally build a new, safer bridge for the Hudson Valley,” said Governor Cuomo. “As we continue to make progress, Brian Conybeare will help connect my administration with residents and the business community. Mr. Conybeare has an extraordinary background in journalism and is familiar with the many facets of this complex project. In his role, he will help ensure that affected communities are provided the information they need and that concerns are properly addressed. Together, we will build a bridge that serves all of Hudson Valley.”



Mr. Conybeare said, “I would like to thank Governor Cuomo for giving me the opportunity to participate in this significant project. The New Tappan Zee Bridge will be a testament to New York’s workforce and innovation under Governor Cuomo. I look forward to working with the Governor and his team to ensure that the new bridge is constructed through a transparent and inclusive process.”



Prior to his appointment, Mr. Conybeare was an anchor for the News 12 Evening Edition. He was also a co-anchor on the weekly political talk show “Newsmakers” and hosts the station’s local election debates and live town meetings.



Mr. Conybeare is an award-winning reporter, most recently receiving a 2011 New York Emmy Award for his exclusive story on a parking ticket scam called “Rental Rip-off.” In 2009, Brian won a national award from the Society of Professional Journalists. His ground-breaking reporting on corruption in the promotions department of the Yonkers Raceway Casino led directly to a criminal probe and three arrests. It also won him the highly respected Sigma Delta Chi Award from the SPJ. He has also been honored with two other New York Emmy Awards, five Edward R. Murrow Regional Awards, and five New York Associated Press Broadcast Awards.



Mr. Conybeare received a Bachelor’s Degree in Communications from the University of Michigan and a Master’s Degree in Journalism and Mass Communication from New York University. He currently resides in Eastchester with his wife Janna and their four children.



After ten years of delay, the movement to replace the Tappan Zee Bridge is finally underway under the leadership of Governor Cuomo. The project will build a new bridge that will be safer, transit ready and, in the process, will create over 45,000 jobs. Representatives of the Governor’s office are presenting plans to local communities to receive feedback on the project. Mr. Conybeare’s appointment will help further the dialogue and feedback between the Governor, local business representatives and residents of the Hudson Valley community.

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MTA Extends Ticket Life

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WPCNR COMMUTERCATOR. From the MTA. July 24, 2012:


The Metropolitan Transportation Authority is set to extend the validity of one-way and round-trip tickets on the commuter railroads from two weeks to two months. The refund period for those tickets is being extended from one month to two months. Ten-trip tickets will remain valid for six months. The period during which a ten-trip ticket is refundable is being lengthened to match its validity.


A $10 refund processing fee will remain in effect to recoup some of the administrative expenses of issuing and mailing checks.


The MTA anticipates that this change in the validity period will mean an annual loss of about $6 million in revenue to Metro-North Railroad and the Long Island Rail Road.


In December 2010 the MTA abbreviated the validity periods to reduce revenue loss from uncollected tickets and imposed a refund fee of $10 to partially cover the actual cost of processing the refund.


These policies generated numerous complaints from customers and elected officials. In response, the MTA has agreed to increase the validity on one-way and round-trip tickets.


These changes were presented to committees of the MTA board at their July 23 meeting. They take effect September 4, 2012.

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Penn State Gets Life. NCAA Hits them in the Money where it Counts.

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WPCNR VIEW FROM THE UPPER DECK. By Bull Allen. July 23, 2012: 


Well the NCAA made up just a little for  the lifetime of hurt and psychological damage to children allowed to continue for years by the gutless, inexcusable, disgraceful behavior of the pathetic men who ran of the Pennsylvania State University the last 15 years. They gave them a life sentence. Not the death penalty.


The decision: a $60 Million fine; no bowl game appearances for four years, probation for 5 years, loss of 20 scholarships a year for four years, and stripping the late football Head Coach and his teams of 111 victories,  effectively destroying the coach’s legacy forever.  The former coach who put the success of the football program above the welfare of children and kept the offending molester on his staff, even after being told of the abuse. I can’t really figure that out, can you?


