Student performs standout poetry


For the second year in a row, seniors at John F. Kennedy High School were named regional semifinalists in the Junior Science and Humanities Symposium, a premier research competition sponsored by the U.S. Department of Defense. Following several rounds of presentations, they’ll have the opportunity to win up to $12,000 in scholarships for future collegiate expenses.
From Merrick, Luke Feldman, 17, Ty Gelman, 18, and Alyssa Farber, 18, completed extensive research
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At the Bellmore-Merrick Community Parent Center’s “One Pill Can Kill” event last week at the Brookside School in Merrick, one thing was abundantly clear: Families and parents are concerned about the increase in teens’ and adults’ use of fentanyl, a deadly synthetic opioid that is infiltrating the national and local drug trade.
“Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid, one of the single deadliest drug threats our nation has ever encountered,” Wendy Tepfer, the parent center’s director, said. “No community is immune from
this poison.”
In partnership with the Bellmore-Merrick Central High School District and the BellmoreMerrick Community Coalition, the parent center hosted its second informative gathering focused on fentanyl on Feb. 9, led by Ron Riebl, an advocate and community member from Bellmore.
“Last year, over 100,000 people died from drug overdoses driven by fentanyl, and the fastest-growing group of people that have been impacted are under 19 years old,” Tepfer added before turning the presentation over to Riebl. “Fentanyl is 50 times stronger than heroin, 100 times
tion after losing his 31-year-old godson, Timothy Mulligan, to a heroin overdose. The toxicology report revealed that the heroin was laced with fentanyl.
“He didn’t have a chance,” Riebl said. “I don’t ever want any parent of anybody to ever go through this.”
Addressing a mixed crowd of families, parents and students,
Riebl explained that today it is almost too easy for children, preteens and teenagers to get their hands on drugs. On social media apps like SnapChat, it’s easy to find dealers who will sell to just about anyone. What kids don’t realize is that a pill that might look like Percocet, or oxycodone, may actually be pure fentanyl,
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stronger than morphine, and it is being laced into all kinds of other drugs, pills and powders and being sold by dealers to unsuspecting buyers.”
Riebl, whose three children attended Mepham High School, got involved in drug use preven-
Kids are supposed to learn from their mistakes, not die from their mistakes. DEREK MAltz Retired DEA agent
projects for the competition, while enrolled in Kennedy’s Advanced Science Research program under the leadership of teacher Barbi Frank.
Three students from Bellmore — Tyler Bissoondial, Jessica Blumberg and Amanda Levine — were also named regional semifinalists in JSHS.
As part of the Advanced Science Research program, aside from submitting projects to the Regeneron Science Talent Search competition — in which Bissoondial and Feldman were named semifinalists — students also have the opportunity to submit the same projects to other competitions, like JSHS. Bissoondial’s and Feldman’s projects were featured in the Jan. 26-Feb. 1 edition of the Merrick Herald.
Unlike the Regeneron competition, Frank explained, students are judged solely on their research to be considered for a JSHS award.
“As opposed to the Science Talent Search, where it’s your paper and essays and whole scientific portfolio,” she said, “this is just based on your actual research — just based on the actual paper.”
JSHS offers first, second and third place prizes in categories including environmental science, life science and behavioral science, medicine and health, biomedical science, engineering, math and computer science, physical science and chemistry. This allows individual projects
to excel in particular fields of study.
Gelman, an avid soccer player, said he had an interest in studying something related to sports medicine, but ended up pivoting to neurodegenerative diseases — in particular spinal muscular atrophy, or SMA, which affects motor neurons and muscle tissue.
“I wanted to test the effects of accessible and effective treatments,” Gelman said. “I learned that previously, exercise and dietary restriction have been shown to independently mitigate some symptoms of some neurodegenerative diseases, like Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s, so I wanted to see their effect on the model of SMA.”
Gelman used fruit flies to aid his research, because 75 percent of the genes that cause disease in humans are also found in those insects.
Creating a 3D printed device that forced the flies to constantly be in motion, inducing exercise, he also fed them a lowprotein diet.
Aside from being recognized for his research by JSHS, Gelman also was named a 2022 Rising Scientist by the Child Mind Institute. Nationally, only five high school seniors receive that title every year.
Farber completed a social psychology
project, which employed both surveys and lab work.
“During the time I was designing a study, reaching out to people, it was the 2020-21 school year,” Farber said, “and it was really hard — I think for people in general.”
Farber realized that taking online classes during the height of the coronavirus pandemic made it hard for people to apply full effort. “I did a psychology project, focused on cognitive psychology, and it basically looked into how can we motivate students to put in their best effort,” she said.
Her project tested the effects of monetary versus social praise, to see which impacted students more. It yielded somewhat conflicting results: She found in her survey that both males and females prefer a monetary incentive, but females did score higher in preferring social praise. Her memory exam found that both types of rewards were equally motivating to both genders.
Despite sending papers to Regeneron and JSHS, Farber’s research is far from complete, she said. “The main takeaway was that rewards are beneficial,” she explained, “but there is still a lot more that I’m currently working on.”
As regional semifinalists, Feldman, Gelman, Farber, Bissoondial, Blumberg and Levine presented their projects to a panel of judges on Feb. 12 at York College in Queens. Regional finalists are still to be named, but those chosen will advance to the national symposium, slated to take place in April in Virginia Beach.
Awards aside, Gelman and Farber agreed that what they learned in ASR was beneficial in their high school careers.
“I think what stands out for me is it really teaches you how to interact and work in professional workspaces,” Gelman said. “We’re 15, 16, going on interviews with professors, mentors, these esteemed people.”
“It helped me develop skills that are going to be useful in the future, and just communication skills in general,” Farber added. “It also just develops a passion for the field that I researched, and it’s something that I want to pursue in the future.”
Both students know where they’re headed next year for college — Gelman is committed to major in mathematic economics at the University of Pennsylvania, while Farber will study psychology at Cornell University.
To learn about Blumberg’s and Levine’s projects and acceptance into JSHS, and to learn about Bissoondial and Feldman being named semifinalists in the Regeneron competition, visit LIHerald. com/Bellmore. For more about the science symposium, visit JSHS.org.
It really teaches
how
Ty Gelman Student
ALISON
WOhLStetteR
ANd Beverly Kleinman, students at John F. Kennedy High School in Bellmore, have teamed up with a group of students in East Meadow to raise money for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society.
Courtesy Beverly KleinmanTwo students from Bellmore-Merrick, Beverly Kleinman and Alison Wohlstetter, have partnered with students from East Meadow to raise money for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society.
Ryan Monahan, Andrew Ignatiou, and Benjamin Krieger, all of East Meadow, are leading the fundraising team “Finding the Cure,” as candidates for the LLS Student Visionaries of the Year campaign. Their high school team has over 30 students, and is part of the Long Island Chapter which puts them against roughly 20 other teams.
Student Visionaries of the Year is a philanthropic leadership development program for high school students. During the campaign, students learn what it’s like to grow their entrepreneurship, marketing, management and organizational skills.
The campaign comes to its grand finale on March 23. All funds raised will benefit the LLS mission, — to find a cure for leukemia, lymphoma, Hodgkin’s disease, and myeloma, and to improve the quality of life of patients and their families.
