Mayor Couldn’t Sell City Land to Landlord Without Common Council Approval

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS LAW JOURNAL. By John F. Bailey. August 25, 2010: 


City  Chief of Staff, John Callahan, today said that Mayor Adam Bradley could not arrange directly to sell city land to his landlord even if he wished to do so.


Callahan told WPCNR, if the city were inclined to sell the two pieces of land to Walter Gabriele, the owner of 19 Hall Avenue, Mayor Bradley’s newly rented residence since June, the sale of both pieces of land adjacent to Gabriele’s Hall Avenue complex would have to be approved by a majority vote of the Common Council.  Callahan,Chief of Staff and Corporation Counsel for the city noted any sale of city-owned land,no matter how small, had to be approved by the Common Council.


 


Five of the 6 members of the Common Council have publicly stated the Mayor should resign his office, and are still known to be very hostile to the Mayor.


 


Callahan, asked if possible sale of the land sought by Walter Gabriele, owner of Mayor Bradley’s new residence, would come before the Common Council, said it was unclear since the city Real Estate Committee would have to recommend sale of it, and that meeting was not scheduled yet.


 


The Mayor’s scheduling of a series of meetings with Gabriele’s representatives with city departments to discuss sale of a 4,860 square foot parcel of city-owned land and a smaller 2,500 parcel and building issues involving demolishing 21-23 Harmon Street (in Battle Hill) was revealed today by Benjamin  Rubin (Journal News city beat writer).


 


Rubin learned of the details of the Board of Ethics “confidential” probe of the Mayor’s interactions with Gabriele, based on 6 Freedom of Information Requests his paper made to the city which produced documents showing the Mayor scheduling meetings on July 8 to go over issues Mr. Gabriele wanted to discuss with the city.


 


The pieces of land in question surrounding Mr.Gabriele’s property at 1-19 Hall Avenue


 


Mr. Rubin’s report on the substance of his Freedom of Information “find” notes that Darren Grubb, Mayor Adam Bradley’s newest personal spokesperson, said the Mayor “proactively gave full and complete disclosure regarding his temporary residence at 19 Hall Avenue to the staff that handle the issues raised in the letter.”


 


The Mayor’s office has for years (especially in the last 12 years) has  scheduled meetings of developers at the drop of a hat at the request of developers large and small to discuss technicalities of developments, possible requests  and summoned department heads to “get right on it.”


 


Thursday evening,the Common Council is to consider hiring an attorney to continue with the Board of Ethics probe and determine if the charges the Mayor breached the city ethics by arranging these meetings are founded.


 


 

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Coyote Take Over of Westchester to be Explored

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WPCNR HABITAT WATCH. From Westchester County Department of Parks and Recreation. August 25, 2010


 


 Find out what local researchers are discovering about coyotes’ migration patterns and behaviors at “Coyotes in Suburbia,” a Conservation Café event, Friday, September 24, 8 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. (8 – 8:30 a.m. registration) in the Kessel Student Center at Pace University’s Pleasantville campus. Property managers, planners, naturalists, environmentalists, students and the public are invited to this free program.


Mark Weckel, director of research and land management at Mianus River Gorge Preserve in
Bedford will present “Mapping Human-Coyote Interaction in Westchester.” The presentation will cover how observations of coyotes can help predict the likelihood of an encounter, with the goal of  peaceful coexistence and  how citizen-generated data  benefit wildlife agencies and municipalities.



Dan Bogan, a doctoral candidate at Cornell University, will report findings he made on local coyote behavior including territory size and movement. Bogan was field research leader of the New York Urban/Suburban Coyote Study, a NYSDEC-funded project carried out in four Westchester municipalities.


A question-and answer session will be included. 


Advance registration is requested by calling (914) 864-7326 by September 22. Beverages will be served; participants should bring their own coffee mug. Carpooling is encouraged.