The fine really hurts.


 It hurts not just the football program – but the school itself and its ability to run other athletic programs and academic programs. It will hurt students and possibly mean a raise in tuition.


It may also, if the quality of football deteriorates, wreck the program slowly. The NCAA is allowing all present Penn State players to transfer to other schools to play in September, if they wish. Any football player with talent will get out and go elsewhere.


The loss of 20 scholarships a year dooms the talent attraction tools. It will be eight years before the program recovers, if at all.


Who wants to go to a school if you can’t go to bowl to showcase for the NFL?  


As the revenue from football drops, the school’s athletic programs will become mediocre. It is a life sentence, not a death penalty.


I applaud this decision by the NCAA, because no school wants to pay a $60 Million fine. Perhaps it should have been more, though. 


But,  perhaps those loyal Penn State alumni who loved the former head coach so much will step up and pay the $60 Million fine. They should. Who will write the first check?


Mark Emmert the President of the NCAA, an organization long criticized for its loosey-goosey approach to disciplining big time schools,  has set a new tone with this punishment.


Universities that are tolerating abusers of any sort, in any sport have been put on notice they had better turn out the perverts, if, of course,  there are any. Hopefully the Penn State assistant coach who disgraced his employer with condonance by the head coach, is the the only one.


Penn State said they would not appeal the sanctions.


How big of them. I expect the alumni fund drive to begin with a big football dinner shortly.


The entire staff of the football program needs to go.


How could those people work with this horrendous person the last 12 years? How could that head coach keep such a monster on his staff?  How could they? How could he?


How can the present administration keep that staff in place?


In an ironic footnote, the decision was inexcusably leaked to the press Sunday by the press.


They ran with it.


Yes, the same inexcusable see-no-evil, hear-no-evil, do-no-evil press that saw no evil going on for oh…maybe 15 years in the Penn State football locker room while a child molestor was molesting children in Penn State facilities. And no one in the press picked that up? They could not tell this was going on? Journalism failed on this one. It would have taken guts to tell the story, and you would have needed a source to go on the record…always hard to find.


 


 

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43 Years Ago, Men Walked on the Moon

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WPCNR’S NEWS & COMMENT. By John F. Bailey.. July 21, 2012


This column originally appeared on WPCNR on February 1, 2003, and celebrates the Dreamers, the Achievers, the High and the Mighty:



The Space Blazers:


 The Apollo 11 Crew: Nail Armstrong, Michael Collins,  Buzz Aldrin, Jr. Mr. Armstrong set foot on the moon 43 years ago on July 20 (Friday).(NASA Photo)


The two papers I receive at WPCNR White Plains News Headquarters, White Plains, New York, USA did not tell you Friday morning that it was the 43rd  anniversary of the day when Neil Armstrong walked on the moon. The exact hour  was  20:11 GMT (Greenwich Mean Time). That was the culmination of the last great American achievement — conquering space — when Apollo 11 with Armstrong in command, with astronauts Michael Collins and Edwin E. Aldrin, Jr. blasted off to the stars .


Their mission was a success. But there have been the tragedies associated with striving for the stars and being the best, achieving the best, working for the good. Those are the persons who keep the dreams alive by their deaths and personal sacrifice. I wrote the following after the explosion of the Columbia Space Shuttle upon reentry after 19 days in space in January 2003.


Saturday’s fatal Columbia Space Shuttle accident killing all 7 astronauts aboard when the historic spacecraft broke up over East Texas at daybreak Saturday morning begins a period of national mourning.

The expected media speculations have started, guessing at the cause of the reentry that went bizarrely, awfully wrong.

The truth is the civilized world takes absolute scientific miracles for granted. We do not appreciate the courage and skills of the men and women creating the future.

Those of us with cell phones, internet connections, high-speed trains, satellite communications and entertainment (all products made possible by the space program), do not realize the magnitude of daring achievements that you and I have come to accept to be executed like clockwork.