The team has already raised over $2,000, and they have plenty events planned in the coming weeks.
They are directly collaborating with Kleinman and Wohlstetter, who attend John F. Kennedy High School in Bellmore, for a bingo fundraiser at the North Merrick firehouse at 2095 Camp Ave., in Merrick on March 4 at 7 p.m. The boys will then later host a “Taco Tuesday” night fundraiser at the East Meadow Chipotle at 2312 Hempstead Turnpike on March 7 from 4 to 8 p.m.
The East Meadow students were first introduced to Kleinman and Wohlstetter at an LLS event for all of the teams in November. They decided to collaborate because the girls’ team — Good Vibes
Save Lives — is only composed a few members. Kleinman has been a candidate for the student visionary campaign for the past three years.
“It’s about helping each other and our towns are so close,” Monahan said. “It allows us to kind of cooperate there and it’s about raising as much money as you can, so the more people, the better.”
Ignatiou said that the tips that the girls have given them helped them to reach out to businesses to secure sponsors.
“Even in our biggest year we had maybe 17 members,” Wohlstetter said. “It’s really exciting to see how many people really want to contribute to this type of fundraising, and I’m really excited to work with them to figure it out.”
For Wohlstetter and Kleinman, it’s all about community activities. They’ve done bake sales, Zumba classes, art classes and other fundraisers. So far they’ve raised over $800. Over the years, their efforts generated over $20,000.
“Beverly’s been involved with the campaign way longer than us so it’s all about helping each other and giving ideas,” Monahan added. “It’s a like a mentorship.”
Although the campaign journey has just started, the teams have definitely learned valuable skills.
“Public speaking is a very important trait,” Krieger said. “We went to a carnival at Eisenhower Park and there was businesses there and I would get really nervous to speak to people because it’s tough, but Beverly taught us that we just have to accept the “no.” You should always ask, because if you don’t, you won’t know what they would’ve said.”
Leadership, organizational skills, and confidence are what the students needed most in order to run a successful campaign.
“The best part about it,” Ignatiou said, “is that we have the opportunity to make an impact on a patient’s life and be one step closer to a cancer free world.”
RILeY FRIed, LeFt, Poetry Out Loud lead teacher Nicole Maresca and Sydney Florio. Fried took second place at a regional Poetry Out Loud Competition, and Sidney Florio, a fellow Mepham student, made it to the third round of the competition.
Wellington C. Mepham High School senior Riley Fried took second place in the regional Poetry Out Loud competition on Feb. 3. Poetry Out Loud is an arts education program that encourages the study of poetry in high school students across the country at dynamic recitation competitions.
The competitions help bring out a student’s inner artist and performer by encouraging them to master public speaking skills, build self-confidence, and learn about literary history and contemporary life. Since its establishment in 2005, Poetry Out Loud has grown to reach more than 4.1 million students and 68,000 teachers from 17,000 schools across the country.
Fried’s talent in interpreting and analyzing poetry, combined with her natural public speaking ability, helped her secure the impressive win.
For the competition, students are expected to select poems, other than their own, which are meaningful to them. They memorize these poems and focus on aspects such as their stage presence, voice, and articulation, conveying the meaning of the poem through its language and accuracy throughout their performance.
Fried recited three poems, with each having their own unique, significance to her.
Fried first preformed “Big City Speech” by W.S. Di Pier, because she liked the structure of it. Fried said it’s as though the author is writing a letter to the city that he lives in, with layers of emotional complexity.
Her second poem, “Charles Sumner” By Charlotte L. Forten Grimke, is a piece Fried wanted to challenge herself with because of its length, old English syntax and the poem’s exploration of grief.
Her third performance, “Flowers” by Cynthia Sarin, was selected because Fried said it sounded like the author was speaking to a loved one while having a casual conversation about flowers that he bought her.
Fried will now move on to the state competition on March 11 in New York City, where she will compete against other regional winners.
Fried is an active community member
both inside and outside the classroom. She’s part of the school’s student-athlete leadership team, school choir, the Bellmore-Merrick Lady Sharks swim team, and the Long Island Aquatic Club. Her friends and family help to keep her motivated, she said, and provide emotional support through her busy days.
“I’ve just been doing as much as I possibly can, and it does get stressful — it gets very stressful,” she said, “but something that I find helps is surrounding myself with people who also go through similar things.”
Fried said she was first encouraged to compete on the advice of her English teacher Nicole Maresca, who is also the lead teacher for the Poetry Out Loud program. When Fried first competed, she did not place in the competition. Although Fried felt a little discouraged after the loss, Maresca convinced her to enter again.
“Riley has a natural ability to captivate an audience with her poise and confidence,” Maresca said. “Watching Riley recite poetry for a live audience was a real treat.”
From a young age, Fried was surrounded by literature and literary references under the guidance of her mother, who’s also an English teacher. As she grew older, Fried learned to mix the craft of writing and expressing her emotions, but it wasn’t an easy start for the young poet.
As a child, Fried said she was closeted about her emotions and writing. “I wouldn’t necessarily want people to know that I felt the way I did,’” Fried said, “because I didn’t want them to take it as vulnerability.”
As she continued to write and express herself more freely, she realized that writing and exploring her feelings was a form of strength.
“It is a manner in which you can kind of show yourself and be who you really are in front of other people.” she noted. “It’s something that a lot of people can’t do.”
Although it took time, self-discipline, and perseverance, Fried eventually learned how to be comfortable with herself. “I need to trust who I am and trust what I feel and understand that people won’t judge me for that,” she said. “And if they do, then they don’t deserve to hear how I feel.”
Saturday, February 25 I 1:00pm - 4:00pm
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Why don’t more people do the Medicaid Asset Protection Trust (MAPT)? The answer is that clients often get the wrong advice from well meaning but ill informed professionals, family and friends. Here are some of the most common MAPT myths.
1. You Can’t Sell the House. The MAPT may sell the house at any time. The money is paid to the MAPT. You may invest the money and use the income for a rental or you may purchase another residence in the name of the MAPT. The five year clock does not start over.
2. You Lose Your Property Tax Exemptions. Properly drafted MAPT’s preserve your Senior, STAR and Veteran’s exemptions as well as the exemption from capital gains on the sale of the primary residence —$500,000 for a couple or $250,000 for a single person.
3. It Takes Five Years. While it takes five years to protect ALL of your assets from long-term care in a facility, the time “pro
rates”. For example, if you have to go into a nursing home four years after you set up the MAPT, you only have to pay for the one year that is left.
4. You Can’t Get Your Money. The trust pays you all of the income. Principal may be gifted from the trust in any amount to any of your heirs.
5. The MAPT Cannot Be Revoked. Strange as it may seem, in New York you may revoke an irrevocable trust. Here’s why. It’s irrevocable because you, the grantor, cannot revoke it alone. However, New York has another rule on the books that says that if every person named in the irrevocable trust agrees in writing that they no longer want the trust, then you may revoke it on consent of all the named parties. Since that is just you and your adult children, it is usually a simple matter to accomplish. If a child won’t sign, we simply amend the trust to remove them and then their signature is no longer needed.
Instructions
Follow the steps below to edit the content. For instructions, click here.
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As a high-school student, I often wonder: Are the classes I’m taking enough? Do I need more extracurriculars? Am I taking the correct variation of classes to seem well-rounded, but not too eager?
