Romaine Gives 2024 State of the County Address
By Matt Meduri
Pursuant to the County Charter, the County Executive must address the Suffolk County Legislature with a “State of the County” address, with the intention being to update the Legislators on current affairs in the County and delineate priorities and a path forward.
Suffolk County Executive Ed Romaine (R-Center Moriches) addressed the Legislature and the public at Tuesday’s general meeting at 10:30a.m. at the Legislature building in Hauppauge.
It was the first State of the County Address delivered by a Republican County Executive to a Legislature with a Republican supermajority since 1996.
“I am extremely hopeful about the future of this County and there’s eighteen reasons for that, and they’re all sitting around me,” Romaine opened. “We may not always agree on everything, but there’s one thing that I think everyone should agree on, and that’s that the future of this County is good, but it can be improved.”
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Town of Islip Achieves AAA Bond Rating Recertification
By Cait Crudden
The Town of Islip has once again distinguished itself in the realm of municipal finance by achieving recertification with a coveted AAA bond rating, reaffirming its status as a paragon of fiscal responsibility. This prestigious recognition, bestowed by credit rating agency Moody’s Analytics, Inc., underscores the town’s prudent financial management and solid economic foundation.
The announcement was made with a press release, where town officials and leaders celebrated this significant achievement for the ninth straight year. Town of Islip Supervisor Angie Carpenter (R-West Islip) expressed her pride in the town’s fiscal stewardship, highlighting the collaborative efforts that have led to this momentous milestone.
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Thursday, May 9, 2024 ~ Volume 69 ~ Issue Number 29 ~ $1.00 Happy Mother's Day May 12th
CreditMatt Meduri
CreditGoogle Maps Ducks Win Home Opener Page 24 New Column: The Romaine Report Page 5 Charges on Infant’s Near-Fatal Overdose Page 17 FULL STORIES ON: Suffolk County Women of Distinction The Weik Report Page 10 Bergin’s Brief Page 15
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Islip Matters
Town of Islip Achieves AAA Bond Rating Recertification
“We continue working closely with our commissioners to tighten budgets as necessary, making certain that each and every taxpayer dollar spent is done with the utmost scrutiny,” remarked Supervisor Carpenter. “We have continued our zerobased budgeting to our spending plans, assuring no projects move forward unless they are deemed truly essential. These were strategies that enabled us to get the initial upgrade early in 2016, which we continue to adhere to as we move forward”.
The AAA bond rating is the highest possible credit rating assigned. Achieving and maintaining this rating is a mark of financial strength and stability.
“One of the benefits of the AAA rating is evidenced by the number of competitive bids received. The fifteen bids received are the second most in the history of the Town, and the range of offers varied by only twenty-six basis points, truly
demonstrating the importance of our AAA rating,” said Supervisor Carpenter.
Islip’s recertification with an AAA bond rating is particularly noteworthy considering the economic challenges posed in today’s economic environment. Despite the uncertainty and disruption caused by inflation, the town’s prudent financial management has enabled it to weather the storm and emerge with its fiscal health intact.
In its assessment, Moody, the rating agency, cited “The Town benefits from a strong local economy, stable reserves and liquidity, and strong management”. The credit opinion continued by stating “Government operations are managed by certified and experienced professionals who are responsible for implementing policy objectives. Residents have easy access to basic services and the town scores favorably in health and safety”.
Second Half of Property Taxes Due
Andy Wittman, the Receiver of Taxes for the Town of Islip, reminds all Islip Taxpayers that the second half of property taxes are due, on or before, May 31, 2024.
THE LAST DAY FOR PAYMENT OF THE 2023-2024 PROPERTY TAXES at this office, will be FRIDAY, MAY 31, 2024 After that date, taxes plus penalty and interest must be paid to the Suffolk County Comptroller’s Office in Riverhead.
The Islip Tax Office is located at 40 Nassau Avenue Islip, New York, 11751. Regular office hours are Monday-Friday 8:30a.m. –4:30p.m. We will be open late on FRIDAY, MAY 31, 2024, from 8:30a.m. – 7:00p.m. for inperson payments. Our office will be closed on MONDAY, May 27, 2024, in observance of Memorial Day.
Mr. Wittman reminds all taxpayers of our Online Payment Portal, Tax.IslipNY. gov as a secure and convenient way of paying property taxes in the Town of Islip. This portal is available to PROPERTY OWNERS only. Please consider using this option in lieu of mailing in your payment.
Town of Islip Comptroller, Joseph Ludwig expressed his view of the reaffirmed AAA rating by stating “Our willingness to look at the process realistically is something that continues to have a positive impact with the rating agencies. The goal always has to be to maximize our revenues and decrease our expenditures”.
The recertification with an AAA bond rating reflects positively on the town’s overall financial health and will have tangible benefits for residents and taxpayers. Looking ahead, town officials remain committed to upholding the principles of fiscal responsibility and prudent financial management that have earned Islip its esteemed reputation. As the community moves forward, buoyed by this latest accolade, there is confidence that Islip will continue to thrive and prosper for years to come.
Beautification Society Honored
On Sunday, May 5, West Islip Beautification Society was honored for their 50 years of volunteer service to the community, a uniquely landscaped hamlet attractive to residents, businesses and visitors since 1976.
It was the vision of resident, Dorothe Karwoski, along with Marie Wilson to showcase how beautiful the hamlet of West Islip could be with a little tender care, a lot of hard work, and the addition of flowers. The society’s first committee was Dorothe Karwoski, Beatrice White, Kathy Ruotolo, Arlene Widecki, Marie Wilson and June Quirino, PTA moms with a common interest; love for their community.
Each member had a job; Dorothe was President, Arlene was Vice President, Kathy was Recording Secretary, Bea was Historian, Marie was Hospitality and June was the Photographer. They wrote bylaws and a commitment to each other
to get new members to help beautify West Islip. They held fundraisers and purchased whiskey barrels to be used as planters on chosen sites. Later, they approached the Town for permission to beautify the triangle at Udall Road and Higbie Lane. As time went on, they adopted additional islands and sites to beautify. They attracted more volunteers to help and today have a list of very dedicated members that care for 54 barrels, lampposts, and greens on Dorothe’s Island and others around West Islip. They now offer a $500 Scholarship every year to a high school student who has volunteered with them. In addition, they have plant sales and participate at the West Islip Country Fair. Over the years, they have had Country Western Nights, Fashion Shows, Dinners and Fundraisers at Southward Ho Country Club to raise funds for flowers, shrubs, sprinklers, etc. to beautify the community.
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2024
Lee Zeldin, Riley Gaines, Legislators, Coaches, Parents, and Student Athletes Speak Out Against Proposition 1
On Monday, May 6, 2024, former fourterm U.S. Congressman, 2022 New York Gubernatorial candidate, and Chairman of the Leadership America Needs PAC, Lee Zeldin (R-Shirley), joined Riley Gaines and legislative leaders at the New York State Capitol in opposition to Proposition 1.
Proposition 1 is a constitutional amendment that will be voted on by New Yorkers via statewide ballot on November 5, 2024. Congressman Zeldin slammed Governor Kathy Hochul (D) and Albany Democrats last week for advancing this assault on women’s rights, parental rights, and much more.
“Proposition 1 is a full-fledged attack on women’s rights by Kathy Hochul and the Democrats, targeting girls and women on sports fields, in locker rooms, on single-sex high school and college campuses, in dormitories, in bathrooms and elsewhere. Its impacts could be far reaching – destroying parental oversight, trampling free speech rights, extending constitutional protections to illegal aliens, and much more,” said Congressman Lee Zeldin. “To protect your rights, stand up for parents, and save girls’ sports, every common sense New Yorker MUST vote NO on Proposition 1 on November 5.”
“This ballot initiative is the latest attempt by misguided lawmakers to enshrine the destruction of female athletics into the state constitution,”
said Riley Gaines. “Whether it be Joe Biden (D) changing the definition of Title IX, female athletes in West Virginia being banned from competition for standing up for themselves, or a male assaulting a girl in a bathroom at a high school in Western New York, there is a coordinated effort to destroy girls’ sports and attack women’s rights. I am proud to stand alongside countless New Yorkers who support common sense and want to Save Women’s Sports.”
Proposition 1 was struck from the ballot in a State Supreme Court ruling, but Democrats have appealed the decision to get it back on the November ballot. Zeldin issued another statement in response to the decision.
“In New York, there has been no greater threat in our lifetimes to women’s and girls’ rights than Kathy Hochul and the Democrats attempting to jam their
far-left, woke agenda into the State Constitution through Proposition 1. Today’s court decision is a huge win for parents, women, girls, female athletes, and common sense New Yorkers all across the state. Proposition 1 was being used as an attempt by New York Democrats to deceptively put abortion on the ballot, when in reality it was a full-fledged attack on women’s rights, free speech, girls’ sports, rule of law, and much more,” said Zeldin. “The good news is that a New York State Supreme Court Justice struck Proposition 1 from the ballot yesterday in a court ruling. The bad news is that Democrats are still hellbent on getting this radical initiative back on the ballot by appealing yesterday’s decision, so we must keep up the fight and continue spreading the word.”
Here are some of the consequences:
• Prohibit educational institutions from barring males from participating in female sports.
• Allow males to use female locker rooms, restrooms, and related facilities.
• Grant minors the right to medical treatments and procedures, including gender transition drugs and/or surgeries, without parental consent
• Ban schools from disclosing to parents when their child is considering or actually transitioning their gender.
• Extend constitutional protections to illegal aliens.
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May 9, 2024
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County Approves Algeria North Affordable Housing Project
By Matt Meduri
The conversation on affordable housing reached new heights at Tuesday’s general meeting, as the Legislature approved Resolution 1103 to authorize funding of infrastructure improvements and property oversight for a proposed affordable housing building.
The proposed dwelling, called Algeria North, would be located in the Town of Babylon and would offer a series of units for certain vulnerable populations. Algeria North is set to consist of eighty-one units, eighty of which will be affordable rentals units, with twentyone units set aside for special needs populations, nine units for those reentering the community from incarceration, and twelve for those with serious mental illness with referrals and supportive services provided by Concern for Independent Living.
The resolution was endorsed and vocally supported during the public portion of the meeting by New Hour Long Island Executive Director Serena Martin-Liguori and Sarah Lansdale, Commissioner of the Suffolk County Department of Economic Development and Planning.
“We would be vetting women for the nine units that would be allocated for women and mothers who have been incarcerated,” said Martin-Ligouri. “The women meet with us through the Sheriff’s contract that we have. We assist them and provide a social worker. They’re required to not have any violations of parole or probation. And in order to qualify for these nine units, they have to be employed and have a history of stability and employment. So this is not for women who are coming directly out of the jail the day they’re released. It might be a year later or two years later. These are apartments that we want to see for our women who are thriving as mothers and as parents in the community.”
Legislators objected to the plan to merge former inmates and mentally unstable individuals with battered women and special needs residents.
don’t think this model is going to work and I fear for the safety of the most vulnerable individuals in our society.”
“You have senior citizens and young people, who are struggling to get apartments, to pay for these things, but now we’re going to give it to people who have been arrested,” said Legislator Rob Trotta (R-Fort Salonga). “It makes no logical sense. And then, on top of that, they’re going to be in with people with developmental disabilities who are potentially easily victimized. I couldn’t think of a better recipe for disaster. There’s no way I would ever support this.”
“Somebody commits a crime and they go to jail, and I have to pay approximately $130,000 a year to house that individual because they decided to commit a crime,” said Legislator Trish Bergin (R-East Islip) (Pictured above). “And then when they get out of jail, two or three years later, we’re still subsidizing this individual?”
Bergin also expressed concerns that language could eventually be changed to allow formerly incarcerated men into the unit. She also expressed concern over violent offenders being eligible for the housing.
“Let’s say we have a single mother who is living in this unit because it’s affordable and she’s a working mom and she’s got a latch key kid who’s coming home to an unsupervised situation,” said Bergin. “So, now we have incarcerated individuals who are now being mixed in with women and children, some of these kids coming home from school, then we also have individuals with mental instabilities, all in one building. I’m not going to support this. I think it’s dangerous. I think it’s irresponsible. While I get that your goal is kind-hearted, I
“I think the intention of this bill is excellent, I have no issue with those who have done time and those with developmental disabilities being supported,” said Legislator Leslie Kennedy (R-Nesconset). “Getting additional housing is marvelous, but putting them together is a recipe for disaster. I just yesterday spoke with an agency that deals with those with developmental disabilities, and I tried to ask in my most non-opinionated way if this was a good idea, and they lost their minds. They said that these people are suggestible. They do not have good judgment 90% of the time. I think we should build them separately or divide the building, but this way I cannot support it.”
Majority Leader Nick Caracappa (C-Selden) (Pictured above) provided a different view on the project than those of his colleagues.
