Unionized Cabbies to Meet With WP. Higher Gas Surcharge 1st. Hockley Coordinates

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WPCNR TAXI STAND. By John F. Bailey. July 30, 2008: Mike Carriere  of the District 9 International Union of Painters and Allied Trades announced to WPCNR Tuesday that his signup of White Plains taxi drivers for union membership “went well, had a nice turnout,” and the union was “pretty close” to signing up the majority of the 400 licensed White Plains cabbies.  He officially declared his union the negotiating agent for his drivers with the City of White Plains Taxi Commission.



Michael Carriere, far right, of the International Union of Painters and Allied Trades, shown addressing White Plains Cab Drivers, July 19 at an organization rally. He is shown with Mario Alfonso and Councilman Glen Hockley.  Carriere announced the IUPAT was now the official negotiator for the White Plains taxi drivers.


Melissa Lopez, spokesperson for the Mayor’s Office,  told WPCNR Wednesday morning the city did not officially recognize the IUPAT union as the official negotiator at this time. Asked if the city would recognize the union when approached with appropriate credentials, she said she would have to check further with city officials.


 



Carriere said that Councilman Glen Hockley would be approaching the Mayor on the union’s behalf to set up “a sitdown” with the Mayor  city to discuss the issues. Carriere said a gas tax surcharge increase was number one on the list. Currently with gas prices floating between $4.27 and $4.36 for regular gasoline in the city, and cabbies currently receiving a $1 surcharge, Mr. Carriere indicated the drivers need a higher surcharge. Other issues on the table were preventing city cab inspection fees from rising, limitation of number of cabs, and more taxi stands in addition to the surcharge and gypsy cab issues.


“We want a sitdown with them (the city) to see where they stand, now that the members are under a collective bargaining agreement,” Carriere told WPCNR.


Asked how the union would address cab driver appearance, cabbie display of medallions, and general protocol issues that the city has criticized cabbies for in the past, Carriere said the union would police those issues and exert influence on cabbies to meet city standards. “We will start stepping it up (the appearance issue, workrules) with our members,” he said.


He said an increased gasoline surcharge was the number issue “without a doubt.” He disputed the city notion that gypsy cabs (unlicensed operators serving the city illegally) were not a big problem.


He said there was no target date for a meeting with the Mayor. He said drivers signup with the union again this week at the 14 Saw Mill River Road offices.

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Finance Reality Show: : What Renaissance? Biz Assessment Nosedive Costs WP

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WPCNR QUILL & EYESHADE. News Comment By John F. Bailey. July 29, 2008: As WPCNR reported exclusively last week, (no inside stuff, no informed sources, just reading the certiorari refunds – am I the only person who reads them), the White Plains downtown growth not only has come to a standstill, but the value of its “thriving” business properties in the downtown, if you go by the expert analysis of the Board of Assessment Review awards last week, is in decline. The certioraris  totaling over $500,000 off the assessment roll,  awarded last week are disturbing.


Though White Plains reports it made its sales tax numbers in the last quarter of 2007-2008, and has topped $45 Million, things are not right.


Hasn’t White Plains been in a Renaissance for five years? Or is Renaissance just a feel-good word? Show me the money.


How can this be?


 



How can this be?


For the first time a series of anchor block properties were awarded significant reductions in assessments based on their business executed during the White Plains “Renaissance.” The Renaissance officially began when the holy grail, The City Center, was opened in 2003. The assessment reductions to the Mamaroneck Avenue anchor properties were awarded while they were doing business in these “boom years”



This does not make sense to me. If you take the city hall economists and the BID Cheerleaders with their pom-poms  for their word, White Plains is in a boom. Everybody’s doing well. Rising tide lifts all boats.


Except for six very big properties sprawling down Mamaroneck Avenue.


In the past, WPCNR has reported on certioraris in detail that have resulted in a property tax drain of  millions. But those were in the early years: 2000 through 2004. We thought it was disturbing – but housing was going up up up,


Well the Aches of 08 have arrived. The supply siders have run out of supply, and thanks to the Bush Boys Raiders of the Average Americans’ Ark – are using Treasury dollars to bail out their pals on Wall Street.


But something is dreadfully wrong.


The market value of White Plains real estate has hit $11 Billion as of 2008, up from $7.1 Billion in 2004  – the assessed value of the properties, however has gone down, down down over the last five years from $317.1 Million to $290.2 Million.


What is happening here? Show me the money. Or  more to the point, where the money went?


This decline is blamed on the rise in White Plains housing values which are added to the commercial property values, which drives the equalization rate between the two sectors down and drops the assessed value.


 Individual properties can bring their books in and challenge their assessments as being too high, pointing out that the property is not as profitable as the city says it was during key tax years covered by the latest certiorari settlements.  They have been doing that a lot the last seven years with a flurry of activity the last three years. In 2008, this was the first time in four years assessed value was slightly above last year. Next year will be key. In theory it should go up. In theory. Cross your fingers.


Something the City and the School District both Agree on.


Asked what the primary driver of the certiorari refunds were, Assistant Superintendent for Business Fred Seiler told WPCNR last week,


“Equalization Rate is the primary driver of the certiorari settlements, but some financial records enter into the certiorari mix,” Seiler said.


Paul Wood, the Executive Officer for the City of White Plains, called upon the legislature to wake up and smell the coffee:


“It is unquestionably the equalization rate that is the primary driving force behind the negative situation the City finds itself in with regards to certiorari settlements.


“This is why the Mayor is asking for State legislation to allow the City to have two separate rates for assessment purposes. Because the City is roughly 60% commercial and 40% residential, the equalization rate destroys us.


Mayor Takes Up Crusade


“He (the Mayor) is advocating the two formula application for any City whose property mix is 50-50 or greater. This is not unprecedented. New York City is allowed to assess commercial and residential differently, as is Suffolk County.


Asked if the Mamamaroneck Avenue Certioraris were totally caused by the equalization rate, Wood said, “Absolutely, Yes,” and if the financials of the property owners had nothing to do with the calculation of the certs, he said “They (the financials) had nothing to do with the calculation of the certs.”


