Police Website Reports Key Bank Robbed. Emergencies Will Be Announced on Site.

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WPCNR POLICE GAZETTE. From White Plains Public Safety Website, www.wppublicsafety.com . August 19, 2011 UPDATED 3:31 P.M. E.D.T.:


The new White Plains Public Safety website reported Thursday that Key Bank, 188 East Post Road was robbed approximately 4 P.M.Tuesday by a suspect wearing a red bandanna, a New York Yankees Cap, long-sleeved blue shirt. The suspect had been seen on video lingering in the bank lobby 3 to 5 minutes prior to the incident, the site says. No one was hurt during the robbery. No weapon was displayed.


To view a video and see a picture of the suspect, go to www.wppublicsafety.com . Anyone with information on the suspect, may contact the police on condition of anonymity by  calling 914-422-6217 or 914-422-6223.


Viewers can also access crime statistics in the city through last week and keep track of upcoming public safety events.


Commissioner of Public Safety David Chong told WPCNR the newly redesigned website will be used to inform citizens in timely fashion on police activity:


“We want to update the website at least weekly and sometimes daily if we need information to get out. This was one of my goals when I came here: a transparent and easily user-friendly accessible department.”


Commissioner Chong elaborated:


“We intend that both Police and Fire will update the site regularly. This us a working project so we will adjust as we go along. We plan to put crime and fire safety prevention tips, wanted/lost persons, open crimes that we want the public’s help, current events, emergency notifications, known street closures, interesting arrests on the site.


“People should check in regularly for interesting public safety news.


“In an emergency, we will attempt to use the site for immediate notifications.


“We are very excited about the way the users can request certain police reports without coming into the public safety building. That convenience and ease is part of Mayor Tom Roach’s commitment to simplicity and ease of government.”


 

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How is drop off and pick up of commuters during rush hours in WP?

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WPCNR MR. AND MRS. WHITE PLAINS POLL. AUGUST 18, 2011:


It’s Bumber Cars every morning and afternoon!


One of the great things of being a media mogul with a strangle hold on local journalism is getting aggravated at things that annoy you.


Your crusading “award-winning-recognized-statewide-by-the-New York-Assembly-for-my-expertise-and-public service”correspondent is now dropping off and picking up a commuter to New York City every morning and afternoon.



The Chaos Hour  (6 to 7 PM) at the Little Station of Horrors–August, 2007– when WPCNR first pointed it out. It is far worse now.


I have to tell you, no matter what hour you pick up or drop off your commuterrette or commuter by car between 6:30 A.M. and 9:30 A.M. and 4:30 P.M. to 7 P.M.,  you are in for a bizzarre, unsupervised traffic pattern with drivers trying to pick up commuters, squeezing by an endless line of taxis (perhaps we sold a little too many medallions folks?), trying to queue up for a train discharge among the parking places, and then dodging the quadruple merge of vehicles from the garage, the drop-off lane, the taxi lane and the pickup-ees lanes dodging cutoffs and getting like jammed up.


Does anyone agree with me that the traffic commission and the police and the parking department have to look at this situation before the fall begins? Get rid of the parking meters in that plaza. Get the taxi pick-up father away from the closest curb nearer the station, that makes no sense. Put the cabs on the other side of the station — just a few examples of how to make it better.


CitizeNetReporter needs your input. If you think the present flow between 6:30 and 9:30 A.M. is o.k. the way it is now…vote NO in the poll at the right. If you think it needs police presence to ease flow of traffic or complete redesign, vote “Yes.”


What do you think Mr. and Mrs. and Ms. White Plains?


I run this survey now, before the vacationers come back in September. Because the aggressive, disorganized pattern that now exists is highly aggravating in my opinion.


Of course had the council let Mr. Cappelli analyze the plaza four years ago, you might have a solution to this by now, but no. They did not.


Now we are stuck with the Metro North plaza mess. But for once, maybe the traffic commission could look at a real issue traffic issue.


 

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Employment Gains Slightly In Region

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WPCNR ECONOMIC HEARTBEAT. From the New York State Department of Labor. August 18, 2011:

 

Private sector employment in the Hudson Valley Region increased 9,100 or 1.3 percent, to 736,500 for the 12-month period ending July 2011. 

 

Employment gains were recorded in leisure and hospitality (+4,100 jobs), professional and business services (+3,000 jobs), educational and health services (+2,400 jobs), and trade, transportation and utilities (+1,900 jobs).

