District Suggests $70,000 Replant of Decimated Woods at the High School

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. By John F. Bailey. October 24, 2007: The engineering consultant commissioned by the school district to review options for rehabilitating the White Plains High School woods that were arbitrarily cut down by order of the district manager of buildings and grounds to build ballfields in August reported to the Board Wednesday evening. He said that in his opinion the soil was not contaminated and that the replanting of the woods, demanded by Haviland Manor residents who look out on the desecrated area (now a forlorn field of stumps), could be achieved by planting 15 trees about one foot high in the center of the meadow portion,  and 10 to 12 foot evergreens ringing the meadow area.  The cost of the restoration was estimated at $70,000.



The Wipeout of the Woods. August 7, 2007. WPCNR File Photo



“`Proposed Rehab Plan of Wiped Out Woods Presented Wednesday Evening. North is at the top of the landscape plan. Plan consists of 15 small 12 inch plantings of trees in the center with meadow grasses, surrounded by planting of approximately 25 – 12 foot evergreens surrounding the center meadow as a visual buffer presenting to Havilands Lane, bottom of picture.


Superintendent of Schools Timothy Connors said that if the board approves the plan the rehab/replanting could be executed in November.  Assistant Superintendent for Business, Fred Seiler, said he estimated the total cost of the removal of the trees, the engineering and landscape design and cost of new trees would be $70,000.


Glen Watson of Badey & Watson gave the opinion that the operation would not require an Environmental Impact Statement and approval of the Department of Environmental Conservation before they would start. He said that by filing what he called an Environmental Assessment Form describing the work they were going to perform on the field, and if the DEC felt the project required their further review, the DEC could intervene and review it.  Watson also wrote SEQRA was probably violated by the original ripping out of the woods, and that a Stormwater Pollution Plan is required. He assured the neighbors to the site that “there is no anticipated effect on drainage patters across the site.


Alan Teck, the conservationist, one of the neighbors living adjacent to the violated site, said the neighbors in attendance were realistic and “reconciled in varying degrees of happiness” with the district solution.  He said that Superintendent of Schools Connors agreed persons executing the rehab view the site from the various properties of neighbors affected by the views to position trees for maximum shielding of the high school campus view from their yards.


Teck thought that was a positive.  Teck observed that the rehab “does not come close to restoring what  was there.”  He said, “Everybody (neighbors) realizes that the ambience of their homes is decimated and is being decimated. This is a compromise.” He recognized the district had limited resources and “there’s no way they could replace what was there.”


Teck did have a problem with the 12 foot evergreens and the slopes of the site and said that needed to be relooked at, saying that a tree on a slope does not provide as much height to screen the project because it is on a slope.


Bill Pollak, School Board member observed that the school district and the neighbors being put in this situation, “seemed so unnecessary to me.”

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Challengers: Incumbies don’t lead. Do not listen.Go Own Way. Sons of BH Do Well

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WPCNR CAMPAIGN 2007. By John F. Bailey. October 24, 2007: In the liveliest council candidates’ forum of the campaign, a crowd of 75 persons jammed the Battle Hill School Condominium Community room and peppered questions at the 9 candidates for Common Council last night. Incumbents Dennis Power and Benjamin Boykin defended their records, and listening skills. An exit poll conducted by the leaders of the Battle Hill Association indicated that Augostino Zicca, Cass Cibelli and Robert Stackpole had responded most to concerns raised by the audience, with Anthony Pilla fourth. (See results at end of this article.)



9 for the Council: L to R, Dennis Power, Anthony Pilla, Milagros Lecuona, Cass Cibelli, Candyce Corcoran, Augostino Zicca, Robert Stackpole, Robert Levine and Benjamin Boykin at Battle Hill School Condominium Thursday evening.



Asked about what legislation the incumbents would work to pass, Benjamin Boykin stood on his experience, claiming that his record has shown that he looks at issues and tries to make decisions for the good of the city. Boykin said he would  push the council legislation to expand the percentage of work force housing to 10%, expand the income eligibility to the $120,000 combined income level, and keep White Plains “a diverse city.”


 Dennis Power, his running mate, sounded the theme of drawing the line on exclusivity and kowtowing to one developer, and continued his theme of more open government, more televised meetings, and working forward with all of the citizens to develop, as Boykin put it “their own vision of White Plains.”


Robert  Stackpole supported the  percentage of affordable housing model, but said he would work to eliminate the  so-called “buy out” option of paying million dollar fees to satisfy developers’ 6% affordable housing obligation,  a “buyout”  he claimed every developer has used to avoid building affordable housing. Boykin pointed out the 17 units of affordable housing at Horton’s Mill off Lake Street (yet to open), the 200 units at Kensico Terrace, and the units at Minerva Place did not require buyouts.


(Editor’s Note: WPCNR notes that the city contributed $848,497 of the city affordable housing fund money  to the Kensico Terrace project to get that built,  and $327,474 more from the affordable housing fund  to the Horton’s Mill project to build that. Last month, the council voted $250,000 to support the Minerva Place project, when the developer lost a grant in the same amount.)


Augostino Zicca said he would work for legislation increasing the income level on workforce housing, and to bring in the Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency to aid and work with the police and the city in discovering illegal housing.


(An ICE spokesperson in Washington,  Rick Rocha confirmed to WPCNR today, the agency could come into the city under the 1996 287(g) Immigration and Nationality Act and investigate illegal housing clusters and possible wrongdoing  and exploitation of illegal aliens in the city.)


Candyce Corcoran said she would work for senior taxation, to provide a tax structure for senior citizens that would enable them to stay in the city rather than sell their homes due to the ever escalating taxes. She advocated workforce housing.


Cass Cibelli said he would work hard to increase fines for illegal housing violations and stamp out illegal housing.