“I just want to say thank you for what you do for these women, these parents. Everybody makes mistakes,” said Caracappa. “You’re providing an opportunity, and it’s up to them [the recipients] to carry on. The amount of requirements and eligibilities that New Hour requires, and I’ll name just a few, proof of employment, no history of probation, parole violations, completion of a signed agreement, engagement letter, with New Hour agreeing to both communicate and maintain an active relationship with the agency staff during the duration of their stay in the housing, for the duration, and anyone with a sex offense is automatically precluded. Those are just some of the requirements out of a list of them. I think you’re doing fantastic work with most of these women who are either victims of domestic abuse or have some kind of substance abuse issues that have been on the path of recovery to finding stability for themselves and their children. If not for these opportunities, these individuals would probably be in County facilities or homeless or receiving some kind of County benefits. I support this 100%.”
Debate ended in a contentious vote, wherein Legislator Anthony Piccirillo (R-Holtsville) called for a point of order before the vote to adopt the resolution entered roll call. Piccirillo requested a vote to appeal, seconded by Trotta, which resulted in a 10-6 failure, with Legislator Steve Englebright (D-Setauket) joining the caucus to approve the appeal. Legislator Chad Lennon (R-Rocky Point) abstained and Legislator Tom Donnelly (D-Deer Park) was not present. The Legislature then voted to approve the resolution with thirteen votes.
Thursday, May 9, 2024 5 News Published by Messenger Papers, Inc.
CreditMatt Meduri
CreditMatt Meduri
State of the County: Good Shape with an Optimistic Path Forward
A typical response to “how are we doing?” is sometimes followed by “good shape for the shape we’re in.” It seems as though that was the mantra of administrations passed, and although elected officials might tell you that “we’re in good shape,” there’s always the question of just how good that shape is.
Some might be appalled to hear “good shape for the shape we’re in.” Others might not be too surprised.
But we’re elated to say that that’s not our outlook after County Executive Ed Romaine (R-Center Moriches) delivered his first State of the County address to the Suffolk County Legislature at Tuesday’s general meeting. For once, we can say “good shape for the shape we’re in” and actually deliver that platitude with confidence and optimism going forward.
During the past election cycle, it was no question that when Romaine put his hat in the ring for Suffolk’s top job that endorsements would flow from each end of the county. And they certainly did. It also wasn’t much of a question for our publication to issue him an endorsement of our own. Not only is Romaine a seasoned elected official, who knows the ins and outs of county government like the back of his hand, but he’s an elected official who has largely commanded respect from both sides of the aisle for his entire career.
With that, it’s no surprise that we can say we’re in good shape, in fact, much better shape than the one we were previously in. Look no further than the fiscal irresponsibility levied on us by former Executive Steve Bellone (D-West Babylon). Look no further than the ongoing investigations into possible conflicts of interest and document mishandlings not even a quarter after his administration ended. Look no further than the cast of characters he surrounded himself with.
The last of those coveted tenets of an aspiring politician - note: not an elected official - is one that made many sour on him towards the end of his term. Some didn’t have as many problems with Bellone as they did the people he surrounded himself with. Congressman Nick LaLota (R, NY-01) made mention of the importance of the friends one has at Romaine’s inauguration ceremony in January by invoking the words of his mother: “Show me who your friends are and I’ll show you who you are.”
Truer words could not have been spoken and truer realities could not have been realized under the previous administration.
But we’d beleaguer our readers if we harped on what’s in the past. Surely, Romaine spared
no expense in painting a picture of the changes in the last few months, but he also spent the lion’s share of his address speaking optimistically of the future and the plans he hopes to achieve during his tenure. With that, we’ll do the same.
Romaine offers a clear vision for the County and one that does not seem unattainable in any meaning of the word. Stressing economic stability, retaining Suffolk’s population, building creditworthiness - S&P already upped our credit rating once this quarter already with stable outlook - reinforcing public safety, recycling County buildings, investing in our assets, charting a path towards renewable energy, and overhauling County departments are just a few of the topics he touched on during his speech.
Perhaps the most unconscionable failures of government came fairly recently in the last two years: the cyberattack of 2022 and the Thomas Valva tragedy. Both were highly avoidable miscarriages of government action - or inaction - and resulted in national embarrassment, prolonged suspension of government services, and, in the case of Valva, a preventable tragedy if Social Services weren’t watching the backs of their eyelids.
To add a squeeze of lemon juice over the paper cut, the cyberattack and the Valva case also reeked of track covering, as former IT Commissioner Scott Mastellon pleaded the special committee of the Legislature to not reveal the vulnerabilities that were found within the County’s IT system a year before the attack. Additionally, Social Services seemed to make it impossible for the County’s top prosecutors, including the District Attorney himself, to access prior records in CPS cases.
Incompetence is one thing, but gatekeeping information, or at least stopping at practically nothing to prevent its publicization, is downright detestable. The cast of characters of the Suffolk County of yesteryear spent less time understanding government and more time navigating the halls of Hauppauge like the backs of the bureaucratic hands.
But from the ashes we rise, and from the tragedies and misfortunes of years passed, we learn from our mistakes. We place our full confidence in Ed Romaine for the next four years and we would be willing to bet our next round of legal notices that such actions - or inactions - do not occur under his tenure.
Elected officials owe their constituents transparency, respect, and responsibility. We think that Romaine’s path for the County, as well as his decades of respect in local government, will produce such a result.
Hochul’s Latest Gaffe: Benefit of the Doubt or Democrats’ True Colors?
Today’s political and social age is no longer defined by asking what we can do for our country or by taking on challenges not because they are easy, but because they are hard. Today, it’s about taking the path of least resistance, making a living for yourself and nothing more, and making sure you don’t make anyone jealous in the process.
Such juvenile thought can’t be good for a country, especially the former most-powerful nation in the world, objectively speaking. And unfortunately, it’s trickling from Washington all the way down to our local school board races.
But what happens when people stop subscribing to such nihilism and hopelessness? What happens when the masses stop ingesting the opium and realize that life isn’t meant to be easy, but that’s what makes it fulfilling?
We start demoralizing people by any means necessary and ensuring we have absolutely no faith in them, naturally.
Governor Kathy Hochul’s (D) latest Los Angeles gaffe is unfortunately too on brand for the Democratic Party as of late. Once a party that touted selflessness and tenacity now peddles the soft bigotry of lowered expectations, especially as it relates to the demographics they claim to have at the forefront of their political minds in the most bleeding-heart way possible.
Hochul was speaking at a forum of out-of-touch technocrats in Los Angeles discussing ways to revolutionize New York’s place on the technological stage, namely by becoming the first state to develop a supercomputer to attract federal research grants and top students from the country’s most prestigious institutions. We can’t fault her for trying to reach that goal, but it seems a little counterintuitive after she just tried to gut State aid for schools across Long Island in the budget.
At any rate, Hochul attempted to remind people that she does, in fact, govern a state of hard-working people and desperately tried to relate to them.
Except she ripped a page straight out of the quiet-part-out-loud section of the modern Democratic playbook, by stating that black kids in the Bronx don’t “even know what the word ‘computer’ means.
Now, the devil is always in the details, (or is it in bureaucratic government?), but unfortunately for Kathy, the context doesn’t really improve her case. She said that she wants the world “opened up to all of them, because when you have all their diverse voices innovating solutions through technology, then you’re really addressing society’s broader challenges.”
Not the worst context, but certainly not the best.
In the classic eating-their-own style of retributionary politics, Democrats quickly descended on Hochul for her comments. However, New York’s favorite race-baiter Al Sharpton quickly rushed to her aid, attempting to connect her comment to the idea that minority children are intentionally excluded from social media access based on race.
Somehow, we’re not surprised Sharpton’s comments are worse than hers.
New York City Mayor Eric Adams’ (D) response was tepid, but probably in the best way possible. He simply stated he’s not out to be the “word police” and that he “knows the Governor’s heart.”
Trust us, we don’t relish in having to be the word police, but the left started this game, and
if you can’t beat them, join them (although we’re fairly confident we can beat them too).
But Adam’s lukewarm response is probably more indicative of the fact that the latest Manhattan Institute poll shows that just 16% of New Yorkers would opt to re-elect him. If his approval ratings were higher, maybe he could afford to give Hochul a more overt benefit of the doubt like Quasi-Reverend Sharpton, or maybe he could double down like other Democrats have and it wouldn’t hurt as much.
At this point, speculation isn’t worth much, especially since Democrats as of late are no strangers to these types of gaffes, although this one is unquestionably one of the worst that Hochul has had so far.
Our fearless Commander-in-Chief made multiple similar gaffes on the 2020 campaign trail. Not only did Biden say that “black kids are just as bright and talented as white kids,” possibly implying implicit bias on his part, but he actually told black voters that if they couldn’t decide whether or not they were for him or for Trump, then “you ain’t black!”
But this isn’t just relegated to the last three unfortunate years we’ve had with Biden. On the 2008 campaign trail, he made the notorious “7-11 joke,” wherein he said you can’t go into a 7-11 or Dunkin’ Donuts “unless you have a slight Indian accent.” In 2007, Biden said that Obama was the first “clean” black candidate for office.
In a 2006 speech, Hillary Clinton called minority teens “super predators” who the government had to “bring to heel.”
We could go on, unfortunately, but it seems as though there is more control in fear and anger than there is in actual policy. It’s also the prime reason the left is selling a message of hopelessness and constant impending doom. Hopelessness leads to fear, which in turn, leads to control.
But let’s give Hochul and Adams the benefit of the doubt. A great start in improving the technology sector of New York would be to control the rampant crime problem that plagues New York City. Crime, regardless of one’s race, is an attractive alternative to the bootstrap argument when it’s the path of least resistance. If we’re not teaching the next generation to do what is hard “because it is hard,” then they’re not going to put up much of a fight. We’re failing them as soon as the bell rings.
Of course, allowing crime to run rampant out of fear hurting criminals’ feelings doesn’t help. But all this time we’re spending trying to put a band-aid on a dam could be spent getting cracking on that supercomputer.
We know the Governor is a nice lady, and we don’t think she’s as Gaffe-prone like Biden has appeared over the years, but her priorities certainly need a check and her words should probably be issued on Joe Biden’s teleprompter before they come out of her mouth.
While we could give her the benefit of the doubt, as everyone does make mistakes, her party’s latest adoption of identity politics and abandoning the country’s hustle culture doesn’t do her any favors.
One thing is for certain: if all of what’s gone on in New York happened in 2022, Lee Zeldin would be governor right now.
And we’d probably have that supercomputer.
6
Editorial
Thursday, May 9, 2024
Published by Messenger Papers, Inc.
Proof That Electronic Machines Can be Hacked
By Steve Levy
Our center has for years concentrated deeply on protecting the integrity of the electoral process. We’ve been raising concerns about the use of electronic voting machines. And now, a new report issued by highly regarded Michigan University professor Alex Halderman suggests these machines are more vulnerable than many pundits have thought.
Our concerns have had nothing to do with the 2020 election, or who won or felt cheated. We’ve been sounding the alarm well before that and will continue to raise the issue until proper safeguards are put in place.
As far back as 2006, Suffolk County government brought a lawsuit seeking to prevent the federal government from mandating the use of electronic machines. While the lawsuit was unsuccessful, it did raise questions regarding these new machines.
There was nothing wrong with the old lever-pulling machines, which were inexpensive, easy to use, and unhackable.
The so-called experts will consistently claim there is nothing to worry about, and that hacking is nearly impossible. But these are the same experts from huge companies such as Yahoo, JP Morgan Chase, and Microsoft, all of whom claimed they could never be hacked, but eventually were. And of course, the Suffolk County government was hacked in the last two years.
Even the U.S. military got hacked by China.
Some will say that the concerns about hacking electronic machines are overstated because the machines are not interconnected. You would have to hack each precinct one by one. However, that does not dismiss our concerns.
Elections are often won by a small number of votes. There doesn’t have to be widespread fraud. Tampering with just one election district can change the outcome of a campaign. It’s quite common for congressional candidates to win by under 100 votes. Former Minnesota senator Al Franken (D) won his statewide race by about 350 votes, which was less than the number of votes contested.
And let’s not forget that President George Bush (R-TX) won his election by a mere 500 votes in Florida. That’s right, if just 500 votes flipped in that state, the electoral college vote would have changed and placed Al Gore (D-TN) into the presidency.
That’s why it’s disturbing to see a new study by Professor Haldeman, who showed a judge in Georgia, in real time, how he was able to hack the voting machine that was used in Georgia and flip the vote to a different candidate.
All he needed was a Bic pen and a smart card. Now we’re not saying it’s easy to do this, or that it has been done to any extent in the past. But there is the potential for tampering in the future.
We think the old-fashioned lever-pulling machines were their surest way to get a quick Election Day result with little controversy.
Our center has also been concerned about the dramatic increase in the use of mail-in ballots. A 2005 bipartisan commission headed by former President Jimmy Carter (D-GA) warned that the greatest potential for fraud is through mail-in votes. That is why almost every Western democracy in Europe has banned this practice.
We have to make sure that these ballots are not sent out to people who don’t ask for them, and we should at least require that the signatures on these ballots match the signatures that are on file with the Boards of Election. We should also require some type of ID as Florida just mandated. Many of those safeguards were removed in 2020 due to the Covid pandemic and have not been reversed back to their former safer condition. And anyone questioning the safety of the electronic machines continues to get falsely accused of being a conspiracy nut wearing a tin hat.