 

Job losses were centered in the following industries: natural resources, mining and construction (-1,500), manufacturing (-600), and information (-500). The Government sector shed 2,500 jobs over the year.

 

In July, the region’s private sector job count came in a little stronger than expected, adding 9,100 jobs, for a growth rate of 1.3 percent.

 

This was the strongest over the year private sector growth in almost 4 years.

 

Strong gains in leisure and hospitality, as well as in professional and business services have contributed to this turnaround. However, the region’s private sector growth rate still lags behind the State’s 1.8 percent.

 

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White Plains Public Safety Launches New Website. To be Used for Emergency Alerts

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WPCNR POLICE GAZETTE. From The Mayor’s Office. AUGUST 18, 2011:


The White Plains Department of Public Safety launched a new website this week. The website will be updated regularly and will also be used as an alert system to inform White Plains residents, businesses and visitors of upcoming events, road closures, missing persons, Amber alerts and other emergencies.


Mayor Thomas M. Roach along with Public Safety Commissioner David Chong announced the launch of a new informative and interactive website for the City of White Plains Department of Public Safety Tuesday.


This new website enables users to easily access current Public Safety information, request and download police reports and browse through a variety of features including current crime statistics and trends, wanted persons, crime prevention tips and fire safety information.


Mayor Roach said, “Utilizing technology to provide better information and enhanced services to the public is one of my top priorities. Together with the recent action to approve a new City website design, we are moving steadily in that direction. The new Public Safety website is not only easy for the user to navigate, but is expected to generate operating efficiencies for the Department, chiefly through the provision of online reports, as well. I encourage everyone to go on line and try it out”.


Public Safety Commissioner David Chong said, “I hope that our public find this website user friendly and takes advantage of the resources and information contained in it. Together the Department of Public Safety working with an educated public can make a difference in everyone’s quality of life.”


The website can be accessed directly at http://www.wppublicsafety.com or through the City’s website, http://www.cityofwhiteplains.com

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WP Student Skills Make Headway in Lower Grades. 200 of 500 WPHS FROSH CHALLENGED

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. By John F. Bailey. August 15, 2011:


 


In Grades 4 to 9 starting school in 2 weeks in September, data from the New York State Education Department, analyzed by WPCNR show the district must address approximately 1,339 children of 2,549 taking the English Language Arts  Assessment Tests, who did not  achieve English proficiency on their May ELA Achievement test.


 


Approximately 208 Freshmen of some 500 starting high school in 9th grade at the high school in September will have failed to pass the ELA 8th Grade Assessment in May


 


The 2011 school district  beat the increased passing scores  by a wide margin in Grades 3,4 and 6  (3 of the six grades tested) on the English Language Arts assessments


 


 


 


Though scores improved in the elementary grades, middle school assessment scores showed 7th and 8th graders failed at a rate 10% behind the new passing standards, and Grade 3 performed 3% less than the state target.


 


This happened to 3rd graders on the Math Assessment Test as well).  This trend on third grade results could mean more children are not as prepared entering Kindergarten,first and second grades.


 


Math performance on the 2011 assessments was encouraging, 4 of the 6 grades met or surpassed the new passing standards.


 


Grades  4,6, 7 and 8 met the higher passing Math standards of 2011. Grade 4 tripled the new passing rate target set by the state and Grade 6 passed at four times what the state expected.


 


The stepped-up preparation and intervention measures instituted by first year Assistant Superintendent for Curriculum and Instruction, Jessica O’Donovan, equaled, doubled and tripled the new state passing standards in four of the six grades (3 through 8) on the 2011 statement assessments.


 


O’Donovan, in a statement last week to WPCNR  said she felt the efforts were productive but it would take three years to move performance ahead substantially. Analysis of the 2009-10 and 2010-11 test scores by WPCNR show the improvement O’Donovan’s approach was able to achieve.







The Challenge of higher passing scores weathered, met.


 


To understand where the May 2011 Assessments show we are as a school district, it is important to show what the state expected when it raised the new passing standards one year ago.


 


Last fall, the district showed how new passing scores ordained by the State Department of Education in response to New York achievement test scores falling behind other states, would be going up and would affect the number of students passing the assessments last year.  Assistant Superintendent O’Donovan, in her first two months on the job,  designed a remedial effort consisting of pull-out instruction blocks for students identified as at risk for failing the assessments and put more emphasis on reading and understanding.