I asked what the future held in store, whether properties who previously had received certioraris might be refilling in the next five years.  Wood said he hoped not.


Asked if the equalization rate might go up this year (from the 2.75% level, an all-time low), since housing values have fallen about 10%, he was optimistic:


“Yes, you’re right. That’s the unfortunate and absolute absurdity of the equalization rate. As residential properties lose value, the rate will increase therefore putting the City in a better position to defend certs. But the administration also does not want to see our residential property owners hurt by falling values. Again, if we had two rates, we would be forced to pick between two evils.”


How could this happen?


In the past, the city has seen Macy’s, Sear’s,  One North Broadway, Nordstrom’s,  Verizon, among others receive reduced assessments and large certioraris. We shook our heads in bewilderment. Saw prices that did not seem high enough and assessment reductions that made the buildings look very undesirable. They are not undesirable, of course.


How could these stalwart business buildings sell for less than you would think, make less profit when office rents and retail rents are up about double in White Plains? Office rates for example, as Mayor Delfino pointed have virtually doubled.


In the first week in July, a series of 14 properties on Mamaroneck Avenue itself were granted over half a million dollars in reduced assessments ($531,000). Two of the blocks are in the middle of Mamaroneck Avenue, prime retail locations. How can these properties not be making enough profit on their space during what has been touted as a boom time in White Plains – the good old White Plains Renaissance? Apparently the Renaissance has not been kind to them. Apparently expenses took their toll.


The Zirconium Halo


If you go over the latest certioraris numbers on these Mamaroneck Avenue jewels, you would have to assume that the City Center had no halo effect on the rest of Mamaroneck Avenue the last five years – at least for these properties.  Other than the $11 Million increase in the sales tax since 2003, if you judge the certioraris  (court actions claiming the properties were overtaxed), the Board of Assessment Review has settled and the reduced assessments awarded the businesses in the downtown – the halo effect has been a Zirconium Halo.


 The numbers  on the six properties (costing the city $500,000 off the tax roll) last week are banana cream pies in the faces of the city Common Council,  and the Downtown Business Improvement District,  the Westchester County Association.


They are slaps upside the head of the Albany legislature that is afraid of all the certiorari specialists who make a fantastic living off these certiorari suits. The legislature has it within their power to stop the certiorari gravy train for commercial property owners, but lack the guts to do so, because of the contributions of you guessed it – the commercial property owners, and the certiorari profiteers.


Equalization Rate Bankrupting the Homeowner


The Suozzi Commission in their Preliminary Report to Governor Patterson on Property Tax Relief somehow completely fails to mention the Equalization Rate tax gimmick that forces the homeowner to subsidize large commercial properties.


The Suozzi Commission on property tax reform came out strongly for a cap on property taxes, a circuit breaker on property tax tied to income, among other measures, but did not come out strongly for a separate commercial tax rate which would eliminate the equalization rate killing us here in White Plains.


The equalization rate bill that Assemblyman Adam Bradley did not introduce in the Senate because, he said, it had no chance of passing,  continues to languish.  Bradley’s bill would only effect White Plains, allowing us to assess commercial properties differently than residential properties. Why can’t we pass it now? Otherwise financial disaster looms in about three years.


Assemblyman Bradley noted that New York City and Nassau County are the only jurisdictions in the state that have separate tax rates for commercial and residential properties.


Nassau Practice not new. Commercial Tax Rate 2-1/2 X the Residential Rate.


The practices have been in place, though since 1981, according to Karl Lasky, Counsel to the Nassau County Board of Assessors,


“New York and Nassau County are the only assessing units in the state allowed to assess four different classes of properties. They have different tax rates and different equalization rates. It went into effect in 1981. Class 1 is single family homes, Class 2 is condos, coops and apartment houses, Class 3 is the utilities, and Class 4 is all the commercial property. Why they did it, I guess was politics.


“ In terms of treating commercial different from residential, it is done in other places based on The Homestead. Article 19 allows for an assessing unit to have a homestead not homestead distinction  and therefore treat commercial differently, and that’s done throughout the state. They have to apply through the New York State Office of Real Property Services.”


In Nassau, he says,  the value of  residential housing is not added to the Commercial property value. “Commerical and residential are treated separately. In Article 18, they also have justification portions which means that they pay different shares of the overall tax levy. They have different class shares. The residential portion pays a smaller percentage of the over class levy then they would if everything were in one class.”


On average, the tax rate on Nassau County Commerical Properties is 2-1/2 times higher than the tax rate for the residential properties.  It is interesting that this tax system did not work it’s way into the Suozzi report since Suozzi is the Nassau County Executive.


When asked this question about killing the equalization rate at a hearing in Tarrytown this past year, the fast-finding panel brushed it aside. Funny, isn’t it?


Equalization Rate Reform Couldn’t Come at a Better Time


Meanwhile now that Governor David Patterson and the bean-counters in Albany have discovered in the last week that the state is losing revenue rapidly this year, don’t you think they might pay attention to the equalization rate problem and give communities like White Plains relief – and extract more revenue from the businesses that have been getting big breaks on taxes, while pushing the shortfall over on the tax payers.


Is it time to do away with the Equalization Rate in the name of relief for the taxpayer?


Let one politician up there in “Alibyin’ Albany” explain why they don’t. 


Why won’t they?


Anchor properties Looking at dropping taxes every three years.


The certs in White Plains generate an ominious warning. White Plains is hurt because it is a growing city. The equalization rate kills a city that is growing.


If these big anchors of the great Fifth Avenue of White Plains aren’t generating the numbers that increase the value of their property, what are the rest of the merchants generating? What’s happening in those thriving inner cities of Yonkers, Mount Vernon, New Rochelle and Peekskill? Perhaps their Boards of Assessment Review are tougher than White Plains.


If the legislature does not do something about the Equalization Rate they will drive residential homeowners into bankruptcy. Because  certioraris nabbed once will come back in just a few short years.


Low 2.75% Equalization Rate bodes WP tax disaster in Three Years.


