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Issue: 727 | June 28, 2024

HOT TOPICS

Get ready to rock your world at Rock The Block’s highly anticipated third concert on Wednesday, July 10th!

Third time’s a charm! We’re shutting down Mamaroneck Avenue between Maple Ave and E. Post Road once again to transform it into the ultimate hotspot for food, music, and fun!

Enjoy the sensational sounds of Scott Tournet and the Spark! Scott Tournet, a founding member of the award-winning band Grace Potter & The Nocturnals, has performed with The Allman Brothers, members of the Grateful Dead and Phish, recorded with Willie Nelson, and opened for stadium tours with Tim McGraw and Kenny Chesney. His new band and debut LP, with Scott slaying on guitar and a riveting Hammond B3 organ alongside, draws on the best of American roots, rock, and pop music.

Our opening act, Smooch, is an eclectic indie soul/funk jam band from Westchester. Their infectious grooves, improvisational style, and soulful vocals are a perfect pairing for the show.

Remember to mark your calendars for our grand finale, headlined by OTM, on August 14th! While you wait, check out Tunes at Noon at the White Plains Plaza every Thursday from 12:00 p.m. to 2:00 p.m, starting July 11th.

Special thanks to our logistics partners the City of White Plains and Doug Panero Presents and our very valued sponsors: White Plains Hospital, Argent Ventures, Teremana Tequila, Cappelli Organization, SRG2 Partners LLC, Westchester County, ArtsWestchester, Etain, Lanline Communications, Partyline Tent Rentals, and Cambria and our community partner New York Power Authority, as well as our partnering restaurants: Brazen Fox, Cantina, Freebird, Hudson Grill, Lilly’s, Lazy Boy, Ron Blacks and Sundance Kitchen.

This project is made possible with funds from Arts Alive, a regrant program of ArtsWestchester with support from the Office of the Governor, the New York State Legislature, and the New York State Council on the Arts.

Common FAQs can be found HERE.

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ANDREW CUOMO TO THE RESCUE

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OUR NATION TURNS ITS HOPE TO THEE.

WPCNR NEWS & COMMENT. By John F. Bailey.  June 29, 2024:

He saved America once.

We need him to save us once again.

Will we turn to him?

When we need him more than America as ever needed a hero against the odds?

The toughest most intelligent politician of our age

He is Andrew Cuomo.

Americans believed him.

I believed him.

He did not deliver rhetoric in the covid epidemic.

He was tough.

He demanded things that no one liked.

He was on the air everyday telling us the facts of what was happening.

He got people to believe in staying home, something his enemies and thousands of leaders did not want.

He stuck by his reason, his instincts.

His solutions worked.

They got results.

It is so rare politicians get results.

Andrew Cuomo got them he stopped covid spread in 6 months

He stepped in where politicians feared to tread, afraid of public criticism.

He saved millions of New Yorkers and across the nation with his actions.

He was second-guessed and gaslighted by irresponsible caregivers who spread the disease by ignoring his policies.

He was hated by New York Democrats for his power and intelligence when they showed none.

As with  any  enemy of the people (Henrik Ibsen’s  play  about a scientist who exposed water problems and was dubbed Enemy of the People” who was vilified by authorities).

By  putting his instincts and willingness to lead when someone had to lead (and it was not the President of the country at that time who lead, it was not the CDC, it was not the politicians who never visited the morgues.

It was  Andrew Cuomo who gave  his political career away , did unpopular things, the lockdowns.

He went on television across the country with his team gave scientists time to get us a vaccine to stop covid spread by stopping the spread at the time there was no vaccine.

The nation listened to him.

Watched him.

In tight, powerful daily half hour to 45 minute bulletins fact-heavy packed with easy-to-understand graphics, experts talked reality on the ground, explained to a panicked state and America at large how to hold down the deadly covid virus at bay and how not to get it.

He did that.

He did the single biggest national public service rescue with the force of his personality and Melissa De Rosa, his heroine Secretary to the Governor and his Health Commissioner since FDR.

Americans never missed a briefing of his.

I didn’t.

He is easily the best leader I have ever seen in this state SINCE GOVERNOR PATAKI

We need Mr. Cuomo again.

Now.

Will he come back to fight the new covid virus of darkness, “The Trumpid Variant”?

