

By Matt Meduri
All eighteen seats on Suffolk County Legislature are up for grabs in November, with sixteen incumbents seeking re-election. Two are term-limited, Legislators Kevin McCaffrey (R-Lindenhurst) and Rob Trotta (R-Fort Salonga). Legislators are limited to six (6) two-year terms.
The Fifth Legislative District (LD-05) was an open seat in 2023, reclaimed by former Legislator and former State Assemblyman Steve Englebright (D-Setauket). The noted environmentalist and geologist once represented the district in Hauppauge in the 1980s, before embarking a thirty-year career in Albany until his 2022 upset defeat to Ed Flood (R-Port Jefferson).
Englebright is vying for another term, not grandfathered in by the term limits referendum passed by voters in 2021. The district encompasses Belle Terre, East Setauket, Old Field, Poquott, Port Jefferson, Port Jefferson Station, Setauket, South Setauket, Stony Brook, Terryville, and parts of Centereach, Coram, and Mount Sinai.
While Englebright defeated Anthony Figliola (R-East Setauket) in 2023, the margin was relatively thin - just about 6-7 points. The once solidly-blue turf dominated by Three Village has become much more competitive, delivering a razor-thin result in the overlapping Fourth Assembly District last year, a district won by President Donald Trump (R-FL) by about 1,000 votes.
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Port Jefferson Summer Farmers Market at Harborfront Park
Mother's Day Brunch at Long Island Aquarium
May 11, 10:00 AM, 12:00 PM, 2:00 PM, 4:00 PM
May 18-November 28
9:00 AM to 2:00 PM
2025 Islip Chamber of Commerce Street Fair
Bird and Breakfast at Connetquot State Park
May 11, 8:00 AM to 11 :00 PM
June 22, 11:00 AM to 6:00 PM
Fleece and Fiber Festival at Hallockville Museum Farm
Islip Farmers Market at Town Hall
June 7-November 22
Alive After Five in Patchogue
May 17, 10:00 AM to 4:00 PM
June 26, 5:00 PM to 9:00 PM
7:00 AM to 12:00 PM
Nesconset Spring Fling
May 18, 10:00 AM to 5:00 PM
Grooves on the Green in Ronkonkoma
Jones Beach Air Show
Hoshyla Farms Lavender Festival
June 28-29, 11:00 AM to 6:00 PM
May 24-25, 10:00 to 4:00 PM
PUBLISHER
Diane Caudullo
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Matt Meduri
STAFF REPORTERS
Cait Crudden
Raheem Soto
ART PRODUCTION
MANAGER
Sergio A. Fabbri
GRAPHIC DESIGN
Colin Herr
CONTRIBUTORS
PJ Balzer
Tim Walz
DELIVERY PERSONNEL
PJ Balzer
Joe Cuminale
Colin Newman
Ashley Pavlakis
Madison Warren
OFFICE MANAGER &
ACCOUNTS
RECEIVABLE
Kim Revere
PROOFREADER
Giavanna Rudilosso
SOCIAL MEDIA
Madison Warren
The ninth grade class of Our Savior New American School (OSNAS) in Centereach went on a school trip just before the Easter break. Every year, History teacher Josette Leon and Principal Dr. Wil Stelzer lead a group of students on a trip to significant sites in our nation’s history. This year, in commemoration of the 250th anniversary of the American Revolution, the destination was Boston, Massachusetts. The trip featured a vast array of major landmarks within a three day time span.
Thursday, June 19, 2025
The first stop on the tour was Plymouth Rock. This is the spot where the pilgrims first set foot in their pursuit of a land where they could worship God freely. The students also climbed aboard Mayflower II, a replica of the original Mayflower that carried the Pilgrims across the Atlantic. They were able to see firsthand the close quarters in which the Pilgrims lived for many arduous days before drafting the Mayflower Compact. As a classical Christian school, OSNAS prioritizes the reading of original sources over textbooks. Naturally, Dr. Stelzer read the Compact to the students who listened to the stated purpose of their perilous voyage: “...for the glory of God and the advancement of the Christian faith…”
The next stop was Boston where the students experienced a reenactment of that fateful day when a band of perturbed colonists marched onto some ships in Boston Harbor and drowned over a million dollars worth of fine British tea. The students even threw a case of their own into the waters solidifying their role as rebels to tyranny.
From there, the students walked the Freedom Trail and rode the trolley to visit sites such as Benjamin Franklin’s childhood stomping grounds, the Boston Massacre, the Old North Church that initiated Paul Revere’s midnight ride, and the gravesites of people like Samuel Adams, John Hancock and John Winthop, the first governor of Boston. It was Winthrop who famously charged the early settlers to think of their colony as a “City on a Hill.” He used this direct quote from Jesus to help early Americans understand that their ultimate purpose was to shine for the glory of God and be an example for the rest of the world. Through this and many others examples, the students saw the ubiquitous influence of Christ and the Bible on our nation’s founding.
On day three of this action-packed tour, the students traveled to Lexington and Concord, the site of the “shot heard round the world.”
Later on that same day, the students visited the towns of Quincy and Weymouth just outside Boston to visit the childhood homes of John and Abigail Adams.
Through a string of phone calls, Ms. Leon obtained access into the Adam’s residence where Abigail corresponded in a loving and respectful interchange with her husband and eventual president. The students also entered the room where John authored the Massachusetts’ State Constitution on which the United States Constitution was modeled. It remains the oldest constitution still in use today. Speaking of
enduring constitutions, it was Adams who said, “Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.”
In accordance with George Washington’s Farewell Address, it is apparent that our founders believed that losing Christianity led to a loss of morality and a corresponding loss of our Constitution.
“The most important thing I learned from the Boston trip is the importance of sacrifice,” said Anjali Caliendo. “Our class had the opportunity to stand where those brave American soldiers stood and to walk in their footsteps. We were in the exact spot where those men died for the freedoms we have today. Just being at the site where the war actually started made me feel grateful and think about all that they sacrificed for their children and eventually us.”
“In Boston, the most important thing I learned was that in everything I saw, the people never gave up. Everyone that we looked at persevered through tough times, and if they had not, we would not be where we are today,” said Frantz R. Joseph. “This was really inspiring and it shows that no matter how bad the odds look, there is still a chance to do what we strive to with God’s help.”
I wouldn’t have the opportunities that I have today if it weren’t for those men who died for freedom, and this trip reminded me of that. The people of America tend to forget about what these men went through and sacrificed in order to grant us the liberty we have today,” said Kaylah Gabriel. “This trip encouraged me to appreciate what I have and am able to do rather than complain about silly things.”
By Matt Meduri
Although the Vietnam War ended fifty years ago, the physical, mental, and emotional complications still remain for those who served.
The latest point of umbrage comes from the Veterans Affairs’ (V.A.) lack of treatment for Vietnam Veterans diagnosed with cholangiocarcinoma, or bile duct cancer. Studies have alleged that the cancer is a product of parasitic worms ingested through raw or undercooked freshwater fish, while other research points to water quality and scarcity in Southeast Asia being the culprit.
Studies have shown that the cancer is about 30% more prevalent among Veterans who served in Vietnam than those who did not, enough of a statistic to create a clear link between that particular war and this particular cancer.
However, the V.A. has not officially established the connection.
On Wednesday afternoon, Congressman Nick LaLota (R-Amityville), joined by Vietnam Veterans, Brookhaven Town Councilwoman Jane Bonner (R-Rocky Point), and a representative for Suffolk County Legislator Nick Caracappa (C-Selden) at the VFW Post #6249 in Rocky Point to shed light on the subject.
“It’s only right that we do right by our nation’s Veterans who signed their names on a dotted line saying they would risk anything up to their own lives to ensure the defense of our great nation. The very least we can do is to ensure that our veterans get the health care they need when they come home,” said LaLota. “I wish that the V.A. just took it upon themselves to ensure that our Veterans, and especially our Vietnam Veterans, got the care that they earned - not as an entitlement or a giveaway.”
LaLota has been on the trail in Washington to ensure legislative success on this matter. His bill passed the U.S. House twice, only to die in the U.S. Senate. The bill would put language into V.A. Appropriations Bills - LaLota is a member of the Appropriations Committee - to put the V.A. on the path to ultimately deliver coverage. He credited one Veteran in particular with that success.
Vietnam Veteran Gerald Wiggins (pictured left) is positive for the cancer and has received treatments for it at Sloan Kettering, a world-renowned cancer treatment center in New York City. LaLota credits Wiggins with bringing the issue to his attention.
“We fought for two years with the Northport V.A.; they refuse to test us. We had a big meeting with them; they laughed at us,” said Wiggins, adding that the V.A. would be “shocked” if one of the fifty Vietnam Veterans came back positive for bile duct cancer.
Twelve of the fifty came back positive.
Wiggins underwent operation in 2017 to remove two cysts from his bile duct. The disease is also known to persist for decades, sometimes upwards of fifty years. Time is of the essence with bile duct cancer, as once it spreads to the liver, death is essentially a foregone conclusion.
“Of course, they say that Vietnam Veterans are alcoholics and drug addicts, so that’s why their liver went bad,” said Wiggins, taking issue with the politics of solving the issue, but achieving no results. He called out Senator Chuck Schumer (D-NY) and Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY), as well as Congressman Tom Suozzi (D-Glen Cove).
“There are 134,000 Veterans on Long Island. If you [elected officials] push this bill through, you’re a hero. But it’s denied over and over again,” said Wiggins, praising LaLota (pictured below) for pushing it through the House.
Wiggins also says that the doctor who owns the rights to the test is in Seoul, South Korea, and he will not relinquish the rights.
“I’m 77. The longer they wait, the more Veterans will die and the less money they have to give out,” said Wiggins. “It’s the way the government works.”
Wiggins was drafted in 1968, recalling how he was told that upon his return to the States, he’d “get everything.”
“We got nothing, and there’s no reason for this,” said Wiggins. “We’re not asking for a giveaway. We’re just asking for what we deserve,” he said, adding a large-scale protest in Washington might be warranted - although he himself is not a “protest person.”
Wiggins continues to be screened every six months at Sloan Kettering.
“We’ve advocated towards the Senate multiple times, both last session and this session,” LaLota told The Messenger “Sometimes, it takes multiple Congresses to get things onto the Senate’s radar. I’m going to continue to advocate towards New York to United States Senators, but also the rest of the Senators throughout the country who have Veterans like ours who had that service in Vietnam decades ago, but yet are still suffering from this ailment. There should be a holistic approach that we take towards the legislative push and my office is doing just that.”
“A lot of the caretakers, in my view, locally here, do have a passion to actually care for the Veterans,” said LaLota, clarifying that the incredulity should be directed at V.A. bureaucrats.
LaLota adds that the V.A. could have accomplished this “years ago with the stroke of a pen”, merely to “honor” the connection between Vietnam and bile duct cancer.
“We’ll take whatever way we can get it - executive action within the V.A., an Appropriations bill, a standalone bill,” said LaLota.
By Cait Crudden
Congressman Nick LaLota (R-Amityville) and Congresswoman Elise Stefanik (R, NY21) are spearheading a renewed congressional offensive to block New York Governor Kathy Hochul’s (D) controversial congestion pricing plan, with robust support from President Donald Trump (R-FL) and U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy (R-WI).
In a joint letter sent this week to President Trump and Secretary Duffy, LaLota, Stefanik, and members of the New York and New Jersey congressional delegations expressed their gratitude for the administration’s efforts to halt what they are calling a “commuter tax” that unfairly punishes suburban families, small businesses, and middle-class workers.
“Hochul’s commuter tax was never about improving transit—it’s about squeezing hardworking suburban families to paper over the MTA’s bloated, mismanaged budget,” said Congressman LaLota. “She’s forcing law-abiding, taxpaying commuters into a system riddled with crime, delays, and dysfunction—without demanding a shred of accountability. I’m proud to stand with President Trump and Secretary Duffy in the fight to stop Hochul’s commuter tax and protect our constituents from this reckless and unfair scheme.”
Congresswoman Stefanik added her voice to the growing chorus of opposition.
“I stand strongly with President Donald Trump, Secretary Sean Duffy, and my fellow New Yorkers fighting Kathy Hochul’s insane and costly congestion pricing tax scheme that harms New York workers and families — all while Hochul further exacerbates subway crime! New Yorkers across the political spectrum oppose this insane and costly failed policy.”
well within its legal discretion to rescind the Biden Administration’s rubber-stamping of this tax,” said Congresswoman Nicole Malliotakis (R, NY-11). “We’ll keep fighting this cash grab by using every tool at our disposal and look forward to working with President Trump and Secretary Duffy.”
Congressman Andrew Garbarino (R-Bayport) also weighed in, calling congestion pricing a “shameless cash grab—punishing hardworking New Yorkers to cover up her own mismanagement” and commended the Trump Administration for pushing back.