The Equalization Rate in White Plains hit nadir last fall when it dropped to 2.75%. Three years from now in 2011-2012, the White Plains Legal Department,  Corporation Counsel Edward Dunphy predicts White Plains will face another around of certioraris to lower current assessments even more on commercial properties. He expects many of the big cert winners over the last five years to reapply. The effect? More shift of taxes to the residential homeowner.


You do not want to be a Suprintendent of Schools or the Mayor of White Plains in 2011 when the second wave of certioraris start to come home to roost, vulturing the tax roll.


But what about the new properties just opening? Will they “Cert” the City, too?


 Could this be the beginning of a rush-to-certiorari of the other big new blocks in White Plains – The Ritz Carlton, One City Place,  not to mention The Westchester, The Westchester Pavilion, the Walmart complex, The Galleria (gasp!)  down the road say in 2009? Will they all file for certs based on  2007-08,08-09,09-10,10-11? They can come back every three years for certiorari relief.   


It is a scary thought. Think of the staggering increases in expenses the retailers, the office space landlords and assorted building owners face this year: the utility increases, the fuel/delivery increases, the slow shuttering of stores. East Post Road is starting to die a slow death: ANL Sports has shuttered, there is no rental yet to replace Border’s in the Pavilion, 180 East Post Road is empty, Frozen Ropes has left.


If this vision of new certioraris comes to be, who is paying the taxes that the commercial owners will not be paying?


Ask not whom the taxman’s bell tolls, individual homeowner, it tolls for thee.


The burden of the taxes is being born by the homeowner in this city, while the commercial property owners keep having their property assessments lowered  by reflex by this administration . The Board of Assessment Review continues to cave. And, no one seems to care to see what it is doing.


Commercial property owners point to the sales tax increases development has brought.  Despite City Hall’s touting the sales tax as paying more into the city budget than the property tax from homeowners and commercial property owners, city hall overlooks  the $19.5 Million generated by the most efficient revenue-generating operation next to the Port Authority, the White Plains Department of Parking. If you throw that in the resident is being squeezed to park.


Like it or not, the Common Council which has not paid any attention at all to this assessment drain, is going to face this head-on in the next two to three years. The continued deluge of certioraris when the commercial property owners return for another round in the Board of Assessment Review Game Show is going to really hurt.


WP Homes Selling for Less.


Depending on what realtors will admit to you, the big ticket homes are moving very slowly. For less than expected.  Many will only move with significant price cuts. Some may even sell for less than homeowners recently bought them for. This may be particularly true of the multi-million condominiums recently sold in the city. Are they “flip-able?” Who knows?


But if I’m an owner of a condominium I bought for $1 Million  and I’m assessed at that price, and I cannot sell it – I can make a case I am over-assessed. If I sell it for less than I bought, the tax roll plummets, and there have been a lot of condominiums sold the last two years in the city.


Now, since assessments are dropping on commercial properties every year thanks to the Board of Assessment Review refusal to fight, and the city failure to enact surcharges on something (anything!) to get the revenue back, and since home values are dropping in White Plains, the perfect conditions might be ripe for a revaluation.


Revaluation a politician’s poison pill.


In such a revaluation, the commercial properties could be assessed at higher than they are now, and homes incredibly under-assessed could be raised. The older posh homes which have not been remodeled in years, will pay more – making their taxes more reflective of their actual market value. The newer homes which are assessed more accurately since they are newer, could be assessed more in tune with today’s market which may be lower than the price they paid.


The commercial property owners will fight the revaluation tooth and nail, so it probably will never happen.


The owners of those lovely big homes from the 40s and 50s in the South End will fight it because their homes are assessed at what they were bought for years ago – if they have not remodeled – and they are paying taxes way lower than they should be.


Go on the city website and see what those big old places in the Highlands and in the Gedney area are paying in taxes, and you will see what I mean.


 It’s touchy – but with both commercial assessments and home prices dropping, revaluation may be a way to make commercial property owners pay their fair share without going to certiorari relief cases where our city is the big pushover.


But, I do not think reval has a chance of happening.


The Issue No Politician Touches


However, in the coming Mayoral campaign, this certiorari “license to lower taxes”  shifting the burden of commercial taxes right over to the homeowner should be a big issue.  What will the candidates for Mayor do about it? It is up to the citizens to ask the questions, and don’t take generalities for answers.


Will our legislators get some sense of reality and stop pandering to the commercial owners and lawyer pals who make money off the cert cases, and say “no” to the equalization rate tyranny in White Plains? After all, it is just in White Plains that we are asking for this.


I doubt it.


The certiorari settlements, the logic and numbers of which are never detailed or vetted on a case by case basis – should be a major issue. There should be public hearings on the merits of each certiorari. Enough of this “your people and my people in a room, we all know each other” stuff.


In  the present “never met a certiorari we didn’t like” climate in the city, which the Democratic Common Council has not said anything critical about,  the middle class homeowner is being squeezed.


 If the Democratic leadership in this city and county, and I use the word “leadership” sarcastically, doesn’t address this – the tax base is going to collapse.


Forget about affordable housing. It is a dead issue. How about “Stay-in Housing?”


Number one, here in “booming White Plains,” (the city developers couldn’t wait to get a piece of just a scant 12 months ago) – you have 7 projects that are not going to build any time soon – The Windsor Place Condo,  Hale Avenue, the Hamilton and Church condominiums, the Maple Avenue assisted living, the North Street Community, and the DeKalb Condo project, and 55 Bank Street is in jeopardy. (We do not know whether the Robert Weisz hotel project overlooking Maple Moor Golf Course stands right now.)  


They were eager to build, the council approved, now the developers can’t find the money. Those sites are live site plans – effectively blocking development while they hold for better times.


The Council now keeps granting site plan extensions de facto. In the future, it might be prudent to explore the legal ramifications of not renewing site plans – or at least requiring a finance bond to be posted with stiff penalty if you do not build within a year. This developer habit of coming in, pushing a project through getting an approval – then not doing anything – strangles city growth and is a form of speculation that hurts the city. It may be smart business. But, it is  dumb or maybe not so dumb government.