All these questions are entirely valid and there is, as always, a balance. Colleges seek more than just adequate grades. Strangely, they are more interested in you as a person and what you can contribute by attending their university. It can be discouraging to work so diligently to show your academic level only for it to not be enough.
Step 1:
Double click the red link on the left "1. Content details of your event.
Your involvement should include items that would be of value to write on a college resume, in addition to other types of participation. Seek out opportunities that will allow you to be seen as an exemplary student by your teachers and fellow students.
Select the language from "Select from items" English, French or Spanish.
Update the information and click "Apply" at the
Step 2:
Double click "2. Center Info" if you need to adjust information.
Step 3:
I am currently in 11th grade and college is looming over me and all my fellow peers. I have one older sister attending a college upstate and another awaiting acceptance. While you are still attending high school, you should attempt to focus on what I like to call, “Making yourself known.”
In order to expand and boost your upstanding reputation, find activities within your community. Take advantage of local volunteer and paying work opportunities. You can easily find these opportunities by pursuing your everyday hobbies. Decide what your main interests are, narrow them down to potential possibilities and start calling!
Double click "3. Image" to change your image. you want to use and click "Apply". If you want on "Crop Image", position the crop box where "Crop"
Step 4: Click "Finish" to download your document.
This does entail some heavy involvement, so try to be extroverted even if you’re faking it. Persevere and keep looking out for opportunities that you connect with the most.
The time you spend on this endeavor will not be wasted. The connections and relationships you will by default develop will be of benefit to your future. Keep in mind that it is easier to indicate that you will make a positive impact on a prospective college campus if prior you have contributed purposefully to your high school community.
Talya Lippman is a student contributor for the Bellmore & Merrick Heralds.
Aaron Verska of Bellmore, Oksana Bykouskaya of North Bellmore, Dalia Steinberg of Westbury and other local residents met Town Receiver of Taxes Jeanine Driscoll during a Town of Hempstead Taxpayer Forum on Feb. 6 at the Bellmore Memorial Library.
Fax: (516) 569-4643
73
With only 13 members, the Calhoun girls’ track and field team knew it had hardly any margin for missteps Feb. 7 at the Nassau Class B championships at St. Anthony’s; every Colt would have to harvest points – some in multiple events – for the club to avenge a stinging spring loss and claim a second straight county indoor title.
West Hempstead Senior Track
hall stole the show at the Nassau Class C Track and Field championships Feb. 8 to help the Rams to a secondplace finish. He captured the triple jump (school record 44-feet, 11-inches), high jump and long jump titles, matching a feat he accomplished last spring.
Friday, Feb. 17
Girls Basketball: Nassau Class AA quarterfinals
Boys Basketball: Nassau Class A ffirst round
saturday, Feb. 18
Girls Basketball: Nassau Class A first round
Boys Basketball: Nassau Class AA quarterfinals
tuesday, Feb. 21
Girls & Boys Basketball: Nassau Class A quarterfinals
Wednesday, Feb. 22
Girls & Boys Basketball: Nassau Class B semifinals
Friday, Feb. 24
Girls Basketball: Nassau Class AA semifinals
saturday, Feb. 25
Boys Basketball: Nassau Class AA semifinals
Monday, Feb. 27
Girls Basketball: Nassau Class A semifinals
tuesday, Feb. 28
Boys Basketball: Nassau Class A semifinals
Wednesday, March 1
Girls & Boys Basketball: Nassau Class B finals
saturday, March 4
Girls & Boys Basketball: Nassau Class AA and A finals
In a flurry of personal bests, which included two school records, Calhoun –led by senior Sara Manson and aided by calculation as cold as the air outside the Student Center – fended off rival Valley Stream North to win back-to-back winter championships after seizing its first indoor Nassau title a year ago.
Manson, a reigning holder of several spring and winter county titles, set a program record in the triple jump with a first-place mark of 36 feet, 4 ¼ inches in the final; successfully defended her winter title in the 55-meter hurdles clocking a season-best 8.86 in the final; and took third in the long jump falling just shy of first-place teammate Yolina Bastien’s 16-2.5 winning mark.
“We needed everyone to come through because we knew Valley Stream (North) would be tough,” said Colts coach Joe Migliano, whose team finished runner-up in spring to VSN at the county Class AA championships. “Sara’s our cornerstone. She was terrific, a big part of us winning two in a row.”
Added Migliano: “We also had everything planned out, down to each point, so we could take advantage and also stop (VSN) from scoring.”
Helping to carry off of a key Calhoun maneuver, Bastien, a junior, finished fifth in the triple jump behind winner Manson and junior teammate Sophia Hines, whose runner-up 35-2.5 was a personal best. “We loaded up the triple jump,” Migilano said. “Every time our kids beat one of (VSN)’s, it’s a four-point swing. We wound up scoring 20 in that event to their four. It was about taking away from their strength.”
Colts sophomore Taylor Halvorsen
took first in the 1500-meter race walk, winning in 8:56.49, while Julia Baguiao set her second school record this season finishing third in the 300-meter dash in 42.57, which qualified the Calhoun senior to run in the New Balance Nationals next month in Boston. Baguiao, who also led off the Colts’ 4x200- and 4x400-meter relays – which placed second and third respectively – ran a program-best 27.04 in the 200 dash last month.
Hines placed second in the high jump with a season-best 4-10, while Colts junior Sofia Zampella missed a win in the 1,000 meters by a second and a half, finishing second-place in a personal-best 3:09.31.
Brooke Cancellarich placed third in the 55-meter hurdles, while fellow Colts sophomore Kaitlyn Stibritz finished fourth in the 3000-meter run.
Along with Baguiao, Calhoun – which won its fifth straight league title at January’s Conference 3 championships – will send Manson in the 60-meter hurdles and triple jump to the nationals, as well as the aforementioned relays. Next up for the Colts is this week’s State Qualifier at St. Anthony’s.
“We set the standard last year,” Migliano said. “Anything less than first now is a loss for us. We’ve really changed the culture here. Just excited to keep it going.”
THE FEIL FAMILY Pavilion will feature an expanded emergency department at Mount Sinai South Nassau, along with 40 critical and intensive care beds, and nine new operating rooms. The Feil family donated $5 million to the hospital as part of a series of generous donations over the years.
Gift is single largest donation in Mount Sinai South Nassau’s history
By KARINA KOVAC kkovac@liherald.comThe Louis Feil Charitable Lead Annuity Trust has pledged the largest single gift in the history of Mount Sinai South Nassau — $5 million. And, in return, it will help usher in a new state-of-the-art facility, with the Feil name on top.
The new four-story, 100,000-square-foot building, is scheduled to open in another year. And when it does, it will be named the Feil Family Pavilion.
This new $130 million pavilion will double the size of the hospital’s current emergency department, increase the critical and intensive care inpatient capacity to 40 beds, and add nine new operating rooms.
“Mount Sinai South Nassau is our local hospital, and we are grateful for the expert care it provides to our communities on the South Shore,” said Jeffrey Feil, chief executive of the Feil Organization— and a longtime Rockville Centre resident — in a release. “We are so fortunate to have an outstanding medical center right in our backyard. The Feil family is honored to support the growth of Mount Sinai South Nassau.”