The Trumpid Variant of covid is infecting Americans’ minds with hate, oppression of the innocent, “Herods to be,”  symptoms being  suppression of  freedom infecting our citizens with Trumpid Variant  behaviors infecting Americans with nationalistic world-threatening folly and false sense of  reality, and inability to see the policies of the Trumpid Variant are threatening the greatest country in the world survival.

As with any  “enemy of the people”, Andrew Cuomo paid for his heroic covid-stopping policies politically. He was framed by his own party with charges of sexual harassment by his own attorney general, they took away his emergency powers.  They trumped up sexual harassment charges. He was forced to resign. He was kangarooed out of Albany.

Since then, the same legislature continues their lack of leadership in this state to deal with the state’s problems, fight the new Governor Kathy Hochul’s solutions.

To this date no court case has found Mr. Cuomo guilty of anything. His accusers have not followed through.

But he is available now when the country needs him more than they have ever needed someone  smart, tough, and rational before.

Now he, in my opinion is the only hope if the Democratic Party hopes to stop the virus of darkness: The Trumpid Variant,” infecting Americans believing in things I never thought I’d see my countrymen and women support.

The tragic performance of President Joe Biden in the mockery of the debate Thursday night is reminiscent of the aged German Chancellor in 1933, when the fickle Reichstag with a collaboration of conspiring members angled to have Hitler appointed with Hitler agreeing to appoint them chancellor and aids. Hitler got rid of them after he was made chancellor.

Von Hindenberg washed his hands and resigned. Hitler was appointed. The conspirators not appointed and Hitler took over. The book Takeover chronicles this explicitly.

There is no one the democratic party can replace Biden with, should Mr. Biden resign, who has the national following Andrew Cuomo did and does.

He is not a New Yorker, he’s the last American Hero. He guided us through covid across the nation straight through to morning in America in 2022,

Andrew Cuomo, our nation turns its worried eyes to you.

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YOUR LOCAL EPIDEMIOLOGIST: YES, GUN VIOLENCE IS A PUBLIC HEALTH ISSUE

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Some context on the Surgeon General’s warning this week

Earlier this week, the U.S. Surgeon General declared gun violence a public health crisis. Many narratives immediately pushed back that this isn’t public health’s lane.

Let me say this loud and clear: Gun violence is absolutely in the purview of public health. And until society accepts it as such, we will continue to lose tens of thousands of Americans annually, leaving behind massive ripples in the community. Thankfully, momentum is changing.

What is public health? It’s broader than you might think.

Public health—also called population health—came into the limelight with Covid-19, but it’s much broader than a pandemic or infectious diseases. It is the science of protecting and improving the health of people and their communities.

Public health is everywhere—think seatbelts, non-smoking areas, vaccines, airbags, clean drinking water, cleaner indoor air, food security, and cancer prevention. Experts are in health departments, nonprofits, government agencies, academic institutions, and the private sector. That’s because public health is most effective when combining science, education, policy, advocacy, and innovation.

Figure from Yale School of Public Health

Violence is predictable and thus preventable.

Epidemiology—one subset of public health—is charged with finding patterns: Who is impacted? What predicts certain health outcomes? Because if it’s predictable, it’s preventable.

Violence epidemiology was born out of a case study a few decades ago, which showed that clusters of cholera in Bangladesh mirrored clusters of gun violence in Chicago.

This meant gun violence wasn’t random; certain factors predispose a person or community. The field has grown to study suicide, child abuse, domestic violence, and, yes, gun violence.

Gun violence patterns are becoming clearer.

Gun violence patterns—who are being impacted, where, and why—have slowly emerged, providing hints about tangible and effective public health solutions. For example:

  • Firearm injuries are the leading cause of death in children. It surpassed motor vehicle crashes in 2020 for the first time.
    • 2 out of 5 homes have at least one firearm
    • 4.6 million kids live with unlocked, loaded guns
    • 1 in 3 youth suicides and unintentional deaths can be prevented by securing guns
    • 8 out of 10 children that used a firearm say it belonged to a family member.

    These patterns suggest safe storage and education for parents, for example, could (and are) move the needle.