I first learned of Columbia’s fate late Saturday afternoon when my wife mentioned that instead of sports programming being videotaped on our television, there was coverage of a live NASA event on ABC.

(Incredibly, the radio station I had been listening to on the way from a sports clinic had not reported any hint of the accident. That station was Z-100, the most listened-to station in the New York metropolitan area. America Online also on their first up page did not mention the missing craft as of midday. That kind of communications misjudgment is sad.)

As I watched the close of Mr. Jennings’ coverage at about 3 PM, he signed off with no recap, no names of astronauts, and some parting words about what he thought was the cause of the disaster.

I’ll say what he should have said.

Columbia’s seven astronauts who died — we know their names: they were


Columbus, Magellan, Cook, Lewis, Clark, the Wrights, Lindbergh, De Laroche, Earhart, Markham, Gruber, Chaffee, Grissom, White, Gargarin, Komarov, the Challenger Crew, the crew of Soyuz 11. They are the hundreds of brave men and women who went into the unknown.



Apoll 11’s Crew turned the dreams of the 1950s visualized in television shows like Tom Corbett, Space Cadet (above, Astro, Roger and Tom) and Captain Video, “The Master of Science” below  into reality.



America’s Spacemem and the explorers before them are the people who trust in their ability and their vessel to expand the world’s horizons, to know the unknown, whose legacies build a better world. Whose deeds inspire and achievements are the catalyst for achievement to come.

From Cook’s fragile vessel which sailed the Pacific, to the marvel that was the Columbia, the captains courageous who sailed the Roaring 40s, blazed the Oregon Trail, discovered how to fly, and flew the oceans, journeyed to the stars, knew the risks they were taking. 

The media  trivializes their courage, their skills, and the difficulty of what they did and wanted to do, to concentrate on the causes of their failure, as if knowing the cause will make their loss acceptable.

The Magnificent Seven

I do not know Columbia’s Magnificent Seven. I just see their smiling faces in their photograph, and I regret the loss of every one. They had achievement on their faces, pride in their demeanor. Their eyes shown with the glow of being alive and striving to do the great things they set out to do.

Civilization has been created because of people like the crew of the Columbia’s Magnificent Seven, not the incompetence we see demonstrated daily today where technology is concerned.

The Columbia itself had flown 26 missions since launching in 1981. It was guided and outfitted with the best 2003 communications and equipment had to offer.


Not like Captain James Cook’s bark, Endeavour, a 100-foot ship powered by sail that conquered the “space” of his time, the Pacific Ocean. It was the Columbia’s Magnificent Seven’s Endeavour. They were tracked, they were backed up, but they perhaps more than anyone here on the ground knew the high dangers of the shuttle mission.

Liftoff, as their predecessors, The Challenger crew fell victim to, is fraught with risk. Reentry, which needs to be negotiated at precisely the right angle of attack, is equally risky. Soyuz 11’s spacecrew of Dobrovolskiy, Volkov, and Patsayev died in 1971 on reentry, when the Russian cosmonauts took too long to descend.

No guarantees in real life. Machines sometimes run out of miracles.

The magnificence of the explorers’ sacrifice and dedication, is that they accept the risk of “the endeavor.”

They accept the challenge, bear it alone, seizing challenge with an indomitable spirit and confidence, facing death when it comes with the satisfaction that they made the effort, and I suspect analyzing, coping, trying to fix it until the end, the very end. Then never give up.

Columbia’s Magnificent Seven, after 16 days in space, are gone now. My sorrow is with their families who will miss these Magnificent Seven, and who know in their hearts that they died trying to reach the pinnacle of their aspirations.

They are only human.

They tried their best, achieved their best, and experienced what they longed to experience. They dared to live the great adventure.

Not all of us have the courage to follow our longed-for adventures and make them real. You can watch movies that attempt to give that experience by transference. That’s why, I believe, you and I take it so personally when we lose heroic personalities of our time. We wonder what they are like. We glorify them, rightly so.