The Feil Organization is a real estate investment, management and development firm based in New York City with more than 70 years of expertise. Feil’s portfolio commands millions of square feet in industrial, commercial and retail, as well as more than 5,000 residential properties and thousands of acres of undeveloped land across the United States.
Feil and his family — including his parents, the late Gertrude and Louis Feil — have been longtime supporters of the hospital. With their latest gift, the family has donated a total of $17 million to benefit the hospital and the patients it serves.
The family previous gifted $2 million in 2019, and $1.5 million in 2018 to help centralize the hospital’s cancer care services.
The family also donated $3 million in 2011 that supported the continued growth and expansion of the Gertrude & Louis Feil Cancer Center.
“This generous gift by the Feil family will have a direct impact on improving patient care on the South Shore,” said Adhi Sharma, president of Mount Sinai South Nassau, in a release. “We are deeply thankful for their generosity and support. It will be the hospital’s distinct honor to name the new patient care tower in honor and recognition of the Feil family, and their longstanding commitment to Mount Sinai South Nassau.
“Their support and commitment has been vital to the growth of our emergen-
cy services and cancer care program as well as the hospital’s tradition of excellence in the delivery of advanced care services.”
The Feil gift is the second major contribution made to the new four-story patient building currently under construction. Last year, the hospital’s immediate past board chair, Joseph Fennessy, made an undisclosed gift to the hospital that earned his family’s name on top of the pedestrian entrance to the new emergency department. Additional naming opportunities remain within the new pavilion, officials said, including nursing stations, lobby areas and surgical suites.
It’s part of an overall $400 million capital building fundraising campaign Mount Sinai has undertaken in recent years.
Currently, South Nassau’s emergency department treats 65,000 people each year, but is designed to handle half that. When construction is complete, the emergency department will nearly double the size of a football field, increasing its annual capacity to 80,000.
In addition, the department will feature centralized nursing stations that will allow for direct oversight of patient rooms. There also will be bedside triage, expanded pediatric trauma treatment areas with an adjoining radiology area, a decontamination room, dedicated areas for geriatrics and behavioral health, and a spacious waiting and reception area with free Wi-Fi, and charging stations for phones, computer tablets and laptops.
The operating room and its surgical suites will be configured and designed to accommodate the nonstop advancements in surgical technologies and equipment. The combined impact of the redesigned and larger operating rooms will allow Mount Sinai South Nassau and its staff of surgeons to increase its surgical scheduling capacity to accommodate projected volumes in same-day, elective, and emergency surgeries.
The new surgical suites also could pave the way for an open-heart program at the Oceanside campus, pending state health department approval.
“The ultimate beneficiary of the Feil family’s generosity is our South Shore community that turns to Mount Sinai South Nassau for compassionate, quality health care,” said Tony Cancellieri, cochair of Mount Sinai South Nassau’s board of directors, in a release.
“On behalf of the hospital’s board of directors, we are grateful to our dear friends Jeffrey and Lee Feil and their entire family, and are honored to name the pavilion as a permanent expression of gratitude for this gift and the ongoing support of the Feil family.”
every class in the North Merrick School District participated in World Read-Aloud Day on February 2. Twenty authors shared their books in virtual read-alouds, provided related activities, and participated in lively Q&A sessions. Selections ranged from picture books such as “Butternut and Buttercup” by Jill Dana for new readers to historical non-fiction like “Most Wanted: The Revolutionary Partnership of John Hancock and Samuel Adams” for older students.
Among the authors were North Merrick teachers Deidre Boyle with “I Am Me Wherever I Go” and Kathryn Pascarella with “Never Give Up” as well as Steven Bromberg, husband of Camp Avenue Principal Hillary Bromberg, with the first book in his series called “Simple Sam Eats… What?”
World Read-Aloud Day is an international program, created by Lit World and sponsored by Scholastic, which promotes the shared connection of reading aloud.
–Jordan ValloneIt’s a vital component of the property tax system, yet for the third straight year, Nassau County won’t be conducting a tax assessment of homes and businesses.
Such a freeze first gained momentum under former Nassau County Executive Ed Mangano, but lifted by his successor, Laura Curran. However, the freeze was reimplemented during Covid-19, and now continues under Bruce Blakeman’s tenure.
The difference — at least according to the county legislatures Democratic minority — is that Blakeman campaigned against Curran, promising to roll back the tax increases caused by the reassessments done under her administration. Yet, they still remain frozen.
“As housing prices soared at an unprecedented rate during the worst of the pandemic, the minority supported a temporary freeze to protect property owners from dramatic swings in a remarkably turbulent market,” minority spokesman Daniel Schrafel said. “However, ‘temporary’ is key. History has demonstrated that freezing the tax rolls for extended periods distorts assessed values to such a degree that the only way for property owners to protect themselves from overpaying is to grieve. We must do everything in our power to break this unjust, exploitative cycle.”
The reassessments are supposed to happen annually to review property value and
tax property owners accordingly. When they don’t happen, properties that have risen in value become under-taxed, while those that may have dropped end up paying a higher tax than they would have otherwise.
The value of property impacts school taxes and other issues.
When in office, Curran called the reassessment process “corrupt” and “broken.”
The latest Medicaid regulations now permit individuals to set aside a portion of their assets in an irrevocable trust account in order to have funds for future funeral expenses.
The Democrat pledged to fix it in a 2018 opinion piece published in the Herald, only to freeze it once again during the pandemic.
Democrats now criticizes Blakeman for the continuing the freeze despite the economic pressures of the pandemic subsiding, particularly in light of Blakeman’s promise to do so.
“Mr. Blakeman vowed to rescind the
county’s increases that he blamed on the recent assessment,” Democratic county legislator Debra Mulé said. “That basically means that if you’re over-assessed, you’ll be stuck paying more than your fair share of taxes this year, unless you successfully grieve your assessment.”
State Sen. Kevin Thomas joined in the chorus against the freeze to highlight that grievance process.
“Every homeowner in Nassau has received solicitations from tax grievance workers, myself included,” Thomas said. “These grievance workers use deceitful tactics that lead many to believe filing a grievance is just too complicated for the average resident.
“That is not the case — homeowners can file grievances themselves. You are not required to use an attorney or a specialist, nor is there a fee to file. You can even file online from today until March 1 by yourself. It should be as simple as that.”
Thomas introduced a bill in Albany intending to bring more trust and transparency to the tax grievance process.
For his part, Blakeman called the phase-in plan of his predecessor a failure, and says it won’t expire until next year. He is extending the grievance deadline, however, from March 1 to April 3.
“My administration has reviewed the comptroller’s comprehensive audit that uncovered many inaccuracies in valuations,” Blakeman said in a statement, “and I felt it was important to give residents additional time to grieve.”
Thomas L. KearnsWhen an individual approaches the time when Medicaid coverage seems likely, social workers generally advise families to look into this funeral pre-funding option.
Here’s how we can help:
• The Family will make an appointment with us to discuss just what we are to do when the death occurs.
• We discuss options and record their wishes not just about preferred funeral home services but cemetery, church, monument inscription, newspaper notices, etc. We inform the family of exactly what the funeral home and third party costs are at the present time.
