Air Ball!

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WPCNR VIEW FROM THE MEZZANINE. By WPCNR SPORTSTALK’s Morty Slickman. July 8, 2010:


 


It’s not good, like Nedicks.


 


The New York Knickerbockers  “Believe in us. We have a plan. Lose now. Lose a lot. So We Can Win Next Year with signing free agents” just threw up a brick.


 



 


The way it used to be in New York Hoops. George Mikan right hooking with Sweetwater Clifton defending at the Old 69th Regiment Armory.


 


The biggest air ball ever. They let the clock run out without taking a shot.


 


The Miami Heat sold their season tickets out for 2010-11 overnight.


 


The Knickerbockers  negotiate like they play ball. No defense. No bench. No consistency.


 


The hardwood wasteland in the world’s most ghastly arena for seeing anything (Madison Square “are those ants down there?” Garden)  is forever now, because the grand strategy of clearing cap room to sign (like the Yankees) two or three super free agents has failed big time.


 


The Knicks are not the Yankees and that’s obvious.


 


If the Knicks make the playoffs before I die I will be amazed.


 


Could the Nets owner buy them, too?


 


Why? Because the present management has a lousy track record. Pat Riley who runs the Heat has a great track record.


 


The Knicks did not get LeBron. They did not get his two pals They got LeBron’s other pal, who has to be admired for convincing the Knick Knack management that he is close to LeBron. What a salesman! I want him selling downtown White Plains.


 


His next conversation with his pal LeBron will be a beaut.”How could you leave me with this terrible team?”


 


Remember what all those astute sophisticated New York Knick season ticketholders were told the last two dreadful years?


 


That the New York sports press and know-nothing talk-show hosts supported this strategy to my everlasting scorn, and the genius of sports radio and the papers did not even consider the Knicks not signing one of these guys?


 


 We’re clearing the cap, the Knick-Knacks told the expense account crowd (the dumbest rich people in America) to give you an NBA title when all those free agents are free to come to New York. We’ll win for years. Wait…


 


Now they are going to lose for the next decade.


 


And the fans who remember Carl Braun, Sweetwater Clifton, Kenny Sears, Howard Komives, and the fabulous Knick Fives of the late 1960s remember when it hurt when the Knicks lost.


 


Now we are numb.The true fan wants to win every game. He wants to believe management does,too. There is something sick and unamerican about mailing in a game — well we Knick fans have watched the Knickerbockers mail in three seasons worth of games.


 


It was not pretty.


 


Well the prime meat did not want to come to New York, anyway.


 


Why? Because this would mean they would have to play for Cablevision, the organization that took the Rangers and the Knicks from Champions to Chumps of the NBA and the NHL.


 


Both teams are run by suckering the season ticket holders every year with big promises  who run out of gas at playoff drive time (the Ranger strategy) and worse on the Knick side where they build teams around bench players, what a strategy!


 


So now LeBron’s pal assumes the Bernard King  the job of the aging superstar that might keep the greatest suckers in the world: New York fans coming back to entertain their clients.


 


We know the name of that tune.


 


There is no joy at 33rd and 7th tonight.  Nor over in Newark where the Nets never really had a chance, but at least they have new ownership who has not made a bad decision yet.


 


The Cablevision boys have never made a good Knickerbocker or Ranger decision.


 


The Knickerbocker strategy – never even second-guessed by the New York sports press —has failed utterly. They have all this cap and no one wants their money. They have nobody on their roster anyone wants except LeBron’s “friend.”


 


Perhaps Omar Minaya would want him for the Mets stretch drive.


 


You know the Knicks should call Walt Frazier and work him out because nobody in his or her right mind is going to go watch the Knick Knacks next year.


 


I feel very badly for the purgatory of sportscasting: all the guys who do Knick and Ranger pre and post-game shows day-in, day-out living the never-never-land that those organizations care at all whether they win.


 


They don’t.


 


 And Frazier could at least even at his age break down a defense in the half court.


 


I love it.


 


And why did the three basketeers not come to New York?