 


In the New York State English Language 2011 assessments administered in May,  the Passing Scores for Level 3 (Proficient) were raised by the state as follows for each grade. The district teachers had a big challenge.


 


2011 New ELA Passing Score LIFT     Pct. Increase to Meet


                                                             


Grade 8        650 to 658–8  points       1.2 %


Grade 7        650 to 664 -14 points       2.2%


Grade 6        650 to 662 –12 points      1.8%


Grade 5        650 to 666 – 16 points      2.5%


Grade 4        650 to 668 – 18 points      2.8%


Grade 3        650 to 662 – 12 points      1.8%


 


 


To maintain the White Plains passing standards of the past, remedial efforts had to raise scores 1.2% at the 8th grade level in the ELA test, with the maximum increase needed to be 2.8% at the fourth grade level, where the district has been concentrating its efforts.


 


The fourth Grade 2011 ELA performance was gangbusters, increasing passing performance by 8%.


 


In Math, the passing scores demanded the district make more progress as follows:


 


2011         New MATH Pass Score LIFT     PCT. INCR. TO MEET


 


Grade 8        650 to  673– 23 points      3.5%


Grade 7        650 to 670—20 points         3.1%


Grade 6        650 to 674 – 24 points       3.7%


Grade 5        650 to 674—24 points         3.7%


Grade 4        650 to 676—26 points         4.6%


Grade 3        650 to 684—34 points         5.2%


 


In math the district was challenged to raise scores 3.5% at the eighth grade level, 3.1% at the seventh grade level


 


How did they do?


 


Lower Grades Held own in May English Language Arts Assessments.


Upper Grades Entering High School did not.


 


 


In the 2010 English Assessments, scored with the new passing grades in effect, 57% of 8th graders passed the ELA Achievement.


 


In the May Assessment scores just released last week for 2011 the passing rate for both seventh and eight graders declined to 52.7%


 


This is a  percentage decline of 8% far below the 1.2%  increase demanded in the passing scores set by the state  for those two grades  


 


The inescapable fact that cries out is  47.3% of  488 eight graders,  approximately 230 children  did not pass their ELA Achievement in May and are “not proficient” in English going into White Plains High School in September.


 


 Seventh graders in 2011 failed to meet the higher passing standard  by 2.2%  increase in ELA passing scores.


 


In the 2010 assessment, scored with the new passing standards, 57.7% of seventh graders passed.


 


Despite the district efforts with seventh graders in 2010-11, the seventh grade class saw the number of passing decline to 52.3%– 9% less passing than in 2010. That translates into approximately 248 eighth graders beginning in September that the district has to upgrade to proficiency.


 


Looking at those scores another way,  about  half of seventh and eighth grade students failed to meet English Proficiency standards. Half. It is worth thinking about that word.


 


ENG LANGUAGE ASSESSMENT SCORES 2011 COMPARED TO 2010


 


                          2010                          2011


ELA         Pct. Pass     Fail         Pct Pass     Fail   YTY + –


 


Grade 8   57%            43%            52..7%     47.3%    -8%


Grade 7   57.2%         43%             52.3       47.7%    -9%    


Grade 6   54.1%         46%             59%        41%      +9% 


Grade 5   54.4%         45.6%           52.6%      47.4%    -3%


Grade 4   52.2%         45.8%           56.3%      43.7     +8%


Grade 3   53.6%         46.4%           57.2%      42.8%    +7%


 


This result occurred despite the efforts of the district through curriculum changes toclose achievement gaps with last year’s 7th and 8th grade groups and upgrade English Language Arts skill ever since they were fourth graders.


 


It is encouraging though to see that the 3rd , 4th, and 6th grade scores improved well ahead of state passing targets, double and quadruple the percentage rise in the new passing scores.


 


Lower Grade Turnaround Efforts Effective.


 


 Improvement twice and four times  the percentages of passing score increases seen in the 3rd and 4th  grade and 6th  grade scores indicate O’Donovan’s program made a big difference in those classes. Unfortunately,  the 7th and 8th grade classes did not achieve a similar level of success in their younger years.


 


Jessica  O’Donovan, Assistant Superintendent for Curriculum & Instruction  was charged with upgrading the scores “from behind” due to the higher passing scores, in her first year with the district.


