WPCNR Report Confirmed by Public Safety: 5 New Police, 5 New Firemen to Be Hired

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WPCNR POLICE GAZETTE. By John F. Bailey. October 6, 2009: Deputy Commissioners of Public Safety Daniel Jackson  and John Cullen officially confirmed the WPCNR discovery Monday afternoon that the White Plains Department of Public Safety is hiring 10 new “replacement” personnel: 5 police officers and 5 firefighters. Here are the details from Deputy Commissioner Jackson, official spokesman for the Department of Public Safety in response to WPCNR  questions asked him early Monday evening:

WPCNR: I would like to confirm the Department of Public Safety is hiring about 10 new police and new fire personnel.


Jackson: Yes, we are planning to hire 5 firefighters and 5 police officers. 

WPCNR: Could you give me the details.


Jackson: The hiring date is currently set for October 19.

WPCNR: Are these replacements for officers who have left?


Jackson: Yes, these are replacements for police officers and firefighters that have retired during this fiscal year.




WPCNR: Are they replacing personnel who are funded in positions not filled?


Jackson: Yes these retirements have occurred this fiscal year, their positions are funded. There are additional vacancies that existed at the end of the 08-09 FY and those positions are not currently funded and remain vacant. The hiring is only to fill currently funded positions. 

WPCNR: Are these hires bringing the two divisions of Public Safety up to full strength?
Jackson: No, we have over 10 vacancies in both the police and fire bureaus so this effort will fill half of our vacancies. 


WPCNR: What is the reason for the hires, considering there is a supposed hiring freeze?



Jackson: The reason for the hires is that we are approaching vacancy levels that are going to impact our ability to deliver the level of service that the city requires. The drastic reductions in our 09-10 overtime budgets ensure that as the vacancies get to these levels, the safety of the public will be impacted. The Commissioner (Dr. Frank Straub) has been consistent in his message to the council and the Mayor, once we get to 10 vacancies, operations and overtime are impacted greatly. 

WPCNR: What is the present level of the Department? Are police and fire at full-strength?
Jackson: Both the police and fire bureaus each will still have 5 vacancies after this hiring so we are still not at full strength.


At the Common Council meeting Monday evening, Mayor Delfino introduced city employees who have completed 25 years of service, but did not make any announcement of the new police and firefighter hirings.

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City Unfreezes Hiring Ban — Hires 5 Firefighters, New Police. Council Unaware

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WPCNR POLICE GAZETTE. By John F. Bailey. October 5, 2009: WPCNR News has learned that the White Plains Department of Public Safety will be hiring 5 new firefighters, bringing the Department of Fire up to about 165 persons,4 short of what the department is budgeted. WPCNR has also learned that approximately 10 new police officers will be hired as well, paid for in the current 2009-10 budget.


WPCNR has asked the Mayor’s Office and the Department of Public Safety for confirmation of these hires which were agreed upon about one month ago, according to a highly reliable source. Neither the Mayor’s Office nor the Department of Public Safety has confirmed or denied the new hires –which apparently, according to WPCNR sources, are “replacement” hires.


 Councilperson Rita Malmud told WPCNR today the first time she heard of the new Public Safety hires was when WPCNR asked her about it this afternoon. Malmud, asked how this could happen when the city was supposedly in a hiring freeze, said the 2009-10 budget was passed, and in that budget a certain number of positions are allowed for, and that it is the Mayor has the discretion to fill those positions if they are funded. Last fall Mayor Delfino instituted a hiring freeze, but did not say that budgeted positions not filled were exempt.


The news of the hires comes when the city is reported facing a $12 Million budget deficit in the current year.


 


 


 


 

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CCOS Holds WHITE PLAINS CANDIDATES NIGHT OCT 14

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WPCNR CAMPAIGN 2009. From Concerned Citizens for Open Space. October 5, 2009: The White Plains Concerned Citizens for Open Space (CCOS) Candidate’s Night on Wednesday October 14 at the Ridgeway Country Club at 7:00. Each candidate will be given an opportunity to make an opening statement, and each group will be asked to respond to a number of questions. The forum will be free and open to the general public.  Candidates scheduled are:



County Legislature: Bill Ryan (incumbent), Bob Hyland.