Milagros Lecuona, first time candidate for Common Council, said she would press hard on environmental issues


Anthony Pilla said he would work to “legislate to insure the school district meet monthly with the leaders of the city, and be accountable for the number of children in White Plains who are not supposed to be here.”


Power said he would support legislation to enhance affordable housing.


Housing in the outlying neighborhoods


On the question of affordable housing concentration in Battle Hill, Mr. Boykin said regarding legislation advancing affordable housing to other neighborhoods that it only applied to new multi-family dwellings, permitted by present zoning and would not impact Battle Hill adversely.


Stackpole said Battle Hill was protected by zoning, but the city has to question how projects not complying with present zoning get built in areas such as Central Avenue.


Anthony Pilla cautioned affordable or workforce housing should not be forced into residential neighborhoods, just in mixed-use areas of the city. He said forcing them into the residential neighborhoods does not work long term. He decried the fact that one of his children’s teachers commutes from Danbury and the Superintendent of Schools lives in Connecticut, saying White Plains needs to fix the affordable housing problem.


Ms. Lecuona said she supported affordable/workforce housing, but it was important to determine the amount of money you could afford to pay for affordable housing (meaning combined income levels) that would work.


Court backlogs


On a question on how the city could fix the city court system, Mr. Stackpole charged that the council appointed the last city judge candidate under considerable pressure from political interests and had not made the best selection,  saying “it (the court system) is a mess.”


Mr. Boykin defended the selection, saying “we’re very careful to make the best selection,” and that the state had to approve the city selection. The council appointed a judge to a new term recently, after being lobbied hard by many black church leaders in the city to reappoint the judge, and did so, despite considerable objection from practitioners in the city court recommending otherwise.


Corcoran first said the judges should be voted out, not realizing the city court judges were appointed, and apologized for not hearing the question specifically. She said the Council should examine appointees more carefully and select the best-qualified candidate.


Zicca accused city court judges of intentionally backlogging their calendars and not disposing of cases in a workmanlike manner.


Mr. Levine on the matter said the lawyers created their own problems and should straighten out the court problems themselves.


On the question asking about the development of the White Plains station area, Councilman Boykin touted his effort in turning back the Exclusivity Agreement on the development of the station, but acknowledged that the developer had “put it (the station) in play” and he, Boykin looked forward to working with the residents to develop their vision of the city. Ms. Corcoran accused Boykin of being disingenuous about  his (and Mr. Power’s)  voting to kill the Exclusivity Agreement because she said, had the agreement not been brought to the public’s attention by the media that the council knew about the Exclusivity Agreement before they  said they knew about it, the council would not have voted it down.


Robert  Levine demurred saying that development of the station should not be undertaken so soon when issues such as the school district finances,  recreation, parking, the infrastructure and the city budget were, in his opinion, more important to be dealt with first, as part of “an overall plan.”


Robert Stackpole took up the cudgel, pointing out that the city did not participate in developing the present railroad station and that it does not involve itself, pay attention  and demand a voice with other government entities conducting projects that affect the city. He pointed out the city not participating with the DOT caused the I-287 construction mess at Exit 6 and was an example of that lack of awareness by the present council.


Zicca said he was for construction of a new rail station, but not for closing of the firehouse, and suggested another  800 car garage was needed there.


Candyce Corcoran objected to the 45% increase in the parking permit fee at the city garage.


Mr.Cibelli was more general on the station, saying it did not matter, because it was a matter of “us and them,” meaning the present two incumbents and the rest of the council, “the four of them and what they do.”


Ms. Lecuona said when she visited the train station campaigning in the morning she realized that if the station plaza project had been  given an exclusivity agreement, the development would have blocked the sunrise and Battle Hill would not see the sun again, saying any development had to be considered as to such impacts.


Power said you had to be careful about what was developed in the station area.


In closing statements, Mr. Pilla said you could not run the city at a loss, the council had to be fiscally responsible.


Candyce Corcoran accused the two incumbents, Power and Boykin of blaming all the city ills, rising taxes on everything but themselves.  She said they were not leaders and made the votes that have lead to the present situation.


Cibelli said the election was important, because if the incumbents win, “we will go from an us to a we, and we will be them – not listening, not caring – all will be planned,  and they are very excellent at it – excellent in bad politics.”


Zicca accused Power and Boykin of listening with “deaf ears” then doing what they are told to do. He demanded the city look into working with the Immigration and Customs Enforcement and work under the 287(g) statute to attack the illegal immigrant problem in the city.


Boykin said his leadership and record spoke for him, repeated his dedication to workforce housing and listening to the people’s vision for the city.


Ms. Lecuona said what an experience it was for her to be a part of the democratic process, that she would listen carefully, and hoped all would vote democratic.


Mr. Stackpole accused the incumbents of indifference: “They listen with deaf ears. They vote their own way. They don’t want to listen…so you have a voice, so  we have a voice vote November 6 if you want to have change.”


WPCNR did not hear the candidates’ opening statements because we had attended the School Board meeting until 8:30 P.M.


 


The Battle Hill Exit Poll — from the Battle Hill website:



































%

Candidate

21%

Augie Zicca

17.5

Cass Cibelli

16%

Robert Stackpole

11%

Anthony Pilla

10.5%

Candyce Corcoran

10.5%

Dennis Power

5.5%

Milagros Lecuona

4%

Ben Boykin

4%

Robert Levine


 


 

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The Mets Secret Plan to Take Over NY Baseball. What I’d Do If I Owned the Mets

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WPCNR VIEW FROM THE UPPER DECK. By Bull Allen. October 24, 2007: World Series time. And the Mets are not in it. In one of the more mysterious collapses in baseball annals, the Metropolitans could not hit or pitch consistently the last two weeks of the season and were over taken by the Philadelphia Phillies.