 


She defended the reading intervention in the Middle and High Schools, saying the results  “did not fall short in my opinion,” and told WPCNR  “significant increases will take far more time—a minimum of three years. Scores decreased 20% (automatically) between 2009-10 when new (passing) standards were implemented.”


 


O’Donovan said  she was pleased at ELA scores in grades 3,4,6 and increases in Math in grades 4, 6, 7, 8.


 


Math Side


 


On the Math Side the scores break down this way during the two years the new passing scores have been in effect.


 


  MATH  ASSESSMENT SCORES 2011 COMPARED TO 2010


     


                                2010               2011


                   PASSED     FAILED          PASSED   FAILED  YTY+-


 


GRADE 8       71.5%        28.5%            71.5%       28.5%     0


GRADE  7      69.2%       30.8%             69.9%       30.1     +1%


GRADE  6      61.6%       38.4%             69.4%       30.5%    +13%


GRADE  5      63.9%       36.1%             60.1%       39.9%   – 5%


GRADE  4      59.9%       39.1%             66.6%       33.4%   +11%


GRADE 3       60.7%       39.3%             58%         42%    -4.4%


 


The chart shows the district doubled the target passing score increase in two of the six grades,  the 6th and 4th grades,,including the key developing  4th grade, but falling short of surpassing the passing score increases  in 3rdand 5th grade, which might be some cause for concern.


 


The Grade 8, Grade 7 examinees  in math failed to surpass the increased Passing Score targets (which were raised 3%) yet the district did not improve or fall back in the overall percentage of passers in the 7th and 8th grades on Math.


 


The breakdown of those who did not pass the Math Assessments works out to an average of 32.6% or about 1/3.  failing to achievement proficiency in math.


 


 


 


Children Left Behind– ENGLISH


 


The following indicates by grade, how many children in grades 3 to 8 did not pass the 2011 Achievement Tests in English Language Arts and Math whom the district must bring up to passing this year.


 


MAY 2011  ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS  ASSESSMENT


 


SNAPSHOT


 


CHILDREN BEHIND  ENTERING 2011-12


 


GRADE   ENTERING    TESTED      PASSED     FAILED         # FAILED


 


8           9        486        52.7%       47.3%          231


7           8        524        52.3%       47.7%          249


6           7        473        59%         41%            193


5           6        493        52.6%       47.4%          234


4           5        513        56.3%       43.7%          224


3           4        486        57%         42.9%          208       


 


TOTALS         2,549     52.5%     47.5%       1,339


 


The sobering realization the district faces is that of upgrading English Language Profiency in almost half their students in grades 3 through 9.


 


 


CHILDREN LEFT BEHIND – MATH


 


 


MAY 2011 MATH  ASSESSMENT


 


SNAPSHOT


 


CHILDREN BEHIND  ENTERING 2011-12


 


GRADE   ENTERING    TESTED       PASSED     FAILED         # FAILED


 


8          9          498         71.5%      28.5%           142


7          8          530         69.9%      30.1%           159


6          7          479         69.3%      30.7%           147


5          6          498         60.1%      39.9%           198


4          5          517         66.5%      33.5%           173


3          4          491         58.3%      41.9%           205


 


TOTALS          2,563       60%     40%         1,024


 


The two charts show that despite the better passing percentages in math,  1,024 children in Grades 3 through 9 have not shown Proficiency in Math.


 


Approximately  1,339 District children are in need of serious intervention on English skills and 1,024 require remediation in math, in addition to moving ahead with new academics as they enter the school year in September.


 


Reviewing the percentages by which the passing scores were raised by the state, and the performances of the May 2011 White Plains scores, the 2011 school district maintained their performance in the lower grades but have a long way to go.

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City Begins Fiscal 10-11 with 4.92% Increase in Sales Tax. County UP 3%

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WPCNR QUILL & EYESHADE. From the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance. August 15, 2011:


New York State notified WPCNR Monday that White Plains generated $3,900,463.40 in sales tax receipts in July , a 4.92% increase over July 2010, but more than a million  dollars less than the city totaled up in June, when it generated $4,980,977. 


Westchester County in the seventh month of its fiscal year 2011, generated a 3%  increase in sales tax bringing its total for seventh months to $257,635,475.21, a rebound in sales from June when the county was down 9% year-to-yeaer. The county is up 3% for the year.