White Plains Mayor: Adam Bradley, Glen Hockley.

Common Council: Tom Roach (incumbent), James Arndt, David Buchwald, Leonard Lolis, Beth Smayda.

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42nd ST. IN MONEY:GAUDY! SHADY! GLAM! TIMELESS LULLABY OF BROADWAY

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WPCNR ON THE AISLE. Theatrical Review By John F. Bailey. October 2, 2009: So I’ve got my fedora back on the back of my head, a Lucky lit up, and a gimlet on the rocks by the trusty Smith Corona Zephyr portable typewriter rapping this out and the tapping from Westchester Broadway Theatre’s 42nd Street just keeps my fingers flying over the keyboard.


 



Shannon O’Bryan as Peggy, with Todd Lattimore as Billie Lawlor :


Sheer, Unadulterated Brilliance!


Photos, Courtesy WBT, John Vecchiola.


 


 


 



Coming at you — The Kids in the Line– in spectacular opening number Audition


 


All you “Little Nifties from the 50s” and “Sexy Ladies from the 80s” who want to meet the elite, should take the I-287 to see Westchester Broadway Theatre’s greatest production of 42nd Street which won over the skeptical Opening Night audience turning it into a thunderous appreciative crowd whose bellows of bravos, whistles and non-stop applause brought back the company for a dancing encore with its effervescent bubbly — what’s-there-not-to-like leading lady —  Shannon O’Bryan, the ingénue Peggy Sawyer romping back on stage for one last fling with the audience.





From the wail of the overture from the octette orchestra bringing  this fabulous old score to life with that old humdinger,  Lullaby of Broadway, and jazz age classic,  In the Money melodies with their toe-tapping blues to swelling ballads all the way  to 2-1/2 hours later to the 15-minute all-stops-out thunderous driving, gaudy, ditzy, glitzy dazzling finale of the title song that brings the crowd to its feet, WBT’s 42nd Street is definitely “the elite.”


 


It features  the greatest dancing “ensemble” with the best looking “Little Nifties from the 50s” WBT has ever put on the old boards. The toe-tapping rhythms and spectacular costumes say “show biz”and create the Broadway dream everybody loves to believe.


 


When the ensemble shouts out the news “Julian Marsh is doing a show,” one of the top 10 musicals of them all turns onto the Express Line and never slows down, as this all-star lineup of 42nd Street veteran hoofers perform Audition, all thanks to Director and Choreographer Randy Skinner, who assisted Gower Champion on the Broadway production of 42nd Street. Skinner was nominated for Tony,Drama Desk,Outer Critics, and Astaires for that production. The lighting by Andrew Gmoser makes this “42nd” WBT’s most visually dazzling production in years and that’s before the talent struts its stuff and embellishes this broadway jewel.


 



 


Tom Galantich as Julian Marsh, a characature of legendary Broadway producers, stops the show when he convinces Peggy  (Shannon O’Bryan)to step in for the star of the show by singing to her of the Lullaby of Old Broadway in Act II. The set, Broad Street Station with its evocative old train station signs gives you the feel of the clickety-clack.


 


Ms. O’Bryan  lives in the Sawyer role, having done the 42nd Street national tour all over the country, on Broadway and in Russia, has the perky, believable moxy this role demands, the energy, and show biz presence that makes you root for her.You like her. She’s cute. Desirable and innocent all at the same time, truly a “little nifty fifty.” She’s got it:  the voice, just clear as a bell and belts ‘em better than Merman, pal – and she can dance.


 


For those would-be Broadway Babies who don’t know the timeless story. Here it goes in one  Broadway sentence: Sawyer arrives from Allentown late for an audition, lands the last slot in a  chorus line for Julian Marsh’s new show, and in tryouts she runs into the aging star of the show, Dorothy Brock breaks Ms. Brock’s leg – and the producer Marsh talks her into taking over the star role – the stuff Broadway dreams are made of. You know she’s going to make it—but 42nd Street makes the story of the build-up to opening night non-stop entertainment. Every girl who dreams of Broadway stardom loves this show.