 


No nucleus. No coach. You have a coach at the Garden who does not believe in defense. LeBron James knew he was not going to win here and the fat boys who feed off the Knick press buffets would rip him to shreds when the Knicks can only do .500 with him.


 


The big 3 went to Miami because they know how to win. They play D.


 


Where is the Knick backup plan?


 


Can we hear it please?


 


Ho hum – another 30 and 50 season next year.


 


 


 


But wait–we’ll win the lottery next year.


 


The Knicks don’t win anything. They don’t work at it at all


 


If that.


 


Another year of lousy pro basketball and tired hockey.


 



The Old 69th Regiment Armory where Knickerbockers played and fans learned to love them.

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No Sprinkler System in Bengal Tiger Where Fire Started, Press Conference Reveals

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WPCNR CITY HALL CIRCUIT. By John F. Bailey. July 8, 2010:


 


When the Bengal Tiger  Restaurant caught fire Wednesday afternoon, at an undetermined time, there was no sprinkler system in the restaurant to slow the spread of the blaze, White Plains Fire Chief, Richard Lyman told a press conference at city hall this afternoon.


 


 



 


The Bengal Tiger Fire Scene (center) seen from the Chester & Maple Garage at noon today.


 


 When firefighters arrived at the Bengal Tiger,  they were responding to a report of smoke coming from the Tiger area. Lyman answering a question from White Plains Week’s Peter Katz, said police officers quickly cleared the buildings on the Post Road block, and firefighters entered the Tiger premises finding heavy smoke coming up the stairs from the basement, flames on the stairwell, and the stairwell had collapsed and high heat conditions.


 



Aftermath News Conference, City Hall: Damon Amadio, Building Commissioner, Police Chief James Bradley, Mayor Adam Bradley, Fire Chief Richard Lyman.


 


 Lyman said firemen attempted get water on the blaze in the interior of the restaurant, but were called them back outside because of the rapid spread of the fire, and the lack of ventilation. In the rapidly deteriorating conditions, Lyman said, the strategy was to bring the firefighters out and conduct a containment strategy to prevent the spread to other buildings on the block and the two story office building on Court Street. Lyman said fire went up the columns from the basement and got into the cockloft(roof of the building)that was wood construction.


 


It is not known who phoned in the alarm which was received by the fire bureau at 2:29 P.M., Lyman said.


 


Lyman said the Latin American Café restaurant next door, did have a sprinkler system installed, but he did not indicate that it had activated.  Lyman also said he had learned that there were explosions in the building according to what persons on the scene had told him.(Two other uniformed personnel have told WPCNR they had heard explosions, and a third had confirmed that he had been told there were explosions.) 


 


 


 


Mayor Adam Bradley said he had been told by persons from the restaurant the fire had started in the basement of the Bengal Tiger and that the search for what started the devastating destruction was now under way.


 


A matter that will be determined as part of the investigation will be– how long the fire was going before it was phoned in,or in the case at this time, when smoke was reported; what activities were going on at the time in the Bengal Tiger that might have lead to the fire starting.


 


Chief Lyman said that Bengal Tiger did not have a sprinkler system because it was not required to conform to the new city code because the restaurant opened before the sprinkler systems were required by the  city fire code. Building Commissioner Damon Amadio told WPCNR that new restaurants opening  now, depending on occupancy expected are required to have sprinkler systems.


 


WPCNR asked Mayor Adam Bradley if he was going to direct the city to look into how many restaurants in buildings similar to the block that was gutted yesterday existed without sprinkling systems, and whether code could be legislated to equip non-fire retardant equipped establishments and buildings with sprinblers.  


 


Bradley said they would look into it but that it was a legal issue as to whether non-conforming properties could be forced to upgrade. Asked if the city would supply a list of restaurants and buildings in the downtown that were non-conforming, Bradley said WPCNR would have to file a Freedom of Information Act request. Amadio, the Commissioner of Building, told WPCNR “there were a great number of (non-conforming) buildings.”