And what developer gets in trouble in this city? The guy who builds – Louis Cappelli.


Arguably, the City Center and the Ritz have definitely helped greatly. But, no one else in the city is helping. Did I hear one peep out of the council, except for Rita Malmud – when 55 Bank Street  defaulted and wants to change the deal?  No.


Meanwhile, the man who gets financing for his projects, most recently $700 Million for his Concord project, has been run out of town for erecting a stone monument on a traffic island and not yet building his affordable housing when it was the Common Council that told him not to build it, they wanted the Pinnacle developers to build it.


The 7% Progression:


If you still have a mortgage in this economy and tax environment you are in huge trouble. Your taxes are going up 7% a year in White Plains. Your utilities, as also reported by WPCNR at the beginning of June, are going up 300% — from 8 cents a kilowatt hour six months ago to  13 cents in January, 19 cents per kilowatt hour in June, to 24 cents  a kilowatt hour this month – according to Con Edison this week. In June Con Edison predicted 28 cents in June to WPCNR, but apparently have been able to gradually move up to that.


The city and county taxes are the bottom feeders. The school district in this city, to keep feeding a $10 Million a year budget increase habit, is going to take a lot more every year. It will make $5.03 a thousand dollars of assessed value look like a bargain next year. $200 Million next year, just watch! $215 Million by 2010-11. $230 Million by 2011-2012 – that’s with 7% increases.


You’ve got to give the teachers 5% to keep them happy after the administrator giveaways this year. You’ve got utility costs out of control. You’ve got the bond to pay for. This was the year to do some serious cutting over at 5 Homeside Lane and it did not happen. 


Where is the money going to come from?


Ask not the obvious.


The individual homeowner does not have the lawyers to fight their tax down like the commercial property owners have their certiorari lawyers.


It’s going to come from you, the homeowner.


Have we been in a Renaissance for five years or a New Deal for Commercial Property Owners program?


Yesterday, Governor Patterson said “Next year’s budget process starts now.”


But it really should start for every government from the bottom to the top.


Perhaps the City School District, the Common Council, the City Budget and Management Committee and the City Commissioner of Finance and  the City Assessor should meet and do some numbers-crunching now.


I have not even mentioned the never-never-land of government budgeting, Westchester County Government, that perhaps should start cutting now, instead of sticking the cities and towns for next year’s massive county tax increase. They should start cutting now. 


(Where is Andy Spano these days anyway, vacationing with Gary Kriss?)


Who knows what pain lurks ahead?


Who knows what the state is going to lay on the city and county due to the Wall Street losses (the poor, pathetic whiners).


May we remind you of the Carl McCall mess not so long ago?


Expect high, heavy hitting increases in state pension fund contributions from the school district and the city, less educational aid, and probably a property tax cap – just when the school district is going to need a 15% increase in the budget, and is having trouble getting the teachers to settle.


If I can figure this out, why can’t our brilliant elected officials?


It’s frightening to think the City of White Plains runs no deficit and appears better run financially than the state and county and federal government put together.


But they have not made wise decisions either.


Ask not for whom the taxman’s bell tolls, individual homeowner, it tolls for thee.

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Governor Calls Emergency Session Aug. 19. Calls for $1.2 B in Cuts

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WPCNR ALBANY ROUNDS. July 29, 2008 UPDATED 11:50 PM EDT WITH TEXT OF GOVERNOR’S ADDRESS; UPDATED JULY 30, 2008  11:17 AM:  Governor David Patterson and his Budget Director, Laura Anglin,  presented a detailed analysis of the state’s financial situation this morning at 10:30 A.M. in a live webcast calling for the legislature in cooperation with the Governor to cut $1.2 Billion from the current budget. Ms. Anglin presented a slide show documenting the precipitous decline in state revenues, which may be viewed at http://www.budget.state.ny.usa and clicking on Budget Director’s Presentation. The charts speak volumes about the financial condition of the state (not good).



Governor David Patterson and Budget Director Laura Anglin addressing the media in Albany this morning on the Budget.


The governor said his office has identified $630 Million in savings across state agencies, to catch up with the current shortfall indicated by First Quarter Results. He enacted a hard hiring freeze, and, in addition he is asking the legislature when it returns to work in Albany at his request August 19, to produce another $600 Million in cuts off the present state budget, to begin to trim the 2009-2010 Budget.  The cuts amount to $1.2 Billion off a $122 Billion Budget ($81 Billion Operating Budget)


The governor and Budget Director, in addition, said they were looking to lease-partner state assets to run them more efficiently, but declined to name what assets were in play for such partnerships.


The $1.2 Billion in spending cuts proposed by the Governor would carry forward into next year’s budget cutting some $2.5 Billion off the projected 2009-2010 shortfall of $6.2 Billion.


The Budget Director said the governor was not looking for cuts by passing along cuts to county and  city governments. The session painted a bleak picture of the present economy. The governor said if the state does not act now, the opportunity to cut into the growing deficit this year would be lost. He maintained that education cuts were still in play, and nothing was “off the table.” 


Wall Street Real Estate Numbers Numb


The  Budget Director pointed out that Wall Street problems were accounting for the widening state deficit, citing a projected 24.4% decrease in Capital Gains, a 20.5% decline in Wall Street Bonuses, pointing out this was the first time since 2002 that Capital Gains had declined.


On the foreclosure front, she painted a bleak landscape: In the first quarter of 2008, 13,700 mortgage loans entered the foreclosure process, up 10,000 properties since the first quarter of 2007. She said at the end of the first quarter, the number loans in foreclosure had almost doubled since the first quarter of 2007, 45,100 in foreclosure (2.2%) to 25,000 (1.2%) a year ago.


Yesterday, Governor David L. Patterson called legislators back to Albany, beginning August 19,  to hammer out immediate spending cuts, state workforce cuts  to deal with a ballooning state revenue shortfall. The Governor promised to “curtail” the costs of heating oil so New Yorkers would not freeze this winter. He called for the legislature to pass a property tax cap to limit school district property tax increases, and indicated there would be layoffs of state workers, as well as spending cuts in the existing state budget passed just four months ago, which he signed.