“I’m grateful to President Trump and his Administration for standing up for our commuters and pushing back against this disastrous plan, and I urge them to keep up the fight,” said Garbarino.
From across the river, Congressman Tom Kean, Jr. (R, NJ-07) denounced the
First announced under the previous administration, New York’s congestion pricing charges vehicles a toll to enter Manhattan’s central business district during peak hours. Opponents argue it would create an unfair financial burden on commuters from Long Island, the Hudson Valley, and New Jersey who rely on personal vehicles due to limited or unreliable transit options.
“The MTA’s reckless mismanagement has left law-abiding commuters to foot the bill, while fare evasion skyrockets, service and public safety decline — yet the Governor refuses to take responsibility. The Trump Administration is right and acting
“We must put an end to this extremely dysfunctional program, created by Governor Hochul and New York State Democrats, which places many commuters at a disadvantage—especially New Jersey residents, who already pay some of the highest taxes in the nation,” said Kean, Jr. “I am committed to standing up for New Jersey taxpayers to ensure this unfair burden is lifted, and I will continue working closely
One of our top stories this week discusses a bureaucratic wing of the federal government that not only reneges its promises to take care of its bravest, makes the rank-and-file out to be incompetent and/or heartless, and, most severely, has significant health consequences for some.
Death is even on the line for others.
The Veterans’ Affairs Department has been the subject of calls to remove their red tape to make certain forms of care accessible. Over the last couple years, one example has been that of cholangiocarcinoma - bile duct cancer caused by a parasitic infection of liver fluke, usually caught by drinking contaminated water or eating raw or undercooked fish infected with the bug.
This specific type of cancer has been linked to the Vietnam War, with studies showing a 30% correlation between the locale and the illness as opposed to troops who did not serve in Vietnam.
Much of the consternation has come from a lack of study, or at least inadequate correlation-causation data. We can understand that from a statistical point of view.
But as Congressman Nick LaLota (R-Amityville) said on Wednesday morning, joined by Vietnam Veterans - including one who is currently battling the form of cancer - the time for research and fact-finding has long been eclipsed by solid data.
The Veteran in question, Gerald Wiggins, claimed that the people at the V.A. with whom he met literally “laughed” at him and others when asked if they would test a group of Vietnam Vets. After thinking they wouldn’t find one sample out of fifty, they found twelve.
One would think that would be enough for the V.A. to start moving.
Particularly concerning is the fatality rate of this disease once it spreads to the liver, which Mr. Wiggins says was essentially written off by the V.A. bureaucrats since Vietnam Veterans’ substance abuse problems are likely the culprits.
It seems that the V.A. not only wants to give the Veterans deep paper cuts, but also squeeze lemon juice over them.
Unfortunately, the best tool for this is likely Congress, something LaLota has taken up since he got into office three years ago. However, he’s succeeded where others have failed: getting it passed through the U.S. House - twice.
The Senate is now the problem, which is somewhat understandable given the upper chamber is intended to move slower as virtually unlimited debate is encouraged for the purpose of hashing out the details.
But this is really a no-brainer. It’s a shame to think that Uncle Sam instilled in young, selfless men to risk their lives for their country, promising care and benefits upon their return. And as Mr. Wiggins stated, he and his fellow Veterans aren’t looking for handouts or
giveaways - they just want what was promised to them. One could superimpose the word “promised” with “owed”, but we think “promised” is the operative word here. “Owed” comes into play if the veterans loaned the government lunch money. This was a conscientious exchange of safety, well-being, and even life itself, for a gift basket of care that could hardly measure up to what they would experience. It’s already bad enough that the Vietnam Veterans returned home the most denigrated militia in our history.
The question now stands, why does Congress need to act, and why doesn’t the V.A. just “follow the science” and begin treating patients.
For one, the individual who owns the rights to the test will not give it up.
Typical.
For another, we believe there are V.A. bureaucrats who realized their predecessors’ egos wrote checks that the current government couldn’t cash. It’s not the current administration’s fault at face value, but just how complicit have some of them been in denying treatment until treating the remaining population becomes more cost-effective?
LaLota deserves kudos for making this an important issue and getting it sailed through the House twice. His powerful position on the House Appropriations Committee will likely come in handy with these issues as time goes on, bureaucrats or no bureaucrats.
Senator Chuck Schumer (D-NY) should also probably stop barnstorming across the country in order to obtain the worst approval ratings out of all of the congressional leaders and Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) should probably try to do more than just exist.
Overall, it’s particularly sick to witness an abuse of power like this, especially as the V.A. has regularly moved the goalposts over the years over what causes the illness, how prevalent it is, and how hardy the link is to Southeast Asia.
It also sheds light on how much government over-promises and under-delivers, especially in an age of perpetual handouts and incentives for some to do as little as possible. We’re all for a safety net, but there needs to be limits and meritocracy to it. The federal government has no problem wasting trillions and continuing to deficit spend, while simultaneously refusing to hold up perhaps the most important bargain they made.
In the end, we believe the V.A.’s various stance changes on what should be an openand-shut issue are as arbitrary as they are disheartening - not to mention the rank-andfile V.A. nurses at Northport who genuinely care for the patients, who now seem either incompetent, indifferent, or both.
All politics is and remains local, we suppose…
We’ve seen candidates do and say some wild things, some for mere shock value, others because they’re just not comfortable in their own skin. Oddly enough, both of those qualities describe Donald Trump (R-FL) and Kamala Harris (D-CA), respectively.
But then there are those moves that really make us consider if a candidate is intentionally trying to sink their chances of winning an election.
We’ve expressed these concerns about Governor Kathy Hochul (D) earlier this year, when a troubled woman was burned alive by an illegal immigrant while sleeping in an NYC subway car. Just hours later, Hochul posted on X a picture of her posing with National Guardsmen, with a caption describing just how safe the subways are.
First, if the National Guard is patrolling the subways, they’re not safe.
Second, there was not a mere mention of the victim who died an unimaginable death by someone who, by all accounts, should not have been protected by New York.
Hochul didn’t hold up under the pressure of Congresswoman - and hopefully her successor - Elise Stefanik (R, NY-21) when she and her Democratic gubernatorial counterparts were grilled on their sanctuary state and city policies. Hochul failed to deliver a sound defense of her political perception, much less the state’s retroactive sanctuary policies that one could argue was the sole reason New York shifted rightward more than any other state last election.
But now the problems reach new heights.
New York City Comptroller and NYC Mayoral
candidate Brad Lander (D-Brooklyn)
was arrested on Monday for attempting to escort a man out of immigration court, shielding him from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Videos show Lander linking arms with the man who was the target of detainment by federal officials. Lander reportedly asked for a warrant before he was arrested for assault and impeding agents.
After four hours in custody, Lander emerged from 26 Federal Plaza alongside Hochul, who called his arrest “bulls–t.”
In an apparent response to the federal immigration policies, Hochul is touting an extra $50 million to “cover legal services for people who are finding themselves in this situation.” The money was already earmarked in the recently-passed budget. Some reports show that Hochul low-balled the actual number, at $64.2 million. If that’s not enough, Lander and his equally-progressive allies are asking for closer to $130 million in funding.
As if the $5 billion the State has spent since the start of the self-inflicted migrant crisis wasn’t bad enough…
Imagine charging your taxpayers exorbitant amounts of money in a state that’s already broke and deficit spending, while advocating for the mass-shipment of foreigners into said state, while simultaneously not encouraging or enforcing assimilation or an orderly process, all while the National Guard patrols the subways, union jobs are lifted, and motorists are charged to drive south of 60th Street… …and you think you’re re-election material?
By Brianne Wakefield
There are two powerful scriptures in the Bible that I would love to share, especially for a time such as this.
The first is in the book of Matthew, where Jesus says, “Every kingdom divided against itself is brought to desolation, and every city or house divided against itself will not stand” (Matt 12:25).
The second is Psalm 133:1, “Behold, how good and how pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together in unity!”
I believe Republican New Yorkers, in particular, need to pay attention to the wisdom that’s in these two verses. These scriptures focus not only on the importance of unity and the dangers without it, but also the good that comes from it. For nearly twenty years, Democratic Governors have held control of our state. And before Governor George Pataki (R) served from 1995-2007, it was over thirty years of the same. We know that the city is winning our gubernatorial elections, and it’s very frustrating that it does not reflect the morals and values of Long Island and other parts of New York.
If Republicans hope to reclaim the Governor seat, a unified party is essential. We must be vigilant of social media and the “fake” news, looking to always divide us and amplify every disagreement. We need to rise above the noise. We need to internally lay aside some of our minor differences, nitpicking, and slandering and fix our eyes on the future. Like never before, we need to come together and refocus our efforts on our state and strengthening our communities.
Remember, no one is perfect. No public servant will ever be completely ideal, but when we lead with integrity and stand united, we can achieve far more than we ever could divided.
As a Smithtown resident for 50plus years and with family ties to Kings Park nearing 100 years, I am proud to call this town my home. My family has fond memories of growing up in Kings Park and working at the hospital all while watching the town evolve and adapt to change. (My father used to talk about how he had to dig and set the foundation for the family home when Indian Head Road was expanded from two lanes to four….). I watched as the town started to stagnate and fall behind the times and longed for someone to come along and be the change the Town desperately needed from its longtime Stupor-visor.
I applauded when Ed Wehrheim won his primary challenge against the longtime incumbent and began to undo the decades of neglect this Town held. I watched as the playground in the Town park nearby my house was updated for the first time since I
The gubernatorial race is next year and there is too much at stake to sit back. Right now, we’re witnessing the future of our state unfold before us. If you are someone who is calling yourself a Republican then I ask you to look out onto the horizon of the future of New York and mend what’s broken, unite around our shared values, and fight for our state back. What do we want to see restored back to New York? What are we fighting for?
For me, the answer is clear.
- I want to see the Constitution of our great country respected and upheld.
- I want our God-given freedoms to not be threatened, but celebrated.
- I want religious exemptions restored—because they are our rightful liberties.
- I want our schools to go back to teaching the foundations of education and not indoctrination.
- I want us to be a state that protects the unborn, that defeats the drug epidemic, and helps to restore mental health.
- I want our senior citizens to be cared for and not mistreated.
These are just a few things, and maybe you think this sounds like an impossible feat, but I have hope for New York, however it will not come without work. If we really want to see a change in our state, it will take a fully united front. It’s time for the Republican party to come together as never before and boldly change the direction of New York to a brighter more hopeful future.
moved to town in 1973. The revitalized park now has people socializing while enjoying the pickleball court, the enhanced basketball, tennis, and deck hockey courts and best of all, the new playground equipment that entices kids to play and meet new friends. I regularly count over 100 people using the facilities when ten years ago there would be 10–15 people. This was repeated at all the parks across the town which improves the value of my home.
I cheered when the town purchased the land across from the Bull and closed the eyesore gentlemen’s club and began creating a welcome center that will provide food and bathroom facilities for people kayaking, canoeing, or just wanting to sit by the river and enjoy a quiet moment. This is a major improvement initiated and created by the current Town Board.
I watched as the long-anticipated sewer system was finally enacted after years of foot-dragging by the previous administration. I know that having this
system will allow the Smithtown and Kings Park downtowns come back to life from their moribund existence. I look forward to seeing what this improvement will bring to our town. This progress will be incremental, and will not lead to overdevelopment as the primary challenger and his minions keep repeating.
Other than these changes that are visceral the current members of the town board have worked tirelessly to enhance the town in other ways.
Councilwoman Lynne Nowick has worked to further her work with addiction issues among our youth to help families avoid the heartbreak that results from drug usage. This work was a continuation of her efforts while a Suffolk County Legislator and illustrates her commitment to all aspects of our community.
Councilman Thomas McCarthy has devoted his time and energy to keeping Smithtown affordable and promoting smart growth of our downtowns. Each member of the Town Board brings
energy and commitment to issues that are important to residents, and all are accessible and listen to what the residents say.
As a Town, we cannot afford to turn to a Supervisor who has made more headlines for arguments, bullying, and altercations than actual legislative accomplishments. Smithtown has made significant progress in the past seven years to shake off the rust and lethargy that marked the previous administration. To elect a man who tries to intimidate rather than mediate, bloviates rather than contemplates would return our town to a downward spiral.
I am voting for the team of Supervisor Ed Wehrheim, Councilman Thomas McCarthy, and Councilwoman Lynne Nowick to continue to move Smithtown forward in a responsible, responsive fashion. I urge all of my fellow Republicans to do the same.
Sincerely, Dave Ryan
By Cait Crudden
At the close of the 2025 legislative session, Republican lawmakers gathered at the State Capitol to deliver a blistering critique of Governor Kathy Hochul (D) and Albany Democrats, accusing them of prioritizing political protection and radical agendas over the pressing needs of everyday New Yorkers.