How to Fill Citi Field in 2009


They were even upstaged in failure by their arch rivals from The Bronx – the richest sports franchise in the world. Even when the Mets seem to have won something – even if it was a first in failure, the Yankees even beat them in failure with the Indian Bug Conspiracy (what a lot of whining) and the Torre firing. They continue to grab the printer’s ink with the charade of hiring Don Mattingly, and the soap opera conspiracy of will they or won’t they sign A-Rod, Mo and Jorge.


Meanwhile, what are the Metropolitans doing? They are in free fall still!



Fred Wilpon now is your chance!


If I were Fred Wilpon  and Omar Minaya, I’d go after Jorge, Mo and maybe A-Rod, and make an effort to sign at least one or both of them. The Mets could use Mr. Posada’s savvy behind the plate to settle their young bullpen, not to mention his bat and maturity. What was the big Met failure that cost them the pennant?


The failure to save games down the stretch. So call up Marian0 Rivera’s agent and make him an offer he cannot refuse. A-Rod – he’s going to be expensive—but hey, the Metropolitans will be able to afford him with that new ballpark coming in, and he could be put at first base where he would not be such a defensive liability as he is in The Bronx.


 BOOM! BOOM! BOOM! With those three signings or at least signing Rivera and Posada you would doom the Yankees in one swoop and dramatically improve the Met defense and lineup at the same time.


For the Mets not to go after those three players would seem to me to be a tacit nolo contender agreement. When leader players of that category are available – Pete Rose, Joe Morgan, Kurt Gibson, Frank Robinson types – and your team leads a leader(s) – you have to bring them in to turn your ballclub away from the bad karma that plagued the Mets all season.


Now I like Willie Randolph, but Willie showed he does not have the ability to lead a ball club. He made no effort to shake up that club the last two weeks of the season. Not one overturned buffet table. Not one benching. No kicking dirt on an umpire’s shoes. No decking of Phillie hitters. No brawls. Come on, when a ballclub like the Phillies is taking your pitchers out consistently, you have to start moving those hitters off the plate.


The Mets pitchers also need a professional winning pitcher as a pitching coach. You cannot depend on Pedro Martinez to supplement the laconic Rick Peterson’s lack of knowledge of how to get players out in a big spot. Young pitchers need that. That’s what Ron Guidry did for the Yankees. If the Yankees unload Guidry – look for the young pitchers to go bad next season.


Willie Randolph should be fired. The Mets lacked toughness and  meanness the whole season. The only fire came from ballplayers like Loduca and David Wright.


The manager has to supply the fire. Willie is too benign as to be almost not seeming to care. He takes losing too easily. Shake up the lineup when you’re slumping. Shake up the rotation. Shake up the defense. Suspend Reyes for not hustling.


Now, do we know of any well-known manager with a track record who is unemployed, knows New York and the New York media, and can bring in a coaching staff that knows how to win?


I can think of a huge name out there sitting by the telephone, recently unceremoniously let go by a ball club because they did not get out of the first round of the playoffs.


Joe Torre.


Yes, if I were Omar Minaya I would remove Willie Randolph or arrange for Willie to step aside and move upstairs – and bring in Flawless Joe as my manager.


Mr. Torre has so much class that he might turn down the position in respect for Willie Randolph. However, the public relations value to the Mets as well as the competitive karma Torre would bring to the Metropolitans ball club would be like a shot of strategic steroids. I have a problem with his propensity for conceding games by leaving starters in too long and not using Rivera in a tie game, but if the Yankees could judge their pitching that might not have happened.


But, hey, Torre is what the Mets need. Even Tony LaRussa  would have helped the Mets.


But no, so far Omar Minaya and the Wilpons are standing pat.


How is Randolph going to inspire this club next season?


However, Omar Minaya is not without blame in the Metropolitan collapse.


He made no moves down the stretch.


I repeat, he made no moves down the stretch. He did not trade for a name starter in August to shore up the rotation, just in case.


One stud starter was all the Mets needed to secure the pennant, but Minaya could not make the deal.


One hitter might have helped, too.


Meanwhile up in the Bronx.


The charade of interviewing Tony Pena, Joe Girardi and Don Mattingly for the managerial position of the Yankees is playing out. Despite a Mattingly acquaintance telling the media that Donnie Baseball felt he was not ready to manage, now the last few days Don has denied he ever said that to any one and says he is ready to manage.


The New York press is buying this. Witness the glowing Mattingly “rehab” in today’s Times.


Meanwhile, Mr. Pena and Mr. Girardi, both men who have managed successfully, are playing second fiddle to the Mattingly line.


Today the Times also did an extensive interview with Hank Steinbrenner portraying him as “A Chip off the Old Boss,” attributing quotes to Hank that indicate he even talks and says things like George Steinbrenner, and is competitive like his father.


Hank also went out of the way to talk about the Yankees still being ahead of the Red Sox and being competitive for years to come. He also noted significantly, and I quote from Murray Chass’s column, “We have the best young pitching in baseball, not just in the majors but in the minors coming behind them. As long as we keep adding young position players like Cabrera and Cano, we’re going to be touch for 10 years…”   and “…I hope we can win enough in the next 20 years that we’ll continue to be Darth Vader, if that’s how they want to portray us.”


This also smacks of reassuring any potential major buyers of the Yankee empire (a $5 billion franchise, if you count the YES network), that they are going to continue to win and be competitive.


Now, it is interesting that Mr. Chass acquires this “get” before anyone else. Is this a “rehab” repositioning the Yankee Torre purge, and assuring the franchise is stable?