“Next Year’s Budget Process Starts Now. New York families are already making the tough choices…New Yorkers are prioritizing spending every day…Now your government is going to follow your lead. We’re going to end the legislators’ vacations and bring them back to Albany and reprioritize the way we manage New York State finances.” Governor David Patterson in his state address today 45 minutes ago.


The governor said the state deficit over the next 10 years three months ago was $21.5 Billion, now three months later that is projected to be 26.2 Billion, “a staggering 22% increase in less than 90 days.” He noted that the 16 major New York banks projected a 97% decrease in taxes they owned to New York State, plunging from $173 Million last year  (through June 2007) to $5 Million this year. He said the situation will get worse before it gets better.


The Governor said “It is time for New York and other governments to cut up our credit cards. The era of buy now and pay later is over. The faster we address this crisis, the faster and stronger we will emerge from it.”


The Governor said that in the next four weeks his administration would be working to address the size of the state workforce, further cuts to agency spending, and generating proposals from public and private partnerships to deal with the crisis. He said New Yorkers everywhere have been cutting back, indicated by the decrease in traffic on the New York Thruway, meaning many have cut their vacations. He said the legislature should take their cue from the citizens in learning to do more with less.


Herewith is the text of the Governor’s remarks:


My fellow New Yorkers,


Our state now faces increasingly harsh economic times. When I travel across the State I see communities suffering. Everywhere I go I meet people who are losing their jobs and their homes. I meet families forced to pay more for gasoline and for food, while their paychecks stay the same. Next winter some of these families will have to choose between heating their homes and feeding their children. The rising costs of health care mean that they can’t afford to get sick. The rising costs of education mean that parents can no longer prepare for their children to be in the work force. The damage on Wall Street is affecting all of our communities and its effects on our New York State’s finances are devastating.


When I took office, I was apprised that the New York State budget deficit for next year was $5 billion. I immediately ordered cuts to state spending, but the situation has gotten worse. Tomorrow I will submit a budget plan that places our deficit for next year at $6.4 billion – that is $1.4 billion higher than it was just a few short months ago. How could this happen? It’s simple. Costs are rising steadily, revenues are dropping dramatically.


In the beginning of May, our budget director projected our New York State deficit over the next three years at $21.5 billion – that was a record. But things have changed. That number has now erupted to $26.2 billion – a staggering 22 percent increase in less than 90 days.


In June of 2007, the 16 banks that pay the most on taxes to their profits remitted $173 million to our New York State Treasury. This June, just a month ago, they sent us $5 million – a 97 percent decrease. Our economic woes are so severe that I wanted to talk to you personally this evening about where we stand. The fact is: we confront harsh times. Let me be honest: this situation will get worse before it gets better.


But the time to act is now. We cannot waste any further opportunities. We can’t wait and hope that this problem will resolve itself. If we do, we will lose our opportunity to turn this situation around. These times call for action and today I promise you there will be action.


Today I am calling the legislature back for an emergency economic session on Tuesday, August [19th].


In the interim, my administration will confront the following issues: addressing the size of the state work force; further cuts to agency spending and generating proposals for public and private partnerships for our State assets.


When I meet with the legislature, we will work together to help New Yorkers cope with this crisis. We will continue working on a property tax cap to lighten the load for homeowners and we will find a way to curtail the rising costs of home heating next winter. I will do everything I can to make sure that New York’s families do not freeze when it gets cold. My message to the legislature is that next year’s budget process starts now.


New York’s families are already making the tough choices. Every time you fill up a tank of gas or go to the supermarket you are learning to do more with less. New Yorker’s are prioritizing spending every day. The lesser crowding of the New York State Thruway is an indication that too many of you have postponed holidays or canceled your vacations.


Now your government is going to follow your lead. We are going to end the legislators’ vacations and bring them back to Albany to reprioritize the way we manage New York State’s finances. For too long we have done less with more and paid more for less. Now government will do what families have done when their incomes have fallen – we will cut spending. Government will learn to do more with less.


But I can’t do it alone; I need all of your help. I’m asking for the State leaders in the public and private sector, in labor, those who serve in Washington, owners of business and others to join us in this great effort.


It is time for New York and other governments to cut up our credit cards. The era of buy now, pay later and later is over. The faster we address this crisis, the faster and stronger we will emerge from it. That is the path to a better and more prosperous New York.


I’d like to thank the networks for extending me this opportunity and all of you for watching and listening this evening. Good night.

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WANTED: Savior of Schools

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WPCNR THE DAILY BAILEY. By John F. Bailey. July 28, 2008: The school district has engaged a consultant, Hazard, Young & Attea Associates,  at a cost of $70,000 to begin a search for a new Superintendent of Schools for the City of White Plains. This will begin with a series of community input meetings in September to find out what kind of person and leadership skills the community feels the district needs in a new Superintendent. WPCNR feels, from a perspective of eight years of covering the school district, this is a totally unneccessary expenditure (like the scoreboard purchase approved last week), symptomatic of the Board of Education blithe blatant spending policies and failure to to look to where White Plains education is going.


With School taxes poised for a record one-time increase next April (justified by the economic inflation forces at work this summer), the school board should know what they need.


I have taken it upon myself to write the first advertisement for the school district personnel consultant for a “Savior of Schools,”  for not what the school district would like in a Superintendent, but what the district needs — something unique for school district management. Here it goes:


WANTED


Savior of Schools


For White Plains City School District


Experience: Proven credentials as  a leader or Assistant Superintendent of a school district of  up to 10,000 students of diverse population.


He or she should bring to the district a demonstrated record of academic improvement in upgrading academic performances of a diverse student body in a 3-year or less time interval with a significant  ESOL student population in a district respected by the collegiate community, demonstrated by the number of students continuing to collegiate education.


They should be capable and familiar with the challenges of and demonstrated ability to manage a school budget of $200 Million for maximum educational achievement with prudent financial cost conservation in the face of dwindling taxpayer support and significantly increased costs.