Led by Senate Republican Leader Rob Ortt (R-North Tonowanda) and Assembly Republican Leader Will Barclay (R-Pulaski), joined by House GOP Conference Chair Elise Stefanik (R, NY-21), Republican lawmakers laid out a scathing assessment of what they call the “failure of one-party Democrat rule” to provide relief from soaring costs, public safety concerns, and runaway government overreach.
“Albany Democrats are wrapping up another session with record spending, radical mandates, and zero results for struggling New Yorkers. Governor Hochul’s $254 billion budget does nothing to lower costs, but everything to drive up energy bills, grocery prices, and the cost of doing business. While families are getting crushed, Democrats created a $10 million legal slush fund to protect their political allies. They doubled down on pro-criminal policies and turned a blind eye to rising antisemitism, illegal immigration, and collapsing public safety,” stated Senate Minority Leader Ortt. He continued, “The message from Albany is clear: if you’re a criminal or a bureaucrat, you’re protected; if you’re a hardworking taxpayer, you’re on your own. Senate Republicans are fighting for a better path, one that puts law-abiding New
Yorkers first, restores public safety, and makes this state affordable again.”
Congresswoman Elise Stefanik, a potential candidate for the Governor’s race, echoed Ortt’s frustration and blasted what she described as Governor Hochul’s far-left agenda.
“Kathy Hochul’s radical far-left Democrat agenda is driving businesses and hardworking families out of the state. Enough is enough. New Yorkers deserve better. It is time for new leadership in New York State,” said Stefanik
Assembly Republican Leader Will Barclay criticized the session for lacking transparency and refusing to address core issues such as affordability, crime, and public trust.
“We’re approaching the end of another legislative session and unfortunately the major issues plaguing New York will persist for another year. Albany’s OneParty Rule has failed to deliver on opportunities to lower the cost of living, address public safety, or govern with any semblance of transparency, efficiency and public participation. Democrats’ signature achievement in 2025 was passing an astronomical $254 billion budget, to be paid on the backs of already-overburdened taxpayers. New York has a dwindling population and stagnant economy because Democrats refuse to change course. Instead of solutions, they prefer the status quo, and that’s a disservice to the people of the Empire State,” stated Barclay.
Republicans outlined five key takeaways from the 2025 legislative session. The first was that the affordability crisis has worsened. New York continues to rank among the most unaffordable states in the nation. This year’s budget increased by $11 billion from last year and piled on new costs through environmental mandates, including the HEAT Act and Packaging Reduction Act, legislation Republicans say will spike utility bills and add hundreds to household expenses annually.
The second was pro-criminal agenda advances statewide. GOP lawmakers sounded the alarm on progressive criminal justice bills like the Earned Time Act and Elder Parole, which they say prioritize violent offenders over victims.
The third was Albany Democrats failure to confront antisemitism statewide. As antisemitism spreads across New York’s college campuses, Republicans criticized Democrats for failing to pass meaningful protections for Jewish students.
The fourth was the continued public safety threats by sanctuary state and city policies. Republicans blasted Democrats for refusing to repeal sanctuary city policies that prevent local law enforcement from cooperating with federal immigration authorities.
Lawmakers also denounced the recent creation of a $10 million taxpayer-funded legal defense fund to aid embattled Attorney General Letitia James. The legislators slammed it as a legal slush fund for Albany insiders.
With just days left in the 2025 legislative session, Assemblyman Doug Smith (R-Holbrook) is raising the alarm over a controversial bill he says would give Democrats sweeping influence over New York’s courts—and by extension, its elections.
Smith is blasting Senate Bill S.8418, introduced by Senator Michael Gianaris (D-Astoria), as a “brazen act of judicial gerrymandering” that threatens the independence of the judiciary and undermines voter trust. The legislation would redraw judicial districts in Western New York, creating a new configuration that, Smith argues, would all but guarantee Democratic control over election-related court decisions.
“This is a shameless, cynical ploy to hijack New York’s judiciary,” Smith said. “Albany Democrats are rigging the system to control election outcomes.”
At the heart of the controversy is the bill’s restructuring of the Fourth Judicial Department. The proposal isolates Erie County—home to the heavily Democratic city of Buffalo—as its own judicial district, while carving out more Republican-leaning rural counties like Allegany, Cattaraugus, and Chautauqua into a separate, newly-created Fifteenth Judicial District.
Critics say this move will allow Erie County’s predominantly Democratic electorate to single-handedly choose all eighteen Supreme Court Justices for the Eighth Judicial District. Compounding concerns is a 2023 law that mandates all Election Law constitutional challenges in the region be filed in Erie County—effectively ensuring that any case involving voting, redistricting, or election disputes is heard by judges elected in a deep-blue county.
“This isn’t about fairness—it’s about consolidating power,” Smith said.
“They’ve designed a system to guarantee favorable rulings on any future election law challenge.”
Supporters of the bill have defended it on the grounds of improving diversity on the bench, but Smith dismisses that as a “flimsy cover story.” He notes that the legislation contains no actual provisions to ensure diversity, calling the justification “politically convenient and legally hollow.”
In an unusual step for a state legislator, Smith is calling on national leaders—including President Donald Trump (R-FL), Congress, the Department of Justice, and federal courts—to take action.
“This is not just a state issue—this is a national threat to election integrity,” Smith said. “New Yorkers deserve courts that are impartial and free from political manipulation. I urge federal authorities to act swiftly to protect our democracy.”
Smith is also urging the public to speak out before the legislative session ends. “The people of New York need to know what’s happening behind closed doors in Albany. Call your representatives. Demand accountability. Our judicial system depends on it.”
The bill is currently under consideration as lawmakers race to finish legislative business before the session closes. If signed into law, it could reshape the judicial landscape in New York for years to come—potentially impacting how election laws are interpreted and enforced across the state.
By Matt Meduri
The nation was shocked on Saturday as a targeted shooting left two Minnesota lawmakers dead and two others wounded.
Vance Boelter, 57 (pictured right), was apprehended Sunday night after what local law enforcement are calling the “largest manhunt in state history.”
Boelter is accused of stalking the homes of four Minnesota state legislators with the intent to kill them. He was disguised as a police officer, pulling up to the residence of State House Democratic Leader Melissa Hortman (D) - the former Speaker of the Minnesota House - in a black SUV with emergency lights flashing. He shot and killed Hortman and her husband, Mark, in their Brooklyn Park home.
The couple leaves behind two children.
For decades, the Virginia gubernatorial race has been seen as a national barometer against the White House incumbent. Only once since 1977 has Virginia elected a governor of the same party as the president. In 2021, Virginia was seen by some as ready to break the contrarian streak - as it has become an obdurately blue, yet still somewhat competitive, state. Glenn Youngkin (R-VA) won the race over former Governor Terry McAuliffe (D-VA), which some saw as a slight upset in a state that had backed then-President Joe Biden (D-DE) by ten points in 2020 - a historically large margin for a Democrat in a once solidlyRepublican state.
The contrarian streak remains alive, and the race has two strong contenders vying for the position.
and Lieutenant Governor Antonio Delgado (D) are vying for the Party of Jackson’s nod. Meanwhile, Bethany Town Supervisor Carl Hyde, Jr. (R) and Patrick Hahn (R-Suffolk County) are the only declared candidates for the Republican nomination.
But the speculative field is shaping up, with Congressman Ritchie Torres (D, NY-15) having long postured to run against Hochul. However, Torres says that he will not run for governor if State Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani (D-Astoria) wins the Democratic primary for New York City Mayor.
The two frontrunners for the Republican nomination, should they make their candidacies official, are Congressman Mike Lawler (R, NY-17) and Congresswoman Elise Stefanik (R, NY-21). Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman (R-Atlantic Beach) has also been included in initial horserace polls.
A new poll obtained by the New York Post shows that Lawler has significant strength in beating Hochul over Stefanik, as Lawler, according to the poll, fares better among moderates than his congressional colleague.
Boelter is also accused of having shot State Senator John Hoffman (D) and his wife, Yvette, in their home in Champlin. However, the Hoffmans survived, with Yvette Hoffman reportedly having shielded her daughter from the barrage of bullets.
Boelter’s vehicle was found to have contained a hit list that is said to have included nearly seventy other names of Minnesota Democratic politicians, abortion rights advocates, and notable politicians, including Governor Tim Walz (D-MN), U.S. Senators Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), Tina Smith (D-MN), and Tammy Baldwin (D-WI), Congresswomen Ilhan Omar (D, MN05), Rashida Tlaib (D, MI-12), and Hillary Scholten (D, MI-03), and Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison (D).
His car is also said to have contained flyers for the “No Kings” protests against President Donald Trump (R-FL), which were to be held at the Minnesota State Capitol on the same day of the shooting.
Many are calling the assassinations and attempted assassinations politically motivated, as Boelter was reportedly staunchly anti-abortion and anti-LGBTQ.
Others are pointing out the timeliness of the attacks on Hortman, as days earlier, she had cast the decisive vote on a State budget bill that strips access to MinnesotaCare benefits for illegal migrants over the age of 18. The Minnesota State Legislature is one of the most divided in the country, with Democrats controlling the Senate 34-33. The House was at a deadlock - 67-67 - until Hortman’s assassination. Republicans now have nominal control of the House until the vacancy is filled. Even with the deadlocked chamber, the House elected a Republican speaker in 2024.
Boelter also allegedly sent his last text message to a friend, David Carlson, at 6:00a.m. Saturday, a few hours after the shootings.
“David and Ron, I love you guys. I made some choices, and you guys don’t know anything about this, but I’m going to be gone for a while. May be dead shortly, so I just want to let you know I love you guys both, and I wish it hadn’t gone this way,” the text as obtained by the Minnesota Star Tribune reads.
Boelter, despite his anti-abortion and anti-LGBTQ rhetoric, accompanied with trips to the Democratic Republic of the Congo to preach his views on those subjects, was appointed to the Governor’s Workforce Deployment Board in 2016 by thenGovernor Mark Dayton (D-MN). He was one sixty members on the unpaid advisory board, and was re-appointed to a fouryear term by Governor Walz in 2019.
“Our Attorney General, Pam Bondi (R-FL), and the FBI, are investigating the situation, and they will be prosecuting anyone involved to the fullest extent of the law. Such horrific violence will not be tolerated in the United States of America. God Bless the great people of Minnesota, a truly great place!” wrote President Trump on Truth Social.
In other national news, Tuesday saw the Virginia Primaries unfold. However, the key race in the Old Dominion, and perhaps the marquee race of the 2025 cycle, is already settled. For the open seat of the Governor of Virginia, former Congresswoman Abigail Spanberger (D, VA-07) will face off against Lieutenant Governor Winsome Earle-Sears (R). The winner in November will become the commonwealth’s first female governor.
Spanberger was elected to Congress in 2018, ousting a Republican in the Richmond-based VA-07. Spanberger was able to hold down her seat in the competitive elections in 2020 and 2022, even going so far as to torch her party for their near-loss of the U.S. House in 2020, a result that was widely unexpected. Spanberger forewent re-election to the House in 2024 to focus on her gubernatorial campaign. She was succeeded by Eugene Vindman (D, VA-07).
Spanberger’s strengths play into her more moderate overtones, willingness to buck her party for tainting their own national brand, and her ability to win in a crucial suburban part of the state that is somewhat responsible for its overall leftward shift. The Richmond suburbs continue to be Democratic-leaning.
On the other hand is Earle-Sears, a Jamaican-born Marine Corps Veteran and businesswoman who became the first black female to hold statewide office in Virginia upon her election in 2021. In Virginia, governors and their lieutenants are elected on separate tickets - not as running mates - meaning Earle-Sears has already been elected in her own right. Earle-Sears is notably pro-Second Amendment and hearkens to a more classically conservative profile that resonates in a state like Virginia. She is also a former Democrat, having switched the GOP in 1988.
Hochul leads Lawler 48%-41% on the initial ballot, but the race becomes a practical tie when participants are informed of their records, with Hochul leading 44%-43.4%.
Meanwhile, Hochul leads Stefanik 50%-39% in the initial round, but her lead shrinks to 46%-42.6% once participants are informed of their records.
Lawler’s advantage is +20 over Hochul on Long Island, compared to Hochul +15 over Stefanik.
In the Hudson Valley, Lawler’s home turf, he trails Hochul by just five points, as opposed to Hochul’s +13 gap over Stefanik. Stefanik and Lawler both lead Hochul by one point in the Upstate regions of Albany, North Country, and Central New York - Stefanik’s home turf.
For context, Virginia was once a reliably Republican state, having backed every Republican presidential nominee from 1968 to 2004. It broke for Barack Obama (D-IL) in 2008 and has been trending left ever since.
If elected, Earle-Sears would become the first black woman in American history to serve as governor of a state.