You can bet that the Chinese, the Russians, and the Iranians at some point will be able to bribe an election official, or hack their way in and make changes to these electronic systems.
The algorithms used in these machines are only as good or honest as the individuals programming them. Remember, it doesn’t take a great deal of tampering to shift an American election and history itself.
Steve Levy (R-Bayport) is President of Common Sense Strategies, a political consulting firm. He served as a Suffolk County Legislator from 1985 to 2000, as a New York State Assemblyman from 2001 to 2003, and as Suffolk County Executive from 2004 to 2011. He is the host of “The Steve Levy Radio Show.” He is the author of “Solutions to America’s Problems” and “Bias inthe Media.” www.SteveLevy.info, Twitter @SteveLevyNY, steve@commonsensestrategies.com
May is Mental Health Awareness Month
By Assembly Minority Leader Will Barclay
Readily available and reliable mental health services are a critical part of building strong communities. Often overlooked, good mental hygiene provides a major boost to our quality of life, our neighborhoods and even our economy. For that reason, during Mental Health Awareness Month, I am advocating everyone take a little extra time to consider ways they can improve their overall well-being.
According to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, Mental Health Awareness Month was established 75 years ago to raise awareness about the importance of taking care of our minds and to celebrate those recovering from mental illness. Now, more than ever, we must continue to be mindful of our mental health as our state and our nation face unprecedented challenges. Ninety percent of the public think there is a mental health crisis in the U.S. today, with half of young adults and one-third of all adults reporting that they have felt anxious either always or often in the past year.
Mental health services remain a priority for the Assembly Minority Conference. We have already made tremendous gains in understanding and addressing the challenges facing two at-risk communities: students in our schools and veterans. This month, we will continue to raise awareness about the challenges facing our schools and our heroes returning home, and we will look to build on our successes.
This year’s 2024-25 State Budget had some key investments in mental health services that I am happy to report:
• Adult Services Program funding will see $26.4 million more than last year
• The Children and Youth Services Program budget is up $10.9 million compared to last year
• Community mental health residences will receive $116.2 million more than last year
• Community Non-Residential Programs will enjoy $25.1 million more than last year
• Children and family community mental health services will receive $12.4 million more than last year
• There will be $4 million in new funding for the recruitment and retention of psychiatrists and psychiatric nurse practitioners; and
• Suicide prevention for veterans and first responders, including disaster workers, will see $2 million in new funding.
The truth is, there is really no group or demographic that can disregard the importance of mental hygiene. Stress, anxiety, and countless other obstacles are a natural part of our daily lives. Ignoring them comes with inherent risks. The better job we do getting ahead of existing problems, the easier it is to deal with future ones. As we go through the month of May, I highly recommend we all take the utmost care of ourselves; this could mean speaking with your doctor about ways to manage stress, getting regular exercise, practicing gratitude or connecting with others. As we go forward this month, take a moment to consider what you can do to improve your mental health; you’ll thank yourself later!
If you have any questions or comments on this or any other state issue, or if you would like to be added to my mailing list or receive my newsletter, please contact my office. My office can be reached by mail at 19 Canalview Mall, Fulton, NY 13069 and by email at barclayw@nyassembly.gov. You may also find me, Assembly Minority Leader Will Barclay, on Facebook or Twitter at @WillABarclay.
Assemblyman Will Barclay (R-Pulaski) is the Assembly Minority Leader and has represented the 120th Assembly District since 2003. The 120th District contains most of Oswego County and parts of Jefferson and Onondaga counties.
Op-Ed 7 Thursday, May 9, 2024 Published by Messenger Papers, Inc.
Suffolk County Honors Fallen Officers in Poignant Memorial Service
By Cait Crudden
In a solemn ceremony brimming with reverence and respect, the Suffolk County Police Department (SCPD) paid tribute to its fallen heroes during the annual Memorial Service for Fallen Officers in the Line of Duty. Held at the SCPD Headquarters in Yaphank on Friday morning, the event drew law enforcement officials, families of the fallen, elected officials and community members to commemorate those who made the ultimate sacrifice in service to their community.
Suffolk County Executive Ed Romaine (R-Center Moriches) delivered remarks, expressing gratitude to the families of the fallen officers and acknowledging the profound impact of their loss on the department and the community. He stated that we will always honor and remember the twenty-nine sworn members of the Suffolk County Police Department who made the ultimate sacrifice in the line of duty. Additionally, Romaine conveyed the courageous sacrifice these officers have made, and it will not be forgotten.
The heart of the ceremony came with the reading of the names of the fallen officers. As the names were recited, the weight of their absence resonated throughout the gathered crowd, a powerful reminder of the dangers inherent in law enforcement and the profound debt owed to those who bravely confront them.
Among the attendees were family members of the fallen officers, whose names were enshrined on a memorial
monument for all to see. Emotions ran high as the memorial had an additional name added this past year of Officer Robert Kirwan. An emergency vehicle was also named in his honor. Kirwan passed away from 9/11 related illnesses on September 9, 2023.
In a touching tribute, ceremonial wreaths stood on either side of the SCPD Memorial Monument, adorned with the names of officers who made the ultimate sacrifice. The gesture symbolized the enduring gratitude and respect for those who have fallen, ensuring that their legacy lives on in the hearts and minds of all who serve.
Throughout the service, there was a palpable sense of camaraderie and solidarity among attendees, a testament to the tight-knit bonds that characterize the law enforcement community. As officers stood shoulder to shoulder, united in their commitment to honor the fallen, it was evident that their legacy would endure not only in memory but also in the continued dedication to upholding the values for which they gave their lives.
The memorial service concluded with a final salute and the playing of Taps, a haunting melody that echoed across the grounds, serving as a poignant farewell to those who had made the ultimate sacrifice. As attendees dispersed, there was a sense of solemn reflection, tempered by a profound appreciation for the courage and sacrifice of Suffolk County’s fallen heroes.
As the community reflects on the events of the day, one thing is clear: the memory of those who have fallen in the line of duty will forever be etched into the fabric of Suffolk County, serving as a beacon of inspiration for generations to come. In honoring their legacy, we honor the very best of what it means to serve and protect.
Thursday,
2024
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May 9,
8 County
1 in 4 ADULTS IN THE UNITED STATES HAVE SOME TYPE OF DISABILITY? DID YOU KNOW THAT Some disabilities impact the way people consume web content. But did you know that the ADA requires your business website to be complaint with standards that make your content available to everyone. Business owners have been sued for non-compliance, but there are quick ways to protect yourself. Give Us A Call To Find Out How. Also, ask about current government tax credit incentives. 631.682.6173 rocketjuiced.com CreditSenator Mario Mattera Facebook
This Week Today
National, State and Local Temperature Checks
By Matt Meduri National
The presidential nominating contest continued to Indiana on Tuesday, offering no surprises in what has been an over-and-done race since March.
Former President Donald Trump (R-FL) handily won the primary with 78.2% of the vote with 90% of precincts reporting as of press time. He carried all ninety-two counties and took all fifty-eight delegates available. Now-suspended former Governor and former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley (R-SC) took 21.8% of the statewide vote. Trump’s lowest margin of victory on the county level came in the form of Indianapolis’ Marion County, where earned 64.9% to Haley’s 35.1%.
President Joe Biden (D-DE) was uncontested for the Tuesday ballot, allowing to win by default and sweep up all seventy-nine of the Hoosier State’s delegates.
Indiana’s state ticket features significant turnover this year, with an open governor seat, an open Senate seat, and three open U.S. House Seats. Outgoing freshman Senator Mike Braun (R) won his party’s nomination for governor, while Congressman Jim Banks (R, IN-03) won the nod for Braun’s Senate seat.
Neither candidate should have trouble holding their respective seats, as Indiana last elected a Democratic governor in 2000 and last elected a Democratic Senator in 2012. Braun ousted two-term Senator Joe Donnelly (D) in the 2018 midterms.
Congresswoman Victoria Spartz (R, IN-05) initially planned to depart Congress after this year, but reversed course over the winter. She won a narrow primary to retain the suburban Indianapolis seat.
The only competitive seat from Indiana will likely be in the form of IN-01, a northwestern seat situated around Gary and the Chicago suburbs, held by Frank Mrvan (D) since 2021. Mrvan has name recognition from his father’s forty-year tenure in the Indiana Senate. On paper, Democrats should have a lock on this seat, but Trump came within ten points of carrying the seat in 2020, improving on his 2016 margin. Republicans had not run as close a race in this seat since 2004.
In other election news, Georgia Governor Brian Kemp (R) recently signed a package that includes changes to the battleground state’s election laws. The changes define “probable causes” that allow for some voters to be removed from the rolls after their eligibility is challenged.
The bill, S.B. 189, lists death, evidence of voting or registering in a different jurisdiction, a nonresidential address, or tax exemptions that show a primary residence elsewhere as forms of probable cause that could result in a voter being removed from the rolls. Proponents of the bill say it purges voter rolls of inactive or ineligible voters, while opponents say it disproportionately affects minority voters.
Fair Fight Action, a voting rights group founded by twotime gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams (D), says that the bill is a “voter suppression bill that emboldens right-wing activists in their efforts to kick black and brown voters off the rolls.” The statement also said that by signing the bill, Governor Kemp “delivered a gift to MAGA election deniers.”
Abrams repeatedly denied her narrow loss to Kemp in 2018, claiming voter suppression and refused to concede. S.B. 189 also grant’s access to Georgia’s ballot to any political party that qualifies for the presidential ballot in twenty states, a move that could possibly bolster Independent Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., in his long-shot third-party bid for the White House. Analysts believe that a Kennedy presence on the ticket could spoil the election for Biden, especially in a battleground like Georgia, and aid Trump’s return to Washington.
In terms of the Kennedy campaign, the ticket has obtained ballot access in California, Delaware, Hawaii, Idaho, Iowa, Michigan, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, North Carolina, and Utah, collectively representing 123 electoral votes, less than halfway to the 270 required to win the election. Kennedy needs 45,000 signatures by the end of the month to qualify in New York.
Additionally, Kennedy sponsored a fifty-state poll of more than 26,000 voters with a margin of error of just 0.6%. While Kennedy concedes that a Trump-Biden ticket would result in a Trump presidency of about 297 electoral votes, the poll finds that if either of the mainstream candidates were to drop out and face Kennedy alone, the race would be much different. Kennedy touts the poll results as a means of dismissing claims that he is a spoiler candidate, and that, based on Zogby Strategies’ findings, that Biden is, in fact, the spoiler.
In a Kennedy-Biden scenario (top graphic), Kennedy wins in a landslide, carrying thirty-nine states and 340 electoral votes to Biden’s 158. Biden would carry Democratic strongholds such as Vermont, California, and his home state
Biden - Kennedy Electoral Votes
of Delaware by thin margins, while Kennedy would win every solid red state and most battlegrounds. Statistical ties were found in New York and Washington. Polls for the District of Columbia were not available on FiveThirtyEight, although it is assumed Biden would handily win the District.
In a Trump-Kennedy scenario (above graphic), the result is much different, with polls presented finding a deadlock between the two candidates. Kennedy would easily win most blue states, Trump would retain most red states, although with difficulty, while the two would effectively split the battlegrounds down the middle. In terms of raw numbers, Trump would carry twenty-seven states and 269 electoral votes. If Kennedy were given D.C., he would also clock in at 269 electoral votes, the scenario of an Electoral College tie that has never happened in American history. The election would then be decided by the House of Representatives.
The maps above are shaded according to the candidates’ margins of victory in each state, with lighter colors representing thinner margins, and darker colors indicating more decisive victories. Kennedy’s best numbers from either map come from Wyoming, where he polled forty-seven points above Biden. Trump’s best numbers came from West Virginia, where he outpolled Kennedy by twenty-eight points. Biden’s best numbers came from Maryland, where he beats Kennedy by nineteen points.
State
Governor Kathy Hochul (D) made an extreme gaffe at a Milken Institute Conference in Los Angeles on Monday. The Milken Institute is a “nonprofit, nonpartisan think tank focused on accelerating measurable progress on the path to a meaningful life,” as per their website. Hochul was in California to discuss technology advancements in New York, with hopes of becoming a new “Silicon Valley” via a supercomputer.
Her gaffe came in the form of trying to express the dichotomy between certain areas of the state and their technological prowess. Her quote came in the form of: “Right now, we have young black kids growing up in the Bronx who don’t even know what the word ‘computer’ is.”
Within context, Hochul discussed building a supercomputer
to attract more federal grant money and making New York more accessible to researchers and college students. She said that no state has done this, followed by her gaffe, and concluded by saying that she wants “the world opened up to all of them [black kids] because when you have their diverse voices innovating solutions through technology, then you’re really addressing society’s broader challenges.”
Hochul received swift condemnation for her remarks, to which she replied that she “misspoke.”
“Of course Black children in the Bronx know what computers are — the problem is that they too often lack access to the technology needed to get on track to high-paying jobs in emerging industries like [artificial intelligence],” she said in response.
Assemblywoman Karines Reyes (D-Parkchester) said that she was “deeply disturbed” by the Governor’s remarks and that “our children are bright, brilliant, extremely capable, and more than deserving of any opportunities that are extended to other kids.”