 



 


Highlights—every scene is a highlight and WBT has spared no expense on this production and it shows: Todd Lattimore as Billy Lawlor — back row center, the male lead in the musical heading to Broadway, Pretty Lady, cavorts in one great costume after another. This is fabulous chorus line doing In the Money


 


 


 



Dorothy Stanley as Dorothy Brock and Michael Scott (Pat Denning).


 


Dorothy Stanley, portraying the ill-fated star Dorothy Brock has the diva mystique down perfectly – even to using her own pet dog in the show. Her plaintive “I OnlyHave Eyes for You” pining for boyfriend Pat Denning (Michael Scott) is striking. She brings her throaty, haughty contralto to focus on heart break quite believably.


 


Ms. Stanley,singing 42nd Street at the end of the First Act is just getting under way with this classic with a unique styling, when the accident with Ms. O’Bryan happens and boom Dorothy Brock is out of the show. The accident  is well choreographed and  even  foreshadowed in the script and still you don’t see it coming because Ms. Stanley and Ms. O’Bryan  pull it off so well. It’s too bad the accident does not happen at the end of the song because I’d love to see her full treatment of this song.


 


Then there are the throw-away numbers that seem in the show just because they are so much fun: Shuffle Off to Buffalo (simulating Pullman Cars, cleverly done), You’re Getting to be a Habit with Me, Young and Healthy with Lattimore and Ms. O’Bryan getting to know each other; Go Into Your Dance.


 



 


Derek Holland playing Andy Lee the chorus line boss – dances deftly with Sawyer – makes her shine – and simulates the work of whipping a show into shape with realism.


Holland, second from left, and Shannon O’Bryan, second from right,  Going into their dance. Chorus line showstopper!


 


This is great entertainment first staged in 1980 – another era of bad economic times (remember 20% inflation, gang) – is great escapist entertainment and you’ll be tapping your toes from the first beat to the last.


 


I doff my fedora to that slick, good-looking, high stepping chorus line, pastry-perfect cuties and sharp-dressed-men all:


Jenna Edison, Andrew Black, Jennifer Cameron, Andrew Charter, Justine Clark, Andrew Eckert, Meghan Garstang, Jordan Grubb, Andrew Hodge, Chris LeBeau, Ashley Peacock(a real stunner),  Matthew Schneider, Kelly Skidmore, Katy Wood (yes!) – never have so many costume changes been made so fast in such cramped space, so many hair irons coiffed so many 30s hairdos flawlessly fluffed and so many taps been tapped so breathlessly entertainingly.


 


 


The orchestra backed them up with the tireless nonstop play of a 30s dance-a-thon – those of you who were blowing and playing, we salute you —  Jeff Tanski, Musical Director and keyboards, Adam Laird, keyboards, Ken Ross, drums, Lewis Wyatt and Ron Kozak, reeds, John Reid on that fabulous blues trumpet, Jason Ingram on the bone, Arnold Gottlieb on bass. They delivered a bigtime Broadway sound in the little bigtime Broadway Theatre.


 


Sets – minimalist but serviceable.  I like the Broad Street Station set with the light big station windows particularly, and the big dimes in the In the Money Number. I also liked the interplay of lighting and fabulous costume colors in the over the top 42nd Street final number.It’s all good.


 


The show will take a break December 7, and return December 30  running to February – you could run this musical forever. It’s educational, it’s entertaining, it’s the show that says “show biz.”


 


 


To paraphrase Julian Marsh, “Don’t see this show for yourself, see it for the kids in the line.”


 


It’s Broadway that won’t make you feel bad. Broadway that lifts your soul and stirs those dreams of stardom you never give up.


 


It’s sheer, unadulterated brilliance! You won’t want to say good night til early in the morning when the milkman’s on his way.


 


BETWEEN THE ACTS


 


For tickets to 42nd Street and the rest of the WBT exciting playbill – contact 914-592-2222, or hit their website, www.broadwaytheatre.com.