Well, If they do not sign Rivera and Posada and A-Rod, I guarantee you they are not winning next year. You cannot replace A-Rod’s run production. You cannot replace Rivera’s saves (but that assumes he has games to save next year). You cannot replace Posada’s bat and ability to handle pitchers.


Conversely all three players would solidify the Mets for one great year or more.  A Rivera Posada Torre get would take the Mets out of the shadows of the Yankee mystique. It would tell their fans the Met management is serious. A Rod would be too much to hope for.


Torre would also instantly stabilize a team that no longer believes in their manager, if they ever did. The Mets lacked fire last year. Torre could conceivably contribute to building up Jose Reyes maturity – a major flaw in Mr. Reyes performance this past year – as he did Derek Jeter.


The best manager the Mets ever had was Gil Hodges — the same kind of quiet strength no-nonsense type that Joe Torre is.


The Wilpons could, while they are cherry picking the results of the Yankee managerial change of guard,  should look at bringing Brian Cashman in as General Manager.


But, hey, Omar Minaya did not do that bad a job.  He gambled that the roster as constituted could hang on to win.  He won’t make that mistake again. But Minaya when he was with Montreal also was reluctant to go for a new player down the stretch. He has to get over that and start pulling the trigger down the stretch.


He does though have to recognize that Randolph did not get the Mets through bad times this year, and that is the manager’s job. That’s why they call the job “Manager.”


So if I were the Wilpons that is what I would do, I would bring in A Rod, Jorge and Mo – whatever it takes – and dangle Wagner, the unreliable reliever. I’d bring in Torre. I’d move Willie to the front office.


Starting pitching – big Metropolitan problem.  But that is why you have to make a change.


Mattingly will have fun with this Yankee pitching staff as presently constituted next season.


Frankly, I’d prefer to have seen LaRussa come in.


But as sports commentators have said, they’ll give Mattingly a three year contract, sign some big pitchers.


Who knows, signing Pena or Girardi makes more sense and they can move either of them out more quickly than they can Mattingly.


Mattingly is much in the position of Mel Ott when the Stonehams hired him to manage the old New York Giants from 1942 through 1948, after Bill Terry left.  Ott presided over six and a half mediocre seasons. But everybody loved him. He just could not win.


More to the point, Mattingly has no experience managing.


When the Yankees fired Casey Stengel in 1960, they gave the job to Ralph Houk.  Houk was a combat commander in World War II. He managed extensively in the minor leagues. He was a leader, winning three straight pennants. When he returned to the Yankees after the dreadful Berra, Keane years, and did not have the players, he was not as successful. But no Yankee fan ever felt Houk’s players dogged it.


Do you remember when the Yankees hired Yogi Berra for the 1964 season? Berra was a former player. The Yankees walked all over him. So much so that even when Berra won the pennant by a game in 1964, the Yankees fired him anyway.


I remember when I became a Creative Director for the first time. It all changed. The writers were no longer your friends and people you worked with. They worked for you. You had to manage your staff psychologically and figure out ways to get them to come around to your way of thinking. 


Mattingly has no experience doing that.


Despite what Hank Steinbrenner says, good young pitching only lasts until the pitchers are thoroughly scouted, that’s when pitching coaching comes in. They need new pitches, new thinking, strategies. Pitching is not all about pitch counts. It’s about heart, guile, guts and brains, and mechanics. You have to develop them.


I did not see a lot of that from the Yankee pitching staff this season or the Mets for that matter


Let’s not go back to the days of Billy Connors.  The Yankees started to win consistently when Mel Stottlemyre became their pitching coach.


So Fred…what do you think?


Reach for the phone now…and let the fun and the Mets future begin.

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Back on the Ice Again! Ebersole Rink Opens.

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WPCNR RINK SIDE. By Edges Bailey. October 23, 2007: The Ebersole Rink opened in White Plains for the season Tuesday evening with the first skate of the White Plains Figure Skating Club. Thirteen advanced skaters of the 32 member club, an organization of serious skaters ranging in age from girls of 11 to a gentleman in his 70s, took the ice in 72 degree weather at good Ol’ Ebersole. 


Ebersole Skating School Director, Kirsten Fuerst announced that Friday, the 26 will start the first regular day of Figure Skating Classes.  



Back on the Ice Again: White Plains Angels of the Ice on the Great White Stage of Ebersole Rink Tuesday Night.



Ice Angel Jen Bisignano – glad to be back on the ice again – spinning like a spinning top.  Ms. Bisignano had a great first night –  with a great start! She landed her Double Lutz jump for the first time – with a smile you had to see!


 


 




Libby Hollahan, President of the White Plains Figure Skating Club supervising the first Club Ice of the year. The WPFSC elite ice is available every Tuesday evening from 5:15 to 7 PM to club members who have mastered Freestyle 1 skills. The members also may skate in the Advanced Figure Skating Program Rink sessions Friday evenings and Sunday evenings


Hollahan arranges test sessions, books judges,  negotiates contracts with the rink.  Her dedicated efforts have helped the build the club into a tradition. She said she was pleased with the thirteen skaters showing up for the very first session and said all could not wait to get back on the ice again.


The Figure Skating Club this year has 32 members, up from last year’s 25, Hollahan reports. Membership in the club is $405, made up of $30 Club Dues, $35 dues to United States Figure Skating, plus $350 for the ice on Tuesdays for the entire skating year.  The $350 for ice works out to about $15 for each 1 hour and 45 minutes of uncrowded ice time. One hour of ice on a jam-packed comparable rink costs $20, so skating moms and dads know their daughters are getting a great ice buy and a great experience their daughters will treasure always with the White Plains Figure Skating Club.