Assemblywoman Amanda Septimo (D-South Bronx) called the remarks “genuinely appalling.”
New York City Mayor Eric Adams (D) defended Hochul, saying that he is not the “word police” and that he “knows the Governor’s heart.
Local
Suffolk County Legislator Steve Englebright (D-Setauket) proposed a bill to ban restaurants and third-party food delivery services from including single-use plastic utensils and condiment packages unless specifically requested by a customer. The bill, Resolution 1371, was open to public hearing at Tuesday’s general meeting. Stakeholders voiced their support for the bill while also discussing the dangers of microplastics in the environment.
Englebright motioned to recess the bill for “two weeks” to make amendments.
“ I don’t want this to become an open-ended situation, but I would like an opportunity to speak to my colleagues, most particularly on the [Health] Committee,” said Englebright.
The bill was recessed with eleven votes to seven.
9 Thursday, May 9, 2024 Published by Messenger Papers, Inc.
Trump - Kennedy Electoral Votes
Wetlands and Invasive Species
The Coastal South Shore of Long Island is known for its scenic views, recreational opportunities and was once known for its maritime forests composed of native Bayberry shrubs, Cedar, Maple, Willow, and Oak trees. What happened to the native trees and shrubs that were once abundant along the South Shore of Long Island? Our native plants are suffering increased competition with non-native species; one particularly detrimental strain of invasive plant is called Phragmites. The invasion of non-native plants creates unhealthy wetlands. Unhealthy wetlands are the root cause of so many of our flooding headaches.
It is believed a non-native strain of Phragmite (a genus of four species of perennial reed grass found in wetlands) called Phragmites australis, perhaps the most common among pesky invaders, arrived here accidentally from a ship ballast in the late 18th or early 19th century, and subsequently, along with other invasive species, disrupted the various Coastal Biomes that make up our South Shore. Phragmites australis, also known as the common reed, can outpace the growth of native wetland trees, with disastrous results for the native plants, but also the native wildlife, animals, and fish.
The common reeds rapid root growth can overwhelm native budding tree-roots, which in turn undermines shoreline stabilization, increases erosion, and weakens the resilience of the coastal banks against storm surge. Other invasive species such as barberry and honeysuckle, also common destructive plants in the Coastal Biome, create ideal habitats for ticks to thrive, and invariably increase the risk of spread of Lyme disease (deer ticks are common hosts of Lyme).
There is an easy fix, let’s create healthier wetlands that will benefit Long Island for centuries to come. There are fantastic, dedicated organizations that can guide
advocacy and teach you what native plants you can plant, where to plant, and how to remove troublesome invasive plants. The Long Island Conservancy (https:// longislandconservancy.org/ / 212-380-8418), Save the Great South Bay (https:// savethegreatsouthbay.org/ / 646-827-0733) and the Cornell Cooperative Extension (631-466-4301) have been working with residents and have had success in removing invasive species and replanting environmentally favorable native species. We can restore our wetlands to beautiful Maritime Forests they once were, we just need a little help. Reach out to any of the above three organizations, go see their website online, and find out how you can make a difference and thank you for caring.
Senator Alexis Weik (R-Sayville) has represented the Eighth District in the New York State Senate since 2023, previously representing the Third District from 2020 to 2022.
The Eighth District includes Bar Harbor, Bayport, Biltmore Shores, Bohemia, Captree, East Islip, East Massapequa, Fair Harbor, Gilgo, Great River, Harbor Green, Islip Terrace, Lonelyville, Massapequa Park, North Great River, Oak Beach, Oakdale, Ronkonkoma, Saltaire, Sayville, West Gilgo Beach, West Sayville, and parts of Amityville, Babylon village, Bay Shore, Brightwaters, Copiague, Holbrook, Holtsville, Islandia, Islip hamlet, Lindenhurst, Massapequa, Plainedge, Seaford, South Farmingdale, West Bay Shore, and West Islip.
Senator Weik is the Ranking Member of the Committees on Civil Service and Pensions and Women’s Issues and serves on the Committees on Education, Local Government, Social Services, and Veterans, Homeland Security and Military Affairs.
The Eighth District office is located at 1 Corporate Drive, Suite GL-005, in Bohemia and can be reached at 631-665-2311.
Islip Girl Scout Troop Earns Bronze Award, Celebrating Influential Women
By Cait Crudden
In a heartening display of community spirit and empowerment, the Girl Scouts of Islip Junior Troop 230, recently met with Islip Town Supervisor Angie Carpenter (R-West Islip) as part of a book they are writing for their prestigious Bronze Award. Their project, featuring women who serve in roles traditionally held by men, will showcase the remarkable achievements of local women but also serve as a beacon of inspiration for the younger generation.
The Bronze Award is the highest award available to junior scouts who have completed their Junior Journey. To receive the award Troop members must demonstrate their leadership skills by working together to plan, implement, and execute their chosen project which aims to address a community matter.
One of the troop’s standout initiatives was to highlight prominent female figures in Islip, ranging the Town Supervisor to a Supreme Court Justice and show their leadership roles within the community. Through these interviews, the girls gained valuable insights into the challenges and triumphs faced by women in various fields, fostering a deeper understanding of gender equality and empowerment.
The troop, comprised of dedicated young girls that are in fourth and fifth grade at Hauppauge’s Bretton Woods Elementary School, embarked on this mission to shine a spotlight on these influential women within their own community. Under the guidance of troop leaders and mentors, the girls undertook extensive research, conducted interviews, and decided to include Supervisor Angie Carpenter in their book documenting her milestone achievement of becoming the first woman supervisor in Islip Town history.
In response to this honor by the Troop, Supervisor Carpenter stated “It’s a privilege to have been considered for the book Troop 230 is preparing for their Bronze Award project. Their decision to dedicate the project to highlighting women’s achievements in our community is truly inspiring.”
Among the influential women highlighted by the troop in addition to Supervisor Carpenter is Supreme Court Justice Alison J. Napolitano, a dedicated judge and steward of the law. Both stories resonated deeply with the girls, inspiring them to pursue their dreams and make a positive impact in their community.
The culmination of the troop’s efforts will be the book, which will be displayed at all three of Hauppauge’s elementary school libraries. Reflecting on their journey, the girls should feel immense pride in their accomplishments. Projects like this emphasize the importance of empowering young girls to become future leaders.
The impact of Troop 230’s Bronze Award project extends far beyond the borders of Islip, serving as a shining example of youth-led initiatives that celebrate diversity, inclusion, and empowerment. As these young Girl Scouts continue their journey of leadership and service, they carry with them the invaluable lessons learned from the influential women who have shaped their community and inspired future generations.
Thursday, May 9, 2024 Published by Messenger Papers, Inc. 10 News
CreditTown of Islip
Romaine Gives 2024 State of the County Address
Romaine hailed the Legislators as men and women of “goodwill, intellect, and commitment” who will “lead this County forward.”
Finances and Infrastructure
Romaine said that “all issues of government are issues of money.” He announced that Suffolk County’s bond ratings were upgraded by S&P Global Ratings this quarter, rising from a AA- rating to an A+ rating with a stable outlook. He stated he hopes to improve the County’s bond rating to AAA, the highest rating, by the end of his tenure.
Romaine also made the County’s infrastructure a priority of his address, stating that when “you don’t invest in your assets, they decline.”
“The Dennison Building is over fifty years old,” said Romaine. “Our buildings haven’t been maintained. They [previous administrations] have not invested in these buildings, and these are our assets.”
Romaine discussed the County facilities and that he was “shocked” to see the levels of maintenance and investment, citing the Dennison Building, the Police Headquarters, the Medical Examiner’s Office, and the Fingerprint Lab in the police department specifically. Regarding the Medical Examiner’s Office, he said that there are “certification issues” because of the “lack of investment” in that office.
“This is going to be a key priority. I am going to look at every single County building in the next four years to see what we can improve,” said Romaine. He also said that while rebuilding the current Police Headquarters is an option, building an entirely new one is also on the table.
Romaine said is also looking at staffing levels, as the same principle applies.
“When you don’t invest in your staffing, you don’t get things done,” said Romaine, referencing one of his campaign pledges to have an “honest budget.”
“I’m not going to put jobs in the budget and tax people for them and then not fill those jobs,” said Romaine. “We’re going staff properly. We will fund the core of government, and we will make sure it has the adequate resources to go forward.”
Romaine also said he is working on centralizing the Grants Office to bring as much federal and State aid to Suffolk as possible.
“One thing I have noticed over the long history of Suffolk County is we’ve been shortchanged. We give so much more to Albany and Washington than we get back, and I’m comparing ourselves not to the money that we want to get back, but to what other counties get,” said Romaine. “The consumer price index stands at 9.1% and inflation has still been growing faster than the Federal Reserve would like, and that has an impact for all of us. New York State has a 2% tax cap, and inflation is running a lot higher than 2%. But nevertheless, I will submit a budget this September for next year that will not exceed the 2% property tax cap. We cannot afford to do that.”
Romaine also mentioned the lawsuits brought on by previous administrations, two of which saw hundreds of millions of dollars diverted from sewer funds that the County will have to settle or litigate. He also discussed a salaries study commissioned by the Legislature last year in the form of $750,000. He and the Legislature will negotiate union contracts this year, but he said that “we have to deal from a position of fairness and that we can recruit and retain the best and the brightest in County government.”
Regarding finances in County health care, Romaine said that an agreement has just been approved with the Suffolk Coalition of Public Employees that reduces copays from $25 to $20 and employs a new third-party administrator, Aetna, which has a broader and wider network for County employees. As it relates to the taxpayers, it will save “about $100 million over the next five years.”
Romaine recently submitted his capital budget of $489 million to the Legislature which will “prioritize public health, public safety, quality of life, and the things that make this County a special place to live.” The budget includes $1.6 million for improvements to roads, bridges, and transit and $35 million for the Board of Elections to ensure state-of-the-art election machines that deliver results quickly.
He also endorsed the plans for overpasses to be built at State Route 347 and Nicolls Road in Stony Brook and at Sunrise Highway and CR-39 in Tuckahoe.
Public Safety
Romaine said that he has hired more detectives and the County has more officers on the streets. Last week, a graduating police class saw 136 additions to the Suffolk County police course. Romaine said there is a second class in August and the County is considering a third class in December. He also said the County is purchasing new police vehicles, equipment, and is addressing mental health issues within the department.
“In the month of January, we had two police officers, a probation officer, and a deputy sheriff take their lives,” said Romaine. “There is no stigma to accepting help and getting help, and we think that that’s important for all county employees and for everyone.”
Combining aspects of public safety and infrastructure, Romaine is targeting the John J. Foley Building in Yaphank as a site for a new Raise-the-Age facility. The Foley Building was originally a nursing home but is now a prime location for the County’s facility for juvenile detention. Romaine said that the State will fund the facility by about 75%, but that their estimate for construction was $110 million. Romaine says
that by converting the Foley Building into a juvenile detention facility would save the taxpayers “approximately $50 million.”
Information Technology
Romaine also addressed the County’s path forward with IT and cybersecurity, touting the new IT Director, John McCaffrey, and discussed the County’s path forward after the crippling cyberattacks in September 2022.
“The prior [Bellone] administration had emergency proclamations September 2022 through December of 2023, that suspended civil service and bidding requirements,” said Romaine. “In that time period, they spent $27 million, of which our County Comptroller [John Kennedy (R-Nesconset)] said $13.8 million was questionable spending. I contacted the Association of Counties of the State and they recommended a forensic audit. We’re doing a forensic audit of that spending and we’ll see if we can pour some of that money back to the taxpayers.”
Romaine also said that the County should not need an emergency declaration, since the IT affairs are being handled “governmentally,” and that County should be able to purchase cybersecurity insurance by the end of the year. He also said that the County’s data center should be moved to the cloud and that periodic penetration tests should be conducted, as was done under his tenure as Brookhaven Town Supervisor.
Romaine also mentioned missing electronic files from the previous administration, which District Attorney Ray Tierney (R) is currently investigating.
Energy
Romaine has been a strong advocate for solar energy and recently introduced his “Solar Up Suffolk” initiative to utilize open space, without clearing trees, and rooftops to house solar panels in a deal that he says can actually turn a profit for the County. Romaine says a big obstacle to this initiative is the lack of substation provided by LIPA and PSE&G.
“We need LIPA to get on the ball and build those substations so we can use alternative energy and always have power at an inexpensive cost,” said Romaine.
Social Services
Romaine said that a recent report shows that Suffolk County is the “worst in the state in processing SNAP applications,” and that call wait times would take an hour and a half to reach the department. He said a way to combat the poor SNAP application processing ratings is to increase staffing, and that the Social Services department is already seeing call response times of “five or six minutes, if not sooner.”
Romaine also discussed Thomas Valva, the landmark case of a child who died at the hands of his parents due to lack of oversight from Social Services.
“I’m happy to say we have leadership at Social Services,” said Romaine. “The previous leadership resigned after the grand jury report came out.”