Deaths per 100,000 in Children and Adolescents, United States. Figure from New England Journal of Medicine; Annotated by YLE

  • Suicides account for most gun deaths, followed by homicides. This is why some states have passed bipartisan legislation, like red flag laws, to temporarily remove firearms from people who have been deemed a threat to themselves. It’s estimated one suicide is prevented for every 10–20 red flag orders issued.
  • Cause and risk are not uniform. Gun injuries and deaths differ by race/ethnicity, physical location, age, and many other factors. This suggests who and how we engage with matters to make an impact.

Firearm deaths by intent and location among children and youth. Figure created by YLE using data from CDC.

  • There are ripple effects. A single neighborhood murder can impact as many as 200 people in a community. Randomized control studies have shown that community-level interventions, like replacing vacant spaces with green spaces, break cycles of violence.
    Firearms are the leading cause of death for children and adolescents

Finding answers has been a slow crawl.

Although we’ve found some patterns, we’ve only scraped the surface. Progress has been plagued by an unfortunate series of events.

Rewind to 1993.

A famous study published in the New England Journal of Medicine found that having a gun in the home increased the risk of homicide in the home. This set off a political domino effect, and three years later, Congress inserted the Dickey Amendment into the CDC spending bill.

The provision stated, “None of the funds made available for injury prevention and control at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) may be used to advocate or promote gun control.” The problem with this, though, is that the language was unclear. The epidemiologist of the 1993 study famously said,

“Precisely what was or was not permitted under the clause was unclear. However, no federal employee was willing to risk his or her career or the agency’s funding to find out. Extramural support for firearm injury prevention research quickly dried up.”

This set gun violence research back decades, as it was completely reliant on nonprofits and philanthropy support. This is helpful but not enough to match the scope of the problem.

But, momentum is shifting.

We see this from several angles:

  • Engagement from the bottom up. A plethora of public health experts have newly partnered with groups directly impacted by gun violence. For example, working with gun owners and gun ranges to curb suicide or communities (see Cure Violence) to build solutions.
  • Funding for research. In 2020 —for the first time in 25 years—our federal budget included $25 million for the CDC and NIH to research reducing gun-related deaths and injuries. This is a start, but to be clear, it’s estimated that we need $1.4 billion to curb this epidemic. (For context, NIH gets $6.56 billion allocated for cancer research.)
  • State and federal initiatives. For example, the Office for Violence Prevention was established in 2023 to focus on key legislative actions. You may be surprised to hear that many policies have bipartisan support. Earlier this month, the office hosted 160 hospital executives and leaders to discuss the importance of using health system data to better understand patterns.

Bottom line

Gun violence is absolutely in the public health lane. This is what we do. We’ve been able to do unimaginable things and save millions of lives by approaching problems with a public health lens, like cigarettes and motor vehicle crashes. Public health can help reduce gun violence in the U.S., and we will. But only at the speed at which society recognizes and supports it.

Love, YLE


“Your Local Epidemiologist (YLE)” is written by Dr. Katelyn Jetelina, MPH PhD—an epidemiologist, wife. During the day, she is a senior scientific consultant to a number of organizations, including CDC. At night, she writes this newsletter. Her main goal is to “translate” the ever-evolving public health science so that people will be well-equipped to make evidence-based decisions. This newsletter is free, thanks to the generous support of fellow YLE community members. To support this effort, subscribe below:

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JUNE 29 2:30 A.M. –FLASH! HUDSON RIVER BEACHES CLOSED. ELEVATED BACTERIA LEVELS CROTON POINT PARK, PHILIPS MANOR BEACH OFF LIMITS

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en Español

**PUBLIC ADVISORY**
CLOSURE OF HUDSON RIVER BEACHES DUE TO ELEVATED BACTERIA LEVELS

Closure of Hudson River beaches due to elevated bacteria levels continues. After a second round of testing that came back positive for enterococcus bacteria, the Westchester County Department of Health has closed Croton Point Park Beach and Philips Manor Beach through the weekend. The beach samples collected exceeded the maximum level of enterococcus bacteria as outlined by the sanitary code.

Both beaches are temporarily closed. A third test will be performed on Monday, July 1. If these subsequent samples meet the required safety standards, the beaches will be reopened at that time. If the enterococcus bacteria level remains high, the beaches will remain closed and will undergo further testing.

Residents and visitors are encouraged to visit the Westchester County website for the latest updates on beach closures and reopening schedules. The County remains committed to maintaining high standards of environmental health and safety across its recreational facilities.