Conservation Café programs provide a forum for dialogue about current environmental issues. Sponsors are Westchester County’s Parks and Planning departments, Pace University, Friends of Westchester County Parks, Teatown Lake Reservation, the Greenburgh Nature Center, Federated Conservationists of Westchester County and Mianus River Gorge Preserve.


Pace University is located on Bedford Road (Route 117) in Pleasantville. Go to www.pace.edu.

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Astorino Vetoes Expanding Scope of Employees Eligible for lifetime free health c

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From Westchester County Department of Communications. (EDITED) August 23, 2010:


 


County Executive Robert P. Astorino  vetoed a law  Friday that would expand the number of county government employees who are eligible to receive free health care for life, basing years of service on service for any government in New York State in the New York Pension System. Astorino felt only employees working solely for Westchester County for 30 years service


Twelve Legislators’ votes are needed to override.


 “It is hard to believe that less than 100 days after the Board of Legislators passed what it rightly called ‘historic’ legislation to have county employees pay a portion of their health insurance, some of the legislators are already starting to reverse course,” said Astorino. “If the taxpayers are to get the relief they deserve, legislators can’t be allowed to dismantle needed reforms. This veto is designed to prevent that from happening.”



 


Currently all retirees receive individual health-care coverage for free. A feature of the legislation  is to require most employees who retire after this year to start contributing toward their health-care benefits. A compromise reached during the negotiations was to allow employees who have at least 30 years of service to Westchester County as of Dec. 31, 2010, to receive individual health benefits for free after they have retired.  


 


The legislation in the bill Astorino vetoed, amends the earlier law by easing the 30-year requirement, allowing it to be met by employees who have serviced any governments covered by the New York State Pension System.


                               


In May, after three months of negotiations, the administration and board agreed on a plan to start making employees pay for a portion of their health-care coverage. Until then, Westchester was only one of four counties in the state that did not require employees to pay a portion of their health benefits. The plan applied to about 400 non-union, managerial employees, requiring them to contribute between 10 and 20 percent of their health premiums, depending on their salaries.


These 400 employees, including Astorino, began making payments in July. The legislation was crafted with the expectation that it would become the basis of contract negotiations with the county’s approximately 5,000 union workers.


 


Trouble in Amendment City


 


Under the legislature version of the amendment, employees with 25 years in the New York pension system, say working for a municipality or school district, could spend the last five years of their career working for Westchester County, retire with 30 years of service, and then be eligible for free, individual health care for life, with that expense paid for by county taxpayers.  This legislation passed on a strict party-line vote with 11 Democrats in favor and 5 Republicans against.


 “The compromise was to recognize the service of those who have worked for the county for 30 years, not those who retire here with 30 years of service, the bulk of which could be from other places, including places outside of Westchester,” Astorino said.  “The problem with amending the original legislation is that county taxpayers are now on the hook for new and unjustified costs. It is wrong and unfair for county taxpayers to be burdened with this added, open-ended expense.”


Astorino acknowledged that the amended legislation only applies to six retirees at this time. The concern, however, is that the number will greatly expand if allowed to become the benchmark for union contracts as they are renegotiated.


“This law sets a terrible precedent for union negotiations,” Astorino said. “We are in effect giving the unions a major concession without even having the opportunity to ask for anything in return. That’s just plain irresponsible.”


The veto is Astorino’s fifth. It takes a two-thirds vote (12 votes) of the Board of Legislators to override a veto.


 

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Your Guide to the New Improved Exit 7 in White Plains

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WPCNR PHOTOGRAPHS OF THE DAY. By the WPCNR ROVING PHOTOGRAPHER. August 23, 2010 UPDATED 9:05 P.M.E.D.T.: 


Today’s Photographs are the first-ever looks at the Department of  Transportation massive reconfiguation of the Exit 7 Westbound I-287 entrances to I-287 and the Central Westchester Parkway. Monday afternoon rush hour showed traffic flowing smoothly at the three lanes into one merge at 5 P.M.