The open seat of lieutenant governor is being a race between John Reid (R), a radio talk host, who is unopposed for the Republican nomination after Fairfax County Supervisor Pat Herrity (R) withdrew his candidacy for health reasons. State Senator Ghazala Hashmi (D) appears to have won the divided primary with 27.5% of the vote in a six-way race, as of press time.
Attorney General Jason Miyares (R) (pictured above) is seeking a second term. Upon his 2021 election, he became the first Hispanic elected to statewide office in Virginia. His opponent, as of press time, appears to be former State Delegate Jay Jones (D), who leads Henrico County Attorney Shannon Taylor (D) 50.9%-49.1%.
Primaries were also held for the Virginia General Assembly, both chambers of which are narrowly divided. Democrats hold a 21-19 advantage in the Senate and a 51-49 edge in the House of Delegates.
A new poll better gauges the political landscape ahead of the crucial 2026 gubernatorial election in New York.
As of press time, there are only two declared candidates on either side. For the Democrats, Governor Kathy Hochul (D)
Creditnaag.org
In the Western New York-Buffalo region, Stefanik is up +2 over Hochul, while Lawler is up +3.
Finally, in New York City, Hochul is up +41 over Stefanik, but up just +35 over Lawler.
Moderates involved in the survey had a composition of 51% Democratic, 21% Republican, and 28% blank. This is all despite a twenty-point advantage Stefanik has over Lawler in name recognition.
Brock McCleary, founder of Harper Polling, said the poll was conducted for a right-leaning client and not a particular campaign. McCleary has not disclosed the client for whom the survey was conducted.
“The upstate polling numbers alone are laughable,” said Alex deGrasse, Stefanik senior campaign adviser Alex deGrasse. The poll also shows Hochul with a job approval rating of 59%-38%, matching President Trump’s rating in the Empire State. 29% of voters support her re-election, while 66% prefer someone else.
The poll was conducted among 600 likely voters from May 7-9 and has a margin of error of +/- 4%.
Suffolk County Community College’s Brentwood campus will play host to the 2025 Larry Swanson Long Island Environmental Symposium next week on Wednesday, June 25, from 8:00a.m. to 12:00p.m.
The symposium will be held by Suffolk County Executive Ed Romaine (R-Center Moriches), Stony Brook University’s Waste Reduction and Management Institute, and the Evan R. Liblit Scholarship Fund.
Topics of discussion for the third annual event include a regional solid waste management plan, the role of wasteto-energy facilities regarding solid waste management, development of a glass recycling master plan, regional recycling, and removing food from the waste stream.
“There are many obstacles related to solid waste on Long Island that impact our regional economy and environment,” said Romaine in a statement. “We must continue to discuss the challenges that are in front of us and lay ahead to preserve our future while ensuring we take a coordinated approach to dispose solid waste and recycle glass and ash responsibly.”
Attendance is free, but guests must register by contacting wrmi@stonybrook.edu.
Lake Ronkonkoma
First Tuesday of the month
Time: 7-8 p.m.
Location:
Holy Cross Lutheran Church
307 Hawkins Ave
Lake Ronkonkoma, NY 11779
Ronkonkoma AM
Last Friday of the month
Time: 10-11:30 a.m.
Location:
Day Haven Adult Day Services
2210 Smithtown Ave Ronkonkoma, NY 11779
Ronkonkoma PM
Second Monday of the month
Time: -7:30 p.m.
Location:
Day Haven Adult Day Services
2210 Smithtown Ave Ronkonkoma, NY 11779
00.272.3900
By Raheem Soto
Most people don’t spend their day thinking about county committees. But when you call 911, wait for an ambulance, or depend on a police officer to respond—you’re relying on decisions that often begin in Suffolk’s Public Safety Committee.
Led by Legislator Steven Flotteron (R–Brightwaters), the committee doesn’t seek headlines. It operates quietly, but its work shapes how public safety functions throughout the county—from patrol cars and correctional facilities to communication systems and victim support services.
“This committee’s responsibility is to ensure our first responders and law enforcement professionals have the tools they need to serve the public,” Flotteron told The Messenger “It’s about smart, practical planning—not just reacting to emergencies.”
The committee’s jurisdiction is wide-ranging. It oversees the Suffolk County Police Department, Sheriff’s Office, Office of the Medical Examiner, County jails, Probation Department, Auxiliary Police, Police District, and the District Attorney’s Office. It also reviews legislation related to domestic violence, orders of protection, and services for victims. Matters involving forfeiture and seizure laws, the alarm permitting program, and “crack house” enforcement also fall within its scope. Any appointments to public safety-related boards, commissions, or agencies must come through this committee.
In 2024, the committee advanced several key initiatives to strengthen emergency response systems across Suffolk.
One major project funded the purchase of new defibrillators for patrol vehicles, providing officers with life-saving equipment to respond to cardiac arrests
“When someone’s heart stops, every second matters,” Flotteron said.
The committee also supported building a redundant 911 communications center, which would serve as a backup in the event the main dispatch system failed. “Emergencies don’t wait for systems to reboot,” Flotteron added. “We need to be prepared.”
Several precinct facilities—some built decades ago—received funding for renovations. Needs assessments and input from law enforcement guided these upgrades. “Our officers need facilities that are safe, efficient, and up to today’s standards,” Flotteron said.
The committee also approved continued upgrades to the 800 MHz radio system, the
critical network connecting police, fire, and EMS during emergencies. Improvements to the county’s firearms training range were also approved, along with investments in marine and helicopter rescue equipment—vital for a coastal county like Suffolk, which has nearly 1,000 miles of shoreline.
When Suffolk received a fully federally funded grant for bodyworn police cameras, the committee amended the budget to accept it.
“This is the kind of transparency tool we support—especially when it doesn’t burden local taxpayers,” said Flotteron.
Flotteron emphasized that the committee’s job goes beyond signing off on the funding. “We ask questions. We weigh outcomes. Public safety is about preparation—not politics.”
He also credited County Executive Ed Romaine’s (R-Center Moriches) administration with improving oversight and interdepartmental coordination. “There’s more alignment, and we’re seeing better planning and resource deployment.”
For most residents, the committee’s work stays in the background. But when emergency systems function as they should, it’s not by accident—it’s because someone asked the right questions before the crisis happened.
That’s what the Public Safety Committee is built to do. And right now, it’s doing it.
Continued from front cover
As such, the GOP has nominated Laura Endres (R-South Setauket) to compete for a spot on the horseshoe. Endres kicked off her campaign last month at Castaways in Port Jefferson Village, and sat down with The Messenger for a glimpse into her candidacy.
Laura Endres, Esq., grew up in Brookhaven hamlet and graduated from Bellport High School in 1988, later graduating from Touro Law School in 1998 with a J.D. She began her focus as a solo attorney in the legal areas of residential and commercial real estate, landlord/tenant representation, and business transactions.
Endres also has a background in County government, having served as Deputy Suffolk County Clerk, overseeing about 130 employees and managing the work flow of departments concerning recording, court actions, business certificates, and judgements.
Endres’ current law firm, she argues, gives her a comprehensive background in managing “little cities.”
“My firm represents condo, co-op, and homeowners association (HOA) boards; what that means is giving legal advice to little cities,” Endres told The Messenger. “We do all of their contracts, we help them with their budgets, elections, any complaints that they may have, such as helping them deal with problem homeowners. It’s like a microcosm of a municipality, and the responsibilities are microcosmic of those of a Suffolk County Legislator. I’m there to help them get them where they need to go in a legal and efficient manner.”
While her firm does handle litigation, Endres does not work in that world, rather working in real estate matters residential, commercial, building, zoning, and proper suburban planning.
“Being in the real estate profession, you learn how to interact with people, you learn what’s really needed for building. It’s a big plan; you have to look at the very large picture when you’re dealing with things,” said Endres. “You have to make sure that you have the proper fuel, energy, utilities, water quality, sewers, roads, and infrastructure. I’m excited to put it to use on a larger scale rather than an individual basis.”
Endres is looking to put her experience with a wide array of housing options to the test, saying the County needs “commonsense ideas” when it comes to development.
“We want a good mixture of everything in commonsense doses. We don’t want all apartment buildings or all single-family homes. It all comes down to suburban planning. Some of the solutions that are used at the Town levels, which is not the level I’m seeking, include 55-and-older communities and tax breaks to those kinds of developments,” said Endres. “Those tenants don’t have schoolchildren, but we need to do something like that for young people so you can buy into development when you’re younger, and when you’re older, you age out of it and then sell to young people once again. There could be caps on what you can sell for so you can make some money to get to the next level, but it would give the next generation a path to ownership and wouldn’t leave them with just renting as an option.”
Endres also floats the idea of an all-Veterans complex, similar in nature to a 55-and-older community. Such a development could include mixeduse zoning, with shopping, doctors, and activities in one place.
Endres, a military mom and the wife of a Veteran, also understands what Veterans need and want, stating, “Veterans like to be with each other and live around each other.” Three of Endres’ children are Veterans, with another currently enlisted in the Air Force serving as a jet mechanic in Charleston. Her husband served in the Navy and the Marine Corps.
“My concern with the apartment buildings is it doesn’t help with our school tax base,” she said regarding development that is seen as rampant in some parts of Suffolk.
The environment is a crucial aspect of LD-05’s landscape, something that Endres addresses with her experience in planning for wastewater infrastructure and sewage treatment plants.
“I will fight alongside the State and other Legislators, as well as County Executive Ed Romaine (R-Center Moriches) to get as much funding into the district as we can,” said Endres, adding that environmental regulations, while well-intentioned, culminate in unfunded mandates that keeps the municipalities lagging behind.
“We don’t need environmental regulations that we can’t implement because we don’t have the funding for them. We can’t put the cart before the horse, but I see where we need to go,” said Endres, adding that infrastructure goes hand-in-hand with environmental concerns. “I’m very pro-labor, our unions are the heart of our people, they’re the ones who are working and bring home the money to spend it in our communities. It’s very important that our unions and contractors are here and not from
out-of-state. It should be done for us, by us.”
Endres would also like to work to further improve the County’s Social Services Department, which has come a long way from the department whose actions - or inactions - resulted in the devastating Thomas Valva case.
“We cannot be neglectful. One of my pet projects is to do as much as we can with our Social Services. If I’m elected, I’ll listen to all of the Social Services people. I want to let the constituents know that I have the energy and drive to get out there and be good with making relationships, putting people together, and making solutions. I’m not a one-issue person. The County is on a good road, but I think that if I were elected, I would be able to work better with the current majority to get things done.”
By Cait Crudden
In a sweeping shakeup of federal health policy, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (I-CA) has named eight new members to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), just days after controversially removing all 17 sitting members of the influential vaccine advisory panel.
The move, which Kennedy says is aimed at restoring “public trust” in vaccination policy, marks an unprecedented overhaul of the committee that helps shape the U.S. immunization schedule, a guide used by medical providers, schools, and insurers nationwide.
“All of these individuals are committed to evidence-based medicine, goldstandard science, and common sense,” Kennedy said in a post on X, “They have each committed to demanding definitive safety and efficacy data before making any new vaccine recommendations.”
Among those newly appointed are psychiatrist and neuroscientist Dr. Joseph R. Hibbeln, epidemiologist Martin Kulldorff, MIT professor Retsef Levi, vaccine critic Dr. Robert Malone who conducted early research on mRNA technology, Dr. Cody Meissner of Dartmouth who is a professor of pediatrics, Dr. Michael A. Ross, Emergency Medicine physician Dr. James Pagano, and Vicky Pebsworth, a nurse with a PhD in Public Health and previously served on vaccine advisory committees.
The decision to sweep out the full roster of vaccine advisers has drawn sharp criticism from leading medical organizations and public health experts. Some question the vetting process and transparency with larger concerns of the overall expertise needed to advise Americans on vaccine recommendations
and their capability to protect their health. Still, supporters of the overhaul welcomed the change. Many believe that this is a huge win for the medical freedom movement.
The new members have diverse backgrounds, but many gained national attention during the COVID-19 pandemic for opposing federal public health mandates and casting doubt on mRNA vaccine safety. For example, Kulldorff co-authored the controversial Great Barrington Declaration, which rejected lockdowns and advocated for herd immunity through natural infection.
Dr. Robert Malone, a scientist who worked on early mRNA technology, has become a prominent figure in anti-vaccine circles. Retsef Levi, of MIT, has called for a halt to all mRNA vaccinations, citing safety concerns that mainstream scientists say are unfounded.
Kennedy also replaced the committee’s executive secretary, Melinda Wharton, with Mina Zadeh, a longtime HHS staffer with a background in microbiology and infectious disease research. While some questioned her experience in vaccine policy, an HHS spokesperson defended the appointment, referring to her as a seasoned leader with over 27 years of public health service.