 

(EDITOR’S NOTE: )

Enterococcus faecalis is a species of bacteria that is naturally found in the intestines. While it tends to be harmless in that environment, it has the potential to cause a serious infection if it spreads to other areas of the body.

Enterococci are a type of bacteria that live in your gastrointestinal (GI) tract. There are at least 18 different species of these bacteria. Enterococcus faecalis (E. faecalis) is one of the most common species.

These bacteria also live in the mouth and vagina. They’re very resilient, so they can survive in hot, salty, or acidic environments.

E. faecalis normally lives harmlessly in your intestines. However, if it spreads to other parts of your body, it can cause a more serious infection.

The bacteria can get into your blood, urine, or a wound during surgery. From there, it can spread to different sites, causing more serious infections, including sepsis, endocarditis, and meningitis.

E. faecalis bacteria don’t usually cause problems in healthy people. But people with underlying health conditions or a weakened immune system are more likely to get sick. These infections often spread in hospitals.

In recent years, there’s been an increase in drug-resistant E. faecalis strains. Today, many antibiotics don’t work against infections caused by these bacteria. (From Healthline)


en Español

**AVISO PÚBLICO**
CIERRE DE PLAYAS DEL RÍO HUDSON DEBIDO A NIVELES ELEVADOS DE BACTERIAS

El cierre de las playas del río Hudson debido a niveles elevados de bacterias continúa. Después de una segunda ronda de pruebas que resultaron positivas para la bacteria enterococo, el Departamento de Salud del Condado de Westchester ha cerrado las playas de Croton Point Park y Philips Manor durante el fin de semana. Las muestras de agua de las playas superaron el nivel máximo de bacterias enterococo según lo estipulado por el código sanitario.

Ambas playas están cerradas temporalmente. Se realizará una tercera prueba el lunes 1 de Julio. Si estas muestras posteriores cumplen con los estándares de seguridad requeridos, las playas serán reabiertas en ese momento. Si el nivel de bacterias enterococo sigue siendo alto, las playas permanecerán cerradas y se someterán a más pruebas.

Se recomienda a los residentes y visitantes que visiten el sitio web del Condado de Westchester para obtener las últimas actualizaciones sobre el cierre y reapertura de playas. El Condado sigue comprometido con el mantenimiento de altos estándares de salud y seguridad ambiental en todas sus instalaciones recreativas.

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WHITE PLAINS WEEK THIS MORNING AT 8:30 A.M. EDT–THE PRIMARY ELECTION REPORT FROM JOHN BAILEY AND THE NEWS. CH 45 FIOS COUNTYWIDE. WHITE PLAINS OPTIMUM CH. 76 AND www.wocommunitymedia.org

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GEORGE LATIMER– ELECTED THE PEOPLE’S CHOICE FOR THE 16TH CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT. 

MERIAM LEVITT-FLISSER REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR THE 16TH SEAT.

 

CITY TAKES UP RENEWING WESTCHESTER POWER AGREEMENT MONDAY EVENING. HIGHER CON ED RATES AHEAD.

NOAM BRAMSON HEAD OF WESTCHESTER POWER MAKES THE CHOICES CLEAR PROMISES LOWER NEGOTIATED RATE. 

SUSAN CACASE IN VICTORY. WINS WESTCHESTER COUNTY DEMOCRATIC NOMINATION FOR DISTRICT ATTORNEY

FIREWORKS WHITE PLAINS HIGH SCHOOL. JULY 2. NO RAIN DATE 6 PM TO 10 PM. FOOD AMUSMENTS ENTERTAINMENT

PLUS KEN JENKINS INTRODUCES GEORGE LATIMER AFTER PRIMARY WIN

GEORGE LATIMER’S VICTORY SPEECH.

AND MORE

 

BEHIND THE ANCHOR DESK FOR 24 YEARS

JOHN BAILEY AND THE NEWS

THIS WEEK EVERY WEEK

ON WHITE PLAINS WEEK

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TONIGHT AT 7 P.M. EDT: “INSIDE WILLIE MAYS” FROM THE POLO GROUNDS ON PEOPLE TO BE HEARD FIOS CH 45 & OPTIMUM 76 BULL ALLEN INTERVIEWS GIANT FAN LARRY SHAPIRO “THE DUTCHMAN” ON THE SAY HEY KID AND BULL ALLEN’S 2024 MID SEASON BASEBALL AND THE RULES

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INSIDE THE CATCH!