He or she should be able to interact productively with parents, taxpayers, faculty and administrations and city management to contain costs in a manner that will not overburden taxpayers and compromise quality of education.


Proven Administrator Motivator


Able to reorganize district management, academic administration, and information reporting to demonstrate timely feedback on the effectiveness of skills, practices, and managers.


Innovative Amiable but Firm Negotiator 


Able to work with teaching faculty to attract high quality new recruits with pay-benefits ratios acceptable by employee  to deliver bottomline effectiveness, arresting out of control salary escalation now affecting district – with pragmatic department-trimming skills to lower overall budget.


Endowment Specialist/Fundraiser


Able to interact with the community, city and government  to build a district endowment fund to transition the district from a totally taxpayer supported operation into an endowment/taxpayer combination to finance major new construction and limited borrowing.


Innovator – problem-solver


Capable of undertaking a major cost-cutting management initiatives to lower the costs of operations without sacrificing educational effectiveness.


Salary: $300,000K and Up Plus generous incentive package based on performance in bringing school budget growth under control.


Equal Opportunity Employer

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Number of Gypsy Cabs Trolling City “Exaggerated,” Wood Says.

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WPCNR TAXI STAND. July 29, 2008: Paul Wood, the city’s Executive Officer, issued data from the Department of Public Safety today that disputes the extent of gypsy cab (medallion-less cars for hire) forays into White Plains. Wood said the taxi driver spokesperson, Mario Alfonso  “definitely exaggerates the issue.”


Wood reports that the number of  misdemeanor  or arrests and impounds for unlicensed cabs impounded by The Department of Public Safety has been very low. In 2005,  he said the number was 5; 2006, 3; 2007, 7, and to date in 2008, 3.

When someone is found operating in the city without a medallion, they are arrested and booked, their cab is towed and the max fine is $250 plus the tow fee.  

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Paper Ballots Held Off Til 09. Old Machines to Be Used in Primary/Nov. Gen Elect

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WPCNR CAMPAIGN 2008. By John F. Bailey. July 28, 2008: The new voting machines the county has had delivered (only 10% have arrived to date), which feature optical scanning will only be available for the disabled in the primary and general elections coming up this fall. The rest of voters will vote the old-fashioned way – pulling a lever.


Weschester County Commissioner of the Board of Elections Reginald Lafayette confirmed this to WPCNR today, and said the new machines when phased in across the county in 2009, would have voters using paper ballots. The new machines have headphone aids, magnifying glass for reading the paper ballot, and the paper ballot is fed into the machine and scanned. 



Lafayette said they would be phased in for the 2009 elections (the upcoming city election next year). Lafayette informed WPCNR today that only 42 of 4,200 of the new voting machines ordered by the county have been delivered, and he had no information as to when all would be delivered by Sequoia Voting Systems.


Lafayette confirmed to WPCNR the county new machines require all voters to mark a paper ballot. understand to the machines that will be used in Florida for the national election. Sequoia, the company that manufactured the Westchester County machines did not return WPCNR calls for explanations of how voters would use the new county machines and which machine the county actually ordered.  Mr. Lafayettee told WPCNR, the Westchester machines were being tested two weeks ago when WPCNR asked for a demonstration.


However, according to the Poughkeepsie Journal, the machines are paper ballot-driven with scanners counting the votes. They will be in use in the 2009 White Plains mayoral election, according to Mr. Lafayette. The Poughkeepsie Journal also reported today that Sequoia is having problems delivering all the machines it owes to New York State, citing lags in deliveries in Nassau County, For the Poughkeepsie Journal report  detailing the machine shortage around New York, go to www.poughkeepsiejournal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080720/NEWS01/807


Reality in Palm Beach County


 The Sequoia voting machines use a paper ballot that is fed into the machine and recorded were tried out in Palm Beach County, Florida, last month to less than stellar reviews. Though the Palm Beach County Election Commissioner pronounced them a success, reporters in Palm Beach County noted long lines and confusing ballots as two of the drawbacks.


For a reporter’s analysis of the Palm Beach County optical scanner voting machines, go to http://www.palmbeachpost.com/search/content/opinion/epaper/2008/06/27/a14a_cramercol_0627.html


Next year, White Plains will use the machines in a citywide election for the first time. Some questions come to mind.


Will each person have a numbered ballot – enabling election officials to see how they voted? (Eliminating the secrecy of the ballot)


Will paper ballots be checked against scanners – to verify the count? This raises the possibility of the ballots being examined to see if John Bailey’s vote was really counted correctly by the scanner? How will counts be verified?


How will the paper ballot be designed? (The Florida ballots use a series of arrows on their paper ballots which voters found very confusing.)


The voting in Palm Beach County took longer than expected because citizens had to take more time marking their ballots. Will this make voting in Westchester slower, and slow results?


Will the paper ballots be marked in secret, as the traditional voting machine allows?


Will the ballots be available for political analysis – or voter identification be kept anonymous?


Asked if the Board of Elections would hold a news conference to demonstrate how you vote with the new machines and procedures, Commissioner Lafayette told WPCNR this might be a good idea.

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Preschool Children Can Get Their Immunication Shots Free from Westchester County

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. From Westchester County Department of Health. July 28, 2008: The Westchester County Health Department reminds parents and guardians to schedule an appointment with their child’s healthcare provider now to ensure children will have the immunizations required by New York State to start school on time.


For children who have neither health insurance nor a primary care provider, the Westchester County Health Department will offer free immunizations by appointment during special back-to-school immunization clinics.


During these clinics, facilitated enrollers will be on hand to help parents and guardians sign their children up for the health insurance they need. Families without a regular doctor also will receive information about where to go for ongoing pediatric primary care.

 Appointments will be made on a first come, first served basis during special sessions from Aug. 14 to Oct. 16. If your child does not have health insurance and needs shots required for school, call the Westchester County Department of Health district offices. In Yonkers, call 914-231-2523. In White Plains, call 914-995-5800. In New Rochelle, call 914-813-5525.


            For more information on immunizations required for school entry, please contact the Westchester County Department of Health Immunization Action Program at 813-5000 or visit us on the web at www.westchestergov.com/health.