 


Adam Bradley said the 11-hour fire fight was “a devastating fire to the citizens.” The Mayor said 13 stores were affected by the fire, and 7 were destroyed from The Bengal Tiger to the beauty salon around the corner on Court Street. He praised the White Plains Fire Bureau who “performed amazingly in adverse conditions,” and they were fortunate there were no serious injuries. He said 24 White Plains fire fighters were treated for heat exhaustion and 7 from other fire companies and 2 civilians treated. All but one firefighter had been released from the hospital as of 2 P.M.


 


“It was a fabulous joint effort,” the Mayor said.


 


He thanked White Plains Hospital Medical Center for supplying oxygen, restaurants for supplying water, and aid from the Westchester Department of Emergency Services.


 


Chief Lyman said 60 firefighters in total worked on the sweeping blaze which alternate blackened the city streets with thick dark smoke and white foggy acrid smoke for 10 hours,  including 9 companies.


 


Bradley said the transformer explosion that took place about 7:30 P.M. resulting in the closing of Mamaroneck Avenue to traffic was unrelated to the fire then still going on. He said it was the result of a cover being placed on a transformer, creating an overheating condition which caused the transformer to blow. No one was hurt in that incident.


 


Chief Lyman said that a fire at the Con Edison substation on New Street, phoned in at 1:39 P.M. and hour earlier took up one White Plains unit, and this complicated the response to the Post Scene phoned in 50 minutes later. Mayor Bradley said they were very concerned about the Con Ed fire because that would have produced a strain on the electric grid, and the fire fighters at that scene were able to contain that.

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Cloudy Water From WP Taps — Due to fire Drain,Kensico Pipe Fix — OK to Drink

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WPCNR MAIN STREET JOURNAL. Special to WPCNR. July 8, 2010:


Tap water in White Plains was unusually white and cloudy this morning. After about 30 seconds it cleared. WPCNR checked with the Department of Public Works Pumping Station, and was told the cloudiness was due to the fire fighting yesterday, and the Kensico pipe repairs going on allowing excess air in the water lines. The official said residents should wait about 30 seconds and the water will become crystal clear as the air bubbles to the surface and escapes into the air. He said the water is absolutely safe.



WHITE PLAINS WATER OUT OF THE TAP AT WPCNR HEADQUARTERS THIS MORNING


 

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Firefighters Given Prelim Injunction too.FF Retirees don’t have to Pay Med $$

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS LAW JOURNAL. By John F. Bailey. July 8, 2010:


Joe Carrier, the President of the White Plains Firefighters announced to WPCNR today that his union suit in federal court for a preliminary injunction was also granted by the judge late yesterday. Carrier told WPCNR, “We scored a major success. The judge in federal court ruled our retirees (joining the city before July, 1995) over 70 years old do not have to pay 15%,”


The city by the granting of the preliminary injunction  to be extended to cover the firefighters by Judge Stephen Robinson, the city is enjoined from collecting premiums beginning Saturday. The injunctions prevent the city from collecting some million dollars or more in premiums from police and fire retirees in the 2010-1l fiscal year which started 8 days ago. 


Carrier said he is reluctant to negotiate with the city on a new firefighter contract coming up unless the city attitude changes. “They need to be less dictatorial,” Carrier said. He said he fully expected the medical benefits issue to surface again. However, the present contract the police and fire unions just completed continues in effect, so unless concessions are negotiated, medical benefits premium payment by  present employed uniformed police officers not new hires would be off the table.


Carrier said the city violated the Taylor Law by changing the way retirees medical benefits are paid without negotiating it.


Carrier, commenting on yesterday’s disasterous fire on Post Road said it showed why the city needed 169 active firefighters, not the 152 the city cut back to in June. Carrier said the fire at New Street involving the Con Edison substation hurt the department ability to respond optimally to the fire on Post Road.

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AFTER INJUNCTION: Attorney Al Pirro to City: Want to Negotiate?