Membership entitles club skaters to the privilege of skating in the three White Plains Figure Skating USFS Test Sessions for a Test Fee,  in which United States Figure Skating Official judges evaluate skating skills  as the skaters advance through the skill levels set by the USFS. This year Hollahan has scheduled test sessions for December 5 , February 26 and March 26.


Last year, Hollahan said the club conducted 60 Tests and said 95% of skaters passed the sessions, attesting to the quality of the instruction at Ebersole Rink  and dedication of the Club skaters.


In addition to Test Session eligibility, membership in the WPFSC entitles members to participate in United States Figure Skating competitions around the country under the auspices of the club.



At the Club’s Tuesday evening “Elite Ice,” members can schedule lessons with Ebersole Figure Skating Instructors. Here Skating School Director Kristen Fuerst (right) conducts a lesson Tuesday night with a Club member.



 


Serious Ice: The Club Session provides plenty of wide open “elite” ice to practice skating programs to skaters’ custom-cut music, and perform and practice the axels, spins and jumps of  the figure skater’s trade where moves can be staged at top speed in uncrowded ice conditions. It’s serious ice. Skaters said the ice was beautifully laid down and supportive with good bite, despite the warm weather, saluting the extra effort put in by the Ebersole Zamboni Ice Technician.


The club makes sense for serious skaters  who have passed the Freestyle 1 level. It provides a courteous, friendly atmosphere where skaters respect each other’s ice space and look out for each other, making friends for life. The Club skaters get valuable solo performance opportunities in the Holiday and the End of Year traditional Ebersole ice shows, and get their performances showcased to the world on The CitizeNetReporter.


Kristen Fuerst, Ebersole Skating School Director for over a decade, said that there is still time to sign up your  young skaters for all the skating class Group Lessons. Eight-Week sessions are offered from Tots 1 (ages 4 to 6) to Advanced Figure Skating (Beta Level and above. Cost is $95 for White Plains residents per 8 week session and $150 for a non-resident per 8-week session. Skating levels are sequential of course. For more information on what skating class is best for your children,  contact Ms. Fuerst at Ebersole Rink 948-6696.


For information joining the White Plains Figure Skating Club, contact the Club at  761-6259.


Public Ice Skating Sessions begin  today at 10 A.M. to 2; Thursday, 10 A.M. to 2 and 3 to 5 PM; Fridays, 10 A.M. to 2, 3 PM to 4:45 PM, and 8 PM to 10 PM (the closest thing to a teen center White Plains has when a hundred teens take to the ice),  Saturdays, 12 Noon to 4 PM and Sunday, 1 P.M. to 4 P.M. Sunday mornings from 10:20 A.M. to 11:45 PM is for adult skaters.


 


The Group Lesson Schedule of the Ebersole Figure Skating School



 


 


 

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At Long Last Autumn

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WPCNR PHOTOGRAPHS OF THE DAY. By the WPCNR Flying Photographer. October 23, 2007: Today’s photos prove that despite the endless summer of 2007, the reports of autumn’s demise have been greatly exaggerated. Foiliage has just begun to showcase in northern Westchester and Orange Counties as these pictures show looking north on climbout from Westchester County Airport, and on takeoff from  Orange County Airport Sunday.


The 5 Hour Vacation



 


Westchester County Looking North from Westchester County Airport on Climbout.



Turning amber in Orange County.


 

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Zicca, Cibelli: Council a “Blockade,” Act on Illegals; Bobs Corc Hammer Finances

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WPCNR CAMPAIGN 2007. By John F. Bailey. October 22,2007 UPDATED 12:15 PM: In the third Common Council Forum last night, Augostino Zicca, Cass Cibelli, and Anthony Pilla,  the three Republican candidates roasted and toasted incumbent Councilmen Benjamin Boykin and Dennis Power as soft on illegal housing, and chided what they described as Council consistent stalling on an IDA for the city, implying they were representing county interests and not White Plains. Zicca called for commercial property owners to pay more city taxes, perhaps by PILOTS.



The White Plains Common Council Field debated their positions at the White Plains Public Library last night before 97 persons. Left to right, Robert Levine, Melagros Lecuona, Anthony Pilla, Benjamin Boykin, Candyce Corcoran, Robert Stackpole, Dennis Power, Augostino Zicca. Cass Cibelli participated but was away from the dais at the time.



Independent candidates Robert Levine, Robert Stackpole and Conservative Candyce Corcoran returned to their theme that the council has not minded the city’s books responsibly. Corcoran  said she supported  passing the additional ½% sales tax, limiting Payments in Lieu of Taxes, would push the city IDA proposal, and would work to roll back parking rates and parking time intervals, and attempt to cut expenses throughout the budget and hold tax increases to inflation.


Boykin  the incumbent, steadfastly maintained he was proud of his record and had worked as Chair of the Budget and Management Committee to balance growth and development  and  services and keep taxes low (though they have gone up twice the rate of inflation the last four years). Candidate Power, Boykin’s running mate noted city taxes had gone up 35% in 7 years. 


(Editor’s Note: To amplify Mr. Power’s tax comment, in 2001-2002, the property tax collection was $28.2 Million. In 2007-2008, it is $41.1. In the five years since 2001-2002, city property tax levy has increased 46%)


Now they Can Consider Sales Tax


Boykin said that now that the Council finally has the financial information (future projections) they asked for from the Mayor they will be able to come to a decision on the sales tax and “carefully review where the (budget) gaps are.” Power also said the White Plains taxes were among the lowest in Westchester County. Power maintained the County IDA fees of  $3 Million county wide, would not bring White Plains that much more in revenue if the legislature granted White Plains its own Industrial Development Agency. 


Power promoted open government and diligent cost cutting, that going forward the council had to look at all costs and trim spending, and televise more meetings, work sessions, and special meetings. Power also trumpeted the council’s rejecting the Station Plaza Exclusivity Agreement and the New York Presbyterian Hospital Memorandum of Understanding proposal.