Westbound traffic on I-287  wishing to access Route 22 to North White Plains and the Taconic Parkway  should take the new Exit 7 (just after exit 8 coming from Connecticut.


 


 



Motorists Bound for Central Westchester Parkway (Route 22, Valhalla, Bronx River Parkway/Taconic come off I-287 westbound up Route 7 on this ramp,which feeds into single lane traffic leaving White Plains in one lane far left (below), and White Plains traffic leaving for I-287 westbound from Harrison, on right



Reverse angle of above photo is show below,  showing three lane converge: Traffic leaving White Plains on left, Traffic for Central Westchester Parkway in center lane, and motorists leaving White Plains in a single lane on far right: (Redesign prevents the cross over entering and entering traffic of the former entrance.)



Three lanes converge below:



Three Lanes Merge into 2, (below)with Ebersole Ice Rink flying by on right.



Under the Grant Avenue bridge (below)



 


Three lanes merge into one lane headed towards a fork (below) with an entrance to I-287 Westbound on left, and Central Westchester Parkway on right.



I-287 Motorists merge smoothly with a long entrance to get up to speed (below)



Department of Transportation Bonus:


Silver Lake and West Harrison residents can now swing across directly into White Plains and The Westchester shopping mall and Stop N Shop via this spur from Columbus Avenue and Locust Avenue, now open.


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Raucous RENT Over Top at WBT. Avenue B Gang Electrifies Emotions

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WPCNR FRONT ROW LOGE.  Theatrical Review by John F. Bailey. August 22, 2010:


 


 A tropical storm pounded the roof of the Westchester Broadway Theatre Sunday evening, but it was no match for the storm of emotions, energy, and passion blasted at the audience like WABC MUSICRADIO last night by the young and “into it” cast of the Theatre’s Rent revival last night.


 



 


There are no trendy restaurants on the Avenue B of Rent. What we have is Roger (above), played with haunting, twisted anxiety by  Mark Ayesh who deliver anguish like scratched glass (that’s a compliment) trying to write One Song Glory before he dies. His pal, the filmmaker,  Mark, played by Andy Kelso,  sets the scene for us,with a series of phone calls in song, we learn the mogul who owns the hideous building they live in wants the Rent, one year’s worth.



 


The company belts into the title-song, with the chorus, “How we gonna pay last year’s rent,” and during the opening title song you have to listen carefully as each of the characters’ problems, (Collins, Benny, Maureen, Mark, Joanne) are explained – it is bittersweet funny— laments and bravado echo against the black brick wall– the wall of the tomb where their living bodies are living in the despair their choices have made. But it’s fun!


 



Rent, the Best Musical of 1996 Tony Award winner  musical/operatta retelling of La Boheme, book, music and lyrics by White Plains High School graduate Jonathan Larson portrays the vivid, colorful, and not so vivid and downright painful world of the creative artists and the down and out of the East Village of the 1960s.


 


This operetta (every word is sung) drops Mr.and Mrs. Westchester into the world of struggling songwriters, filmmakers, entertainers, and their pals, junkies, pimps, prostitutes and street dealers – sort of a Guys and Dolls of the 90s with a hard edge, and yes their struggle against the establishment. However this is also the story about the toll street life, the night life, the life of poor choices takes in the rough streets of any times.


 


Ayesh comes into his own with what I felt was the best sung song of the hour and a half first act, One Song Glory, picking away, Roger the former rock star, now dying a little each day, sings,


O


ne song to leave behind
Find one song
One last refrain
Glory
From the pretty boy front Man
Who wasted opportunity
One song
He had the world at his feet
Glory


 


It is the story of the show, how our own choices when they turn out wrong hurt us forever, but they should not be reasons for society to reject an individual. Each of the tortured people you meet in Rent has a sad sad story to tell but there but for the grace of God go you or I.