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School Board Extended Superintendent of Schools Contract in June of Last Year.

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS By John F. Bailey. August 15, 2011:


 


 WPCNR News has learned that the White Plains  Board of Education extended present Superintendent of Schools Dr. Christopher Clouet’s contract by one year through the 2014-2015 School year, after one year on the job at a Special Meeting on June 21, 2010  of last year.


 


Dr. Clouet’s contract extension defines his salary for years 2, 3,4, of his original contract, signed in 2009 when he replaced former Superintendent, Timothy Connors, and adds a fifth year to the contract keeping him with the district through June 30, 2015.


 



 


The original Clouet contract was a four year agreement which had been written calling for his salary to be reviewed each year in June. The fifth year extension specifies his salaries for years 3, 4 and 5 of the extended contract, and specifying his contributions to his health benefits provided by the school district.


 


Clouet was originally hired at a salary of $210,000 for his first year.


 


At that June 21 meeting, Clouet’s second year salary for the year just completed (2010-11) was held at $210,000, with his salary being raised effective July 1, 2011 to $217,612.50 for 2011-12; raised again in 2012-13 to $225,500.95; increased to $233,675.36 in 2013-14, and in the fifth year, 2014-15, his pay will be raised to $242,146.09.


 


The contract extension in addition, increases by 1% a year, the Superintendent’s share of contributing to the cost of his medical benefits. In the year just completed, Clouet according to the extension, paid  13% of the premium cost; In 2011-12, he will pay 14%; in 2012; 15% in 2012-13; 16% in years 2013-14 and 2014-15.


 


There was no agenda issued to the public for the June 21, 2010 meeting when the board voted for the contract extension, according to the Clerk to the Board of Education, Michele Schoenfeld, and no news release was issued announcing the extension, the effect being that the public had no awareness that the Superintendent’s contract had been extended and his medical benefits contribution increased.


 


The President of the Board of Education Rosemarie Eller has not returned a WPCNR call asking why the Board extended the contract in the Superintendent’s second year, when the original contract had stated his performance would be “reviewed” each year.


 


The effect of the extension enables Dr. Clouet to negotiate a new contract with the White Plains Teachers union that expires July 1, 2012, with his own contract not up for decision-to-renew in July, 2012. The Board of Education would have to advise Clouet in April of 2013 on whether they wanted him to return beginning in 2015-16. 


 


The Superintendent’s original 4-year contract called for him to notify the Board  in April 2012, 15 months before  July 1, 2013 when the contract expired, whether he sought renewal of his contract, and for the Board to notify Clouet 14 months before July 1,2013 should the Board not want to renew the contract.

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ALTAR BOYZ Impudent! Irreverent! Wired! Raise Roof at WBT Send-Up 90s BoyBands

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WPCNR LEFT AND CENTER. Theatre Review by John F. Bailey. August 13, 2011:


 


Never had the fan thrill of seeing a pop idol band in a touring concert within touching distance?


 


 



 


 


ALTAR BOYZ! THE FAITHFUL FIVE!


Luke! (Travis Morin), Mark!(Adam Cassel) Matthew! (Ralph Meitzler), Juan! (Patrick Ortiz),Abraham! (Ian Joseph) Photos Courtesy, Westchester Broadway Theatre by John Vecchiola


 


The irreverent, Evangelical Born-Again Christian Rock Idols are in Elmsford’s Westchester Broadway Theatre for the final stop on their saving-souls crusade across America – to save your soul and introduce you to God and Jesus one soul at a time nightly at Westchester Broadway Theatre. Luke! (Travis Morin), Mark!(Adam Cassel) Matthew! (Ralph Meitzler), Juan! (Patrick Ortiz),Abraham! (Ian Joseph)


 



 


The hilarious seriousness of this send-up-of-all-cult-bands everywhere comes out in over-the-top style when all of the “Faithful Five” perform the show-stopping, soul-uplifting, icon-invoking Number 918 that “Gets the Hell Out of You” using the power of God–beaming God’s power at you as Matthew, Mark, Luke, Juan and Abraham hold out cross, Bible, rosary beads,  and the Star of David in sequence to save the last souls left to be converted in the WBT hall.