In carrying the ball for the ticket, Power said the Council had supported efforts by Assemblyman Adam Bradley to establish a separate Commericial Tax Rate for residential tax relief. Bradley, though it should be noted, has no indication that he can get this bill through the present New York State Senate in the present climate.


New York Presbyterian Hospital Land Rises From Dead


When asked how they could work to get New York Presbyterian Hospital to reconsider turning parkland over to the city (a 35-year crusade), most said they would work toward developing an atmosphere with the hospital to do that. Corcoran said her long standing in the community as an activist and her professional, personal relationships with New York Presbyterian Hospital executives, she was in a unique position to rekindle a dialogue with the Hospital on the land and would if elected.


Zicca said it would be prudent to develop money sources to gear up to buy the land eventually, suggesting that the Council erred in not negotiating more from New York Hospital during the time the Memorandum of Understanding proposal was on the table, (floated by the Delfino Administration),  trading development for land in a more favorable ratio to the city. (The city would only have received 6 acres.)


IDA granting atmosphere disputed.


Council a “Blockade”


When Power voiced his opinion that White Plains has little chance of getting an IDA, because the state  has not granted one in twenty years, Cibelli said that was not true,  that Hamilton Township was granted an Industrial Development Agency in 2006.


Cibelli boomed that the present council was stalling on issues, calling them “a blockade for not passing legislation and it’s got to stop. They limit passing legislation,” referring to the Council stalling the sales tax and the City IDA promoted by the Mayor, because of the Council alledged allegiance to the county.


Bring in Feds  (ICE) if you want to Clear out Illegal Housing.


Mr. Zicca returned to the theme of quality of life stressing that illegal residences were killing the city. He called on the city to partner with federal authorities under the Section 287G law (on the books since 1996) to come in and crack down on illegal housing once and for all. Zicca recalled observing owners of overcrowded housing, whom he did not name, laughing at the fines in city court. He suggested racheting fines up to $35,000 for starters for property owners maintaining overcrowded residences.


Mr. Pilla, not Mr. Zicca, reported how the City of Albany receives $22 Million from the state of New York in PILOTS, suggesting White Plains should receive similar PILOTS from Westchester County.


(Editor’s Note: The Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act (IIRAIRA), effective September 30, 1996, added Section 287(g), performance of immigration officer functions by state officers and employees, to the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA). This authorizes the secretary of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to enter into agreements with state and local law enforcement agencies, permitting designated officers to perform immigration law enforcement functions, pursuant to a Memorandum of Agreement (MOA), provided that the local law enforcement officers receive appropriate training and function under the supervision of sworn U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers.


The cross-designation between ICE and state and local patrol officers, detectives, investigators and correctional officers working in conjunction with ICE allows these local and state officers: necessary resources and latitude to pursue investigations relating to violent crimes, human smuggling, gang/organized crime activity, sexual-related offenses, narcotics smuggling and money laundering; and increased resources and support in more remote geographical locations.


For more on this interesting resource, go to www.ice.gov/partners/287g/section287_g.htm. )


Railside Rises From the Dead Again


Mr. Boykin was questioned again by  a resident of Railside on the Railside Avenue sale on how much money was made from that sale after all the curb and drainage improvements reported that the sale brought in $2.5 Million and the city spent $260,000 to prep the street for the new property owners leaving a “profit” of $2,235,000. Boykin said the city no longer needed to do one-shot land sales and he and the council would not do it in the future because it was not needed. All candidates agreed on no more sales of city assets.


Voice of Finance


Mr. Stackpole cautioned that the sales tax was a “false hope” and the passing of a city IDA was unlikely, that the city needed to do the hard work of bringing the budget under control, cutting costs, and planning.  He said this election was a unique time for the citizens of White Plains to make a change in leadership, instead of just complaining about where the city was going. He said if the voters wanted that change they should give their vote to him and Mr. Levine. Otherwise they should not.


A question on how the council stood on granting driver’s licenses to illegal aliens was semi-supported by Mr. Power because of the complexities and personal situations of illegal aliens, as well as aliens here legally in the state, and the need to insure driver safety. Mr. Boykin said he had no position because of the complexities of the issues. Mr. Zicca, Mr. Cibelli, Ms. Corcoran, Mr. Pilla, were all opposed to the policy. Mr. Stackpole said it was a state issue and very complex and noting he was 1/8 American Indian,  he would not take a position. Mr. Levine said he had no comment.


One question that was not asked by an audience member who did not get an opportunity to ask the question from the floor was given to WPCNR to ask in this article. A senior citizen asks “If elected, would you vote breaks for developers which will result in a building tax burden on those of us on fixed incomes?”


Anyone want to take that one?


 


 

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Billion Dollar Lectric Car Arrives WP. Mayor, GM intro WP Man to Road Test Car

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WPCNR BUMPER TO BUMPER. October 22, 2007 UPDATED October 23, 2007: Mayor Joseph Delfino drove up to city hall in a new 21st Century General Motors  hydrogen powered  “electric” Equinox today, and, together with Larry Burns of General Motors introduced Eric Rotbard, a White Plains commuter from Nyack, one of two Westchester workers who will be “road-testing” America’s first hydrogen-powered emissions-free vehicle.



Mayor Jospeh Delfino arriving City Hall in the GM Equinox hydrogen-fueled battery-operated car today.




Mayor Exists Vehicle to Media Swarm



Mayor Delfino, White Plains lawyer,  Eric Rotbard (Center) and Larry Burns, Vice President, GM Research and Development and Strategic Planning (right) announcing Project Driveway Program today. Mr.Rotbard will roadtest GM’s Billion Dollar Baby — the car of the future– and provide market research as GM plans to introduced the car to the market in 2009-2010.