Follow Me! They Say.

I wonder how those Magnificent Seven felt, how satisfying it must have been, to be at your best, doing what you love, coping with the risks.I envy them that.

The Columbia Crew is the Miracle.

In reality it is not machines that conquer, it is the intrepid personalities, each unique, each contributing, who perform the miracles with God’s help. That they fall short is an example to us, not to take ourselves, our fates, or our existences for granted.

This is true of the everyday people we take for granted: the firefighter, the policeman, the train engineer, the airline pilot, the construction worker, and yes, the crusading annoying reporter. All are highly trained disciplined workers, executing precise tasks for which the non-expert has no feel or understanding . What makes for the desire to achieve? What is out there or up there that leads them on?

The Feel of the Unknown

I took Anne Morrow Lindbergh’s biographical adventure diary, Listen! The Wind down from the bookshelf.


She was the young bride of the aviator-pioneer, Charles Lindbergh. She navigated for him in his aircraft, and ran his radio communications on his many exploratory flights around the world.


In a passage she describes a night flight over the ocean, in which she was operating the radio for her husband Charles, who was at the controls. Mrs. Lindbergh is describing the feelings she had as she tries to tune in the South American coast at sea in the dark of night in 1933, 79 years ago.


The feeling, the courage of the adventurer, the explorer has not changed. This is great:

“Night was the hardest. It would be all right once it was day. I kept saying…We began to hit clouds. I could tell without looking up, for the plane bumped slightly from time to time, first one wing down and then the other. And the moon blackened out for short periods.


Then for longer periods. I could not see to write my messages. I stiffened, dimly sensing fear – the old fear of bad weather – and looked out. We were flying under clouds. I could still find a kind of horizon, a difference in shading where the water met the clouds. That was all. But it seemed to be getting darker.


Storms? Were those clouds or was it the sky? We had lost the water. We were flying blind. I turned off the light quickly (to give my husband a little more vision), and sat waiting, tense, peering through the night. Now we were out again. There were holes through which one could see the dark sky. It was all right, I felt, as long as there were holes.

More blind flying. This is it, I thought is what people forget. This is what it means to fly across the ocean, blind and at night. But day is coming. It ought to be day before long… Daybreak! What a miracle. I didn’t see any sign of day and yet it must be lighter. The clouds were distinguishing themselves more and more from water and sea.

Daybreak—thank God—as if we had been living in eternal night—as if this were the first sun that ever rose out of the sea.



Note: This column originally appeared February 1, 2003 on WPCNR.

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Police Report Suicide at The Westchester

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WPCNR POLICE GAZETTE. July 21, 2012:


White Plains Police reported to the Journal News Friday that  Catherine Guarnieri apparently commited suicide after having lunch at the Nordstrom Cafe at the Westchester Mall Thursday. She was reported lying on the sidewalk at 3 PM on Bloomingdale Road. It was the second apparent suicide in five weeks.

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WP Police Prefer Disciplinary Charges Against Officer in Chamberlain Shooting.

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS LAW JOURNAL. From  the White Plains Department of Public Safety. July 21, 2012:


The city’s Department of Public Safety in a news release distributed to media Friday announced 


“Departmental Disciplinary Charges were preferred against Police Officer Steven Hart, based on misconduct allegedly committed by Police Officer Hart outside of 135 South Lexington Avenue on November 19, 2011.”


The dispatch continues:


“The charges were served on Police Officer Hart earlier today (Friday). He has until July 30,2012 to file an answer to these charges.”


“If found guilty of the charges, Public Safety Commissioner David Chong, in his capacity as the appointing authority for police officers (under Section 220 of the City Charter), could impose a penalty on Police Officer Hart ranging from a reprimand to dismissal from the Police Bureau.


“Officer Hart has been suspended without pay. He is entitled to a hearing.  Given the pending nature of the charges, no further comments specific to this matter will be made.”

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