 


WBT’s genial host, Steve Calleran also announced the WBT’s dynamite 2010 lineup: the blockbuster productions are Nine, (coming in February)  Sugar (based on the movie Some Like It Hot),  the Tony-winning Rent by the White Plains playwright, John Larson and Jekyll & Hyde.


 


I forgot to say that for the $70 for this show, WBT throws in your dinner too.


 


So go already1

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Ryan Undergoes Gall Bladder Surgery at White Plains Hospital

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. October 1,2009:  The Board of Legislators reported today: “After experiencing some physical discomfort on Saturday, September 27th and after seeing his family doctor,  Westchester County Board of Legislators Chairman Bill Ryan was admitted into White Plains Hospital Center.  The medical staff determined that the best course of action was to conduct laparoscopic gallbladder surgery. The procedure, one of the most common medical procedures, was completed quickly and successfully.”

 


“He is recovering comfortably, is eating and in excellent spirits, and is looking forward to returning to a full schedule of work as soon as possible.  Chairman Ryan‘s wife, JoAnn, has been by his side at the hospital.”


 


“I want all residents to know that I’m doing great and feeling fine, and can’t wait to get back to work,” said Chairman Ryan.


 


# # #


 


Additional news available at www.westchesterlegislators.com/mediacenter


 


_______________________________________

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County SEEKS TO OVERTURN NICOLAI RULING HOCKLEY CAN BE ON NOV Mayor Ballot

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS LAW JOURNAL. By John F. Bailey.OCTOBER 1, 2009. : Westchester County Attorney Linda Trentacoste reported to WPCNR today that a brief appealing New York Supreme Court Judge Francis Nicolai’s ruling that Councilman Glen Hockley should be allowed to remain on the November ballot for Mayor was filed yesterday with the Second Department of the New York Appellate Court in Brooklyn. No date has been set yet for a hearing on the matter.



Councilman Glen Hockley, right, with City Executive Officer Paul Wood, left, Tuesday evening. Mr.Hockley’s ability to run for Mayor is being challenged anew by the County Board of Elections with an appeal filed Tuesday.


The Board of Elections is appealing the ruling by Judge Nicolai that Mr. Hockley’s gathering of some 2,000 signatures half of them himself indicated he indeed intended to accept the nomination and that filing a Certificate of Acceptance was not primarily for the purpose of accepting a nomimination,but rather to decline a nomination.


The Appellate Court usually attends election matters promptly.


As of noon Thursday, Glen Hockley told WPCNR he had not been “served” with the notice of the appeal.


He told WPCNR, “They’re (the Board of Elections) are very much afraid, that’s why. To disrespect the opinion of one of the top judges. They don’t respect independent nominees. They’re afraid  (because) I’m not being part of this insider community. They hide behind trivial issues and not concerned with the issues they should be concerned with — that is to be sure people have a choice.”

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It’s All About the Bread: Panera White Plains Celebrates Opening 11th Venue

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WPCNR MAIN STREET JOURNAL. By Freddy the Freeloader. October 1, 2009: Panera Bread, with its signature asiago cheese flavored classic loaf,  celebrated its opening in the One North Broadway Plaza on Main Street  between Wal Mart and One North Broadway just five minutes from City Hall, just across from the City Center yesterday with a “Break the Bread” ceremony Wednesday. 


 



 


Panera Bread on One North Broadway Plaza on Main Street.


 



 


The kingpin of Panera Bread in the New York area, Lowell Farkas, right, was on hand with Mayor Joseph Delfino to welcome Panera officially to the heartbeat of business in Westchester County, White Plains, New York USA. With yet another opening of a new restaurant in White Plains, it was another indication that White Plains was coming back – maybe. The Mayor officially “breaks the bread” at Panera White Plains official opening Wednesday.


 



Tony Diaz, Operating Partner, left, with Lowell Farkas, right, who opened his 11th Panera franchise location yesterday.