However, with only eight of nineteen members appointed, the committee cannot reach quorum without interim voting rights for ex-officio members from other federal health agencies. The ACIP’s next meeting, scheduled for June 25–27, may require emergency procedural changes to proceed with official business. Kennedy, long known for his controversial views on vaccines, has defended the move as necessary to rebuild faith in the CDC and on his quest to Make America Healthy Again. As the fallout continues, the medical community remains divided on whether this is reform or regression.
On Sunday, June 8, the Butch Dellecave Foundation — alongside partners Newsday and the Economic Opportunity Council of Suffolk Inc. — hosted its annual awards ceremony honoring Suffolk County’s top high school student-athletes. The prestigious event celebrates finalists for the High School Athlete of the Year Award, recognizing a combination of excellence in athletics, academics and community service.
This year, Sachem High School was proudly represented by four outstanding student-athletes. From Sachem East, Sarafina Scavo and Logan Schomaker were
selected as nominees, while Lea Rowett and Brayden Tappin represented Sachem North. Each honoree was chosen for their exceptional achievements both on and off the field, as well as their commitment to leadership and service.
The evening highlighted the dedication, integrity and impact these students have made within their schools and the broader community. Sachem Central School District congratulates all four nominees on this well-deserved recognition and thanks the Butch Dellecave Foundation for continuing to shine a light on student excellence across Long Island.
On June 16, Bayport-Blue Point High School seniors took a nostalgic walk down memory lane, visiting their former elementary schools. The annual tradition allows graduating seniors to return to the halls of Sylvan Avenue, Blue Point and Academy Street elementary schools where their educational journeys began.
Dressed in their caps and gowns, the seniors were greeted with cheers, high fives and handmade signs from current elementary students and staff. The walk served as a full-circle moment for the Class of 2025, offering a chance to reflect on their growth and celebrate the milestones ahead.
Albert G. Prodell Middle School’s choirs brought home top honors at the 2025 Music in the Parks festival, held on June 7 at Six Flags, earning a series of first-place finishes and a prestigious overall award.
Under the direction of John Samonte, the Middle School Chromatics Men’s Choir and the Quartertones Show Choir each placed first in their respective categories, demonstrating exceptional musicality, stage presence and professionalism. In addition to their category wins, the combined efforts of the ensembles led to the highest honor of the day – the Overall Middle School Choir Award, given to the top-scoring choral group among all participating middle schools.
Additionally, Jamyson Ochoa, an eighth grader and featured soloist, received the Outstanding Soloist Award, a recognition presented to individual performers who demonstrate remarkable vocal skill and artistry.
“These students have worked incredibly hard all year, and it’s so rewarding to see their dedication recognized on a big stage,” said Mr. Samonte.
Music in the Parks is a national adjudicated music festival that brings together student ensembles from across the region to perform for expert judges and receive valuable feedback. The festival emphasizes musical excellence, teamwork and positive student experiences.
Four members of the Bellport High School Class of 2025 will be entering the military following graduation. They represent the 1% of graduates who commit to the military each year. The South Country Central School District extends its gratitude and well wishes to the following seniors who committed to entering the military:
Miguel Cortez, Marine Corps
Julia Cuji Ramon, Army
Olivia Jones, Air Force
Luis Sabellichi, Army
Canaan Elementary School recently hosted its inaugural color run fundraiser, collecting over $20,000 to support school assemblies and PTA events. Students, administrators, faculty, and staff all eagerly participated, with some running while others threw color. This included Canaan Elementary School’s principal, Ray Ruiz, who both tossed color and was completely covered. Families were invited to watch as well, enhancing community unity and joy.
“It was a day filled with energy, color, and fun. Most importantly, it brought us all together for a great cause,” said Canaan Elementary School firstgrade dual language teacher and community liaison Jamie Mangan, who helped organize the event. “We would like to relay a heartfelt thank you to everyone who donated, volunteered, and participated. We could not have done it without them.”
Canaan Elementary School teamed up with Booster, a company that helps schools organize their fundraising efforts. Each student had the chance to register online and receive their own donation page. This page could also be shared with family and friends through social media to support students in their fundraising. Whether they raised money or not, every student was able to participate in the color run.
“We also want to give a special thank you to our generous sponsors, whose support made this event possible,” said Ms. Mangan. “Their commitment to our school and community means the world to us!”
For more information about the PatchogueMedford Union Free School District, please visit the District’s website at www.pmschools. org. Happenings in the District can also be followed on Facebook at www.facebook.com/ PatMedSchools/. #PatMedPride.
By Matt Meduri
We wrap up our mini-series on the amendments to the U.S. Constitution with the final and most recently-ratified one, the TwentySeventh Amendment. It codifies a housekeeping issue of congressional compensation, particularly salary increases or decreases as they pertain to a subsequent slate of lawmakers.
Interestingly, despite being the most recently adopted amendment, it was actually one of the first amendments ever proposed.
The First Congress submitted this amendment to the states for ratification on September 25, 1789, along with eleven other proposed amendments. The last ten items were ratified in 1791 to become the first ten amendments to the Constitution, also known as the Bill of Rights. The other two proposals, the one that would become the Twenty-Seventh Amendment and another regarding congressional apportionment, were not ratified by enough states to be added to the Constitution.
In the early days of the republic, several states raised the issue of congressional salaries as being enshrined in the Constitution as they were considering the other proposals. North Carolina’s convention proposed several amendments, including a law “ascertaining the compensation of Senators and Representatives, for their services, shall be postponed in their operation until after the election of representatives immediately succeeding the passing thereof; that excepted which shall first be passed on the subject.”
In other words, the North Carolina proposal, which was followed by an identical amendment proposed by Virginia, posited that salary increases or decreases passed by Congress would take effect for the next legislature, not the current one. New York also climbed aboard in this proposal’s interest.
This amendment was one of several that was introduced by James Madison in 1789. Madison’s intent was for it to be added at the end of Article I, Section 6, Clause 1 of the Constitution, which codified congressional compensation. The states deliberated in their committees, and the state legislature subsequently added amendments to the twelve-item package. The language that would later become the Twenty-Seventh Amendment was listed second of the twelve items. Proposals three through twelve were ratified over two years later, enshrining the Bill of Rights into the supreme law of the land.
The congressional compensation article was ratified by seven states through 1792, an insufficient quantity for ratification. Some states, however, would pick up their own mantle for the proposal, with Ohio ratifying it in 1873, and Wyoming doing so in 1978. The latter two states ratified out of protest of federal executive and congressional pay raises.
In one the most fascinating aspects of constitutional review and law in U.S. history, the Twenty-Seventh Amendment owes much of its passage to an undergraduate student at the University of Texas at Austin.
This column will seek to address the long-forgotten concept of civics and how it relates to American government in general, from the federal level to the local level. This column will explore Constitutional rights, the inner workings of government, the electoral process, and the obligations and privileges of citizens. Published by Messenger Papers,
Gregory Watson wrote a paper on the subject for a political science course in 1982, arguing that the amendment was still “live” and could be ratified. His paper received a “C” grade, which was retained on Watson’s appeal to his professor. His response was to push for its ratification by staging a letter-writing campaign to the state legislatures. The campaign began the unearthing of Supreme Court cases and other forms of precedent to review if the amendment was still indeed “live.”
The 1921 Supreme Court case Dillon V. Gloss found that ratification of a proposed constitutional amendment must be within a “reasonable time” after proposal. They found it “quite untenable” to consider proposed amendments from 1789, 1810, and 1861 as “still pending.” This decision was contradicted by the 1939 Supreme Court ruling in Coleman V. Miller, in which the Court found that the validity of state ratifications is a political matter, and not properly assigned to the judiciary. They then kicked the prerogative of review to Congress.
Watson spent $6,000 out of his own pocket to sponsor the nationwide campaign. In April 1983, Maine became the first state to ratify the amendment as a result of the barnstorming, with Colorado following suit the next year. States that had already ratified decades or centuries earlier re-ratified it to be in line with the campaign. Michigan became the tipping-point state for ratification on May 7, 1992, with New Jersey ratifying the amendment after previously rejecting it centuries prior.
In 2016, Zach Elkins, a professor in the University of Texas at Austin Department of Government found Watson’s teacher from the 1980s, suggesting his grade be changed from a “C” to an A+”.
“Goodness, he certainly proved he knew how to work the Constitution and what it meant and how to be politically active, [...] So, yes, I think he deserves an A after that effort – A-plus!” said Sharon Waite, Watson’ s political science professor.
Although “A+” grades aren’t valid at University of Texas (UT), Elkins urged the registrar to leave it as an “A+”, making it the only such grade ever recorded at UT.
The amendment was first ratified by Maryland in 1789, with the original supporters including North Carolina, South Carolina, Delaware, Vermont, Virginia, and Kentucky. Kentucky’s ratification occurred in 1792, the last action on the TwentySeventh Amendment until Ohio did so in 1873. Another century-long gap would end with Wyoming’s ratification in 1978.
Two states reaffirmed their support after the Watson campaign, Kentucky and North Carolina. New Hampshire ratified it in 1985 after rejecting it in 1790. Nebraska would be the most recent ratifier, doing so in 2016. Four states have never ratified the amendment: Massachusetts, Mississippi, New York, and Pennsylvania.
Congressional leaders then challenged the validity of the ratification after the Archivist of the U.S. at the time, Don Wilson, signed the amendment’s certificate of ratification.
Senator Robert Byrd (D-WV) admonished Wilson for certifying it, claiming that he did so without congressional approval and that the action deviated from “historic tradition.” Speaker of the House Tom Foley (D-WA) concurred and called for a legal challenger.
However, the aforementioned Supreme Court case Dillon V. Gloss gave Congress the prerogative of reviewing the validity of an amendment based on time passed. Precedent set by the Fourteenth Amendment’s ratification also gave way to Congress nearly unanimously backing the validity of the Twenty-Seventh Amendment. The Senate approved the measure 99-0, and the House did so to the tune of a 414-3 vote.
“No law, varying the compensation for the services of the Senators and Representatives, shall take effect, until an election of Representatives shall have intervened.”
Because of this amendment, congressional cost-of-living adjustments (COLA) have been upheld against legal challenges. In Boehner V. Anderson (1992), the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia ruled that the first COLA was in line with the amendment because it took effect after the elections that followed the COLA vote. The Supreme Court has not heard subsequent challenges to congressional COLAs based on the Twenty-Seventh Amendment.
The No Budget, No Pay Act was proposed in 2012 and again in 2013 to prevent lawmakers from being paid during a government shutdown. Although it had some bipartisan support, concerns against it were derived from violating the TwentySeventh Amendment. This was based on the phrase “no law, varying the compensation”, in that compensation could not be altered until after the next Congress had been seated. The bill was not passed and the Supreme Court has never addressed its constitutionality.
At the very least, the episode of ratifying the Twenty-Seventh Amendment has proven a few things: 1) Centuries-old amendments are, at face value, fair game for adoption at any time, so long as it is ratified properly; 2) Issues and concerns faced in the early days of the republic are still faced today, and; 3) One person, even a student, can clearly spark significant change, especially after receiving a sub-par grade.
Published by Messenger Papers,
By Ashley Pavlakis
Thursday, June 19, 2025
Some reconstruction needs to happen at Miller Place High School as the school needs to expand the trophy case to accommodate the four titles the varsity softball team won this season. Four-for-Four, almost like Wendy’s but with championships!
The Miller Place varsity softball team is a member of the New York State Public High School Athletic Association (NYSPHSAA) and competes in League VI. The team is coached by fifth-year head coach Matthew Timmons. He’s joined by Allie King, Thomas Fank, and Gwendolyn Smith in the dugout. The squad finished the regular season 17-2-0 and went 7-0-0 in the post-season.
On Saturday afternoon, the Panthers took the field in Binghamton for the State Championship game versus Williamsville South. The Panthers fell short last year and sought redemption in their return this season. They secured the victory with a 3-0 win, Kelsey Hoffmann made the final out for everyone to finally go and dogpile on top of Ava Zicchinelli and Delaney Schleider on the mound.
“I’ve been reliving it with every person I see in the hallways. If you watch the video back and you see Ava, it’s just pure joy,” said Timmons, who just finished grading math Regents exams upon his return to school Monday morning. “I told them five years ago that ‘you’re the best team in New York State, and if you just buy in and you trust me to guide this ship, I will take you to a state championship.’ It’s a big promise to make. In that moment, to see Ava’s reaction, to see the pure joy, to see them just all leave everything behind and just love one another was cool.”
Miller Place showed up once again for their beloved softball team, providing whatever was needed to ensure their girls were taken care of.