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS LAW JOURNAL.EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW WITH POLICE RETIREES ATTORNEY JULY 7, 2010


 


Attorney Albert J. Pirro, Jr. of The Pirro Group, in an exclusive interview with the WHITE PLAINS WEEK news team  comments on the preliminary injunction issued against The City of White Plains and what it meansin the lawsuit he brought can be viewed at www.whiteplainsweek.com — or directly using this link: http://www.whiteplainsweek.com/Pirro-384k-7-7-10.WMV

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Fire on Post-Court Street Block Contained. Water Pressure LOW. Conserve!

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BULLETIN


WPCNR BULLETIN. By John F. Bailey. July 7,2010. 8:55 P.M. E.D.T. UPDATED 10:10 P.M. E.DT. PACKED WITH PIX!:


A CitizeNetReporter observer from the roof of the Chester-Maple garage reports flames still erupting from the ComFit Shoe Store as of 10 P.M. this evening as fire personnel continue to bring the biggest fire in White Plains in the last decade under control.



David  Chong,Public Safety Commissioner,far left, Anthony Sutton, County Emergency Preparedness Officer and Mayor Adam Bradley at the news conference, 8: 15 P.M. discussing the Bengal Tiger fire.


Commissioner of Public Safety David Chong reported at 8:15 this evening at a news conference that the disasterous fire starting in the basement of the Bengal Tiger restaurant early this afternoon was contained. He said it was still not under control. Chong also asked White Plains residents to conserve water usage (no sprinkling, no unnecessary running of washers),immediately because of low water pressure conditions aggravated by the untold gallons of water poured on today’s fire. Residents are currently receiving automatic calls from the city asking for water conservation.


Mayor Bradley said that 19 fire fighters have been hospitalized due to heat exhaustion, and said there were none in serious condition of any sort.


 



Fire, 3:15 P.M.



FIREFIGHTERS POURING THE WATER ON, 3:45 P.M. FROM THE FARMERS MARKET STAGING AREA BEHIND THE BENGAL TIGER.



ACRID SMOKE  DESCENDS OVER AREA: 4 PM



SMOKE COMING OUT OF DOORS OF BEAUTY SALON ON CHURCH STREET.4 PM



Firefighters Attempting to go on roof. 4 PM.



Fire, Still Spewing thick acrid smoke, 6:45 PM, Sunsetting.



Apparratus saturating roof as roof collapses at 6:45 P.M.




Flames shooting up out of  roof, 7:00 PM (after fire was ongoing for about 6 hours



THICK, CHOKING, PUNGENT SMOKE BLANKETED THE DOWNTOWN FOR 3 BLOCKS OF MAMARONECK AVENUE FOR SEVEN HOURS. THIS WAS QUARROPAS STREET AT 6 PM., VIEWED FROM Mamaroneck Avenue LOOKING WEST. SMOKE OBSCURED THE SETTING SUN.


Bradley said he fire started in the basement, spread through the basement and went up to the roof and because the basement could not be reached, the fire was very difficult to bring under control. He said six businesses were destroyed by the fire. Bradley added that a fire wall “seemed to work” and prevented the fire from spreading to Webster Bank on the corner of Mamaroneck Avenue and Post Road.



A transformer blew underground at the Mamaroneck Avenue and Post Road intersection at about 7:30 P.M. firemen on the scene told WPCNR, resulting in police clearing the sidewalk bars on Mamaroneck Avenue between Post Road and Maple Avenue, and closing the street to traffic.


The street is presently closed to traffic between Post and Maple. The drinking establishments  are still open. The street was bumper to bumper traffic for most of the afternoon.


 


Smoke was still coming up moderately from the scene of devastation as sun set.