• Funds to cover those expenses can then deposited in our FDIC insured PRE - PLAN Trust. The Trust pays sufficient interest to allow us to guaranty those future funeral home costs into the future.
• While the funds remain in the name of the individual going on Medicaid, eligibility to receive Medicaid coverage is not affected.
If we can help you with this important matter, call us and our knowledgeable staff will answer your questions. Moreover, there is no cost involved in establishing a PRE-PLAN Trust.
LIJ Medical Center is in the top 10% of hospitals nationally for oncology, according to U.S.News&WorldReport.
Our doctors are raising health by pioneering innovative approaches to cancer from novel chemotherapy techniques to first-in- the-nation robotic mastectomies with minimal scarring. Because when it comes to cancer, there’s no status quo. There’s only “how far can we go?”
Northwell.edu/NoLimits
Commuters are riding the high of never-before-seen rail service aimed at connecting the Long Island Rail Road to the bedrock of Midtown Manhattan at Grand Central Madison.
The Metropolitan Transportation Authority celebrated a turning point with the long-anticipated opening of its 750,000-square-foot East Side Manhattan transit hub with the first shuttle train from Jamaica station on Jan. 25. Now the terminal is set for a full rollout of regular train service beginning Feb. 27.
The East Side Access Project, as it was known, has already drawn a daily rush of commuters — albeit under a limited format with shuttle service from the Queens station to Grand Central Madison.
Rather than plunging straightaway with full service, MTA officials said the station is in a soft-launch phase, enabling riders to slowly acclimate themselves to the additional shuttle service from Jamaica, find their way around the facility and test out commuting options.
Once Midtown’s terminal comes fully online, it will no doubt reorder the MTA’s transit system and send ripples through its 11 Long Island train branches, each offering direct or transfer service to Penn Station on the West Side, and Grand Central Madison.
For LIRR commuters, this change will
be felt most acutely in adapting to an overhauled train schedule that divvies up Manhattan-bound train service between the two sister terminals.
Some commuters may feel more taken to the change than others with the promise of greater accessibility and efficiency to their commutes. Still, others can’t help but groan over the foreseeable loss, and longing for their preferred service lines and connections.
But at least for MTA chair and chief
Dolce Aesthetics is looking for a creative, energetic, and reliable Licensed Aesthetician/Certified Laser Technician to add to our established and growing company. Position is part time that may lead to full time. Saturdays are mandatory. You must have a friendly demeanor, be punctual, responsible, detail oriented and have professional etiquette.
executive Janno Lieber, the change is a net-gain for most commuters — and a sign of economic renewal for the metro Long Island area, with a 41 percent increase in service.
Grand Central Madison provides “faster, more convenient travel that brings Long Island closer to the heart of the City,” Leiber said, in a release. “The new schedules are going to be a major shot in the arm for the local economy and the effort to get people back to offic-
es, theaters and shopping.”
But critics are quick to point out that the often-touted 41 percent service increase — raising the number of daily trains from 665 to 936 — is relative to current service which has experienced a major cutback of its own compared to pre-pandemic levels.
Weekday ridership continues to hover at about 65 percent of what it was before any of us had ever heard of Covid-19.
And while MTA officials expect nearly 45 percent of riders to shift over to Grand Central Madison, there are nagging concerns about the potential travel headaches brought by the decline in available morning rush-hour train service to Penn.
Take, for example, the fact that the Long Beach branch which will get 10 additional rush hour trains from its current 13 at Penn Station. Yet, it will have two fewer rush hour trains at Penn Station with shared service lines to Grand Central Madison.
“The new schedules are designed to have more evenly spaced trains and fewer large gaps in service,” MTA spokesman Dave Steckel said. “There will also be more frequent service to Queens and on the Ronkonkoma and West Hempstead branches. New service promises decrease travel times from Long Island to Manhattan, and reduce crowding at Penn Station.
“We will continue to monitor and adjust service based on ridership trends and other factors.”
he herd is back. Kids of all ages
Quest — the traveling dinosaur “experience” — returns to Nassau Coliseum for four days of prehistoric adventuring. Jurassic Quest takes families back to the days when these prehistoric creatures ruled the lands, Friday through Monday, Feb. 17-20.
• Feb. 17-20; times vary
• Tickets start at $22; available at MonsterQuest.com or NassauColiseum.com
• Nassau Coliseum, Uniondale
This immersive spectacle features a bevy of lifelike dinosaurs — of all shapes and sizes — that are an impressive lot. They transform the arena environment to a time 165 million years ago during the Triassic, Jurassic and Cretaceous periods where visitors can get up-close and personal with the creatures.
“They are all life-size and authentic,” Park Ranger Marty (aka Marty Hoffman) says. “You get to see what dinosaurs are really like, hearing the different sounds they made.”
Described by Park Ranger Marty and the Jurassic Quest folks as North America’s largest and most realistic event, the creative team collaborates with leading paleontologists to ensure each dinosaur is painstakingly replicated, from coloration to teeth size, to textured skin, fur or feathers — drawing on the latest research about how we understand dinosaurs and these ancient creatures looked and moved. Plant settings, sound effects, lighting and electronics add to the authenticity of the setting.
But perhaps what makes the experience more than just a spectacle is the way it pulls on the heartstrings. As Park Ranger Marty — who proclaims himself a “dinosaur nerd” — put it: “It’s a great time for everyone. Especially the kids, but also the adults. We’ve all had that time in our lives when we loved dinosaurs. Then we get away from it. When we take the time to see them through the kids’ eyes, we reconnect with that love of dinosaurs we all had.”
It’s all self-guided, so visitors proceed at their own pace. That means you can approach the mighty T. rex, check out the 50-foot-long Spinosaurus, largest known carnivorous dinosaur, even longer and heavier than the T. rex, also the enormous Apatosaurus with its whip-tail, along with sea creatures, and many others.
“One hundred sixty million years worth of dinosaurs are here,” Park Ranger Marty enthuses.
And there are those baby dinos, “hatched” specifically for Jurassic Quest: Cammie the Camarasaurus, Tyson the T. rex, and Trixie the Triceratops.
“People really love them,” Park Ranger Marty says. “Kids want to hang out and pet them. It’s an amazing thing to see. The interaction between the babies and the kids is really fun.”
While the dinosaurs are the main draw, of course, the event includes a fossil dig, where budding paleontologists can dig up bones, along with an excavation site, with actual fossils and themed rides, among other activities.
“There really is something for everyone,” Park Ranger Marty says. Plus an education component is worked in — and the kids won’t even realize it.
“We like to think of dinosaurs as the ‘gateway science,” he explains. “Kids are learning about biology and geology, and more, when they explore dinosaurs. Also other sciences like astronomy and engineering. It all relates back to dinosaurs andancient plants. And this all comes out of the kids thinking dinosaurs are cool.”
Park Ranger Marty and Dino Trainer Dustin hanging out, at left, with a Tylosaurus skull. Open wide! An enthusiastic young visitor, at right, finds his way into an Allosaur head
The prolific Canadian singersongwriter has boundless appeal. The moment he burst onto the scene in the early 1990s with his band Great Big Sea, Canadians fell in love with the pride of Petty Harbour, Newfoundland, whose effusive charisma and sense of humour was eclipsed only by his magnetic stage presence. His influence is now being heard in a new generation of artists as his solo work continues to endear him to roots music fans everywhere. That’s clearly evident on Doyle’s latest EP ‘Rough Side Out,’ which finds him collaborating with Canadian country music superstars Dean Brody and Jess Moskaluke, while at the same time offering his own distinctive interpretation of contemporary country. His songs all have a strong personal meaning, according to Doyle, who believes ‘the best songwriters in any genre are the ones who can look in their own backyard and find something they want to sing about.’