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Jumbotron Scoreboard Coming to Loucks Field.

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. By John F. Bailey. July 27, 2008 UPDATED WITH MORE PIX, 11:05 EDT: Last week, the Board of Education ordered a new scoreboard for Loucks Field from Daktronics of South Dakota, whose scoreboards are seen throughout major league baseball (including Chase Field in Phoenix, home of the Diamondbacks). White Plains football fans will be able, (should the high school choose to use all the scoreboard bells and whistles) to see instant replays, slides of their favorite players, live close-ups of field events, and pre-programmed CD programs on the scoreboards jumbotron. (Perhaps even closeups of the band marching live.)



A Scoreboad similar to this Daktronics installation at East St. Louis High School in Illinois will be coming to Loucks (with larger matrix message board), according to the Daktronics salesperson on the account. No prototype design to replace the scoreboard at Loucks (shown below) was apparently shown to the school board, according to Fred Seiler, the Assistant Superintendent for Business. The scoreboard consists of one giant matrix, that can be programmed for different sports, shift to messages, slides, or video.




The software package presents unique custom scoreboard formats  football, soccer, field hockey,track and lacrosse as well as other sports. The cost of this state-of-the-art scoreboard is an additional $104,000. The purchase order was cut this past week according to the Business Office.


 



Superintendent of Schools Timothy Connors told WPCNR the scoreboard was necessary to attract outside rentals for the new $5 Million stadium, especially state championships (for football and track and field – the venue already hosts the Loucks Games ).


The versatility of the scoreboard is amazing. According to Daktronics salesperson it will provide instant reply, ability to put up slides of individual players with their records, and play CD programs  on its matrix screen. It is controlled from a wireless control panel from the press box.  The salesperson said it will take 6 to 8 weeks to deliver to Loucks Field. (It might be in place by mid-September, but no date was given.)


 



New Scoreboard, will at flick of a programming button switch from football to a track format like this. (This is not the design — just a typical track format from Daktronics.)


Connors did not have an idea of how many rental events the stadium would attract. None have been signed yet and there is no fee schedule, according  to Assistant Superintendent for Business, Fred Seiler, told WPCNR that a rental fee schedule for the stadium had not been established. For starters, he said, the idea was to charge $50 an hour for the use of the lights.


 Connors said a timetable for working out the charges with the city of White Plains had not been set yet.  He told WPCNR that advertising space and commercials would not be sold to be stadiumcast on the scoreboard. Seiler said the school district would be meeting with the city in August on the matter of setting rates.


Connors said there have been a lot of requests to come in and use the new Loucks Field, including non-sports events for which the district would charge a fee. There are no events scheduled at this point.



Asked if the district had plans to renovate or replace the field house (above) to accommodate two full athletic squads in a modern facility, Connors said, not at this time.



Assistant Superintendent for Business Fred Seiler said that the Matrix Daktronics scoreboard was similar to this board installed in Liverpool, New York (near Syracuse), though higher, wider and larger, according to the Daktronics order, according to the salesperson on the account.


The Daktronics scoreboard  product is the Galaxy  Pro is similar to the scoreboard installed at Dutchess Stadium where the Hudson Valley Renegades play baseball. It consists of a 128 x 172 inch matrix, (10 x 17 feet), the entire surface measures 8 feet by 10 inches high by 18 feet, 3 inches wide, considerably larger than the old Loucks scoreboard, which WPCNR figures as 12 feet wide. A location for it has not been determined, but the assumption is it would be at the end of the end zone where the defunct Loucks score tower is now.



Loucks Scoreboard Today


The Galaxy Pro model is pretty much top of the line.  The $104,000 price tag includes all software and hardware to run the board, as well as the board itself. 


The $104,000 is roughly akin the the salary and benefits paid one full-time teacher. Year to year maintenance was not brought up at last week’s meeting.


One Giant Scoreboard


An internet search by WPCNR, reveals that  electronic football scoreboards convertible to track, lacrosse, soccer, though  may be purchased from a variety of scoreboard manufacturers for under $10,000.  4 Different Scoreboards for 4 different sports could have been purchased for a total of a very generous $35,000, based on the website of http://www.varsityscoreboards.com, (shown below) just one such vendor. The 20 foot wide by 8 foot scoreboard, second from the top in the picture below would have cost the district just $5,195. It could convert to handle track, soccer or field hockey.


Of course, it would not have the video capabilities.



 

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The Real Deal: Summer of 2008– Best Wedding Ideas

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 WPCNR’S THE REAL DEAL. By The Wedding Jeannie, Jeannie Uyanik of Cap and Gown Weddings. July 27, 2008: Every season we get the unique opportunity to create beautiful weddings with our amazing clients.  And although some ideas we’ve seen a million times (personalized napkins, you don’t say?!), every now and then we get hit with something that’s so incredibly unique and fun, we can’t keep it to ourselves.  So as the summer wedding season winds to a close, Elizabeth West of C&G Weddings joins us again to offer you our “Best Of” Summer 2008 wedding ideas.    


 


 



The Wedding Jeannie


Jeannie Uyanik


Wedding Planner to the World


WPCNR COLUMNISTA


 


 





5.  Nettleton Hollow


 


We all know being good to the environment while still planning amazing events is a constant struggle in the industry and especially for our “green” clients.  For their outdoor engagement party, our couple Lynn and Stephen wanted to create a natural and elegant feel without using a ton of fresh flowers that would die soon after being cut.  After doing some research, I came across the site www.nettletonhollow.com.


 


Nettleton Hollow has a beautiful array of lasting botanicals, grasses, foliage, and branches.  And considering you can reuse all of their materials, their price points are extremely fair.  The couple ended up using clusters of the coral bush branches which created a beach-like feel without it looking kitschy and overdone.  They also used these great 5’ long palm boats and filled them with fruits and dried flowers for food station décor.  It was a booming success and the couple walked away with great pieces they are now used in their apartment as a part of their everyday.