 


White Plains Panera is the11th franchise in Mr. Farkas’ Panera portfolio. He is pleased with the work ethic and quality of the White Plains labor market, and how his new location is doing. He selected WP as his first inner city location. Farkas is bullish on bread, telling WPCNR his ten stores are up 2% over last year’s results in the metro area (in Rockland, Westchester and northern New Jersey.  According to the news release issued at the location opening, he plans to expand to 11 more areas in the metropolitan area. He assured WPCNR, he is doing substantially better than the competitor, Atlanta Bread Company. Panera is still hiring and interested persons may apply at https://www.peopleanswers.com/pa/testPortalPositionsSelect.do  and learn more about the Panera Bread menu at www.panerabread.com


 



 


The new Panera has a tasty selection breads, pastries for morning and evening knoshing and serves breakfast, lunch and dinner. It provides free wi-fi connection, and a quiet, high-ceiling amply spaced table seating section. Panera has no time limit on how long you can tickle your keyboard, and is within an easy stroll of City Hall, with convenient parking in the municipal lot or the Wal Mart lot.


 


Panera  White Plains is open 7 days a week, 6:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M,. Monday through Thursday. Friday and Saturday, 7 A.M. to 10 P.M., and on Sunday: 8 A.M. to 8 P.M.


 


Panera donates unsold baked goods at the end of each business day to local charity groups. For information on how your charitable organization may participate in the distribution of Panera’s unsold products each day, contact 1-845-695-1880, and ask for Peggy Brunetti.


 



 


 

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It’s National Black Cat Month. Spokescats Work to Fight Fear of Black Cats

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WPCNR KITTY NEWS NETWORK. By Tiger the Anchorcat on KNN, The Kitty News Network. October 1, 2009: From KNN WorldNews Headquarters in White Plains, New York Here is Tiger the Anchorcat:



TIGER THE ANCHOR CAT.


This is Tiger, the Anchorcat on KNN Kitty News Network, The World’s Most Feline Network –All Cats All the Time on “Kitty Today.” My guests today are the 2009  poster cats for National Black Cat Month,  Midnight on the left, and Bela on the right of White Plains, New York


 



Tiger’s Guests: Midnight and Bela. Spokescats for National Black Cat Month.


 


Tiger, The Anchorcat: Midnight, suppose you start, National Black Cat Month grew out of the Halloween image of Black cats, right?


 


Midnight: Thank you, Tiger, but I am shy like all black cats. I’d prefer Bela answer that.





Tiger: Very well, Bela, what is the story?


 


Bela, (paws folded): Thank you for having us Tiger, National Black Cat Month grew out of a movement started by Salem, the black cat on Sabrina the Teen Age Witch. Salem was the first black cat to upgrade the sinister image the black cat has long been painted by movies, media, and the author Edgar Allen Poe. Salem’s humor showed that black cats are not wild and unapproachable. Salem is in retirement now and he lent his royalties (paid in cat food) to the cause. Salem realized that persons have the images of black cats, you know that come out on Halloween.


 


Midnight (licking paw): We are bad luck. We are familiars. We are evil. All the old stories. You’ve heard them, Tiger, I’m sure. We have been given a bad image in media, literature, for 2,000 years.


 


Tiger: Well I am a domestic tigercat myself, and I know – it has made you black cats very reclusive.


 


Bela (Meows excitedly): Exactly Tiger, we stay longer in shelters. We try not to show ourselves. Though black cats were worshipped as Gods in ancient Egypt, we suffered greatly due to bad public relations images in the middle ages, in old Salem, and the association with witches. Prosecution of all cats, including black cats lead to proliferation of rats and the spread of bubonic plague in the 14th century. More cats mean less rodents. If your home has a cat it does not have rodents. National Black Cat Month is an attempt to recognize that just because cats are black does not mean they are bad luck, or evil in any way.


 


Tiger (harumphing): Midnight has that been your experience?


 


Midnight: Exactly. When I was a kitten I had this natural fear of people due to centuries of persecution by humans. I wanted to like them but I had this innate fear of them instilled by the experiences of millions of  generations of black cats.


 


Tiger: Bela, how can KNN help?


 


Bela (holding out left paw): We would like persons to consider that black cats have great inner beauty and dignity. Just because the black cat kitten does not tap dance and roll around and be silly like the typical kitten, it is not because the black cat kitten does not like people. He or she is trying to overcome years of fear.