Saturday, Feb. 25, 8 p.m. $41, $37, $29. Jeanne Rimsky Theater at Landmark on Main Street, 232 Main St., Port Washington. (516) 767-6444 or LandmarkOnMainStreet.org.
The acclaimed Dublin Irish Dance ensemble visits Long Island with their new production, ‘Wings: A Celtic Dance Celebration.’ Wings features exquisite Irish and World champion dancers alongside Ireland’s musical and vocal virtuosos. Complete with original music and choreography, this groundbreaking production, infused with world dance and musical influences, will thrill audiences with its transformative emotional energy and imaginative design. The vivid and illuminating production portraying rich Irish heritage themes, in spectacular dance and musical performances by this superb cast that will thrill audiences of all ages. Everyone will be entranced by these world champion Irish dancers as they defy gravity in this captivating spectacle.
Friday, March 17, 8 p.m. $60, $45, $35. Tilles Center for the Performing Arts, LIU Post campus, 720 Northern Blvd., Brookville. (516) 299-3100 or TillesCenter.org.
Grab your lunch and join Nassau County Museum of Art Docent Riva Ettus for her popular “Brown Bag Lecture” live, via Zoom, Thursday, Feb. 23, 1 p.m. She’ll discuss the current exhibition, “The Big Picture: Photography Now.” Participants are invited to ask questions at the end of the program. Register at least 24 hours in advance to receive the program Zoom link. Also Feb. Nassau County Museum of Art, 1 Museum Dr., Roslyn Harbor. (516) 484-9337 or NassauMuseum.org.
Governor’s Comedy Club and GovsRadio.com offer a showcase of the finest comedy acts from Long Island, New York City and beyond, Thursday, Feb. 16, doors open 6 p.m. This is a rare opportunity to see the best comics in one, big show. Tickets are $14. Must be 16 and older to attend, 2 item minimum per table. 2792 Merrick Road, Bellmore. Call (516) 781-5233.
Musiscal duo Gotcha Covered performs at the North Merrick Library, Sunday, Feb. 19, 1:30 p.m. Enjoy tunes from the 70s through the 2000s, including rock and folk hits of the last 50 years. 1691 Meadowbrook Road, North Merrick. Call (516) 378-7474 for more information.
The band brings their distinctive sound to the Landmark stage, Friday, March 3, 8 p.m.
Their unique recipe blends hot jazz and sultry standards from the ’20s, ’30s and ’40s, rich New Orleans sounds, a dash of ’40s Paris flavor, and vibrant musical surprises. It’s all steeped in salty stride piano and the music Louis Armstrong, Django Reinhardt and Fats Waller used to make. The result is straight-up foot-stomping jazz. Their name says it all: their iconic ‘hot’ styling will paint a vibrant picture with smoky sounds and audiences revel in the steamy, swanky influence of their art form. With their contagious brand of joy, grit, glamour and passion, they invoke the sounds of nearly a century ago, yet stay right in step with the current age. $60, $50, $46. Jeanne Rimsky Theater at
Mo Willems’ popular The Pigeon comes alive on the Long Island Children’s Museum stage, Saturday, Feb. 18, 11:30 a.m. and 2 p.m.; Monday through Thursday, Feb. 20-23, 11:30 a.m. and 2 p.m. Pigeon is eager to try anything, with the audience part of the action. Long Island Children’s Museum, Museum Row, Garden City. (516) 224-5800 or LICM.org.
Eric Neumann, a rising standup comic who made his debut on The Tonight Show, performs at the Brokerage in Bellmore, Friday and Saturday, Feb. 24-25. Doors open at 6 p.m., show starts at 8 p.m. Friday, 7:30 p.m. Saturday. $25. Must be 16 and older to attend, 2 item minimum per table. 2792 Merrick Road, Bellmore. Call
Requests for transportation to private or parochial schools outside of the North Merrick Union Free School District must be received by April 1. Children must be registered in the North Merrick District first before submitting an application. Families moving into the district after April 1 have 30 days to submit a request. Transportation is not provided to those older than 6th grade, children who will not be 5 by Dec. 1, 2023, to schools located further than 15 miles from a child’s home, or to schools located less than 2 miles from a child’s home. All requests must be sent to 1057 Merrick Ave., North Merrick. Applications can be picked up at Fayette School, between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday to Friday.
Photography’s ascent in the art world is an international phenomenon. Nassau County Museum of Art’s exhibition spans the historical roots, wth works by Ansel Adams and his generation and such contemporary masters as Cindy Sherman, Thomas Struth, James Casebere and Gregory Crewdson.Through March 5. NCMA, 1 Museum Drive, Roslyn Harbor. (516) 484-9337 or NassauMuseum.org.
North Bellmore Union Free School District provides transportation for students in kindergarten through third grade living a distance greater than a half mile up to 15 miles and in grades fourth through sixth living a distance greater than one mile up to 15 miles from the school they attend. Transportation to a day care is also provided under certain circumstances, also to private and parochial schools. Transportation requests to schools outside of the district must be made by April 1 — the child must be registered in the district. Applications are online at NorthBellmoreSchools.org or call 516) 992-3000 for info. Requests should be sent to 2616 Martin Ave., Bellmore.
The Garden at St. Francis seeks volunteers, Saturdays, 10 a.m.-noon, at the church’s Charity Crafting Circle. Email stfrancisec@gmail. com for info or call (516) 679-1184. Church is located at 1692 Bellmore Ave., North Bellmore.
The Journey tribute band visits The Paramount, Saturday, Feb. 25, 8 p.m. The popular band takes everyone back to the ‘80’s when Journey’s timeless music ruled the airwaves. Hailed by fans and critics alike as the world’s top Journey tribute band, this group performs their music with chilling accuracy. Fronted by Hugo — a dead ringer for Steve Perry, both visually and vocally — he continues to delight fans with his miraculous resemblance, exact mannerisms and identical voice to Steve. Fans agree that Voyage delivers an experience to the original Steve Perry-fronted lineup. $40, $35, $30, $25. The Paramount, 370 New York Ave., Huntington. (800) 7453000 or Ticketmaster.com or ParamountNY.com.
Items on The Scene page are listed free of charge. The Herald welcomes listings of upcoming events, community meetings and items of public interest. All submissions should include date, time and location of the event, cost, and a contact name and phone number. Submissions can be emailed to thescene@liherald.com.
See the romantic comedy about what happens when an African American and a Latina college student fall in love, presented by Nassau Community College Theater and Dance Department and the Africana Studies Department, Thursday through Saturday, Feb. 16-18, 7:30 p.m.; Sunday, Feb. 19, 2 p.m., with talkback session with playwright David Lamb, immediately following final performance. Threaded by the culture of hip-hop, the lovers defend their relationship, as friends and family learn that this “food fight” calls for fusion instead of feud. Nassau Community College’s Mainstage Theatre, Garden City. Tickets $10; NCC students free with valid ID; $8 veterans, alumni, seniors 60+, students and NCC employees. For tickets/ information, visit NCC.edu or call (516) 572-7676.