 



 


Mimi the prostitute, played with power, passion and range with body by Steena Hernandez  asks Roger for shelter from the cold. They also do I Should Tell You at the stunning close of the first act, Hernandez steals the show with Ayesh on their duet Light My Candle when she seeks shelter from the cold from Roger who is feeling sorry for himself and throws her out. It is  the beginnings of that ill-fated romance.  Another  gay couple Angel (Justin Senense) and Collins(are another romantic thread and they combine on a sensitive  I’ll Cover You


 


Hernandez at a building party on Christmas Eve, the first act takes over the stage with a sensational Out Tonight,


 


Let’s go out tonight
I have to go out tonight
You wanna play?
Let’s run away
We won’t be back before it’s Christmas day
Take me out tonight (meow)

When I get a wink from the doorman
Do you know how lucky you’ll be?
That you’re on line with the feline of Avenue B


 


 


Maureen, (Sara Ruzicka) another pop singer down on her luck due to a habit,  who stole Mark’s girlfriend Joanne is the topic of   Tango Maureen as Mark points out to Joanne  how Maureen manipulates people:


 


‘At least I’ll have tangoed at all’
The Tango Maureen
Gotta dance till your diva is through
You pretend to believe her
Cause in the end — you can’t leave her
But the end it will come
Still you have to play dumb
Till you’re glum and you bum
And turn blue


 


Throughout the first act, the nitty gritty of the East Village (where a Westchester boy like me never went in the 60s) is played out in vignettes of attempted muggings, proprietary power struggles, and the point of these cameos of conflict is to put across this is what people have to do to survive. They should not be looked down on for it, not pitied, but perhaps helped – what a concept!  You could easily update it to the day laborer situation today, or foreclosed homeowners.


 


The first act concludes with a dinner party where Maureen performs a hilarious spoof of the singer Janis Joplin in her spotlight performance, Over the Moon, and all the misfits of Avenue B confront their landlord


 


The Second Act opens with the famous song Seasons of Love


 


525,600 minutes, 525,000 moments so dear.
525,600 minutes – how do you measure, measure a year?
In daylights, in sunsets, in midnights, in cups of coffee.
In inches, in miles, in laughter, in strife.


 


The Second Act finds  the various lovers despite their flaws and failures come to their respective fates which win the audience over. WPCNR was unable to stay for Act II due to a commitment, but then I cannot tell you how it ends anyway.


 


Rent is spectacle. Its pace breathless. It’s loud, rocky(some really great signature rock and roll backbeats), sensitive, outrageous and comes at you with raw emotions that really get into your heart, but it is not maudlin or sentimental in any way. Here is a show that confronts you, setting the tone for many of the very unique musicals of today: Next to Normal and Rock of  Ages, come to mind.  It is not subtle, but like the street life it seeks to portray is in your face, just like the show is.


 


The choreography (and Direction) by Patricia Wilcox was inventive with singers and choristers leaping and jumping everywhere – by far the most energetic show WBT has staged in some time.


 


The sound system needs some adjustment because at times the words were hard to discern they were sung so fast and there was distortion. In fact the show comes at you so rapid fire your head spins trying to concentrate. But, this will probably be adjusted.


 


Jonathan Larson wrote the book, music and lyrics for Rent over eight years, and ironically died just before the show opened  Larson also wrote  Superbia and tick, tick…BOOM! And songs for Sesame Street. 


 


Rent  though, is his One Play Glory.


 


RENT only plays WBT for one month through September 25, so I suggest you call the box office 914-592-2222, and pick your dates or go to www.broadwaytheatre.com


 

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Should Officials Resign when they are Charged or After Proven Guilty

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WPCNR MR. AND MRS. AND MS. WHITE PLAINS POLL. AUGUST 21, 2010:


Our newest poll I am indebted to The Journal News for creating and I thank them for raising the issue.


This week we have seen another chapter unfold in the Bradley Administration.