BASEBALL AT MIDSEASON.

YANKEES STARTING PITCHING COLLAPSES. BULLPEN WORN OUT. IT’S DEJA VIEW ALL OVER AGAIN.

THE METS BATS GET THEM BACK IN THE HUNT.

A LIFE LONG GIANTS FAN REMEMBERS WILLIE AND WHAT MADE HIM THE BEST.

TWO FANS THE LEGENDARY BULL ALLEN AND THE DUTCHMAN ON THE NEW RULES EFFECTS ON

“THE GAME”

 

 

 

 

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JUNE 27– WHITE PLAINS FIREWORKS AT HIGH SCHOOL JULY 2, TUESDAY, NO RAIN DATE. FIELDS UNDER CONSTRUCTION NOT AVAILABLE FOR SEATING

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CITY OF WHITE PLAINS INDEPENDENCE DAY CELEBRATION
FOOD, FUN & FIREWORKS – JULY 2 (NO RAIN DATE)

White Plains, NY – June 27, 2024. The City of White Plains will host its Annual Independence
Day Celebration on Tuesday, July 2 from 6:30 p.m.-10:00 p.m. The free event will be held at
White Plains High School on North Street.

This year’s celebration will feature a wide variety of entertainment including a performance by
the Stolen Moments Entertainment on the main stage at 7:30 p.m. Children and their families
will also enjoy a visit from the Animal Embassy, the Miz Liz Variety Show and face painting. A
variety of food concessions will be available. The White Plains Independence Day Celebration
would not be complete without fireworks. The show presented by Special FX Wizard Inc. will
begin at approximately 9:15 p.m.

White Plains 2024 Independence Day Celebration is sponsored by New York – Presbyterian
Westchester Behavioral Health Center. Residents are encouraged to come early, bring blankets
and chairs and enjoy a fun-filled evening of music, entertainers, food and fireworks. There is no
rain date for this event. For additional information, please call 914.422.1336.

IMPORTANT MESSAGE- NEW THIS YEAR

Please note that due to construction at White Plains High School several seating and parking
areas that were previously used during the event will be off-limits this year. Additionally, Bryant
Avenue will be closed intermittently to vehicular traffic. It is recommended that visitors arrive
early and use the parking areas at the YWCA White Plains and Central Westchester at 515 North
Street and 707/709 Westchester Avenue.
#

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TRUMP NEARING DECISION ON VP 2024 RUNNING MATE

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WPCNR CAMPAIGN 2024. News & Comment by Professor Stephen J. Rolandi. June 26, 2024:

“Donald Trump has no shortage of prospective VP running mates to choose from with the GOP Convention just weeks away. The former President’s process for selecting a nominee for the second highest office in the land resembles more of the casting calls from The Apprentice TV show than a more deliberate process.

Mr. Trump’s criteria are: someone who looks the part of a VP; can raise substantial amounts of money for his campaign;and is 100% loyal to the former President. A number of US Senators such as Marco Rubio and J. D. Vance are contenders, as well as North Dakota Governor Doug Burgum.

Rubio’s selection would pose residency problems and a conflict with the 12th Amendment (Florida electors cannot vote for two residents from the same state).

I do not see Trump selecting a sitting Senator, as I believe a sitting senator who is the VP nominee may not be able to vote for himself/herself in a  contingent election in January 2025 if no wins a majority in the Electoral College.

Bottom line:

Donald Trump selects Governor Burgum as his VP choice, as he checks just all the boxes.

There could be a surprise choice such as former Speaker Kevin McCarthy or former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, but my money is on Burgum, who is also well-regarded in the battleground Mid-West.”

 

(Stephen Rolandi is an adjunct professor of public administration at Pace University and John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY and a former Deputy Commissioner in the administrations of NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg and NYS Governors David Paterson and Andrew M. Cuomo).

 

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GEORGE LATIMER IS THE PEOPLE’S CHOICE

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55% to 45% MARGIN OF VICTORY DEFEATS INCUMBENT CONGRESSMAN JAMAAL BOWMAN IN DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY

COUNTY EXECUTIVE LATIMER TO RUN FOR CONGRESS IN WESTCHESTER 16TH CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT.