 


Persons should go to cat shelters and attempt to adopt the black cats, too. We were adopted at a fastpitch softball tournament out of a box. And one of the humans even returned Midnight, saying they didn’t want him. It was very traumatic for him. Humans have to commit to their cats. Fortunately those that adopted me took in Midnight as well.


 


Tiger: But Midnight, aren’t all cats notorious for lack of commitment to their humans?


 


Midnight: This is the myth we want to dispel. I am very grateful to the master who took me and Bela into their home. We have gradually overcome our fear of humans due to centuries when our black ancestors and other breeds were distrusted by humans.


 


Tiger: So your message is – we have 30 seconds.


 


Bela: Consider the black cat as sensitive, eager to reach out, but his or her commitment has to be won by mutual trust. The black cat is not evil. We no longer are familiars. And this Halloween treat black cats with respect and love and consider adopting a black cat or any cat from a reputable veterinarian or shelter. They will become a part of your life.


 


Tiger: I understand you’ve authored a book on the black cat experience. Ghosted by The CitizeNetReporter?


 


Midnight (holds up book in his paws): Yes, that’s right  Tiger, it’s called “Aristocat of Cats: The Black Cat  From the Pharoahs to the Witches to the Curbs to the Burbs”


 


Tiger: and it tells,


 


Bela: What we’ve been facing over the centuries and how black cats are coming out of the shadows, being affectionate with children and adults, and learning to love people when people show respect for our history and contributions to agriculture, controlling threats to mankind, and providing companionship to the lonely unselfishly, in return for Friskies once a day.


 


Tiger: What is the best phenomena about black cats?


 


Midnight: Our eyes. They are green and they mirror the soul and when you look into them you look into the past and see your future.


 


Tiger the Anchorcat: Thank you Midnight and Bela, This year’s spokescats for National Black Cat Month. Bela and Midnight remind you to check with your local animal shelters and veterinarians for cats, black, or any breed who will be loyal comforting and undemanding – if just a bit independent.


 


Tiger: Now to Storm the Weather Cat for today’s weather — indoors and out.

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The Team With No Heart

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WPCNR VIEW FROM THE UPPER DECK. By Bull Allen. September 30, 2009:  I’m sorry. I have to get this off my chest. I cannot wait for the weekend. It has to be said now.


 


Up here in the mythical upper deck, behind the mike, straw fedora hat perched on the back of my head,  at the WPIX mike, watching another hideous Metropolitan loss today. I can no longer sit around and listen to the excuses the  press makes for the Mets of 2009.


 


The New York Metropolitans lost again today, 7-4 on a grand slammer by Justin Maxwell with two-out in the ninth off Francisco Rodriguez. A 5-run ninth by the Nats whom the Mets made look like the Yankees the last three nights. It was the third straight loss the Mets have rolled over for in the Nation’s Capitol this week.


 



CitiField, this Spring.


 


This team has no heart. They are not playing for their manager. They are not playing for themselves. They are not playing for their fans. They are not being managed for the fans. This is the team that gave up in June when their General Manager Omar Minaya did not make a move with his two big hitters went on the D.L.


 


You gotta do that.


 


All summer long the Metropolitans have moaned and groaned about their injuries. Wait’ll next year, the Metropolitan fan is told.


 


Forget about it.


 


Next year the aging stars Beltran and Delgado will be another year older and another year creakier.


 


Next year the same inconsistent pitchers will be back. And Johan Santana may not be the Johan Santana of old.


 


The Wilpons have to be beside themselves with concern.


 


The new CitiField – the name which they stayed with despite the adverse publicity CitiBank received from the bailout farce last fall – has presided over the most unfun, disgraceful season in New York Mets history. The Mets are as bad as the bank their field was named after.


 


Call it the curse of CitiBank.


 


Why disgraceful?


 


This team quit in June. They played like barnstormers in August. They played in September like zombies. They pitched with no fire.  How many losing streaks did they have? I cannot remember. They seemed to be always losing. And they did not care.


 


When was the last time a Met pitcher brushed a batter back or got a big out in the clutch? They failed over and over again. 