The beloved fairy tale springs to life in a delightful musical romp, presented Plaza Theatrical Productions, Monday, Feb. 20, 11 a.m.; Friday, Feb. 24, 11 a.m.; Sunday, Feb. 26, noon. All the
ANTIQUE STORE:
Congrats to all the Top 3 Finalists in the 2022 Herald Long Island Choice Awards presented by PSEG Long Island! Check back each week for the Top 3 Reveal in each category leading up to the Oscar-style awards ceremony in April 2023. Did your favorites make it to the top? Visit www.LiChoiceAwards.com!
*Finalists are listed alphabetically, not in order of placement.
Garden City Antiques & Fine Arts, Ltd
Long Island Antiques Center
Remember Yesteryears
APPLIANCE/HOME
ELECTRONIC STORE:
ACS Camera & Pro Video
AHC Appliances
P.C. Richard & Son
BOUTIQUE:
Artisan Jules Gifts and Goodness
Jolie Fleur
Love and Honey Boutique
BRIDAL STORE:
Blossom Brides
The Bridal World
David’s Bridal Westbury NY
CARPET STORE:
Anthony’s World of Floors
Carpet Depot
Harry Katz Carpet One Floor & Home
COIN STORE:
Coin Galleries of Oyster Bay
Collectors Coins & Jewelry
Eastern Numismatics Inc
COLLECTIBLES STORE:
Bullseye Collectibles
Collectors Coins & Jewelry
LuxeSwap
CONSIGNMENT/THRIFT STORE:
Lucky Finds Boutique
LuxeSwap
National Council of Jewish Women Thrift Shop
EYEWEAR STORE:
Cohen’s Fashion Optical
Eyes On Broadway
FrameBar.co
FARMERS MARKET:
Crossroads Farm at Grossmann’s
Deep Roots Farmers Market
Youngs Farm
FLORIST:
Central Florist
Feldis Florist & Flower Delivery
Olive It Boutique
FUR STORE:
Barbatsuly Furs
Tres Chic Furs
Tsontos Furs
FURNITURE STORE:
Furniture Gallery of Long Island
Raymour & Flanigan
The Rustic Loft
GIFT SHOP:
Dolce Confections by Trubee Hill
What A Girl Wants
GOURMET MARKET:
Gemelli Gourmet Market North
Iavarone Bros
Sorrento’s Italian Specialties
GROCERY/SUPERMARKET:
Cross Island Fruits
Holiday Farms
Uncle Giuseppe’s Marketplace
LOCAL CHILDREN’S CLOTHING:
Cathy’s Touch
Denny’s Fashion, Style, For All
Morton’s Official Camp Outfitters
LOCAL HARDWARE STORE:
Ace Hardware Hewlett
Atlantic Hardware
Costello’s Ace Hardware
LOCAL MATTRESS STORE:
Furniture Gallery of Long Island
Mattress Firm
Sleepworks Mattress & Futon Superstore
LOCAL MEN’S CLOTHING:
Karako Suits of Lynbrook
LuxeSwap
Mur-Lees Men’s & Boy’s Shop
LOCAL WOMEN’S CLOTHING: A.J. & MOS
STOOSH BOUTIQUE
Trois Jours Boutique Etc
NURSERY & GARDEN CENTER:
Abby’s Parkside Nursery & Florist, Inc.
Dees Nursery And Florist Inc.
Hicks Nurseries
PAWN SHOP:
Collectors Coins & Jewelry
Empire Pawn of Nassau
Matthew James Jewelers
WINDOW TREATMENT STORE:
Blinds To Go
The Blind Spot
The Shade Store
Commuters are riding the high of never-before-seen rail service aimed at connecting the Long Island Rail Road to the bedrock of Midtown Manhattan at Grand Central Madison.
The Metropolitan Transportation Authority celebrated a turning point with the long-anticipated opening of its 750,000-square-foot East Side Manhattan transit hub with the first shuttle train from Jamaica station on Jan. 25. Now the terminal is set for a full rollout of regular train service beginning Feb. 27.
The East Side Access Project, as it was known, has already drawn a daily rush of commuters — albeit under a limited format with shuttle service from the Queens station to Grand Central Madison.
Rather than plunging straightaway with full service, MTA officials said the station is in a soft-launch phase, enabling riders to slowly acclimate themselves to the additional shuttle service from Jamaica, find their way around the facility and test out commuting options.
Once Midtown’s terminal comes fully online, it will no doubt reorder the MTA’s transit system and send ripples through its 11 Long Island train branches, each offering direct or transfer service to Penn Station on the West Side, and Grand Central Madison.
For LIRR commuters, this change will
be felt most acutely in adapting to an overhauled train schedule that divvies up Manhattan-bound train service between the two sister terminals.
Some commuters may feel more taken to the change than others with the promise of greater accessibility and efficiency to their commutes. Still, others can’t help but groan over the foreseeable loss, and longing for their preferred service lines and connections.
But at least for MTA chair and chief
executive Janno Lieber, the change is a net-gain for most commuters — and a sign of economic renewal for the metro Long Island area, with a 41 percent increase in service.
Grand Central Madison provides “faster, more convenient travel that brings Long Island closer to the heart of the City,” Leiber said, in a release. “The new schedules are going to be a major shot in the arm for the local economy and the effort to get people back to offic-
es, theaters and shopping.”
But critics are quick to point out that the often-touted 41 percent service increase — raising the number of daily trains from 665 to 936 — is relative to current service which has experienced a major cutback of its own compared to pre-pandemic levels.
Weekday ridership continues to hover at about 65 percent of what it was before any of us had ever heard of Covid-19.
And while MTA officials expect nearly 45 percent of riders to shift over to Grand Central Madison, there are nagging concerns about the potential travel headaches brought by the decline in available morning rush-hour train service to Penn.
Take, for example, the fact that the Long Beach branch which will get 10 additional rush hour trains from its current 13 at Penn Station. Yet, it will have two fewer rush hour trains at Penn Station with shared service lines to Grand Central Madison.
“The new schedules are designed to have more evenly spaced trains and fewer large gaps in service,” MTA spokesman Dave Steckel said. “There will also be more frequent service to Queens and on the Ronkonkoma and West Hempstead branches. New service promises decrease travel times from Long Island to Manhattan, and reduce crowding at Penn Station.
“We will continue to monitor and adjust service based on ridership trends and other factors.”
Courtesy Metropolitan Transportation Authorityand can kill them within seconds of being ingested.
Derek Maltz, a retired agent in the New York Division of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration who is regularly featured on national news segments that focuses on the fentanyl crisis, joined the discussion via Zoom, and explained how the drug is ending up in the hands of young teens.
“This is not a drug problem,” he said. “This is the poisoning of our kids. The Mexican cartels are operating with impunity right now, and moving drugs into this country like they’ve never had in the history of the U.S.
“Make no mistake — there is a clear and present danger to our citizens right now,” Maltz continued. “It’s a national security problem that we’ve never had in the past.”
Just last week in Houston, he said, a task force in Texas found and shut down a lab creating fentanyl. Chemicals used to create the opioid typically come from China, he added.