“The experience of States this year was totally different with it being away and not being in our backyard. There was a lot more going on. There were hotels and buses, how were we feeding the kids? What are they eating? Do they have enough water? I’m very much a coach who wants parents to let me run the team. ‘I will run this; I’m in control.’ So, it was very strange that in the last week of the season, I had to completely flip-flop that and say, ‘I need you, please. I need you to set up food, I need you to run and get water, I need you to set up breakfast.’ They were so accommodating. Our community was just amazing, and it allowed the girls to just solely focus on softball,” said Timmons.
Ava Zichinelli is dominant, Emily Lopez is Ms. Consistent, and Laney Vomero is stellar. Timmons described some of his top players with kind words but also made sure to voice the importance of the whole roster and what each individual brings to the team.
“Delaney Schleider behind the plate, you don’t have tenth-graders that can call a softball game from behind the plate at the level that she does. To have the level of communication with Ava to understand what you’re doing to try and get hitters out and to be successful in that. If you look at all of the teams that were at states, they’re all calling pitches. She’s the only catcher there that is calling her own game. They’re so in lockstep with one another about what needs to get done and how they’re going to go about it,” Timmons told The Messenger
Being a coach isn’t always easy, especially when you have depth on your roster and have to figure out how to utilize it accordingly. Sometimes tough decisions have to be made.
“Go to the seventh inning in the State championship. Evelyn Paul gets a base hit and everyone’s rocking, everyone’s crazy, and I have to make the
decision to end a girl’s high school career and say, ‘I’m going to put Kelsey [Hoffmann] in for you right now. I’m going to put a freshman out there for you to run and then to play defense.’ Kelsey goes ahead with an absolutely amazing play in the bottom of the seventh to help secure it and put it away. It’s one thing to just be good athletes and good at softball and it’s another thing to have teammates that understand and work well with each other and take a back seat at times. I’m sure it wasn’t easy for Evelyn to take a back seat. I’m sure she wanted to be out there on the field to the final out of the State championship. But for them to support one another in that way was really special the whole year,” said Timmons.
Celebrations ensued on the field as the Panthers rejoiced in the feeling of finally achieving their goal of winning a State championship. Timmons described how he felt in the final moments of the game as feeling like a water balloon exploded in his chest. Speaking of water, Timmons managed to get by unscathed from the longtime Gatorade shower tradition.
“I was free from that. They were too excited to celebrate with one another; they didn’t come after me this time,” said Timmons.
The Panthers saw some of their own receive seasonal honors with Ava Zichinelli being awarded Suffolk County Pitcher of the Year. All-County honors were given to Emily Lopez, Ava Zichinelli, Laney Vomero, and Delaney Schleider. All-Division honors were awarded to Brooke Callaghan, Evelyn Paul, and Breya Kesler. Last but not least, Sadie Bryant was awarded AllLeague honors.
At the beginning of the season, Timmons spoke to his team about the grind and the hard work of getting back to the State championship. He told them it wasn’t promised, and if they wanted it for themselves, they needed to put in the work on and off the field. It’s safe to say they did just that, as they now have back-to-back League VI, Suffolk County, and Long Island titles, as well as a first-time State title to show for this 2025 season.
“You don’t get many moments like that in your life where nothing else matters. And to see them diving on each other was a really cool way to end your high school career,” an emotional Timmons told The Messenger
By Raheem Soto
While Governor Hochul (D) applauded the passage of New York’s largest budget in history—$254 billion for fiscal year 2026—Suffolk County was already tallying up the cost of Albany’s delay. On paper, the state appears to be flush.
But on the ground, taxpayers are covering the bill for a job the state failed to finish on time.
Between March and June, Suffolk County quietly absorbed over $280,000 in jail costs—expenses that, by law, should have been covered by the State. The reason is delayed inmate transfers. At the time this was written, 125 convicted individuals sentenced to state prison remain housed in Suffolk jails. Under state law, they should have been transferred to Department of Corrections and Community Supervision (DOCCS) custody within ten business days of sentencing. But those transfers stalled.
The state reimburses counties around $100 per inmate per day, a rate set years ago. Suffolk, by contrast, pays roughly $250 to house each inmate— covering meals, medical care, supervision, and basic services. That $150-per-day shortfall adds up quickly. Multiply it across 125 inmates over weeks and months, and taxpayers are left footing a growing tab.
The money isn’t theoretical. It’s real, and it’s local. It comes out of budgets that also fund schools, roads, and emergency services. The burden doesn’t land in Albany—it lands in Riverhead. It doesn’t hit DOCCS— it hits Suffolk County correction officers trying to manage overcrowded jails, which were built for temporary detention, not long-term incarceration.
Suffolk’s jail system is designed to house individuals awaiting trial or serving short sentences— people cycling in and out, not medium- or maximumsecurity inmates serving state time. With state-ready
inmates clogging space, the entire system backs up. Bed space shrinks. Pretrial services are strained. Officers are stretched thin.
This is not an isolated incident. A February report by the New York State Association of Counties confirmed that more than 30 counties were experiencing similar backlogs. Across the state, county jails are absorbing costs while the state delays transfers. Some counties reported monthly overruns in the hundreds of thousands of dollars. The problem isn’t new—it’s just being ignored.
Blaming the late state budget is convenient but incomplete. DOCCS staffing shortages predate this year’s fiscal holdup. The truth is more troubling: New York State continues to overpromise and underdeliver, leaving counties to bear the brunt of the consequences.
Meanwhile, federal aid has dropped, too. Suffolk received $1.2 million from SCAAP in 2024, down from $1.3 million in 2023. These funds, meant to offset the cost of housing undocumented detainees, don’t touch the issue of delayed state transfers. They simply plug other holes—just not fast enough or deep enough.
With the state’s record-setting $254 billion budget now passed as of June 15, excuses are wearing thin. The money exists. The resources exist. What’s missing is execution—and accountability.
In the private sector, deadlines matter. Performance is tracked. Shortfalls lead to consequences. In government, the consequences are often passed along quietly to those with the least power to stop them: the taxpayer.
For now, the state may have finalized its budget. But Suffolk County residents are still paying the price of what Albany didn’t do in time. And that price keeps rising, one day—and one inmate—at a time.
Published by Messenger Papers, Inc.
Thursday, June 19, 2025
By John Solomon | AMAC Outside Contributor
A confidential human source told FBI counter-intelligence in summer 2020 that China’s communist government was shipping fake driver’s licenses to the United States to manufacture “tens of thousands of fraudulent mail-in votes” for Joe Biden, according to a raw intelligence report distributed to federal agencies that was reviewed by Just the News.
The report – one of two sent Monday by FBI Director Kash Patel to Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley – was sent to U.S. intelligence agencies on Aug. 24, 2020, as an uncorroborated advisory, then suddenly recalled with little explanation other than the bureau wanted to “re-interview” the source, the documents stated.
The recall notice specifically asked spy agencies to erase or delete the original intelligence memo, the memos show.
“This report was recalled in order to reinterview the source. Recipients should destroy all copies of the original report and remove the original report from all computer holdings,” the recall notice stated.
Officials told Just the News the recall kept the FBI and other agencies from fully investigating allegations that Beijing was trying to meddle in the U.S. election to Biden’s benefit, though corroborating evidence came in from a fellow law enforcement agency.
They said U.S. Customs Border and Protection had captured 19,888 of the fake driver’s licenses – mostly from Hong Kong and China in late July 2020 – on their way to battleground states in the Midwest.
The subject line of the FBI intelligence bulletin succinctly stated the potential nature of the alleged plot: “Chinese Government Production and Export of Fraudulent US Driver’s Licenses to Chinese Sympathizers in the United States, in Order to Create Tens of Thousands of Fraudulent Mail-in Votes for US Presidential Candidate Joe Biden, in late August 2020.
The intelligence report was not deemed corroborated, making clear it was raw intelligence and that the informant was relatively new and “has been corroborated for less than one year.”
It also noted the information was “indirect” through a sub-source. “Warning: This is an information report, not finally evaluated intelligence,” the report told other agencies.
It also flagged one aspect of the informant’s allegation: that information about the fake driver’s licenses was gleaned from TikTok accounts of Americans.
“A person’s address information was not a valid field when creating a TikTok account,” the report noted. “It was unspecified how China would attain US address data from the application.”
That said, the FBI bulletin provided significantly detailed information for agencies to investigate as leads to make sure the U.S. election wasn’t being hijacked by a foreign power seeking to exploit a sudden explosion in mail-in voting during the COVID-19 pandemic that struck earlier in 2020.
“In late August 2020, the Chinese government had produced a large amount of fraudulent United States driver’s licenses that were secretly exported to the United States,” the report reads “The fraudulent driver’s licenses would allow tens of thousands of Chinese students and immigrants sympathetic to the Chinese Communist Party to vote for U.S. presidential candidate USPER Joe Biden despite not being eligible to vote in the United States.”
“China had collected private US user data from millions of TikTok accounts, to include name, ID and address, which would allow the Chinese government to use real US persons’ information to create the fraudulent driver’s license,” the report
continues. “The fraudulent driver’s licenses were to include true ID number and true address of US citizens, making them difficult to detect. China planned to use the fraudulent driver’s licenses to account for tens of thousands of mail-in votes.”
After Just the News reported on the existence of the intelligence bulletin Monday evening, Grassley on Tuesday implored Patel to investigate the circumstances of the memos more intensively to determine who ordered the recall and why.
“The document alleges serious national security concerns that need to be fully investigated by the FBI,” the senator’s office said in a statement. “Grassley is requesting additional documentation from the FBI to verify the production, and is urging the FBI to do its due diligence to investigate why the document was recalled, who recalled it and inform the American people of its findings.”
Patel told Just the News on Monday evening that he is fully
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investigating the circumstances surrounding the intelligence report and its recall.
“Thanks to the oversight work and partnership of Chairman Grassley, the FBI continues to provide unprecedented transparency at the people’s Bureau,” Patel said. To that end, we have located documents Chairman Grassley requested, which detail alarming allegations related to the 2020 U.S. election.
“Specifically, these include allegations of plans from the CCP to manufacture fake driver’s licenses and ship them into the United States for the purpose of facilitating fraudulent mail-in ballots –allegations which, while substantiated, were abruptly recalled and never disclosed to the public.”
John Solomon is an award-winning investigative journalist, author and digital media entrepreneur who serves as Chief Executive Officer and Editor in Chief of Just the News.
May 15–Jun 29, 2025 Jul 10–Aug 24, 2025
Etymology:
late Middle English (also in the sense ‘extravagant, going beyond acceptable limits’): from Latin insolent- ‘immoderate, unaccustomed, arrogant’, from in‘not’ + solent- ‘being accustomed’ (from the verb solere )
adjective
Pronounced: /in·suh·luhnt/
Definition: showing a rude and arrogant lack of respect.
Example: “The rebuttal was marked with an insolent tone.”
Synonyms: impudent, unmannerly, uncivil
Antonyms: polite, humble, proper
Source: Oxford Languages
June 21, 1948: Columbia Records unveils the 33-1/3 rpm LP phonograph record invented by Peter Carl Goldmark, allowing up to 20 minutes per side, at the WaldorfAstoria Hotel.
June 25, 1929: President Herbert Hoover (R-IA) authorizes building of Boulder Dam (Hoover Dam).
June 20, 1840: American inventor Samuel Morse patents his telegraph.
See how many words you can create. Must have center letter in word and can use letters more than once. 4 letter word minimum.
June 19, 1865: Union General Gordon Granger declares slaves are free in Texas, now celebrated as Juneteenth.
June 24, 1916: Mary Pickford becomes the first female film star to get a million dollar contract.
By PJ Balzer
The word “great” has been a part of my vocabulary for almost forty years now. Yet, I certainly haven’t heard it used as much as in the last ten.
Everywhere I go, people are discussing greatness; how we need to become great and the path we need to travel to accomplish that. It’s been interesting to just quietly listen, observe, and learn without saying much.
Some have suggested that the greatest are the people who have clawed their way to the top, by any means possible. Others would say that the greatest are the sports stars everyone is currently talking about. The truth is that our society has and will always idolize the bright lights and shiny stuff. I was once a part of that green and shiny gang. As a sticker on the back of a car I was parked behind the other day read, “Whoever has the most toys at the end wins.”
The discrepancy over greatness isn’t something new though; it’s been going on for thousands of years. Even back when Jesus walked the dusty roads of the Middle East in a tunic and a pair of sandals, people were even then discussing how to achieve this feat. As a matter of fact, as His life was coming to a close and He was journeying with His earliest followers into Jerusalem for the final time, He overheard them arguing over this very topic.