 


No matter how closed you are, or skeptical of going to an hour and a half, all-music all-the-time, satiric, outrageous joke after joke about faith and driving hard rock music from 80s pop, rap,funk, soul and Barry Manilow balladeering to deliver a message of aggressive evangelical zeal–they save all souls in the WBT house every night.


 


According to their “Soul Sensor DS 12” meter of God, a soul scoreboard that hangs high above the stage to count down how many in the audience are left to be converted by the end of the hour and a half  “concert,” all souls in the house opening night were captured for the Lord and Jesus.


 


And they loved it: biz guys, power elite, birthday celebrants, 30 and 40-somethings, and seniors-in-training like me in suits,  and the young and restless  stood in standing ovation tribute to this irreverent work of redemption, starring five of the most energetic, dancingest young men you’ll see.


 


Altar Boyz ran off-Broadway for almost five years from 2005 to 2010. It delivers a simulated concert tour performance like Rock of Ages. 


 



 


Ian Joseph as Abraham, the Jewish member of the ecumenical rockers, tells his story, singing the Miracle Song.


 



Ralph Meitzler as Matthew, singing his story at the poignant moment when he is announcing he is leaving the band –will he stay or will he go? As  Adam Cassell (Mark), Travis Morin (Luke), Ian Joseph (Abraham), and Patrick Cruz (Juan) look on in shock.


 


Travis Morton, Patrick Ortiz, Ralph Meitzler, Adam Cassel and Ian Joseph, nail the  synchronized camaraderie that stylized the rise of the heart-throb all-boy groups like Boyz2men (did I spell that right, how quickly we forget), Backstreet Boys and New Kids on the Block with the unique concept of making their band the Altar Boyz, a Christian Evangelical Band. And it works!


 


From the high energy beginning of the concert riffed throughout by a solid bunch of sidelady and sidemen laying a driving “bed” for the earnest voices of the “Faithful Five,” the music grips you big time, no matter what your taste.


 


If you are Glenn Miller born-and raised, have doo-wop roots, are rap-sodic, the energy of the music and the relentless in-your-ears-in-your-face, cannot-ignore-God’s-power musical  story of the rocking evangeleers puts God back in your soul, while the appeal of the young men with their own special camaderie evokes great laughs. The humor, moms,  is adult.


 


This is a simulated concert, opening with fog, and the WBT stage turntable rising up to evoke the beginning of a typical rock concert experience. The glib book sets the tone as the boys individually sing how they came together.


 


There are no dull moments, number to number, though the sound levels of backup band tend to overbear the vocals—but that’s standard in a rock concert. However the lyrics are so good and funny you are a little disappointed not to make them out in their sanctimonious silliness. (But as Brenda Starr, my wife, says, I don’t hear well anyway.)


 


The songs are not hum-along tunes you’ll leave the theatre going out to buy the cast CD – but you might. From “The Calling, Jesus called me on my cellphone, there were no roaming charges” to Number 918, the fantastic “Get the H—L out of you” lyric where religious icons are held up to the audience by each of the five guys.  


 


Each song performed by the boys keeps reducing the number of audience members who are without God – sensed by the  Soul Sensor Scoreboard. The audience applauds itself as the convertants multiply, song by song, having the effect of a game show and a Billy Graham revival meeting.


 


The special effects of this concert venue are satiric.  The lighting effects by Andrew Gmoser and staging and choreography by director Carlos Encinias  deliver the flash-bang-senses-assaulting drama of a typical “tour” concert.  Gmoser and Encinias evoke the experience for those 70 and older who want to feel what the young people feel at these cultural phenomena concerts. The staging  cleverly connects with the 30s, 40s, and 50-somethings  who will remember, smile how the real thing was. This “concert” is an experience that wins over adults of all ages.


 



I have to make special mention of the energetic, committed Musical Director on keyboards Julie McBride,(Center) the bubbly, committed-to-the-music, key-pounding, head-shaking, blonde hair flying young woman who had all the moves of  Billy Preston (the charismatic organ-pounder man on the old Shindig Show). I thought she was going to crash her Yamaha in two she was pounding it so hard. It is great to see some enthusiasm in a pit band!


 


It is great to see the ensemble, too, you got the feel you were in a real concert.  Her sidemen included David Gardos on keyboards. David Shoup on guitar and Ken Ross on skins. They had as big a sound as any back-up band. With some sound adjustment…this show will get God’s message across!