The  City Board of Ethics was persuaded to investigate that Mayor Adam Bradley had committed an ethics breach in finding a place to live at an apartment owned by a person doing business with the city.


The Board of Ethics,  moving swiftly,  found reacting like the Three Mesquitters” that there might be an “ethics” breach.  A letter “smoking gun”  was requested by a Freedom of Information request from the Gannett chain (delivered by the city in an all-time record timely response to their FOI request) and a special counsel was requested by the Board of Ethics to investigate the matter. It was an amazing enterprise of investigative journalism to say the least, or selective information leaking by somebody that conned the Board of Ethics into being used to make the Mayor look bad again and revive calls for the Mayor’s resignation.


Even if an ethics breach is found to be true, the Common Council still has to vote to make the Mayor resign, and if the Mayor does not,  then the Governor has to remove him. That’s something a new Governor, or an old one is really going to do, right? I doubt it.


The Gannett chain  ran two stories reporting calls have been renewed that the Mayor should resign over this latest breach.


All around the country, mud is thrown up at persons in public office and in private positions, and there are immediate calls for them to resign: Some have: Eliot Spitzer most notably.


The point is the Mayor could very well be exonerated completely from the domestic violence charges he is facing.


The Mayor’s “Ethics Breach,” supposedly being investigated “confidentially” by the Board of Ethics which finds its way into the local press in embarrassing detail for a “confidential investigation” could also be found to be a trumped-up charge. Really, who did tip the Board of Ethics to the breach, anyway? It is easy to witch hunt. At least these days we do not burn people at the stake.


Well this “Resign if charged” philosophy  raises the question: Should an official be expected to resign once charged? Or should they only be expected to resign when proven guilty or after an appeal is upheld, or when there is an even a hint of ethical misconduct?


Let WPCNR know at the right:

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Permission to Park on Street 2-6AM Now Granted only for “Unexpected Emergencies

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WPCNR THE PARKING NEWS. By John F. Bailey. August 21, 2010:


 


White Plains residents can no longer count on “automatic” permission from police to park overnight on White Plains Streets between 2 and 6 A.M, simply by calling in the car’s license number to the police.


 


The White Plains Department of Public Safety is no longer guaranteeing that residents who call the Police Department requesting  permission to take advantage of the long-standing practice requesting permission for overnight guests or whatever reason to park a car on the street overnight will have their requests granted, Police Chief James Bradley confirmed in a written statement to WPCNR Saturday morning.


 


The Chief in a statement, said the new policy  is due to “overwhelming” requests for a waiver of the No Parking between 2 and 6 A.M. experienced by the police lately.


 




 


WPCNR received a report from a resident who was seeking permission for a friend of theirs who was they reported unable to drive. The resident said they were told by the police officer they spoke with, that residents no longer had the option of requesting permission to park a car on the street overnight, no matter what the circumstances.


 


WPCNR went to Police Chief James Bradley to clarify the policy since WPCNR knows of persons who did receive permission to park over night within the last three weeks.


 


The answer is you may or may not be granted permission depending on the circumstances. And if you do not receive permission you may receive a $25 Ticket. The reason, according to Police Chief James Bradley is the Department of Public Safety Night Desk is being “overwhelmed” with such requests recently.


 


The new policy: A pass on Overnight Parking will only be granted for “unexpected” emergencies.


 


According to Chief Bradley:


 


   “We are advising callers that exceptions to the ordinance are for unexpected emergencies.


 


We have been overwhelmed with callers who are not aware of that and believe the call itself guarantees that a summons will not be issued. We also try to point out the availability of legal parking in the area of the caller.



    We have been receiving calls from residents and neighborhood associations about uneven enforcement.