“Now there was also a dispute among them, as to which of them should be considered the greatest. And He said to them, “The kings of the Gentiles exercise lordship over them, and those who exercise authority over them are called ‘benefactors.’ But not so among you; on the contrary, he who is greatest among you, let him be as the younger, and he who governs as he who serves. For who is greater, he who sits at the table, or he who serves? Is it not he who sits at the table? Yet I am among you as the One who serves.” (Luke 22:24-27)
As the Bible so often does, the words on its pages once again turn everything we’ve been taught our entire life completely on its head. In another one of His teachings, yet certainly parallel to this one Jesus states, “Those who exalt themselves will be humbled and those who humble themselves will be exalted,” - words that give life to the heart that desires to hear them and are a thorn in the side to the ones that don’t. This path to greatness He is talking about is extremely narrow and one least traveled.
As eighteen-year-old Anjezë Gonxhe Bojaxhiu (pictured right) arrived in India on one of her very first missionary assignments and journeys, she was totally stricken to the heart by what she both saw and experienced. On the back roads of Calcutta, she came face-to-face with the deadening poverty of India as well as the untouchable class - sick, diseased, and dying alone on the roadsides. While this had become normal for the people around her, she couldn’t simply look the other way, especially having the Spirit of Christ reigning as King of her heart. She felt the personal conviction and the heart’s pull to not remain indifferent to the suffering of others.
How could she?
As her narrow and personal journey took shape over her years of services, she began to bring the diseased and dying off the busy garbage-filled streets to bathe, feed, and care for them, one by one. She understood that greatness to the One she had given her life on earth to serve wasn’t concerned about the numbers on paper. He loves and sees the individual. People around her reminded her of how contagious these diseases were and how “these people” are of other religious persuasions. None of that swayed Anjezë; she believed that every human deserved a death of dignity and free from complete loneliness. She cared for each one without cameras, campaigns, selfies, reimbursement or recognition. It wasn’t about any of that for her. It was about serving Jesus by becoming a servant to people who most would consider the bottom of society, worthless, and completely disposable.
As these types of works based solely on service often do, her ministry ended up branching out into also caring for and educating India’s orphans, taking in newborn babies who were abandoned on the roadside, and she eventually was provided a home to do so. This was undoubtedly her divine calling and life’s main purpose. While it definitely wasn’t easy, and while there were personal struggles along the path, she relieved on God’s strength and never gave up.
Many years and many human beings cared for later, Mother Teresa was eventually publicly recognized for this hidden work as she stepped on stage to receive the prestigious and world-renowned Nobel Peace Prize. The now-elderly and hunchedover old woman stepped behind a world-known podium with whom secular society would consider some of the greatest in attendance. Yet, the God she served for decades raised her from the filthy back streets of Calcutta to speaking to the world’s most powerful people with the Nobel Peace Prize in hand. She proceeded to give a speech about the reoccurring theme of her entire life.
“Whatever you do to the poorest and most vulnerable of society, you do to Jesus Himself. That’s what He Himself has said. So, how are you all treating Jesus?”
Mother Teresa was a humble woman who has achieved greatness and I’m sure is currently enjoying her many eternal rewards with no end in sight.
Almost ten years ago, a friend made me a handmade wooden sign that reads, “Well done, good and faithful servant.” While most may have other items that inspire them to whatever they define greatness as next to their bed, the first thing I see in the morning is my sign and these words - reminding me that my life will come to a close one day unknown to myself and then my time of accountability before God’s throne will suddenly arrive.
On that day the person with the most toys won’t be the winner, despite how fun and full of greatness that path may sound. It will be the one who took the narrowest path possible and forsook this world’s definition of greatness to look to a much higher one.
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Thursday, June 19, 2025
By Raheem Soto
In a time when headlines are filled with job losses, tech layoffs, and supply chain disruptions, something different is happening on Wireless Boulevard in Hauppauge.
And it didn’t come from Washington or Albany. It came from a Long Island tech company making a bet on American workers.
Orbic Electronics, a smartphone and device maker headquartered in Suffolk County, has broken ground on Project Patriot. This $110 million manufacturing expansion doesn’t just promise jobs—it outlines exactly where they’re going, how many there are, and when they’ll arrive.
The company is doubling its local footprint, expanding from a 60,000-square-foot operation to more than 135,000 square feet, all within the Hauppauge Industrial Park. The expanded site will feature solar-powered automation lines capable of producing up to 5 million 5G-enabled devices annually.
Smartphones. Tablets. Laptops. And they’ll be made not in Shenzhen or Bangalore—but right here in Suffolk County.
Orbic states that the project will create over 1,000 new manufacturing jobs, with many starting at approximately $45,000 per year. These are not vague “innovation economy” promises—they’re roles in assembly, logistics, testing, and quality control. Most don’t require a fouryear degree, and the company is partnering with Suffolk County Community College and Queensborough Community College to prepare local workers for jobs that are already being designed into the floor plan.
It’s the kind of announcement that too often comes
with more ribbon-cutting than reality. But Orbic’s approach is different. It’s measured. Quiet. Results-driven.
The reasoning behind the move isn’t ideology—it’s economics. During the COVID-19 pandemic, companies like Orbic learned the hard way what overseas production actually costs when the global supply chain breaks. Higher freight. Slower timelines. Missed launches. Less control. Add in rising instability in Asia, and the old “offshore everything” model no longer adds up.
So, they’re reshoring. Not to score points. To regain control.
Project Patriot isn’t just about one company. It’s about whether Long Island still has the ability—and the will—to rebuild a skilled manufacturing base in a state that hasn’t made that easy in decades. The state offered $10 million in Excelsior tax credits to help get it started. The Suffolk County IDA backed it. But at its core, this is a private-sector initiative to take practical action in a place that needs more than plans—it requires proof.
And here’s the proof: walls are going up. Equipment’s being installed. Hiring is scheduled to ramp up into 2026.
This isn’t just a story about jobs—it’s a challenge to the idea that “those jobs are gone.” Orbic didn’t wait for a federal reshoring task force or another round of subsidies. It moved.
If it works, Suffolk gains more than payroll taxes and press releases. It gains a blueprint—an example of how to bring work home without the handwaving.
In an era of endless talk, Project Patriot looks like what serious investment actually is: risk, numbers, timelines, and people.
And in Hauppauge, it’s already begun.
By Diane Caudullo
Let’s be honest, like many of you, I am a busy woman and self-care has not been something I have truly given myself time for.
But after all of these busy nights at the paper, and life in general, I decided to finally learn more about taking care of myself. My daughter Giavanna, an esthetician at Karasmatic Day Spa, has passionately detailed her knowledge and importance of what she offers her clients. Genuinely intrigued, I attended an educational night at the Spa where many of the technicians spoke about the services they provided with great detail into the how and the why.
I think what grabbed me most was when a comment was made about how, as we age, we just accept the issues that come with it, not realizing that we absolutely can be an active participant in aging well.
So,I booked a visit at their Port Jefferson location to start my self-care journey.
The spa itself has a luxurious, yet cozy and welcoming vibe that immediately calmed me. I was put at ease by the warmth of the bed, the dim lighting, and the aroma of essential oils pouring throughout the room. Not only were we discussing result driven treatments tailored for my skin needs, the visit itself is a wonderful experience.
We (of course I scheduled with Giavanna), decided to go with the monthly special called the Glass Skin Facial which included BioRepeel, DMK Enzyme Therapy, and
Dermaplane.
Dermaplane uses a sterile blade to gently exfoliate dead skin and remove vellus hair (peach fuzz), which left my skin feeling brand new.
The BioRePeel was applied, a no-peel chemical peel that brightens, smooths, and softens skin without the harsh downtime.
Then was the DMK Enzyme Oxygen Therapy portion, which was nothing like I’d ever experienced. It’s a skin revision treatment that uses a tightening enzyme mask to stimulate circulation, detoxify the skin, and bring back
that healthy glow by oxygenating the skin. This not only felt cool but was quite invigorating.
I left with a brightened and hydrated look and feel to my skin, the understanding of what we did and why, and recommendations for at home care and a plan for how to meet my new desired goals.
Now that I am loving the spa experience, they have a long list of other services I am interested in. In real need of energy and hydration I have started receiving IV vitamin drip therapy, as well as customized massages and quick services like teeth whitening.
Personalizing everything- tailoring each treatment and product to exactly what I need. I have and will try a few different services and will continue to share what I am learning.
But this I do know now: if you’ve been on the fence about taking care of yourself because we are always busy caring for others, learn about the many services available. It isn’t frivolous - it’s a necessity. Like the oxygen mask theory on the plane, take care of yourself first then you are good to take care of others. Whether you’re dealing with acne, dullness, aging, or just feeling burned out — there’s something here for everyone.
And trust me, the glow is real.
To learn more about Karasmatic Day Spa visit www. karasmaticdayspa.com
Published by Messenger Papers, Inc.
By Mollie Barnett
June 19, 2025
Meta’s SuperIntelligence bet exposes a deeper problem: It’s not the model—it’s the mindset.
Mark Zuckerberg’s latest move stunned Silicon Valley: he’s stepping personally into the cockpit of Meta’s AI strategy, launching a new initiative called SuperIntelligence, investing $14.3 billion in Scale AI, and offering ninefigure salaries to lure top researchers from competitors. It’s bold. It’s expensive.
And it reveals an uncomfortable truth—not just about Meta, but about the state of AI adoption across corporate America:
The real barrier to success isn’t the model. It’s the mindset.
The Disconnect at the Heart of Meta’s Strategy
Zuckerberg built the most viral platforms on Earth. Facebook and Instagram are engineered for human connection—designed for sharing, psychological engagement, and network effects. But now, the man who got humans into tech can’t seem to get humans into his new technology.
Despite having a high-performing opensource model in LLaMA and deep infrastructure capabilities, Meta is struggling. So much so that Zuckerberg is reorganizing teams, re-centralizing leadership, and writing checks the size of small nations to catch up.
And he’s not alone.
Across boardrooms, companies are adopting AI superficially—bolting on Copilot-style tools, licensing dashboards, and hiring consultants to “install” intelligence. What they get instead is boxed intelligence: isolated tools with no integration into how decisions are actually made.
AI is being treated like software.
But real value only comes when it’s treated like infrastructure for intelligence flow.
The LLaMA Paradox
Meta’s technology isn’t the problem. LLaMA 3.1 (70B) scores competitively in benchmark tests—82% on MMLU compared to GPT-4’s 86.4%, and it performs especially well in coding. It’s cost-efficient, fast, and highly capable.
But capability isn’t adoption.
The irony is stark: the company that taught the world to share can’t seem to share its own intelligence internally. SuperIntelligence won’t scale until Meta breaks the habits of its own hierarchy.
Meta is just one case study, not an exception. Most companies face the same underlying problem: AI is being compartmentalized. Leaders are chasing plug-and-play productivity instead of organizational rewiring.
The result?
CNBC reported that LLaMA 4 wasn’t well received by developers. Internally, progress is stalling. It is not because the model lacks power—maybe it is that the company lacks alignment.
Inside Meta departments are siloed. Ethics, engineering, and product teams operate in parallel rather than in partnership. AI insights don’t flow, so intelligence never compounds. This is frustrating for your employees and your progress.
Meta knows how to build platforms, not people.
Meta’s 2025 capital expenditures are expected to top $72 billion. SuperIntelligence is being treated like a network problem: more hardware, more hires, more horsepower.
But intelligence doesn’t emerge from brute force. It emerges from systems that learn, adapt, and connect.
Dashboards no one uses. AI “departments” that operate like islands. Frustrated teams unsure of what the tech does.
Meanwhile, research from Stanford’s AI Index and McKinsey shows that companies embedding AI into everyday decisions—where it becomes part of how teams think—are pulling ahead on innovation, cost control, and talent attraction.
The real ROI isn’t in the tool.
It’s in how the tool changes how your organization learns
Organizations seeing results treat AI like a nervous system, not a magic brain.
• They train their teams to speak a shared AI language
• They use AI for insight amplification, not just automation
• They embed AI into decision loops, not just workflows
AI doesn’t replace humans—it augments them. But only if humans are in the loop.
This isn’t just about big tech. Companies across Long Island—from manufacturers to marketing agencies exhibit the same adoption gap.
The mindset? “Add AI to our CRM.”
The reality? AI won’t transform your business unless your business is redesigned for intelligent flow—across teams, functions, and strategy.
If Long Island wants to become an AI hub, it won’t be by outspending Silicon Valley. It will be by out-integrating it.
It is not about billion-dollar budgets but smarter operations, shared learning, and culture-level buy-in.
Superintelligence doesn’t come from models.
It comes from momentum—when insight becomes a shared habit. Meta’s moonshot may eventually succeed. But it won’t be because of infrastructure. It will be because the company that built the world’s biggest networks finally figured out how to build one inside itself.
That’s the real AI revolution.
It’s not a tech shift.
It’s a mind shift.
Thursday, June 19, 2025
By Ellyn Okvist, B.Sc.