 


You can catch their “Final” concert playing at the Westchester Broadway Theatre now through September 18. Call the box office at 914-592-2222, or visit the website, www.BroadwayTheatre.com


 


The exuberance of this non-stop hour and a half evangelical express makes all the stops on time and wins you over, sending you out with the Lord within you!


 

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Ossining Stops the Sewage Leak into the Hudson. County: Bacteria Level Unaccepta

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WPCNR WATER WATCH. From the County Department of Health. 9:30 P.M. August 12, 2011:


 


The Westchester County Department of Health advises swimmers, boaters, windsurfers, kayakers and other recreational water users that they should continue to avoid direct contact with the Hudson River until further notice.


 


The Village of Ossining reported today that it had completed repairs on a village sewer main damaged by a fallen tree.  The health department estimates there had been an ongoing sewage discharge of 1.5 million gallons per day of sewage due to the sewer main break reported by Ossining on Thursday.


 


 The county health department also has advised the two Hudson River beaches in Westchester, Croton Point Park Beach and Philipse Manor Beach, that they must remain closed.


 


Results from beach water quality samples taken Thursday by the county health department were available this evening and showed unacceptable levels of bacteria.


 


 The Health Department will continue to monitor the situation and will update this advisory when possible.


 


For more information regarding the repaired sewer main, contact the Village of Ossining.

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Curric Head Outlines Efforts to Drive WP Test Scores. 3 Yrs for Progress

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. Statement from  Jessica O’Donovan, White Plains School District Assistant Superintendent for Curriculum & Instruction to WPCNR on the District’s 2011 State Test Scores. UPDATED 6:15 P.M. August 9, 2011:


(Editor’s Note:)Monday the New York State Education Department released the test scores across the state from the Grade 3 to 8 Achievement Tests administered three months ago in May. White Plains English Language Arts scores from Grades 3 to 8 showed that 55% of students in those grades passed the ELA exams, and 65% passed the math exams. WPCNR asked the Superintendent’s Office for a statement on the district’s position. Jessica O’Donovan, the Assistant Superintendent for Curriculum and Instruction issed this statement to WPCNR:



Jessica O’Donovan shown with White Plains Superintendent of Schools Dr. Christopher Clouet in April, 2011 at a district budget meeting.WPCNR News Archive


“We are pleased at the increases in our district-wide ELA scores in grades 3, 4 and 6 (despite a statewide decrease), and the math increases in grades 4, and 6-8. We are now outperforming the State average and the regional average (Westchester County) in middle school mathematics.


Yet, we also realize we still have work to do in order to prepare every student to meet the new, more rigorous State standards.


To this end, we will continue implementing and fine-tuning the Intervention Block at the elementary level, with a clear focus on using data to drive flexible small-group instruction that directly addresses students’ individual needs.


We will also be implementing an enrichment reading program called Great Books in grades 2-8, which will utilize classic high-quality literature and the “shared inquiry” approach to enhance reading comprehension, critical thinking, vocabulary, and writing (please the the Great Books website at http://www.greatbooks.org/about/ for further information).


Third, we will continue to use our early release days to engage in Professional Learning Communities (PLCs) that provide teachers with much needed time to develop common assessments, collaboratively analyze data and then develop action plans, and share best practices.


Finally, we will be implementing a comprehensive reading intervention program at the middle school and high school level that will provide targeted and intensive reading and writing instruction for students who are performing below grade level.


This summarizes some of the key changes we will be making next year in order to ensure we continue making progress in helping every student meet, and ultimately exceed, the new standards.” 


 In a follow-up response to Ms. O’Donovan’s statement, WPCNR asked Ms. O’Donovan why the remedial efforts in response to the higher passing levels fell short and how much of a gap remains to be closed. We asked whether the district scores in May were lowered exponentially by the Hispanic and Black student groups, and what she gauged the achievement gap between black, Hispanic and white students appeared to be.


Ms. O’Donovan responded:


The remedial efforts did not fall short in my opinion.


The changes we put in place to begin addressing the new standards have not even been implemented for a complete year.


Significant increases will take far more time – a minimum of three years.



Our scores decreased more than 20% between 2009 and 2010 when the new standards were implemented.


The achievement gap varies between grades, subjects (ELA versus Math), and schools. In most cases, it is greater than 10%. All of that information will be available for your review when the State officially releases our district report card.


 



 



 

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