 


We understand that unexpected events will necessitate our assistance and we will continue to work with our residents and certainly we would not direct an incapacitated driver to move their vehicle. “


 


The ordinance forbidding parking on the street between 2 and 6 A.M. was originally put into affect to keep streets clear of cars for snow removal. For years residents have been able to call the police Department Front Desk on an evening and  give a license number of a vehicle requesting perfmission. When this reporter has asked for it, usually for overnight guests, or a vehicle breakdown in a rare circumstance, it has always been granted.


 


Residents should be advised that this is now no longer the case, and should not “count” on it.

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Fire Investigation Team Awaits Key Results.

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WPCNR POLICE GAZETTE. Special to WPCNR. August 20,2010:


White Plains Commissioner of Public Safety David Chong advised WPCNR this evening that the fire investigation team investigating what caused the Bengal Tiger restaurant fire that destroyed half a block on East Post Road July 7 is awaiting some lab results to aid them in making a determination of what lead to White Plains worst fire in five years.



Bengal Tiger Block July 7 Burning. Fire took some 10 hours to bring under control



Aftermath, July 8.

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County Exec Rob Astorino on WHITE PLAINS WEEK on Budget,Housing Settlement

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS WEEK NEWS. August 22,2010:


 County Executive Rob Astorino appears on the city news round-up show, WHITE PLAINS WEEK, this week discussing the county’s latest budget situation.



 


County Executive Visits WHITE PLAINS WEEK, Talks Money, Housing Settlement negotiations, Playland Now at www.whiteplainsweek.com



Rob Astorino was interviewed by John Bailey, the CitizeNetReporter and Peter Katz, the noted ABC Television editor and commentator on Friday evening. The County Executive previewed the budget battle coming up, broke major news on Playland (he sid he would pledge to preserve the buildings now on the site), updated the situation on the county affordable housing settlement (currently county is negotiating how flexible the government guidelines are), and discussed the state of the county and what needs to be done, and how he expects to do it.


The program may be seen around the world on the White Plains Week news site at www.whiteplainsweek.com and on local television at 7 P.M. on Monday countywide on Verizon FIOS channel 45 and on Cablevision, Channel 76 (in White Plains only).


Viewers around the world know they may see Mr. Astorino discuss his fiscal strategy, the affordable housing settlement and what’s ahead on that issue, and reveal startling Playland news, and a look into the future on www.whiteplainsweek.com.


 

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Deficit Falls with New Savings Astorino Announces.

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From Westchester County Department of Communications (Edited) August 20,2010:


Westchester County government will save approximately $21 million next year due to incentive programs that so far have prompted about 450 employees to voluntarily resign or retire.

“The incentive programs have allowed us to trim $21 million from next year’s projected deficit,” said County Executive Robert P. Astorino, who proposed the government participate in the county and state incentive plans. “But even with these and other planned savings, an enormous budget gap of approximately $72 million remains. The toughest budget decisions are still in front of us, but taxpayers must get relief. I am committed to submitting a balanced budget for 2011 with no tax increase.”

Deficit Update


Approximately 450 former county employees who have opted into the county or state incentive plan and left county employment. An additional 20 to 30 more voluntary retirements are expected later this year under the state’s Part B incentive.

The $21 million projected thus far from the state and county voluntary separation programs represents net savings. The figure assumes that approximately 20 percent of the employees who leave under the programs will have to be replaced to maintain operations. The $21 million breaks down as $7 million from the county voluntary separation and $14 million from the state incentive. Those figures, which had fluctuated earlier in the year as employees exercised their options to enter, withdraw or switch programs, are close to being finalized with the closing of the county program and the more significant part of the state program.

In March, Westchester’s budget and finance departments, in consultation with the county’s outside auditor, projected a 2011 budget deficit of $166 million. Since then, initiatives and measures by the Astorino administration have produced in-hand savings of $50 million. Another $44 million in savings are anticipated. Assuming those savings are realized, a gap of approximately $72 million remains, which could require the elimination of about 720 jobs. All of the county’s commissioners and department heads have been given a target to reduce the tax levy portion of their respective budgets by 20 percent.


 

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