The grand jury report on the Thomas Valva case, spearheaded by D.A. Tierney, found “systemic failures” of the Child Protective Services system and recommended “local and state-wide common-sense changes to ensure that incompetence and apathy are not protected.” Valva’s death was substantiated by numerous, unattended complaints to CPS, furthered by the fact that high-ranking prosecutors, even the D.A. himself, could not obtain prior reports that were deemed “unfounded” by the department.
Romaine said furthering the efficiency of the department is through investing in staffing, preventing heavy caseloads on social workers, and providing extra training. He also said the County has talked with schools in the SUNY systems to recruit social work graduates.
Open Space Preservation
Romaine said that while development should take place, it should only be in the areas that make it “perfect.” Romaine renewed his calls for electrification of the LIRR, which currently end at Babylon and Ronkonkoma. He said that NYC congestion pricing revenue is not coming to Suffolk County and suggested electric lines from Ronkonkoma to Riverhead and Huntington to Port Jefferson.
On the topic of bus transportation, Romaine said that Suffolk only receives $40 million in State for such transit, compared to larger numbers for other, geographically smaller counties. He also said that buses and trains need to be tied together to work in tandem.
Romaine also called for redesigned sewers and treatment plants, sewers that handle road runoff, and replacing aged out sewer treatment plants, via a “regional approach” to sewer treatment.
Moving Forward
“I’ve been taught that the squeaking wheel gets the oil, and we have to start squeaking a lot more,” said Romaine. “I know with these eighteen powerhouses behind me, we can’t lose.”
News 11 Thursday, May 9, 2024 Published by Messenger Papers, Inc.
Continued from front cover
Hauppauge Gives Back with Eagles Food Pantry
In the fall of 2022, a group of Hauppauge High School students discussed the issue of food insecurity and recognized the need for food drives, and possibly a food pantry, in their building. Fast-forward to April 2023, under the Hauppauge for Humanity club’s umbrella, the Eagles Food Pantry was born.
The pantry was founded by students Colin Buscarino and Nick Sumwalt as well as current Hauppauge Middle School Assistant Principal Kristy Pagliari while she was still an assistant principal at the high school.
In January of 2023, Ms. Pagliari took a group of teachers to visit food pantries in three other Long Island schools. From there, the team worked together to generate ideas. Later that winter, Ms. Pagliari put together all
the necessary paperwork and submitted it to the Board of Education to become a charter. Fast forward to early spring 2023, a food drive was held to collect palettes worth of inventory. Hauppauge High School students, under the leadership of Colin Buscarino and Nick Sumwalt and overseen by Kristy Pagliari, organized and stocked the pantry. The pantry officially opened its doors in April of 2023.
“During free periods, we’ll all come down and do the inventory and pack orders,” said officer Avery Marchese. “It feels very rewarding being able to do this and help other families you know are in need.”
By the fall, the community was made more aware of the service and the pantry
became a districtwide initiative.
At the same time, French teacher Simone Pavlides took over as the high school adviser, while Kristy Pagliari began coordinating pantry needs between the district’s five schools. School social worker Shannon Griffin became the family coordinator. Everyone, including Colin and Nick, met to formalize a plan for pantry requests.
Now, the district’s social workers identify families who could potentially benefit from the program and assist them in filling out a request. Requests are kept anonymous, only known by each school’s social worker, and the club is run by high school seniors who receive community service hours for their participation. Presently, the pantry
Top Two Academic
Leaders
of the West Islip Class of 2024
West Islip High School has named the top two academic leaders for the Class of 2024 – Jake Guttman and Emerson Ammirata.
Guttman is a member of all seven academic honor societies at West Islip High School and serves on the leadership board for five of them. He uses his skills in graphic design to support a local charity that he has been working with for many years, in addition to his many other philanthropic endeavors. Guttman will be attending High Point University, where he plans to study advertising, public relations and strategic communication with a double major in psychology.
In addition to her academic pursuits, Ammirata is an active member of the varsity cheerleading team and was previously part of the varsity gymnastics team. As a member of the West Islip Vocal Motion performance group, she sings and dances in musical productions both during and after school. Outside of school, she has long been involved in local gymnastics and dance programs. Ammirata is well-rounded and highly motivated, demonstrating a commitment to both her academic and extracurricular endeavors. Her academic preparedness, leadership skills and determination have made her successful. She has not yet decided on college but plans to study pre-law.
is still run by Colin and Nick, the president and vice president, respectively, as well as officers Brianna Burton, Sofia Kalaitzis and Avery Marchese. These students stock the shelves of the pantry with food and hygienic products, package orders, and run monthly food drives, typically with specific items in mind.
“The goal for this year was to transform the pantry from a few shelves to an actual, functioning and organized pantry,” said Colin. In March, the students moved the pantry from a smaller second floor space to a spacious first floor room. “For the first two weeks when we moved everything down here, every single person was in here for three periods a day to make sure everything was accounted for and done right,” said Vice President Nick Sumwalt.
“All of us coming together and coming to work on the pantry whenever we’re free just goes to show everyone cares and how even districtwide, people are so giving and compassionate towards our cause,” said officer Brianna Burton. “It’s very heartwarming and rewarding.”
“I’ve put my heart and soul into this project,” added President Colin Buscarino. “I’ve loved every second of it. It’s become so much more than I ever thought it could be.”
Connetquot Students Qualify for State-Level SkillsUSA Competitions
This month, several Connetquot High School students participated in regional SkillsUSA competitions in a variety of vocational skill categories, earning scores that qualified them to compete at the state-level in Syracuse. SkillsUSA students hone hands-on skills against current industry standards in more than 130 occupational areas, from 3-D animation to welding and many areas in between. At the same time, they develop transformative career-readiness skills, including teamwork, communication, professionalism, leadership and more to fuel their success.
Congratulations to the following students who qualified in the following SkillsUSA competition events: Ava Cregg (Action Skills Teaching Competition), Hannah Elramly (Crime Scene Investigation), Alexa Hernandez (Senior Cosmetology), Molly Murphy (Marine Technology), and Emma Thom (Health Knowledge Bowl).
12 School Highlights Thursday,
Published by Messenger Papers, Inc.
May 9, 2024
East Islip High School’s mock trial team recently placed an impressive third at the 50th annual Long Island Law Day tournament at Northport High School. Sponsored by Project PATCH, the New York State Bar Foundation and Touro Law School, the competition challenges teams through six rounds of fast-paced civil law trials. In each round, students are given a new fact pattern and 15 minutes to prepare an entire legal case. The format tests students’ knowledge of the law and their ability to think on their feet and speak extemporaneously. East Islip made it to the semifinals and finished third overall.
East Islip students who competed at Law Day were Cora Capellino, Michael Collina, Delaney Demasi, Julia Fink, Erin McLoughlin, Ava Micheli, Hanna Ross, Catherine Sause, Niko Stavropoulos, and Olivia Stepanenko. Presiding over the semifinals round, U.S. Circuit Judge Joseph Bianco praised the students’ legal reasoning, objections, and courtroom etiquette, saying that they were as capable as any young attorneys he has seen in his courtroom.
“This tournament marked the end of another high-achieving season for East Islip mock trial,” said team adviser Patsy Lester.
Sachem North Students Take Trip of a Lifetime to Iceland
On April 20, fifty-five Sachem High School North students started a journey of a lifetime to Iceland. Their Icelandic adventure began in Reykjavik and was filled with incredible activities.
Students buckled up their crampons and hiked the Sólheimajökull Glacier. They beheld the beauty and power of several waterfalls, including the Seljalandsfoss, Skógarfoss and Gullfoss Falls. Additionally, the group witnessed the activity in the Krísuvík geothermal field, strolled the black sand beaches of Vic, and had an incredible swim at Sky Lagoon. The trip was truly a life-changing experience for all.
East Islip Mock Trial Team Takes Third at Law Day Tournament
Bayport-Blue Point HS Students Learn the Dangers of Impaired Driving
“We’re so grateful for the enthusiastic support of our administration, the board of education and the community, without which we would be unable to enjoy such success.”
“Congratulations to the mock trial students on their success,” Assistant Superintendent for Human Resources and Administration Dr. Aileen O’Rourke said. “They should all be proud of their incredible efforts.”
Bayport-Blue Point High School’s health classes participated in the Suffolk County Sheriff Department’s “STOPPED” program, an interactive anti-drunken driving program, allowing students to simulate walking and driving while intoxicated.
Program coordinator and Sheriff Philip Doukas visited the high school, setting up a driver’s course with “drunk buggies” and traffic cones to mimic obstacles, teaching students about the risks of driving impaired. Students wore special goggles to alter their vision. They also took part in a sobriety test while wearing the goggles.
To round out the presentation, students learned the rules of driving with a junior license and the consequences of driving under the influence.
School Highlights 13 Thursday, May 9, 2024 Published by Messenger Papers, Inc.
The Necessary Standard for American Education
Unpacking the Electoral College
By Matt Meduri
The United States’ electoral system is a reflection of its brand of federalism and a distinct balance of power. Not without its controversies, the Electoral College stands as one of the most unique forms of election systems in the world.
Composition - 538
The Electoral College is a direct reflection of the United States’ particular brand of federalism, the dichotomy and division of powers between the federal and state governments. As pursuant to compromises between the Founding Fathers, the federal government of the country is composed of a bicameral (two house) legislature: the House and Senate. The House represents states proportionally while the Senate represents them equally.
The House is composed of 435 Congressional Districts across all fifty states, with the highest number being allocated to California (52), and the smallest number (1) being allocated to the states with the lowest populations. Right now, six states have just one Congressional District, otherwise known as an at-large district. Districts are redrawn every ten years pursuant to the results of the Census. Some states might gain or lose Congressional Districts, and thereby, electoral votes each decade. New York, California, and West Virginia were some of the losers after 2020, while Oregon, Colorado, and North Carolina each gained one vote. Texas gained two.
With 435 districts, the House ensures states are represented proportionally.
The distinction in the Senate was set forth by Roger Sherman’s Connecticut Compromise, which ensured equal representation in the upper chamber across all fifty states. Each state receives two Senators, each elected to staggered six-year terms. Special elections can result in off-year Senate elections, or even “doublebarrel” Senate races, when both seats from one state are on the ballot simultaneously. This will occur in Nebraska in the 2024 elections. Every double-barrel Senate election since 1966 has produced victories for one party in both seats. 1966 saw a split outcome in South Carolina.
With 435 Representatives and 100 Senators, plus three non-voting members from the District of Columbia, the Electoral College is then composed of 538 electoral votes. A state’s electoral vote number can easily be calculated by taking the number of Congressional Districts and adding two to that number. New York has twenty-six Congressional Districts. With two Senators, New York has twenty-eight Electoral College votes. Each state’s proportional power is wielded in the presidential elections, while equal power gives the smaller states footing in their respective corners. The College reached its full power of 538 electors in 1964, when Washington, D.C., received three electoral votes.
Winning an Election - A Game of Counties
In order to win a presidential election, a candidate must receive at least 270 electoral votes, which is half of all available Electoral College votes plus one. States have long been classified as “red states” or “blue states,” indicating their regular preferences for the Republican and Democratic parties, respectively. The famed “Blue Wall” states were formed in 1992, when Bill Clinton (DAR) won a slew of states that typically voted with the GOP for the latter half of the 1900s. Many “Blue Wall” states are still reliably in the Democratic column today, although three of those states tumbled in 2016 with Donald Trump’s (R-NY) wins in Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.
Red states consist of those in the South, known as the Bible Belt, the industrial and agricultural Midwest, and the more intrinsically libertarian Mountain West. However, writing off states as merely “red” or “blue” undersells the true elasticity of presidential politics and just how flexible the College can be in a path to victory.
Much of this is owed to the states’ individual histories, explored in our column America the Beautiful: How History Shapes Our Electorate, which can be read on our website.
In short, New York Republicans are not like Iowa Republicans, and Idaho Democrats are not like Rhode Island Democrats. Thus, elections can come down to a game of counties, wherein candidates seek their expected base in certain enclaves of states to turn an impenetrable wall into an upset victory or even usher in a new political era. Such examples show trends and results in recent years that may surprise the political layman. For example, in 2016, Delaware backed Hillary Clinton (D-NY) by just 11.5%, a sharp downturn from its 18.5% and 25.0% margins for Barack Obama (D-IL) in 2012 and 2008, respectively.
When a candidate reaches 270 votes, or more, they are declared the winner of the election and the transition period between administrations begins. The Electoral College votes are certified by the states in December and by Congress in January, formalizing the presidential victory.
However, some anomalies can occur. Faithless electors occur when electors from the states chose not to back the candidate selected by the voters of the state. Many states have laws against faithless electors, which impose penalties for breaking from the state’s popular vote, or by replacing the elector with one who will honor the result. The 2016 election produced seven faithless electors, two from Texas who defected from Trump, and three from Washington and one from Hawaii who defected from Clinton.
Faithless electors argue their right to break from the state’s post electoral result under Alexander Hamilton’s original purpose for the Electoral College, which was more of an emergency feature in the event the people elected someone deemed “unfit” to be president. The College has never served in this capacity.