SAYS DEPUTY COUNTY EXECUTIVE KEN JENKINS IS “READY TO LEAD” THE COUNTY.

GEORGE LATIMER (CENTER) SURROUNDED  BY COUNTY LEGISLATORS FANS, AND STATE SENATOR SHELLEY MEYER, SECOND FROM LEFT AS THE ” HARRAHS” CASCADED. 

WPCNR CAMPAIGN 2024. By John F.Bailey. June 26, 2024:

The music playing at the close of last night’s Victory Party at 1133 Westchester Avenue was playing Don’t Stop Thinking About Tomorrow by Fleetwood Mac, with hundreds of supporters singing along,  County Executive George Latimer was thinking ahead to November when he will run for the U.S. Congress. Looking at once ecstatic, grateful and humble all it once the roars of congratulations rolled and reverberated across the vast hall.

It was a great day in his life.

Westchester County Executive George Latimer  by 9:15  Tuesday evening knew he had won the Democratic Primary with a rolling and growing 55% of the the vote  and would run for the 16th Congressional District seat in congress in November. Mr. Latimer has never lost an election from City Councilman in Rye, County Legislator, to State Assemblyman to State Senator to County Executive of the country’s wealthiest county, yet most diverse, the last six years, George Latimer to yesterday primary, Mr. Latimer was won them all.

In his “Thank you address”   to a throng I estimate to over 500 persons,  Westchester Democratic Party members, union members, business personalities, 20 media outlets,  well-wishers and just plain folks who have loved George Latimer for his four decades of public service to the County from Rye to Peekskill, Peekskill to Yonkers and Yonkers to Bedford, new Rochelle, Mount Vernon showed to cheer and appreciate his victory and for, I believe the way he has demonstrated how he cares about them from Senior Socials to Memorial Services he is visible every day 7 days on the job to his weekly briefings. He is everywhere in Westchester, it seems all at once.

In a wall to wall-packed hall jammed close to the stage as they could getrat 1133 Westchester Avenue, Deputy County Executive Ken Jenkins introduced “The People’s Choice” as having won because everyone in the county knows what kind of person he is

The crowd surged loud deafening cheers filled the vaulted space. The astmosphere electric and then The County Executive spoke, beginning with the word “Friends” –an appropriate greeting, for Mr. Latimer treats everyone he meets as a friend. Click arrow below to hear his remarks:

IN HIS OPENING REMARKS TO THE CLAMORING CROWD, MR. LATIMER THANKED THEM AND SPOKE OF THE FUTURE SAYING DEPUTY EXECUTIVE KEN JENKINS IS “READY TO LEAD.”

 

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JUNE 25—WESTCHESTER COUNTY HOMES HIT NEW HIGH PRICE AVERAGE OF $980,000 IN MAY

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May Median Single-Family Home Sales Prices Rose by Double Digits in Almost All Regions;

Closed Sales Declined in Every Area Except Westchester

New Listings Grew in Rockland, Orange, and Sullivan Counties

 

WPCNR REALTY REALITY. From the Hudson Gateway Association of Realtors. June 25, 2024:

Median sales prices for single-family homes saw double-digit increases in every county, with the exception of the Bronx, which experienced a slight drop of just 1.6%.

Westchester County reached a new high, with a median of $980,000 – a 16.3% increase over last year’s median home prices.

 

inside Westchester County

For the first time in months, sales of single-family homes increased slightly by 4.6%, and the median sales price advanced by 16.3% to a new high of $980,000. Last year at this time, the median price held at $842,500 and just last month it stood at $870,107.

The County’s condo market also experienced a boost of in sales at 16.5% and a 9.8% hike in the median sales price to $499,500.

Closed sales declined by 4.8% in the co-op market, however the median sales price grew by 10.1% to $205,000.

Drooping inventory: New listings for condos rose by 26.3% but declined by 15.8% for co-ops and 10% for single-family homes. Overall inventory for all property types declined, with co-ops seeing the largest decrease at 33.3%, followed by single-family homes at 21.3%. Months of supply was down 10.7% to just 2.5 months, and pending sales fell by 11.1%.

Closed sales in the condo markets for both the Bronx and Westchester rose by 18.8% and 16.5%, respectively.

Westchester’s condo and co-op median prices also increased by about 10%.

In Rockland County, the median condo price jumped 49.2% to $472,000, the Bronx median condo price grew 42% to $350,000.