Rotbard told WPCNR that he had the opportunity to test drive the hydrogen powered Equinox last week and tells us it is instantly responsive, with great accelerating power to get into traffic, and that it runs very quietly, and runs “just like a real car.”  He and his wive will be driving the car, which he says gets 300 miles to a tank of hydrogen which he will fuelup with at the White Plains hydrogen station at the Department of Public Works.



What’s Under the Hood


White Plains is the pioneer city, along with Newport, California and Washington, D.C. to participate in GM’s Project Driveway in which 100 consumers nationally will test-drive the vehicles for GM.


Burns told WPCNR he expects the company to offer the battery powered vehicles on the U.S. market by 2009-2010. A price on the environmentally-friend vehicle has not been set yet. Burns in another news report Wednesday said eventually the car would sell for $25,000 on the market.



Rotbart (behind the wheel of the electric car), told the media, he had been a follower of the technology since the mid-80s, he said in being selected to testdrive the Electric Car in the real world, that he felt like an astronaut, and that  “very rarely do you get a chance to do something that effects the fate of all mankind.”


 WPCNR can tell readers that the car is “super quiet” as Rotbart describes it, and when we sat in the driver’s seat you could hardly hear the motor. There are no moving parts to the engine, no compression or ignition or combustion and hence no emissions. Hydrogren is used to fuel the battery which runs the car. The car runs somewhat like a transformer that runs an electric train.


Maria O’Neill, also of Westchester, an area science teacher will also be test-driving an electric Equinox in the program.


Burns said White Plains is the first city  in the nation to have a hydrogen-fuel service station (at the DPW) which makes this real world test possible: “We appreciate the leadership the city of White Plains had demonstrated in its support of alternative fuel vehicles.” White Plains and Shell Hydrogen have established a hydrogen filling station at the Public Works depot The station, the Mayor told WPCNR, will be dedicated November 13.


 

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WPCNRs Photos of the Day: 30 Days to Kickoff

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WPCNR Photos of the Day. By The WPCNR Roving Photographer October 21, 2007: The Sunday Photos of the day show the Parker Stadium in the home stretch of its renovation Sunday afternoon 30 days before kick on Thanksgiving Day when the field is planned to be completed with artificial turf and stands and slopes to accommodate the 500 to 1,000 fans expected for the traditional game. Actually, there are 24 workdays to complete the field for Thanksgiving Day play, 30 days if you include the weekends. (More pix follow if you click “Read More”)



Parker Stadium: South view of new metal stands in place with slope coverings. Old stone bowl removed. October 21, 2007



Field leveled with drainage, gravel in place and asphalt track, awaiting artificial turf installation.


 



View looking north of the stands.



View from the North endzone, looking South.

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WHITE PLAINS WEEK GOES WORLDWIDE. Now Showing on the Internet 24 hours a Day.

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS WEEK NEWS. October 21, 2007: White Plains Week, Channel 76’s Public Access news talk program  makes its world debut on the internet Sunday on the show’s new exclusive website, www.whiteplainsweek.com. Fans of the show can now see the current week’s edition any time, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week whenever and wherever they log on to a computer.



Every week, the latest edition of White Plains Week, featuring White Plains own distinguished “old school” reporters, Jim Benerofe, the founder of Suburban Street, journalist and pioneer; Peter Katz, the former ABC News White House Correspondent, aviation journalist and, of course,  the White Plains CitizeNetReporter, John Bailey, creator of the pioneering local White Plains Internet Newspaper (since 2000),  it’s moderator and founder,  can now be seen delivering their insightful, hard-hitting direct and droll commentary on the fast-moving news and behind the scenes intrigue in White Plains, from Ann Arbor to Zagreb. Click on www.whiteplainsweek.com.



THIS IS WHITE PLAINS. White Plains Week Now Reporting from White Plains on your computer! Left to Right, John Bailey, TheCitizeNetReporter, Peter Katz, The Anchor for All Seasons, and Jim Benerofe, the Dean of White Plains Journalists



John Bailey, Executive Producer of White Plains Week, founder of the show in 2001 on White Plains Public Access Television  with  Westchester County Business Journal editor Alex Philippidis and Jim Benerofe and has delivered  356 weekly editions of White Plains Week in seven years, said,


“Thanks to Scarsdale Technologies, our internet service provider, and the technological wizardry and  expertise of  my co-anchor, Peter Katz, (the distinguished ABC Correspondent who joined the show in 2006),  who devised the quickloading user friendly format of the website,  I’m proud to announce White Plains Week can now be seen not just in White Plains, but everywhere in the world where a person can get  on the internet– to keep track of the news in their hometown and Westchester County’s most progressive, fastest-growing city.”



Jim Benerofe, the distinguished White Plains businessman and journalist, founder of Suburban Street, and its worldwide web incarnations, www.suburbanstreet.com, www.oped.com, and www.whiteplains.com. holds forth and observes based on his 37 years of covering White Plains.


 Now White Plains citizens out of town, on the road, at college,  wintering in the sunbelt, on vacation,  who do not have cable, or are not yet receiving public access programming, and of course  everyone with access to the internet anywhere in the world can go to www.whiteplainsweek.com, and see the local news reporters delivering the real stories behind the headlines,  armed only with a pen, a telephone and guts fight a never ending battle for truth, justice and the American way. It is not for the faint of heart.



Peter Katz WorldWide Tonight — Mr. Katz delivers his unique analysis and historic insight from his long career in television news as foreign correspondent, and aviation expert and observations of White Plains for three decades as a resident.


The October 13 show  breaking the news of White Plains secret financial projections the Common Council did not know of can now be viewed on the site. The October 20 edition will be available next. The current show also reviews the opening of the political debates in the local White Plains Common Council race.