 


When was the last time the Met manager got thrown out of a game? Could the Met management ban buffets in the clubhouse and not supply the bubble gum, at least, since Jerry Manuel never turns over a buffet. What’s a buffet for, anyway?


 


If you exumed Billy Martin  or Gil Hodges and put their coffins in the dugout the Mets would have played better by the vibes coming out of the coffins. There would be mystique.


 


But never fear Mets fans, Bobby Valentine is back in the U.S.A. and he’s unemployed. If I’m the Wilpons, I bring Bobby back for 2010 and bring in another G.M., pronto.


 


It is a tribute to the Met broadcasting team that they have stomached the terrible inept play of this team. Even Lindsey Nelson, Bob Murphy and Ralph Kiner had better games to watch in 1962.


 


In the 1960s when the Met teams were bad, the fans loved them because you got the sense they always tried. They could do the impossible. They were valiant in defeat. In 2009, you get the impression these ballplayers do not care. That is a bad taste in your mouth.


 


The 2009 Mets are not gallant.


 


They are not valiant.


 


They are not smart.


 


They do not play heads-up ball.


 


They are woefully inept in fundamentals, throwing to the wrong base, failing in the field, failing on the mound, and when you see this consistently for three months it means they are not playing for their manager.


 


The Met mistakes this year were not lovable. They were not funny.


 


They are collecting checks—big ones.


 


There are no leaders.


 


 If you’re a 2009 Met you do not play through an injury, you hit the disabled list as soon as you can.


 


We are seeing vivid evidence the last two years why former manager Willie Randolph did not like this team. They have no pride. They don’t play hard. They play lazy – all of them.


 


They are not a team, either, it seems.


 


How is having a healthy Met team with the same roster next year (2010) going to change this culture of irresponsibility?


 


Will they suddenly remember not to throw ahead of the runner? Will they remember to back each other up? Will the manager put some plays on? Will a Met play hurt? Can Johann Santana lift the team spirit by himself? You could see many times this year that Santana was shocked by what was going on behind him. He was the Roger Craig of 2009. And will Johan come back strong as ever?


 


But losing all three games to the Nationals this week was the worst.


 


Minaya the General Manager gave up on this season in June.


 


He has a history of that. Ask the Montreal fans in the mid-1990s.


 


Minaya cannot pull trigger on trades down the stretch. He cost the Mets not one, but two pennants because of his inability to make a trade down the stretch the last two seasons. One pitcher either year would have won the pennant. One. Another hitter would have been nice, but a stud starter or reliever might have done the trick. They needed just a coupla more wins in 07 and 08 down the stretch to win.


 


Omar could not do it. Or the ownership would not let him.


 


This year though, he showed he could not retool when he lost two wheels, Delgado and Beltran. He said wait’ll next year.


 


(We are also treated to the ludicrus prospect of the New York Knickerbockers before the NBA season starts with bogus refs, already saying they are looking forward to the 2011 season when they will have Lebron James. But, I digress.)


 


Could the Mets have – with their $50 upper deck seats – gone out and swapped or paid the Blue Jays Cash up for Ray Halladay this season?  Halladay and Santana back to back in the rotation would have been an instant improvement – and Minaya could have done that in June! They might have played .500 ball.


 


Could Minaya have swapped with Washington for one of the Nationals’ sluggers —
Dunn or Zimmerman– (that inept Washington management will never be able to pay them when they become free agents)?  Mike Francesa of WFAN rightfully said  in June the Mets had to make a trade and he was right. 


 


Omar Minaya did not make that big trade or big acquisition to keep the Mets respectable.


 


Obviously the Wilpons did not want to spend the money on Halladay next year but they would have had him for a year!


 


I cannot think of one reason why any free agent would come to the Mets this winter when they see the team culture they are stepping into if they come here.


 


There is some real old dead wood on this club. Dead in the head and faint of heart. A bunch of designated hitters. No speed. Weak up the middle, and a hideous defensive outfield.


 


But the heart issue is fundamental.


 


This team could not even get up when they played contending teams like the Braves and the Phils.


 


But as a fan – one sin this team committed day-in, day-out the last three months was not playing with heart.