Split Electoral Votes
Two states split their electoral votes: Maine and Nebraska. The other forty-eight states, plus D.C., award their votes in a winner-take-all system. Maine and Nebraska award votes based on winners in the state’s Congressional Districts. Both states award two votes each based on the winner of the statewide popular vote. Maine then awards two votes based on the popular vote-winners in its two Congressional Districts, one for each, and Nebraska acts identically, only it has three Congressional Districts, and thus, three electoral votes to award.
Nebraska began its Congressional District method in 1992, and Maine began its method in 1972. Since then, only three elections have produced split outcomes: 2008, Obama won Nebraska’s Second District; 2016, Trump won Maine’s Second District; and 2020, Biden won NE-02 and Trump won ME-02. 2020 is the only election to date in which both states have split their votes simultaneously.
Nebraska is solidly Republican at every level, while NE-02 contains Omaha, a more moderately-conservative city with liberal tendencies. Maine is a blue-leaning state that is becoming more competitive, but ME-02 contains the more classically-Republican rural northern part of the state, home to a vibrant logging industry.
Although small prizes, just one electoral vote can make a massive difference in a tight election.
What Happens in a Tie?
If neither candidate receives 270, either by a 269-269 tie or if a third-party candidate takes electoral votes (which has not happened since 1968), the election is then thrown to the House of Representatives. This has not happened since 1824, when John Quincy Adams was elected over Andrew Jackson. A House-decided election has only occurred one other time: 1800.
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.
Bellwethers and Voting Streaks
Bellwethers account for an outsized portion of presidential campaigning. In American politics, a bellwether is a state that is often seen as a barometer for political moods across the country, and pre-election polling or early returns can often be used as a gauge for what might happen elsewhere. Famous bellwethers included Missouri and Ohio, who backed winners throughout the Twentieth Century, with only a couple exceptions, until the GOP formed a solid base in both states recently. Biden is the first president to win the election without carrying Ohio since John F. Kennedy (D-MA) in 1960. From 1904 to 2004, Missouri backed every general election winner, except in 1956. In 2008, it was the closest state that year, backing John McCain (R-AZ) over Obama. Republican margins have grown exponentially since then.
Emerging bellwethers appear to be Nevada, New Mexico, and Florida.
Winning streaks for both parties are also important, as it helps ascertain a base of support going into each election. Since 1964, Democrats have won D.C. in every election in which it has participated. Since 1968, the GOP has won Alaska, Idaho, Kansas, Nebraska (at-large), North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Utah, and Wyoming. Democrats have their longest winning state streak in Minnesota, backing every Democrat since 1976. New York has backed every Democrat since 1988.
The deviation of states backing other parties has dwindled significantly since 2000, but 2016 and 2020 saw generational victories in several states that have expanded the map.
Controversies
Many criticize the College for being “outdated” and reflective more of land than of population, citing that the winner of the national popular vote should win the election outright. The point of the College goes hand in hand with federalism. Without distinct checks and balances, popular-vote rich states would receive outsized attention. In the current age of hyperpartisanship and the near-extinction of split-ticket voting, such scenarios would be all but ensured. Additionally, the smaller states and the “game of counties” would be forgotten in a popular vote-winner method. Florida’s razor-thin margin in 2000 is often a massive point of criticism. However, New Hampshire, worth just four electoral votes, backed George Bush (R-TX) that year. If the Granite State had backed Al Gore (D-TN), Gore would have won the election, regardless of the outcome in Florida. A system without the College negates the importance of states like New Hampshire.
The National Popular Vote Interstate Compact is an ongoing initiative that seeks to enlist half of the country’s electoral votes in an alliance to ensure the popular vote-winner is elected president. If states making up half of the country’s electoral votes join the compact, their electoral votes would then be bound to the popular vote winner, rather than the winner of each state respectively.
Maryland was the first state to join the compact in 2007 and Maine was the most recent in April 2024. So far, seventeen states, plus D.C., have joined the compact, collectively representing 209 electoral votes. Initiatives are pending in nine states, making up eighty-seven electoral votes.
Only five elections have seen the winners of the popular vote lose the elections: 1824 (John Q. Adams), 1876 (Hayes), 1888 (Benjamin Harrison), 2000 (Bush), and 2016 (Trump).
Highs and Lows
1880 - James Garfield (R-OH) won by just 1,898 votes (0.11% margin) out of nearly nine million ballots cast. This is the closest election by popular vote to date.
1960 - Kennedy defeated Richard Nixon (R-CA) by a 0.17% margin, with 303 in the College. However, Nixon won more states (26).
1964 - Lyndon Johnson (D-TX) wins the election with 61.1% popular and 486 electoral votes, the largest popular vote margin in history. 1936, 1972, 1984 - The only three elections in which a candidate received more than 500 electoral votes. FDR (D-NY) is the only Democrat to accomplish this. Nixon and Regan won in 1972 and 1984, respectively.
Vermont has voted Republican more times than any other state, thirty-three times.
Georgia has voted Democratic more times than any other state, thirty-four times.
14 Civics 101 Thursday,
Published by Messenger Papers, Inc.
May 9, 2024
Bergin’s Brief
(Above) This year, Legislator Bergin (R-East Islip) selected Britnae Tillet to represent District 10 as the 2024 Champion of Diversity. Britnae is the President and Founder of Central Islip Connects for a Change (CICFC), a nonprofit organization dedicated to making a meaningful difference in our community. Through passionate volunteers and a variety of active projects, CICFC successfully achieves their goal of facilitating positive social change and equal opportunity for all. Central Islip Connects for a Change collects cap and gowns and an assortment of college dorm essentials to donate to graduating seniors and holds annual toy and food drives to assist families through financial struggles, especially throughout the holidays. Legislator Bergin is honored to have Britnae represent LD10. Thank you for all you do!
(Above) Legislator Bergin presented Central Islip student, Zada Richards, with a proclamation to honor her second-place win for the 2024 Annual Suffolk County Bicycle Safety Poster Contest! Each year, the Legislature hosts a contest for all elementary students to promote safe biking throughout the county. All eighteen Legislators pick one entry to represent each district; District 10 received so many amazing submissions but only one could be chosen, Zada’s poster was Legislator Bergin’s choice! Out of all Legislative Districts, Zada’s came in second place for her exceptional artistic talent and dedication for promoting safe biking. Congratulations!
(Above) Legislator Bergin was honored to present proclamations at the Central Islip-Hauppauge Volunteer Ambulance Annual Installation Dinner. At the Royal Palm in Farmingdale, Legislator Bergin was joined by the Town of Islip Receiver of Taxes, Andy Wittman (R-Sayville), to honor the dedication of a passionate group of individuals who aid our communities. Outgoing Chief Nicholas Tush was honored for his nine years of service and for holding several positions including Third Assistant Chief, Captain, and Chief of Department. Tush still remains incredibly involved and dedicated to providing lifesaving care to the residents of Central Islip and Hauppauge.
(Above) Joined by State Senator Mario Mattera (R-St. James), Legislator Bergin attended the Hauppauge School District’s Hoops for Heroes event! Hoops for Heroes is an annual fundraiser hosted at Hauppauge High School to raise money for Hauppauge Care & Share, directly benefitting each school building. It was a wonderful night put together by school district staff, Hauppauge Fire Department, Central Islip-Hauppauge Volunteer Ambulance, Suffolk County Police Department, and New York Police Department.
(Left) On Friday, May 3, Legislator Bergin honored two Suffolk County Probation Officer Trainee graduates from the Tenth Legislative District, Jahaira Chmielewski and Vanessa E. Williams. Thank you to these brave women for dedicating their careers to protecting and serving Suffolk County Residents.
Legislator Trish Bergin (R-East Islip) has represented the Tenth District in the Suffolk County Legislature since 2022. The Tenth District includes East Islip, Great River, Islandia, Islip Terrace, North Great River, Ronkonkoma, and parts of Central Islip and Hauppauge.
Legislator Bergin serves as the Chair of the Seniors and Human Services Committee, Vice Chair of Economic Development, Planning, and Housing, Vice Chair of the Government Operations, Personnel, and Information Technology Committee, and serves on the Committees on Education and Diversity; and Labor and Consumer Affairs.
The Tenth District office is located at 44 East Main Street in East Islip and can be reached at 631-854-0940.
15 Thursday,
May 9, 2024
Published by Messenger Papers, Inc.
State and County Officials Unite with VFW Commander Leon Schoemmell to Host First Annual Veterans Honor Pancake Breakfast
On Saturday, May 4, 2024, New York State Senator Anthony Palumbo (R-New Suffolk), New York State Assemblyman Ed Flood (R-Port Jefferson Station), and Suffolk County Legislator Nick Caracappa (C-Selden), Chair of the Veterans Committee in the Suffolk County Legislature, hosted a pancake breakfast to honor the service of local Veterans. The First Annual Pancake Breakfast took place at the VFW Post 3054, 8 Jones Street in Setauket from 9:00a.m. to 12:00p.m.
The program began with an opening prayer by Chaplin Micheal Russell, who was followed by Chaplin David Mann, singing a beautiful rendition of the National Anthem. David has been the Chaplain of American Legion Post 269, of Patchogue for 11 YEARS and is a life member of VFW POST 2913 in Patchogue. David served in Vietnam with the Army in the 15th Combat Engineer Bn, 9th Infantry Division from 1968-7 where he earned two Purple Hearts for his service.
Following the anthem, the Pledge of Allegiance was led by the Civil Air Patrol, Suffolk Cadet Squadron 10. Suffolk Cadet Squadron 10 is an elite unit of the Civil Air Patrol, the United States Air Force Auxiliary. They have three congressionally chartered missions which include Emergency Services, Aerospace Education, and the Cadet Program. Civil Air Patrol has over 60,000 members nationwide and operates a fleet of 550 aircraft. The CAP program follows a military model and emphasizes Air Force traditions and values. Those cadets who earn cadet officer status may enter the Air Force as an E3 (airman first class) rather than an E1 (airman basic). The cadets were accompanied by their Commander, Lt Sam Portugues Klos.
The highlight of this gathering was the moment Senator Palumbo, Assemblyman Flood, and Legislator Caracappa presented Staff Sgt Michael E. Russell with a State Proclamation acknowledging his service and dedication to his community.
Micheal Russell was born in Brooklyn and grew up in Toms River, New Jersey. He was enlisted in the United Air Force from 1966-1970 and served in Vietnam from 1968-1969. Upon his return to the United States, Micheal was employed with the Federal Aviation Administration from 1970-1981 until he left there and spent the remainder of his career as Managing Director and Senior Vice President of merged Wall Street firms. For his service, Micheal received two bronze stars and a purple heart.
Throughout his life in the private sector, Michael Russell continued to serve his fellow man. He was a member of the NYS small business administration, and a member of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority Capital Review Board. He was Commissioner of New York State Cable TV Commission, Special Assistant to New York State Senate Majority LeaderThe Honorable Ralph Marino - a trustee on the State University of New York Board of Trustees, and the Chair of the Committee of SUNY Hospitals and the NassauSuffolk Hospital Council. Michael also served as a member of the
Committee of SUNY Community Colleges, the Committee of Finance and Investments, Committee of Athletics and Four-Year Schools, Committee on Charter Schools, and a member of the Board of Trustees, John T. Mather Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Russell is a founding Member of Jefferson’s Ferry Continuous Care Facility and was Chair of the Transition Team for Suffolk County District Attorney James M. Catterson and a Member of the Transition Team for Suffolk County Executive Robert Gaffney.
Micheal E. Russell is married to his wonderful wife Barbara Russell, and they have three children and six grandchildren. Senator Palumbo has been a huge advocate for Long Island Veterans. After months of advocacy from Senator Palumbo, the Long Island State Veterans Home will finally receive over $80,000 in past donations generously given by New Yorkers through the state’s tax-checkoff system. As well, the Senator was instrumental in securing $100,000 in funding to aid the VFW Post 3054.
“It is always an honor to pay tribute to our Veterans and thank them for their service. During our Veterans breakfast, we recognized Michael Russell for his impressive contributions on behalf of those who served and his dedication to our Veterans and the community,” said Senator Palumbo. “Suffolk County is home to one of the largest Veteran populations in the nation and it is my privilege to represent these extraordinary individuals and their families in the New York State Senate.”
“It was a pleasure and honor to be able to recognize Michael Russell at the Veteran’s Pancake Breakfast last week at VFW Post 3054 alongside my colleagues,” said Assemblyman Flood. “Being a Vietnam Veteran, Russell has exemplified courage, dedication, and selflessness in defending our freedoms. I want to express my deepest gratitude and appreciation toward his unwavering commitment to our nation and I was proud to join my colleagues to host this event.”
Thursday, May 9, 2024 Published by Messenger Papers, Inc.
16 State News
LI Life & Politics
Pregnancy Care Center Faces Lawsuit from Attorney General’s Office
By Hank Russell
The Care Center, doing business as Soundview Pregnancy Services, has been sued by New York Attorney General Letitia James’ (D) Office, claiming the center disseminated misleading claims to pregnant women that abortions can be reversed by taking a pill. Soundview joins ten other pregnancy care centers and Heartbeat International as defendants.
According to the lawsuit, which was filed on May 6 in New York State Supreme Court, Heartbeat International and the other pregnancy care facilities made “false and misleading statements” which “constitute persistent fraud and illegality under Executive Law 63(12) and deceptive business and false advertising practices in violation of sections 349 and 350 of the General Business Law,” according to a press release issued from James’ office.