 


 


4.  Melangerie Inc


 


While this next couple’s wedding isn’t until August 23rd, their amazing welcome bags still fall on this summer’s “best of” list.  The bride is a medical resident in psychiatry but has a super creative side so she truly enjoys everything in wedding design.  When we first started conversations of welcome bags, Tara didn’t get excited about paper bags or boxes filled with the traditional things like water and NYC maps at all. 


 


So I went on a crusade to track down NYC’s most creative duo and found Julie Tinker and Elana Dweck- the owners of Melangerie.  They specialize in custom gifting and the creation of what they call, “mélanges.”  For Tara and Greg, they created a custom NYC guide outlining the couple’s favorite spots, what they normally order, where their first date was, site of the proposal, etc and used the artwork from their Save the Date to reinforce their art deco feel and enhance consistency.  While I can’t disclose too much about the project prior to the wedding, the artists took the opportunity to customize every inch of the gift.  Check out their site for more creative ideas:  http://www.melangerienyc.com


 




 


3.  Southern Gospel


 


When trying to come up with a fun way to start her ceremony, one of our brides used a childhood story about the Pied Piper as inspiration for how to get her guests from the pre-ceremony cocktails out to the beach for the ceremony.  But instead of a flute playing peasant, she hired an amazing gospel choir to arrive at the venue on foot. 


 


They approached the house in full song and led guests out onto the beach in a parade of clapping and excitement.  When it was time for the bride to process, they started singing one of her favorite childhood songs, “This Little Light of Mine.”  The bride wanted to avoid weepy classical music and to keep the ceremony as an upbeat celebration.  Mission accomplished!


 


2.  ‘Still Live™’ by Brian Dorsey


 


One of our most fantastic NY photographers, Brian Dorsey introduced us to one of our favorite new ideas in interactive photography.  At a July 3rd wedding at Pier Sixty in NYC, the photographer set up a live digital gallery of the photos for guests to see as they were taken.  It started with the moments before the ceremony that every guest doesn’t get to see and as the night progressed, the digital library got updated.  Guests could literally cut a rug on the dance floor and then moments later see themselves on screen as a part of this amazing rotating digital gallery on a large flat screen monitor.  Talk about instant gratification!  Check out Brian’s work at www.briandorseystudios.com


 


 


 


1.  Bridal Gowns through the Generations


 


A fantastic and extremely creative Floridian bride dreamed of wearing her grandmother’s dress as she walked down the aisle in her May wedding.  But when grandma told her she could not make any changes to the dress (and wearing it “as is” was not an option), she immediately had to come up with plan B.  And in this case, Plan B turned out to be even more incredible as Plan A!  She had a rare and unique situation where both her and her fiancé’s mother and grandmothers still had their wedding gowns.  So as a tribute to them and their beautiful dresses, she displayed them on manikins at the reception venue.  Not only did it give a peek into the family’s heritage, it offered a beautiful addition to the room’s décor.  (And grandma didn’t have to watch her gown get cut into a million pieces!). 


 


In an industry that has seen it all and done it all, it’s always nice to see when clients and vendors come up with something unique and special.  We hope that our list of favorites has inspired you to come up with your own ways to further personalize any event that you’re planning.  Enjoy the rest of the summer and here’s to a fantastic fall wedding season!  Throughout the weekends in August, we will be highlighting photos and stories from some of our most recent weddings this spring and summer. 


 

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Could the New York Sports Teams Step Up for the Community — Just Once?

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WPCNR VIEW FROM THE UPPER DECK. By Bull Allen. July 26, 2008: It’s been two weeks now since Mount  Vernon football, basketball, baseball, track and all their other teams, learned that there will be no sports this year unless the $1.2 Million to run the sports program is raised privately.


Where are the New York megafranchises when you need them?



Yankee Stadium 1956


 



No More Mount Vernon-White Plains Classics?


It’s Up to the Big Leagues to Act Big League.


RACING FOR THE WINNING TD: Brian Mix leaves the Tigers behind ih a 2005 football classic, in Old Parker Stadium, won by Mount Vernon, 38-32. Mix breaks out of the backfield on a trap, uses speed to get outside and is about to head into the endzone for the Winning 6 to end the second overtime.



They love celebrity golf tournaments and toys for tots drives – which cost them nothing. But – help young athletes who have been betrayed by school district mismanagement? Forget about it.


The New York Giants and Jets are building a new stadium. The Mets and Yankees are each building new stadiums. The Yankees are even getting a train station built for them. The Nets are getting a new arena in Brooklyn. The Devils have a new arena in Newark.  


Madison Square Garden (Cablevision-owned) mints money at the Garden and has delivered underachieving (out  in the first round, or bad intramural playground basketball for 12 years).


Where are these teams that ripoff the public with “mediocrity for more” (Giants excepted, but wait until they play the varsity schedule this year) ?


The Jets signed an untried player yester for $30 Million for 5 years. Come on. The Jets throwing around that kind of money – and they and the Giants can’t write Mount Vernon a $1.2 Million between them – before it’s too late?


The Giants are selling Season Seat Licenses — a disguised price increase.


The Steinbrenners, the Wilpons (who are very generous) could step up. Considering the money thrown at those two clubs for their stadiums (part of which they are paying for) But the football teams should.


Denzel Washington did.


The fact that none of New York’s sports teams has is a disgrace.


That Madison Square Garden isn’t even renting their ice to local hockey, figure skating and synchronized skating teams over in Greenburgh is another disgrace.


Fans should think twice before renewing season’s tickets and instead send the money to the Mount Vernon Educational Foundation Inc., P.O. Box 476, Fleetwood Station, Mount Vernon, NY 10552, write “Sports” on the memo section of the check.


Why should any fan care about all these sports clubs any more? They like nothing better than championing organized causes, they portrays them as “good citizens,” but – a simple act of contributing just a little to the community without expectation of getting something back is beneath them?


For that matter the National Football League, the NBA, and Major League Baseball itself could step up with a Million-‘Five. Considering the cost of the Super Bowl Party alone – a bacchanal of sickening proportions – the NFL should dig deep and be the first to step up.


Where’s a big play when you need one?

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