 

Inventory plummeted in all areas except Sullivan County, which experienced a 5.8% increase. The Bronx scored the highest for overall pending sales for all property types with an 18.4% hike. Most of the other areas reported a decline in pending sales.

 

Today’s report by the Hudson Gateway Association of Realtors (HGAR), based on data supplied by OneKey® MLS, reflects varying performance for inventory, with Westchester, Putnam and the Bronx declining, while Rockland, Orange and Sullivan new listings were on the rise.

“Due to strong demand and limited supply, home prices are continuing to rise in our area, ensuring the value of owning property and wealth creation for homeowners in the lower Hudson Valley,” said Lynda Fernandez, HGAR CEO. “New listings are increasing in half of our region, pointing to more homes coming onto the market, while rising pending sales signal an increase in future closed sales.”

Bronx County

Single-family home sales decreased slightly by 4.3% and the median sales price also dipped slightly by 1.6% to $610,000. Last month, the median was $617,500, and last year at this time, it was $620,000. Condo sales, however, rose by 18.8%, and prices by 42% with a new median of $350,000. This tops last month’s median of $285,000 and last year’s median of $246,500. However, sales in the co-op market saw a 6.8% decline and a 4.9% decrease in median sales price to $215,000. Last May’s median co-op sales price held steady at $226,000.

New Bronx listings for both condos and co-ops climbed by 26.7% and 15.7% respectively, while listings for single-family homes dropped by 15%. Overall inventory for all three housing types was down significantly, with condos seeing the largest decline at 36.8%. There were 34% fewer single-family homes on the market, and 15.9% fewer co-ops. As of May there were six months of supply, down by 21.1%  from last month. Overall pending sales for all property types were down by 12.8%.

 

Single-family home sales in Putnam County saw a decrease of 29.2% in May but condo sales rose by 62.5%. The median sales prices for single-family homes increased 13.5% to $565,000 – up from $498,000 in May of 2023. Condos also saw a hike in the median sales price by 6.9% to $369,000. No co-op sales were reported in May.

While Putnam typically has a very limited supply of condos, new listings for condos saw a 650% increase, to 15 condos, up from just two last May. Single-family home listings declined by 14%. Inventory for condos also rose significantly by 150% from six to 15. Months of supply for both property types was up by 3.7%, leaving just 2.8 months. Pending sales declined by 6.3%.

Rockland County

Rockland’s co-op market, while small, saw the largest drop in closed sales from last year, by 81.8%. This time last May there were 11 closed co-op sales, as opposed to just two this year. Closed sales for condos also declined by 28.9%, and 10.4% for single-family homes. Again, co-ops were the big winners when it came to price increases – the market realized a 158.4% gain on median sales prices to $307,500, up from just $119,000 in May of 2023 and $140,000 from last month. Condos saw a 49.2% increase in median sales prices to $472,500, as compared to $316,750 last year. Single-family homes experienced a 19.5% growth in median sales prices to $776,000.

New listings for condos grew by 24.5%, and 4.9% for single-family homes. Co-op listings, however, dropped by 18.2%. Inventory for all three property types declined , with co-ops seeing the largest drop at 50%. Months of supply for all property types was down 10.3% to 2.6 months, while pending sales were up by 13%.

Orange County

In Orange County, sales of single-family homes declined by 13.2% and condos by 20%. However, condos saw a 21.4% increase in the median sales price to $312,50 – up from $257,500 last year. Single-family homes also got a boost in the median sales price to $442,500, which is 2.9% higher than last year. There was just one co-op sale in May at $140,000, as co-ops properties are limited in Orange County.

New listings for condos rose by 13% and 6% for single-family homes. Inventory dropped by 30.2% for condos and 15.2% for single-family residences. Months of supply increased 3% in May to 3.4 months, but pending sales declined by 7.4%.

Sullivan County

While Sullivan County’s single-family home sales declined 12.9% in May, the median sales price grew 27.5% to $347,500, over last year’s median of $272,500. There was just one condo sale at $230,000 and no co-op sales during the month.

New listings for single-family homes advanced by 16.7% and inventory increased by 5.8%.  As of May, Sullivan had the largest months of supply at 6.4 months, an increase of 20.8% over last month., Pending sales of single-family homes also increased at a rate of 8.8%.

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