William Thomas Cleary was born on September 3, 1923, in Brooklyn. He was the sixth child in a family of seven children belonging to John R. Cleary (1887-1960) and Mary Devery Cleary (1889-1939). This was a fine upstanding family, holding God, family, and country in high esteem and lived a proper life bringing up the seven children. In age order, Joseph Gerard (19111978), Mary R. (1913-) John R. (Jack) (1915-1978), Dorothy R. (1916-1994), Eileen Patricia (1919-1997), William T. (1923-1944). James F. Cleary (1932-1984) was the seventh child, and was known to so many here in Lake Ronkonkoma, maintaining a local insurance agency and volunteering in many community activities. William’s brother, Lieutenant Joseph G. Cleary, was an instructor in the officer’s candidate school at Fort Sill, Oklahoma. Multi-generations of Cleary’s had strong ties with Lake Ronkonkoma; some held dual residences at their base home on Fort Hamilton Parkway in Brooklyn and some permanent residences here in the village. The family interests were here, and they were always available to support each other’s efforts as they assisted in adding the Lake Ronkonkoma legacy we know today.
all ten crewmen were killed. After the plane went down, this teletype notified: “Adriatic Sea, 10 December 1944, Failed to Return (FTR) Missing in Action Blechhammer; 10-Dec-44 Hit by flak crashed Adriatic Sea Killed in Action (KIA) MACR 10689 Blechhammer, Germany.” The War Department reported him missing to his parents.
John R. Cleary, father of William, was the brother of Rosemary, Genevieve, and Florence Cleary, and we know them from 1925 when Rosemary Cleary opened Camp Peter Pan. As the first summer camp for the deaf in the United States, it accepted children ages three through eight. Lessons in speech, language, and lip reading afforded educational goals as well as camping activities and games. Due to the success of Camp Peter Pan, Rosemary R. Cleary, founder and the first Director-Principal, took a bold step in the face of uncertainty and started a school for the deaf. It was a united effort by the Cleary family to make this venture a success. In 1960, Catholic Charities of the Diocese of Rockville Centre legally assumed the sponsorship and ownership of Cleary Deaf Child Center, Inc., upon the request of Rosemary Cleary. Its legacy continues with four schools. William’s grandfather, John W. Cleary, was chief and organizer of Ronkonkoma Hook & Ladder Co. #1 and on June 15, 1904, became the first chief of the organization. The Cleary Family also supported St. Josephs Roman Catholic Church, and the entire up and coming village known as Lake Ronkonkoma.
A handsome young man, William had blonde hair and blue eyes. A fortress bombardier, graduate of St. Michaels Parochial School, he was attending Manhattan College when he entered the Army in January of 1943 at age 18. He was noted, at the time of his enlistment, as being employed as a bookkeeper and/or cashier and also as married to wife Virginia Katheryn of Lynn, Massachusetts.
Commissioned at Big Spring, Texas, he went overseas in September 1943 and was stationed in Celone, Italy, where he had 37 missions under his credit, and held the Air Medal with one Oak Leaf Cluster and a Presidential Citation. He had just been promoted to first Lieutenant. He was 21 years old at the time of his death.
William T. Cleary, First Lieutenant in the U.S. Army Air Forces, 463rd Bomber Group-Heavy, 773rd Bomber Squadron, Boeing B-17G #44-6190, was Killed in Action over Germany on December 10, 1944. The plane was shot down and
The 8.8cm Flak 18/36/37/41 is a German 88 mm antiaircraft and anti-tank artillery gun, developed in the 1930s. It was widely used by Germany throughout World War II. Due to its lethality, especially as a tank killer, the eighty-eight was greatly feared by Allied soldiers.
The Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress (pictured above) is an American four-engine heavy bomber aircraft developed in the 1930s for the United States Army Air Corps (USAAC). A fast and high-flying bomber, the B-17 dropped more bombs than any other aircraft during World War II, used primarily in the European Theater of Operations.
William was declared a casualty of war, Killed in Action on December 10, 1944, during WWII; his remains were never retrieved.
William was commemorated in Perpetuity at Tablets of the Missing at Sicily-Rome American Cemetery, Piazzale Kennedy 1, 00048, Nettuno, Italy, on January 1, 1946. This stunning cemetery is part of the American Battle Monuments Commission, USA. General John J. Pershing was quoted, “Time will not dim the glory of their deeds.”
It is now time for Lake Ronkonkoma to honor William. There have been many years of searching, inquiries and research, which was started by his father, brother James and nieces, represented by Casey Cleary. It seemed there was never a definite answer as to the location of his honor memorial. The Lake Ronkonkoma Heritage and George Cristino began to work with this case over three years ago, and the moon and stars have bought the information to us. William is displayed on his Military Tribute Banner on the corner of his family’s home, Cleary Road and Portion Road. Please visit it and give him the recognition he deserves.
William was awarded the Purple Heart and Air Medal and the World War II Victory Medal, American Campaign Medal, Army Presidential Unit Citation, Army Good Conduct Medal, New York Veterans Medal, European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal. The CS medal was issued 5/5/1947, as First Lt, AAF, and the medal was sent to his father, Mr. John R. Cleary. William is honored on the Memorial of the 463rd Bombardment Group/KIA and MIA, located in Santa Ana, CA. and known as the “Swoose” Group 1943-1945.
Thank you to our friends, the extended Cleary Family, who continue to add happiness to our lives and in keeping our history real.
By Raheem Soto
Justice came quietly last week in a Suffolk County courtroom—nearly three years after a man was gunned down at a backyard party in Amityville and almost a year after his killer was tracked across state lines and arrested in a hotel in Pennsylvania.
On June 11, a jury found Paulin Cerisier, 29, of Pennsylvania, guilty of Murder in the Second Degree and two counts of Criminal Possession of a Weapon, following a multi-day trial before Supreme Court Justice Timothy P. Mazzei. Cerisier is now awaiting sentencing and faces 25 years to life in prison when he returns to court on July 15.
The verdict marks the end of a long chapter in a case that began with a single, senseless act of violence.
It was the early hours of July 18, 2021. A backyard party was winding down in Amityville—friends and family gathering in peace under summer lights. Then came a gunshot.
Prosecutors say Cerisier arrived uninvited at the gathering. Without a word or confrontation, he approached Maresse Dickerson-Stevenson, 41, and shot him in the left shoulder at close range. The victim, who was the uncle of Cerisier’s ex-girlfriend, collapsed on the ground and later died from the wound.
Cerisier fled the scene and disappeared for nearly three years. He was eventually located on July 15, 2024, at a hotel in Washington County, Pennsylvania, by members of the Suffolk County Police Department’s Homicide Squad and taken into custody without incident.
Jurors heard testimony outlining the deliberate nature of the crime, the recovery of ballistic evidence, and the efforts that went into tracking Cerisier across state lines. The case was prosecuted by Assistant District Attorneys Dena Rizopoulos of the Homicide Bureau and Raquel
Tisi of the Narcotics Bureau. Detectives Walter Sosnowski and David Gelsomino conducted the investigation that led to Cerisier’s arrest and conviction.
The murder had no apparent trigger. No fight. No argument. Just a man with a gun and a target— turning what should have been a quiet night into tragedy.
The victim’s death sent shockwaves through the community and devastated a family. The trial, delayed by COVID-era backlogs and extradition timelines, finally brought resolution to a case that never lost urgency for those closest to it.
Cerisier was represented by attorney Matt Tuohy. His sentencing next month is expected to reflect the severity of the crime, with the top count carrying a maximum penalty of 25 years to life. The weapons charges—both Class C felonies—may add additional time.
The case stands as a stark reminder: violence doesn’t always come with warning signs and justice—when it works—often takes time, patience, and precision.
In an era of plea deals and procedural loopholes, this was a full trial, resulting in a unanimous verdict and a clear message. A man was murdered. His killer was found. And now, after years of delay and investigation, Suffolk County can finally close the book on a case that began with a single shot in the dark.
By Cait Crudden
Nestled at the end of Adelaide Avenue where the road melts into Moriches Bay lies a place frozen in time, and all the better for it.
The Silly Lily Fishing Station in East Moriches isn’t just a marina, it’s a throwback to simpler days, lovingly restored and revived by owners Jay Scott and Steven Chiros. With its vintage charm, colorful dories, and warm local spirit, Silly Lily is more than a business, it’s a community heartbeat.
Technically just outside the East End, Silly Lily has still earned the nickname “the Hamptons’ best kept secret.” Whether you’re craving a lobster roll, planning a day on the water, or just in search of some sunshine, this 1.5-acre waterfront gem delivers. Locals and visitors alike come for the boat rentals and protected waters of Tuthill Cove and often stay longer than planned. The waters, flushed twice daily from Moriches Inlet, are renowned among fishermen. It’s honestly a flat
fisherman’s paradise.
Scott and Chiros are preparing for another season at Silly Lily, a revival project they took on several years ago. The property, once a rundown relic of the 1930s fishing era, has been transformed, but only just enough to preserve its original character.
Their approach is lovingly nostalgic. Bright white picnic tables and boats turned into tables. A rainbow of rowboats rocks gently at the docks. Inside, what used to be a cramped living space is now a cozy market, office, and bar. Amazing food, a jukebox, and even a pinball machine completes the picture.
What truly sets Silly Lily apart is its ability to transport visitors to a simpler time, when summer meant salty air, bare feet, and lazy afternoons on the water. Families return year after year, creating memories with their children just as their parents once did. The station has become a multi-generational tradition, where
grandparents teach grandkids how to bait a hook, and couples toast anniversaries with fresh-shucked oysters and a bayside breeze. It’s this sense of continuity and care that makes Silly Lily more than a destination, it’s a living memory in the making.
Even as trends shift and development creeps closer, Scott and Chiros remain fiercely protective of Silly Lily’s charm. They resist commercialization, focusing instead on authenticity and community spirit. It’s not uncommon to see them chatting with regulars, lending a hand at the docks, or checking in on families enjoying a boat ride.
The Silly Lily has truly become a beloved destination. The station now hosts weekend events like Friday Bingo, Saturday Seaside Dining, and Sunday Sunset Cruising. Rentals are available for skiffs and paddleboards, and the market carries everything from bait to beach snacks.
Hidden away but open to all, Silly Lily Fishing Station invites everyone to step back in time, slow down, and savor a slice of waterfront Americana.
Don’t walk — run here, just don’t forget your wallet and maybe a cooler for that fish you’ll catch.
Published by Messenger Papers, Inc.
The Long Island Ducks defeated the Lancaster Stormers 6-1 on Wednesday night in the middle game of a three-game series at Fairfield Properties Ballpark.
Taylor Kohlwey’s two-out RBI single coupled with a fielding error that scored Cody Thomas gave the Ducks an early 2-0 lead in the bottom of the first inning. RBI singles to left field by Kole Kaler and River Town in the second doubled the Ducks advantage to four.
Kohlwey tacked on a fifth run in the third with an opposite field solo homer to left off Stormers starter Noah Skirrow. Kaler scampered home from third on a wild pitch by Skirrow in the fourth with Long Island’s sixth run. Lancaster scratched across a run in the ninth on Alex Isola’s sacrifice fly to right, but that was all the visitors could muster.
Justin Alintoff (1-3) earned the win, tossing eight and one-third innings of onerun ball, allowing three hits and two walks while striking out five. Skirrow (5-3) took the loss, conceding six runs (four earned) on nine hits and a walk with three strikeouts.
Kohlwey led the Ducks offense with two hits, two RBIs and a run. Kaler added two hits, an RBI and two runs, while Chris Roller chipped in with two hits and a run.
The Ducks and Stormers wrap up their three-game series on Thursday night. Game time is slated for 6:35p.m., with the Fairfield Properties
Ballpark gates opening at 5:35p.m. (5:20 for full season ticket holders). The first 1,200 fans in attendance will receive Ducks T-Shirts, courtesy of Petro Home Services. It’s also a Bluebird Hardwater Thirsty Thursday at the ballpark. The Duck Club restaurant/bar will be open for all fans to enjoy during the game, and representatives from Bluebird Hardwater will be in attendance offering free samples in the Duck Club. Additionally, fans can enjoy a buy one, get one half-price special on Cutwater Premade Cocktails during the game. Right-hander Tyler Beede (0-1, 6.75) toes the rubber for the Ducks against Stormers righty A.J. Alexy (0-1, 6.54).
Tickets to the game and all Ducks games are now available and can be purchased by visiting the ballpark box office, calling (631) 940-TIXX. Those unable to make the game can follow all the action live on FloBaseball.
The Long Island Ducks are in their 25th Anniversary season of play in the Atlantic League of Professional Baseball and play their home games at Fairfield Properties Ballpark in Central Islip. They are the all-time leader in wins and attendance in Atlantic League history, have led all MLB Partner Leagues in total attendance for four consecutive seasons, and have sold out a record 713 games all-time. For further information, visit LIDucks.com or call 631-940-DUCK (3825).