 


Fans can tell.


 


Remember those 1969 Mets of 40 years ago? They looked bad too, but they kept coming back at you. There was heart in that team. As a fan caught up in the 1969 Impossible Dream, that team built up hope.


 


With the 2009 Mets — hope is lost when they announce the starting lineups.


 


Meanwhile across town at “Money Stadium” in The Bronx, the Yankees are in a league of their own.


 


Why?  Because the Yankee general manager went out and signed Sabathia and Teixeira (incredibly the Red Sox did not grab him) and Swisher. Posada incredibly came back from shoulder injury while Andy Pettite amazingly returned to his form of five years ago. What is Andy’s secret? But this may be Pettite’s last hurrah. Of course, I said that last year. You never can tell. Pettite has heart or a pitch no one is talking about. I salute Brian Cashman, the Yankee G.M. for making those moves– but they really lucked out with Pettite and Posada. In fact Posada should be exposed in the post season, because he does have throwing problems. His hitting — unconcious — I have to salute him for having such a great year at the plate.


 


The Yankee success this year  positions them to buy anything they need in the free agent market for next year. They will win for years to come at the “House that New York State Built” in The Bronx.


 


Far be it from me to even think that major league baseball would like nothing better than a Los Angeles Dodgers-New York Yankees World Series to raise last year’s dreadful World Series ratings (lowest of all time) due to the Tampa Bay-Philadelphia Phillies match-up.  How does Manny wind up in L.A.? How does Mark windup in The Bronx? How do the Red Sox let C.C. escape?


 


But why should we even care about major league baseball where the teams love the fans so much they will play games in rain from beginning to end to keep their massive attendance, and keep moving $9 beers.


 


The game has a hold on us.


 


I was at a Yankee game two weeks ago, and the old magic and beauty of “the only game” was still there.


 


I made my peace with it.


 


There’s nothing like The Show.


 


Maybe that’s why it pains me so to see the Mets going through the motions day after day playing zombie ball.


 


They are letting the young fans down.


 


The fans do not deserve that.


 


Hustle. Heart. Desire. Pride – they could at least show that.


 


Mr. Met has a tear in his eye.


 


This is Bull Allen in the Upper Deck, saying so long everybody!

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One Shot City Tax Hike Fix of 60%/24% — Would You Support it?

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WPCNR MR. AND MRS. AND MS. WHITE PLAINS SURVEY. September 30, 2009: With estimates of the city deficit from sales tax, mortgage tax, parking revenues down, it is estimated that the city faces a deficit ranging from $3.8 Million to $25 Million. If the worst case scenario comes to pass, a $20 Million deficit could be restored by a one-time 60% increase in city taxes, otherwise expenses would have to be cut $10 million to chop the amount of tax increase to 30%, and $15 Million to cut the city tax increase to 15% — if other revenues are not found or created by the incoming city government in January.


A 60% tax increase which would replenish most of the dire predictions and restore the alleged missing fund balance of $27 Million. Faced with such a one-shot 60% tax increase, the  median-priced home in White Plains,  marketable at $650,000, would present the median homeowner with an additional $1,741 in the 2010-2011 budget year and a total tax bill of $4,642.In future years as the economy improves, tax cuts could be induced.


If the deficit holds at the City Commissioner of Finance (Gina Cuneo-Harwood) estimate of $3.8 Million — plus a $4 Million across the board union increase (based on a probable 4% settlement in the voluntary arbitration that commenced last week according to the city negotiating lawyer last month) that’s about an $8 Million deficit requiring a 24% increase in city income taxes to balance the 2010-11 budget at the present level of services — the median home property owner would face only a $696 increase in city taxes bringing their city tax to $3,597 a year in 2010-11.


Now, this is just the effect of the city income tax based on the deficit numbers that are appearing now.


WPCNR was wandering if Mr. and Mrs. White Plains would opt for taking care of the looming deficit with one tax stimulus of 60% which should keep the city functioning the way it is, without cuts in services, or whether they would choose a more modest increase of 24% and not restore fund balance, just take care of current level spending.


Make your choice at the right.

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