 

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As of 7:15 P.M. Post Road Fire Still Going. Roof Collapses. 18 Firemen to Hosp

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WPCNR BULLETIN. By John F. Bailey. July 7, 2010. 7:10 P.M.UPDATED WITH EXCLUSIVE WHITE PLAINS WEEK VIDEO 7:50 P.M. E.D.T.:


Mayor Adam Bradley of  White Plains reported moments ago by phone with WPCNR that the cause of this afternoon’s Bengal Tiger blaze which at this time is blazing at the basement level according to the Mayor, is under investigation. He said 18 firepersons had been hospitalized from heat exhaustion, heart, and other conditions in fighting the blaze, which has been ongoing since 2:30 P.M. The Mayor said fortunately that no firemen at this time have been seriously injured to his knowledge


For exclusive White Plains Week video of the scene taken between 6 P.M. and 7 P.M. go to this White Plains Week Link, showing flames and the scene as the roof was collapsing:


http://www.whiteplainsweek.com/downtown-fire-update-384k-7-7-10.WMV


The Mayor said, and this reporter observed that the roof collapsed about 6:15 P.M. and towering ladders were spewing water on the flames flaring up out of the top of the building. The Mayor suggested there may be more information as of 8:15 P.M. Traffic is still flowing on Mamaroneck Avenue, but motorists should avoid the area.

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Four Alarm Fire Gutting Post Road, Maple Ave. Block. Starts at Bengal Tiger Rest

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BULLETIN


WPCNR BULLETIN.By John F. Bailey. July 7, 2010 UPDATED 5:20 P.M. E.D.T.: Mayor Adam Bradley reporting from the fire scene at the Post Road Block between Court Street and Mamaroneck Avenues reports to WPCNR as of 5:20 P.M. that the fire is still out of control.


 As of 4 P.M. the fire was raging out of control on the Post Road block between Maple and Mamaroneck Avenues in downtown White Plains with billows of white and black smoke sweeping across the rooftop and down on the street. Residents and motorists are urged to avoid the area at all cost.


To see exclusive WHITE PLAINS WEEK VIDEO of this unfolding fire, shot an hour ago,  go to http://www.whiteplainsweek.com/downtown_fire_384k-7-7-10.WMV


Commissioner of Public Safety David Chong told WPCNR 4 White Plains fire companies had been fighting the fire for an hour and a half and it was still out of control as of 4 P.M. Chong said two firefighters had been treated for heat exhaustion under “the worst possible conditions to fight a fire.”


Chong said the fire started in the kitchen of the Bengal Tiger Restaurant and spread through the rafters. Smoke could be observed by this reporter coming out of the street level doors of the beauty salon on Court Street, 3/4 of a block from the Bengal Tiger establisment.


Fire apparatus was applying extinguishing agents to the roof of the block from the Farmers Market lot and when WPCNR departed to put up this story, Scarsdale and Harrison fire departments were arriving to aid White Plains firefighters.


 

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PIRRO CALLS ON CITY TO TALK OVER RETIREE MEDICAL PREMIUMS AFTER WINNING PRELIMIN

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS LAW JOURNAL. By John F. Bailey. July 7,2010:


U.S. District Court Judge Stephen Robinson issued a preliminary injunction today, stopping the city of White Plains from collecting medical premiums from previously retired White Plains Police Officers. Attorney for the White Plains Retirees Association, Albert J. Pirro, Jr., advised the media today. Pirro said the preliminary injunction prohibits the city from collecting premiums from the 146 police retirees he represented in the suit 


He said the firefighters union is currently arguing a case in court saying the ruling should apply to them, too, but Mr. Pirro did not have details on how that legal battle is unfolding. Pirro said the injunction only applies to the police retirees, and does not affect the firefighters situation.


Pirro told WPCNR the injunction would stand until the case the police retirees have filed goes to trial. Pirro is requesting a jury trial. He indicated he was willing to take the case all the way, but was willing to sit down and talk with the city. Later this evening on the White Plains Week website, WPCNR will be airing a White Plains Week special interview with Mr. Pirro on the ramifications of this decision.


 

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55 White Plains Customers Without Electricity.

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WPCNR THE POWER NEWS. JULY 7, 2010: 


As of 9 A.M. this morning with the temperature at 90 degrees in the shade, Con Edison Storm Map shows 55 White Plains customers without power, and across Westchester County, there are 1,568 Con Ed customers without power among the 346,452 customers the utility serves.


In White Plains, a cooling center is open at 65 Miller Place, (the Senior Citizen Center) for use by the general public. City pools at Kittrell and Gardella are open until 9 P.M.

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