This web page explaining the benefits of abortion pill reversal (APR) appears on the websites of many pregnancy care facilities, which, along with Heartbeat International, are being sued by the attorney general’s office.
Photo Courtesy of the Attorney General’s Office
time is of the essence.”
• “Using the natural hormone progesterone, medical professionals have been able to save 64-68% of pregnancies through abortion pill reversal.”
Soundview provides services in East Meadow, Centereach, and Riverhead. Heartbeat and the eleven crisis pregnancy centers named in James’ lawsuit aggressively advertise “abortion pill reversals” (APR) on their websites, social media, and other promotional materials using false and misleading claims that lead patients to think that APR is a proven and safe treatment with minimal risks, despite the lack of reliable scientific evidence, for example:
• “Can the abortion pill be reversed? The simple answer is yes! If done in time.”
• “There is an effective process called abortion pill reversal* that can reverse the effects of the abortion pill and allow you to continue your pregnancy, but
“Abortions cannot be reversed. Any treatments that claim to do so are made without scientific evidence and could be unsafe,” James said. “Heartbeat International and the other crisis pregnancy center defendants are spreading dangerous misinformation by advertising ‘abortion reversals’ without any medical and scientific proof. Amid the increase in attacks on reproductive health care nationwide, we must protect pregnant people’s right to make safe, well-informed decisions about their health. Your reproductive health care decisions are yours and yours alone, and my office will always protect New Yorkers from those who push a scientifically unproven and potentially life-threatening intervention.”
On April 22, James sent notices of intent to sue to Heartbeat International and the other pregnancy centers over their APR claims. Eight days later, the Thomas More Society, a conservative nonprofit public interest law firm, filed a lawsuit in New York State Supreme Court on behalf of Heartbeat International, CompassCare and other pregnancy care facilities, claiming that James’ lawsuit is an act of intimidation and a violation of the First and Fourteenth Amendments of the U.S. Constitution, the New York Constitution and state civil rights law.
“New York State laws protect abortionists and abortion on demand up until birth,” added Heartbeat International President Jor-El Godsey. “Now they are targeting those who assist a woman in exercising her right to continue her own pregnancy. It is unconscionable to see the abortion industry and its paid-for politicians go so far as to insist she complete an abortion she no longer wants.”
According to its website, Heartbeat International has a worldwide network of more than 3,000 pro-life pregnancy help organizations and provides lifeaffirming help to all pregnant women who feel that abortion is the only option.
The organization noted on its website that APR “remains a safe and effective option, supported by scientific evidence and the lived experiences of women who, after initiating a chemical abortion, successfully reversed it and now cradle their babies in their arms.”
Long Island Life & Politics reached out to Heartbeat International and Soundview Pregnancy for additional comment but did not hear back as of press time.
In response to the lawsuit, Peter Breen, the executive vice president and head of litigation for the Thomas More Society, said in a statement, “Today, New York Attorney General Letitia James has decided to proceed full steam ahead with her witch-hunt against New York’s pregnancy help organizations. Delivering on her threat of lawfare against our life-affirming clients, Ms. James has filed a baseless lawsuit in Manhattan—where none of our clients are located—to unconstitutionally silence their pro-life message. In doing so, Ms. James is seeking to keep in the dark women who desire to urgently try to continue their pregnancies.”
Breen added that James should “turn her ire” to Planned Parenthood and similar groups which “continue to disseminate inaccurate, misleading, and even false information, about the risks and dangers of the chemical abortion process to women who pay for their services—and have thus far not been targeted with threats or prosecution by Ms. James’ office.”
Former Suffolk County Executive and NYS Assemblyman Steve Levy is the co-publisher of Long Island Life & Politics.
To read more from Steve, visit lilifepolitics.com
17 Thursday, May 9, 2024 Published by Messenger Papers, Inc. (631) 269-6421
Fentanyl Awareness Day 2024
Nationally Known Advocate Dr. Stephen Loyd of ‘Dopesick’
Joined with DEA & Community Advocates for ‘Call to Action’
Parents who have lost children to fentanyl poisonings and the opioid epidemic did not let Fentanyl Awareness Day go unnoticed. The morning of May 7 started with a demonstration along RT25A in Setauket during commuting time, with families who have been personally affected holding signs stating “Do you know someone who had died from fentanyl poisoning? We do.”
Fentanyl is the number one public health crisis in the country and the number one cause of death for people 18-45 years of age, yet the urgency of the issue seems to have dropped down the list of national priorities.
The demonstration was followed by an event at Thrive Recovery Center in Hauppauge which featured special guest speaker Dr. Stephen Loyd. Michael Keaton’s character in the Hulu series Dopesick is based in part on the life story of Nashville addiction specialist Dr. Loyd, who has been in recovery since 2004. Dr. Loyd is a nationally renowned speaker and expert in public health policy around addiction and addiction treatment. He is the former medical director and assistant commissioner for Substance Abuse Services with the Tennessee Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services.
“This is the number one health problem in the United States,” Dr. Loyd said. “If you don’t have time for the number one health problem in the United States, what do you have time for?”
Loyd stressed that more focus needs to be on those who have recovered from substance use disorder, and not just the dramatic downside, as portrayed in the series Dopesick, which was based on his life.
“There are more people living in active recovery in the United States right now than there are living active addiction, but you don’t know it because of anonymity and stigma. So, I went ahead with telling my story and that story is on a Hulu series, with 22 million people having seen it… I’ve been in recovery, if I make it, until July 8, for 20 years.”
Other speakers included leaders in recovery, law enforcement and parents who have suffered the loss of children and grandchildren and Jeffrey Reynolds, PhD, President and CEO, Family and Children’s Association; Steve Chassman, LCSW, CASAC, Executive Director of Long Island Council on Alcoholism & Drug Dependence; Special Agent in Charge Frank Tarentino of the Drug Enforcement Administration – New York Division; Mark Murray, Narcotics Bureau Chief for the Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office; Anthony Rizzuto, MSW, Director of Provider Relations at Seafield Center; Kurt Hall, Director of Operations at Hope Ministries; Dr Edmond Hakimi, LIRA Board President; and Corinne Kaufman, a grandmother from Glen Cove, lost her granddaughter Paige to a fentanyl-laced pill in 2023.
“There is healing in trying to save others from this sad fate,” Kaufman said. “I hope today launches and refreshes our awareness of fentanyl poisoning and how it is reaching our communities and stealing our lives.”
Also attending the program were Larry and Eileen Lamendola, whose daughter Lisa died from a fentanyl poisoning in 2019; Lori Carbonaro, whose son Nicholas died in 2014; Paulette Phillippe, whose grandson Gabriel died in 2010 at the age of 15; Carole Trottere, whose son Alex died in 2018 and many others.
Special Agent in Charge Frank Tarentino of the Drug Enforcement Administration, New York Division stated:
“According to the CDC, the leading cause of death among Americans ages 18 to 45 is drug overdoses and poisonings. It’s more than car accidents, more than gun violence and more than suicides. In fact, 112,323 Americans died from drug overdoses and poisonings in a 12-month period ending in June of 2023. Fentanyl is killing Americans at catastrophic and record rates and was responsible for 70% of those deaths. What we say in the DEA is that this is no longer a war on drugs. This is a fight to save lives. Every single day our top mission priority is to defeat the two most dominant cartels, the Sinaloa and Jalisco cartels who are responsible for mass producing the vast majority of fentanyl powder and pills that’s flowing into the United States at record rates and killing Americans. But we are having an impact, and we will continue this fight for each and every one of you and for your loved ones and for the future generations to come.”
18 Thursday,
2024
May 9,
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Guest Column
Thursday, May 9, 2024
Colleges Side With Radicals, Their Students Be Damned
By Betsy McCaughey | AMAC Outside Contributor
The Left and their media allies want you to believe the protests roiling college campuses are spontaneous uprisings of morally fervent students worried about Gaza war victims. Don’t fall for that claim. It’s a scam. These protesters don’t represent most students or the American public.
Yet Monday, Columbia University canceled graduation ceremonies, kowtowing to the radical fringe, with whom they largely agree. Students and their families be damned.
Here are the facts: A minuscule 2% of people ages 18 to 29 polled by Harvard’s Kennedy School named the Israel-Hamas conflict as their top political concern, compared with double digits who were concerned about the economy. Students couldn’t care less about this issue.
Claims that today’s campus riots are reminiscent of 1968 when students closed down campuses to protest the Vietnam War, are nonsense. Back then, Gallup found 46% of respondents in that age group considered the Vietnam War the nation’s biggest problem. Not 2%.
Ray Kelly, former New York Police commissioner, nailed it Sunday when he said the nationwide turmoil “looks like a conspiracy. … We need the federal government’s investigative capacity to look at this whole situation.”
Organized outside groups are behind much of the campus violence. Hours before the storming of Columbia’s Hamilton Hall, an outside organization called The People’s Forum — known for its anti-Israel activities and links to the Chinese Communist Party — started gearing up for its Hamilton Hall invasion. In a meeting, TPF’s leader spewed invectives against Columbia.
Hours later, protesters smashed the glass doors of Hamilton Hall, vandalizing and seizing the building. When Minouche Shafik, university president, finally called in police, 13 of the 44 arrested in the building had no affiliation with the university.
Reflecting on the incidents at Columbia and other New York campuses, New York City Mayor Eric Adams said after the arrests, “Individuals unaffiliated with these schools had entered these different campuses and, in some cases, were even training students in unlawful protest tactics.”
New York University Board Vice Chairman Bill Berkley says these occupations appear to have been orchestrated by external groups. He wants the FBI to investigate.
As these groups seize control of our universities, where is the FBI? Director Christopher Wray says the bureau does not directly track college protests but will provide information to campuses if the agency becomes aware of a specific threat.
Huh? The FBI should be proactively identifying and heading off campus terrorists.
Where is the Department of Justice? Two weeks ago, 27 Republican Senators sent a letter to Attorney General Merrick Garland asking for the DOJ to investigate how students’ rights are being violated on campus. Radio silence.
Where is President Joe Biden? When the President was asked if he would use the National Guard to restore order, he emphatically said, “No.”
Why not? The National Guard were deployed in 1962 to protect the right of Black students to attend the newly integrated University of Mississippi. Students of all races and religions who want to go to class or attend their graduation deserve protection.
The Biden administration is missing in action. Is it because the same big Dem donors supporting Biden — the Pritzker family, George Soros, David Rockefeller Jr. — also support proPalestine groups orchestrating campus protests?
Meanwhile, images of campus invaders in headscarves are not winning over Americans. The latest Harvard CAPS-Harris survey shows that 61% of Americans polled want a ceasefire only after Hamas is removed from power and the hostages captured on Oct. 7 are released.
The public also knows what they are seeing on campuses is not freedom of expression — a sacred American right — but lawlessness and dangerous disorder. Universities need to be evenhanded, guaranteeing that all sides get to speak and students can attend class.
Columbia’s students were heckled and threatened, had their classes canceled and now are robbed of the grandeur of a university graduation. It’s a slap in the face to them, and to their
Overview - AMAC - The Association of Mature American Citizens
The Association of Mature American Citizens represents Americans 50 plus. AMAC is centered on American values, freedom of the individual, free speech, and exercise of religion, equality of opportunity, sanctity of life, rule of law, and love of family, with benefits at all levels.
AMAC plays a vital role in helping build the services that will enrich the lives of America’s seniors. AMAC Action, a 501 (C)(4) advocates for issues important to AMAC’s membership on Capitol Hill and locally through grassroots activism. To Learn more, visit amac.us
families who sacrificed to make college possible.
Colombia’s motto is, “In thy light shall we see light.” Truth is, darkness has descended on Columbia and most elite college campuses.
Alumni and taxpayers alike should withhold their support until these institutions see the light and prioritize their students.
Betsy McCaughey is a former lieutenant governor of New York and chairman of the Committee to Reduce Infection Deaths. Follow her on Twitter @Betsy_McCaughey. To find out more about Betsy McCaughey and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website.
EXTENDED THRU JUNE 16 ON STAGE
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19
Bits & Pieces
Thursday, May 9, 2024
WORD OF THE Week
Origin:
late 16th century: from Latin non plus ‘not more’. The noun originally meant ‘a state in which no more can be said or done’.
Source: Oxford Languages
Synonym: confused, bewildered, perplexed
NONPLUSSED
Adjective
Pronounced: naan·pluhst
Definition: (of a person) surprised and confused so much that they are unsure how to react.
Example: “He was completely nonplussed by such a presumptuous suggestion.”
Antonym: unconcerned, unworried, oriented
WORD WHEEL
See how many words you can create. Must have center letter in word and can use letters more than once. 4 letter word minimum.
SUDOKU
This Week in History
May 9, 1865:
President Andrew Johnson issues a proclamation declaring armed resistance in the South is virtually at an end; this is the commonly accepted end date of the American Civil War
D M E M
May 13, 1967: Chuck
May 12, 2002:
Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter arrives in Cuba for a five-day visit with Fidel Castro becoming first President of the United States, in or out of office, to visit the island since Castro’s 1959 revolution.