Future plans and features for the White Plains Week Internet News site will be announced.


White Plains Week can still be viewed Fridays at 7:30 and Mondays at 7 P.M. weekly on White Plains Public Access Televison, Channel 76, “The Spirit of 76”, where it is faithfully produced Friday mornings and cabled to White Plains Cablevision subscribers that evening through the stalwart,dedicated faithful efforts of Gary Stukes, “RKO Keith,” Rita Sands under the supportive efforts of  Executive Director of White Plains Public Access Televison, Jim Kinney. Until now, only residents within the city could see the show.



John Bailey, left and Katz See It as It Is. It’s all there from The Peter Katz “Secret Word of the Week,” The Roll-O-News  Reel March of Time,”  and the “White Plains Week Shocker of the Week. “


To see White Plains Week now…go to www.whiteplainsweek.com. from Timbuktu to Samarkand.

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The Real Deal– The Pictures for Your Event

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WPCNR’S THE REAL DEAL By The Wedding Jeannie. Jeannie Uyanik. October 19, 2007: The old adage that a picture is worth a thousand words is never truer than at an important event.  Often, it’s the only tangible memory that you will have from a wedding or party that reminds you of how it all came together.  


 



Jeannie Uyanik, Planner to the World


The Wedding Jeannie


WPCNR Columnista


 


 


Rule number one, it’s important to find a photographer that you love and really trust.  You are not only with them all day, the post production process is as important as the shooting and this can take months to a year.  At a wedding, there is no one with whom you will spend more time than your photographer so make sure that your personalities click. 


 


 


When beginning the photography search process, there are a few simple guidelines that are important to follow.  In initiating a search, photographers’ websites are a great resource in helping to determine if someone’s style is right for you.  However, it’s important not to rely solely on a website in making a decision to nix or hire a photographer.  Websites are not always representative of the full range of a photographer’s talents, so if you have heard great things about someone whose work you have also seen, but hate their site, give them a chance in person.  It’s an hour of your time and could prove useful. 


 


If however you decide to meet with photographers solely on the basis of recommendations from friends, tread carefully and do your own due diligence.  Everyone has different criteria and priorities and don’t feel embarrassed if your best friend’s photographer is not the one for you.  It’s essential to make independent decisions about a photographer’s work, personality and the post production process. 


 


Digital or Film?


 


A common question that we hear relates to the medium that a photographer uses – digital or film.  While there are pros and cons for each (although fewer and fewer negatives for digital as technology continues to evolve) we highly recommend that you select a photographer based on his or her work and not solely on the method that they use to capture the day.  Don’t choose not to meet with a photographer because they shoot digital or film – simply be well versed in what you like about one or the other and see if those techniques or shots can be replicated by the photographer of choice. 


 


It is however important to understand the type of equipment that your photographer is using.  From a digital perspective, important questions to consider are the type of camera that is being used, the method of backing up or storing photos throughout the night and after the event, and what if any corrections are made to the photos (some photographers automatically retouch all the images that they submit to the couples, others will go through this process only for album photos). 


 


B/W vs. Color Ratio of Shots


 


For film, it’s important to determine what the ratio of black to white photos will be, how much film will be included in the package (and in turn pictures), what the process of printing is after the wedding and if digital conversion is possible, automatically done, or a process that would need to be outsourced. 


 


During initial meetings, ascertain what capabilities your photographer or their studio has in album preparation.  Some photographers will digitally design or manually prepare both the parent and couple album; others outsource the process and some prefer not to be involved at all.  It’s essential to understand the photographer limitations, skill set and product offerings. 


If a photographer only offers traditional leather bound albums and you only want a coffee table book – learn this up front.  This will allow you to weigh your options and potential costs before committing to a contract.  Album preparation can be expensive – especially when doing digitally designed books with pages numbering more than 40.  If you wait to have these discussions after the hiring process, a couple might find that they would have proceeded along a different route.


 


The Cost.


 


Pricing varies for photographers at different levels and with different packages.  Compare apples to apples and make sure that you really understand what each includes (8 hours versus 10 hours, negatives versus no negatives, albums versus print credits, digital proofs versus hard copy ones).  Couples are often surprised by how expensive photography can be – but if you consider that this is the one thing that you really take away from the event, the costs are always worthwhile if you have done your research well. 


 


Rights to Negatives


 


A common point of discussion where price can be an issue is that regarding negatives.  Copyrights for the photos always remain in the hands of the photographer, but these days, many will provide their negatives (or high resolution images in the case of digital photography) in a package or for a fee.  We feel that it’s very important to secure rights to the negatives simply so that you have access to your images at will.  That having been said though, we always recommend that you go through your photographer for prints or albums even if the negatives are yours.  They know the photos better than anyone and will take care to make sure that the quality of the prints matches those of the shots.  Album production is tedious and difficult, so we never recommend that a couple go it alone unless of course a photographer just is not willing to partake in the post production process (which should enter into consideration when making a decision). 


 


Finally, find a photographer that you know will work well with you and your guests and your other vendors (especially a videographer, which we will get to in next week’s column).  He or she is there for every single important moment and will be the most critical person in catching those images for posterity. 


 


In turn though, bad photographers are the ones who can irritate everyone the most; standing in front of the entire ceremony to shoot; pushing the bridal party around in an aggressive manner, not communicating with the maitre d at the venue so that no moment is missed – from the escort card table to cake cutting. 


 


Your photographer is a key player at your wedding or event, so don’t rush the process and don’t take it lightly. 


 
Note: Got a question or a comment for The Wedding Jeannie? Ms. Uyanik will answer your questions. Simply e-mail her at weddinggenie@candgweddings.com 
                           

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