May 10, 1869:
Golden Spike driven, completing the first U.S. Transcontinental Railroad at Promontory Summit, Utah, and connecting the Central Pacific Railroad with the Union Pacific
May 14, 1998:
Seinfeld’s final two-part episode
“The Finale” airs on NBC-TV to 76.3 million viewers with commercials priced at $2 million for thirty seconds
May 15, 1980: AT&T becomes the 1st US corporation to have a million stockholders after young car salesman Brady Denton purchases 7 shares worth $1,078
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Schuldiner, American heavy metal singersongwriter and guitarist (Death; Control Denied), born on Long Island (d. 2001)
I R A
Theatre & The Arts
Steelin’ in the Years Rocks the Argyle Theatre Stage
By Cindi Sansone-Braff
Summer will be in full swing on June 21, 2024, and the place to be is the beautiful Argyle Theatre in Babylon Village to hear some Yacht Rock by the beloved Steely Dan Tribute Band Steelin’ in the Years, founded by Long Island personality Johnny Fannon.
The original Steely Dan was the brainchild of two New York college buddies, Walter Becker and Donald Fagen. This dynamic musical duo moved to Los Angeles to record their 1972 debut, “Can’t Buy a Thrill,” which became a platinum hit. A halfcentury later, their other megahit singles, like “Do It Again,” “Reelin’ in the Years,” and “Dirty Work,” still rule the classic rock canon.
Steely Dan is known for their soulful, edgy, provocative, and stream-of-consciousness vibe. What really makes Steely Dan one of the most beloved bands of all time is their distinctive back vocals, dry production sound, complex chords, clean vocals, coded lyrics, catchy melodies, and a wide array of musical styles, including soul, Latin, jazz, rock, and R&B.
Steelin’ in the Years has some of the best vocalists and musicians you will hear on any stage. Johnny Fannon, the lead vocalist and frontman for the band, is a multitalented performer. He is a professional actor and a member of the SAGAFTRA. Fannon appeared in “Jessica Jones” with Kristen Ritter and “The Mysteries of Laura” with Debra Messing. He has also performed his own standup comedy routine at the Gotham Comedy Club in New York City. According to Fannon, their Argyle Theatre show will feature many of Steely Dan’s greatest hits, including “Aja,” “Reelin’ in the Years,” “Black Cow,” “Rikki Don’t Lose That Number,” “Josie,” “Hey Nineteen,” Do It Again,” “Black Friday,” “Peg,”
“Kid Charlemagne,” and “Dirty Work.”
Billy Milne is the band’s powerhouse drummer and backup vocalist as well. Milne has toured with Billy Falcon’s Burning Rose
band, which played at My Father’s Place, CBGBs, and Max’s Kansas City.
Stellar vocalist Pam Dixon has been professionally singing since she was seventeen and has many vocal styles. For fifteen years, she was a member of the all-original NYC hard rock band Kaos From Order and has performed with Randy Jackson of Zebra and Lynyrd Skynyrd members Artimus Pyle, and the late JoJo Billingsley in tribute bands The Long Island Street Survivors, Crawdaddy, and Sons of Skynyrd. Dixon is a triple threat who sings, acts, and dances and has performed in several musical and dramatic productions in New York City and abroad. Richard Forman is an accomplished keyboardist and vocalist. Some highlights of his career include long stints with the popular Billy Joel band Songs in the Attic and the national touring Foreigner tribute band Head Games. In addition, he has shared a stage with Bonnie Tyler, Bret Michaels, and 60s rocker Mitch Ryder.
Colleen Farquhar is a brilliant vocalist, saxophonist, and percussionist. Farquhar performs nationwide with tribute bands such as All Revved Up: The Ultimate Meat Loaf Tribute, Pat Farrell and the Cold Spring Harbor Band, and Pompeii Floyd.
Mark Lopresti is a saxophonist whose musical journey has been as diverse as it is dynamic. With a lifelong dedication to his craft, Lopresti’s repertoire spans from the jazz rhythms of the Stony Brook University Big Band to the high-energy performances of the Rolling Stones cover band Let It Bleed.
Kevin “Abe” Barry picked up a guitar after receiving Ricky Nelson’s first album, and he’s been at it ever since. He’s been on stage with Roger McGuinn, Gene Clark (The Byrds), Rob Stoner, and Robert Gordon.
Mike Young is a guitarist, composer, and educator. He plays solo and duo gigs and does studio work for friends nationwide.
Jay Sepe is a bassist from Long Island who has performed many genres of music in his 30-plus-year career. Sepe was the bassist on the Skynrds Legends Tour 2005 and a member of the Artimus Pyle Band.
The Steelin’ in the Years concert is the hottest show of the 2024 summer season! So, Dan Fans, click the link to purchase tickets for the June 21, 8:00 p.m. performance: Tickets to Steelin’ in the Years, or call 844-631-LIVE (5483).
Cindi Sansone-Braff is an award-winning playwright. She has a BFA in Theatre from UCONN and is a member of the Dramatists Guild. She is the author of “Grant Me a Higher Love,” “Why Good People Can’t Leave Bad Relationships,” and “Confessions of a Reluctant Long Island Psychic.” Her full-length Music Drama, “Beethoven, The Man, The Myth, The Music,” is published by Next Stage Press. www. Grantmeahigherlove.com.
Published by Messenger Papers, Inc. Thursday, May 9, 2024
21
Thursday, May 9, 2024
Dancing in the Streets of Islip
Islip Chamber of Commerce held its 24th annual street fair on Sunday, May 5th. A damp and chilly day could not stop the area residents from coming down and enjoying an assortment of foods, local vendors, and some great music. It’s always a great day for dancing in the streets!
22 Around Town
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Published
Final Performer Line-up
Bethpage, NY – April 25, 2024 - Bethpage Federal Credit Union and the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation, are pleased to announce the final performer line-up for the muchanticipated 20th Anniversary Bethpage Air Show at Jones Beach, taking place on Saturday, May 25, 2024, and Sunday, May 26, 2024, from 10:00a.m. – 3:00p.m.
The United States Navy Blue Angels, which headlined the very first Bethpage Air Show back in 2004, will return to Long Island to headline the 20th Anniversary show. This will be the Blue Angels’ 10th headliner performance for what has grown into one of the most respected air shows in the country.
“The Bethpage Air Show symbolizes the credit union’s roots and is a testament to Long Island’s history in aviation. It is a true collaboration and we are honored to continue to support and help produce this extraordinary show,” said Linda Armyn, President and CEO, Bethpage Federal Credit Union.
In 2004, New York State Parks invited Bethpage to be the title sponsor of the show, recognizing the credit union was founded by employees of Grumman Aerospace. The Blue Angels also have strong ties to Long Island, flying Grumman Hellcats, built on Long Island for the team’s 1946 inaugural flight. The team then went on to fly other Grumman aircraft including the Bearcat, Cougar, and Tiger, one of which, now proudly hangs at the Cradle of Aviation Museum in Garden City, Long Island.
Military performers joining the Blue Angels include the United States Army Golden Knights Parachute Team, the A-10C Thunderbolt II Demo Team, and the U.S. Navy F-35C Demo Team. Civilian performers Mike Goulian, North America’s most decorated aerobatic pilot; the world-famous Skytypers; Warbird Thunder Airshows; Farmingdale State College Flying Rams; Long Island’s own David Windmiller and the American Airpower Museum Warbirds.
“2024 is a very special year for us. Not only are we celebrating the 20th anniversary of the Bethpage Air Show, but we are also celebrating the 95th anniversary of Jones Beach State Park and the 100th anniversary of New York State Parks and the Long Island State Park Commission,” said George Gorman, Regional Director, New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historical Preservation. “Spectators are in for a real treat!”
To help celebrate the 20th anniversary show, organizers are giving away 30,000 commemorative U.S. Navy Blue Angels signed posters to fans attending the practice show on Friday, May 24, and the weekend show on Saturday, May 25 and Sunday, May 26. The show will also feature other celebratory elements throughout the holiday weekend including a special, 15 ft x 20ft, anniversary cake weighing in at 1000 pounds, which fans will be able to enjoy on Friday, following an 11:00 am Jones Beach Press Conference.
“The show brings park visitors together to pay tribute to our nation’s great military and the pilots who serve and protect Americans, as well as our honored veterans. I would like to thank our sponsors, our volunteers as well as our Federal, State and local agencies for helping the show become a treasured Long Island tradition,” continued Gorman.
The Bethpage Air Show is free to the public, but the standard $10.00 vehicle use fee will be collected each day upon entry to the State Park. For 2024 NYS Empire Pass Card holders, there is no vehicle use fee charge.
For up-to-date information about this year’s show, please visit www.bethpageairshow.com or https://www. facebook.com/BethpageAirShow/, or contact the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation, Regional Office, Recreation Department at 631/321-3510.
Thursday, May 9, 2024 Entertainment
by Messenger Papers, Inc.
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Suffolk County Honors 2024 Women of Distinction
By Matt Meduri
Each year, for the month of March, each of the eighteen County Legislators have an opportunity to select one woman from their district in recognition of her contributions to their community. Each eighteen honorees are recognized by their respective Legislators and one honoree is named by the Suffolk County Women’s Advisory Board as the countywide Woman of Distinction.
This year’s countywide Woman of Distinction is Ann Pellegrino of Centereach. Nominated by Legislator Nick Caracappa (C-Selden), Pellegrino was recognized for her role in the transformation of the historic and long-blighted Hobbs Farms on Oxhead Road in Centereach. After the farm’s last descendant passed away in 1996, the farm was left to Bethel AME Church in Setauket, where the last wish of Alfred Hobbs was to have the farm remain a farm.
With no one to tend to it, the farm quickly fell into disrepair and was one of the most notorious blighted properties in the Middle Country area.
However, that changed when Pellegrino took over a small plot on the farm in 2007 with the intention of making it a community farm, the crops from which supply local food pantries and soup kitchens.
Bethel Hobbs Community Farm now donates anywhere from 75,000 to 100,000 pounds of fresh produce to the community each year. The farm grows a variety of vegetables, including, but not limited to, spinach, arugula, Swiss chard, Asian greens, peppers, cucumbers, onions, and tomatoes.
Pellegrino’s vision was for a farm that could not supply the needy with food, but with a variety of nutritional
meals, something she took from her time as a single mother of two.
All honorees were celebrated at a luncheon at the H. Lee Dennison Building in Hauppauge after the State of the County Address Tuesday afternoon and before the remainder of the general meeting. In attendance was former Congressman Tim Bishop (D-Sag Harbor), whose daughter Molly Bishop was the Second District’s Woman of Distinction.
In Smithtown, Legislator Rob Trotta (R-Fort Salonga) nominated Adrienne Giannadeo for her contributions to Smithtown.
“Adrienne is one of the connoisseurs, a trailblazer,” said Trotta. “She was the first woman installed in 1991 on the Board of Zoning Appeals in the Town
of Smithtown. She has served in the Smithtown Historical Society, the St. Catherine’s Advisory Board, the Kings Park Chamber of Commerce, the Smithtown Chamber of Commerce, and she was a teacher for twenty-six years in Kings Park.”
“I spent over sixty years in students’ welfare, and it was a wonderful, wonderful community and I still love being in my district,” said Giannadeo.
Legislator Steve Flotteron (R-Brightwaters) selected Phyllis O’Leary (pictured top left) for her work on the local Chamber of Commerce to the Alliance Club. She also organizes the annual Go Fly a Kite galas on Cedar Beach, with last month’s event bringing in an estimated 5,500 attendees.
“I try my best to get my hands as dirty as I can and do whatever is needed of me because it’s not just one thing, it’s everything,” said O’Leary.
Legislator Leslie Kennedy (R-Nesconset) nominated Jennifer Dickson of Centereach for her volunteering at the Centereach Fire Department and her management of Middle Country’s successful street fairs.
Legislator Trish Bergin (R-East Islip) nominated Patricia Blair (pictured below left) for her endeavors in ending food insecurity.
“I want to inspire others, including our next generation which includes my beautiful daughter Emily,” said Blair. “We have a new venture, it’s called Summit County Women’s Alliance to End Food Insecurity. We’re three years in the making, and we had our ninth food distribution this past Saturday in honor of Mother’s Day. Iin our three years, we have donated over 200,000 pounds of food to those who need it.”
2024 Suffolk County Women of Distinction
District OneMarilyn McLaughlin
District Two - Molly Bishop
District ThreeGeraldine Sapanaro
District Four - Ann Pellegrino (Countywide Women of Distinction)
District Five - Margo Arceri
District Six - Janet Godfrey
District Seven - Moonee Rivers
District Eight - Karla Waldron
District NineWandra Ortiz-Rivera
District Ten - Patricia Blair
District ElevenPhyllis O’Leary
District TwelveJennifer Dickson
District ThirteenAdrienne Giannadeo
District FourteenKaren Kunkel
District FifteenMarian Hester
District Sixteen - Tina Shek
District SeventeenRosaria Luppy
District Eighteen - Linda Guido
Thursday, May 9, 2024 Published by Messenger Papers, Inc. Messenger Spotlight
Credit: Matt Meduri