“We now have people in America that are not necessarily connected to the cartels ordering up chemicals from China and making this stuff in their house with pill presses,” Maltz said. “Some of these pill presses can make 7,000 to 10,000 pills an hour.”
He made it clear that while he understands that it’s normal for kids to experi-
Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid 100 times stronger than morphine. Under medical supervision, fentanyl relieves severe pain, and is typically given to people with advanced cancer.
Illicit fentanyl, which is infiltrating the drug trade, is an uncontrolled substance that can kill a user almost instantly. As little as 2 milligrams can be lethal, depending on body size.
The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration has found fentanyl pills ranging from 0.2 to 5.1 milligrams more than twice the lethal dose.
Fentanyl is a major factor in the
ment when they’re teenagers, they need to be aware of the consequences. “If you buy from the streets, if you buy it from the internet, it’s going to kill you, most likely,” Maltz said. “Kids are supposed to learn from their mistakes, not die from their mistakes.”
One of the videos Reibl showed, called “Dead on Arrival,” is a 21-minute documentary about fentanyl overdoses featuring candid interviews from parents who have lost children. Advocacy groups
increase in opioid-related deaths in the U.S. Between Jan. 2020 and Jan. 2021, overdose deaths involving opioids rose 38.1 percent.
Its effects can be tamed but not reversed by nalaxone, more commonly known by the brand name Narcan, the only Food and Drug Administrationapproved treatment of an opioid overdose. It is administered as a nasal spray, but officials emphasize that immediate medical attention is still needed for an overdose victim.
For more information and resources, visit DEA.gov.
across the country are working to make viewing the video mandatory in school districts, as a way to discourage children from trying drugs.
Steve Filson, an advocate and a retired police officer from California who lost his daughter to an overdose, is featured in “Dead on Arrival.” He regularly takes part in prevention presentations across the country, and he also joined last week’s on Zoom.
“We give our presentations all the time
at schools,” Filson said. “We show ‘Dead on Arrival’ — it resonates with kids. And most importantly, it opens a dialogue between us and kids. It’s a real story. And I think they get it when it comes from people with an experience such as ours.”
Some parents in the audience asked how ‘Dead on Arrival’ could become required viewing in Bellmore-Merrick and surrounding towns. While nothing could be done immediately, a representative from State Sen. Steve Rhoads’ office, who attended the presentation, said Rhoads planned to meeting with school superintendents in the 5th District, and that they could discuss a fentanyl-prevention program.
Maltz applauded the Bellmore-Merrick community for focusing on the fentanyl crisis. “I want to thank the superintendent of the Bellmore-Merrick school district for taking the leadership and the courage to step up to teach the community, educate the kids about this issue,” he said. “America has to wake up — and the citizens of Bellmore-Merrick are waking up, because you’re here tonight.”
To view the documentary, visit TinyURL.com/FentanylPrevention. For information about upcoming drug prevention programs offered by the parent center, call (516) 992-1086. And to get in touch with a local community counseling and prevention center, with offices located in the Central District, visit TempoGroup.org.
RichnerLIVE’s second annual R.E.A.L. Awards will spotlight entrepreneurs, professionals, and visionaries in Long Island’s real estate industry who have achieved success in their respective roles while also involved in community contributions and advocacy.
RESIDENTIAL
SPECIAL PROJECT
THE RESIDENCES AT GLEN HARBOR
Michael W. Stanco
Licensed Associate Real Estate Broker
Stanco Misiti Team at Compass BROKERS (Individual)
Gina Marie Bettenhauser
Associate Real Estate Broker
Coldwell Banker Distinctive Homes
President, Long Island Board of REALTORS®
Hilary Becker
Licensed Broker
Becker Realty Services, Inc.
Molly Deegan
Owner & Licensed Broker
Branch Real Estate Group
Kevin Leatherman
Owner & Licensed Broker
Leatherman Homes
Donna O’Reilly Einemann
Branch Manager | Rockville Centre Office
Douglas Elliman Real Estate
Luciane Serifovic
CEO & Founder
Luxian International Realty
Shawn Steinmuller
Owner & Licensed Broker
Shawn Michael Realty
Mark Stempel & Jennie Katz
Team
Blue Island Homes
Helena Veloso
Senior Executive Manager of Sales
Douglas Elliman Real Estate
LICENSED SALESPERSON
Malka Asch
Licensed Real Estate Salesperson
Coach Realtors
John C. Gandolfo
Licensed Real Estate Salesperson
Coldwell Banker American Homes
Miriam Hagendorn
Licensed Real Estate Salesperson
SERHANT.
Ricki Noto
Team Leader,
Licensed Real Estate Salesperson
Coldwell Banker American Homes
Scott Wallace
Licensed Real Estate Salesperson
Daniel Gale Sotheby’s International Realty
TRAILBLAZER DEIRDRE O’CONNELL CEO
DANIEL GALE SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY
MAJOR SPONSORS:
OFFICE MANAGER
David Kasner
Branch Manager
Coldwell Banker American Homes
COMMERCIAL
BROKERS
Thomas DeLuca
Senior Director & Real Estate Broker
Cushman & Wakefield of Long Island Inc.
DEVELOPERS
Anthony Bartone
Managing Partner
Terwilliger & Bartone Properties, LLC
Kenneth Breslin, Esq. President
Breslin Realty Development Corp.
Rob Gitto
Vice President
The Gitto Group
Mark Meisner
President & Founder
The Birch Group
GENERAL CONTRACTOR & CONSTRUCTION MANAGEMENT
EW HOWELL CONSTRUCTION GROUP
SPECIAL THANKS TO OUR EVENT SPONSORS
REAL ESTATE MANAGEMENT/ DEVELOPER OF THE YEAR
Michael Maturo
President
RXR Realty
REAL ESTATE SERVICES/ PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
Martin Lomazow
Senior Vice President CBRE
ATTORNEYS
Michael S. Ackerman
Founder & Managing Partner
Ackerman Law, PLLC
John D. Chillemi
Partner
Ruskin Moscou Faltischek, P.C.
Bryan P. McCrossen
Partner
Jaspan Schlesinger Narendran, LLP
Christopher H. Palmer
Managing Partner
Cullen and Dykman, LLP
Ellen N. Savino
Partner
Sahn Ward Braff Koblenz PLLC
COMMUNITY CHAMPION
- TRADE GROUP
Commercial Industrial Broker
Society of Long Island (CIBS)
David Pennetta SIOR, LEED GA
Co-President
ENGINEERING
Stephen A. Hayduk, P.E.
Principal & Chief Engineer
Hayduk Engineering LLC
FATHER/DAUGHTER TEAM
Gilbert Balanoff
Owner
The Law Offices of Gilbert Balanoff, P.C.
Tiffany Balanoff
Licensed Real Estate Agent
Douglas Elliman Real Estate
LENDER
Nicholas Ceccarini
Owner & Broker
Weatherstone Mortgage Corp.
Christine Curiale
Mortgage Branch Manager
Valley Bank
Melissa Curtis
Sales Manager and Senior Loan Originator
Contour Mortgage
PROPERTY ACQUISITIONS
Michael Steinberg
CEO and Founder Hedgestone Business Advisors
RISING STAR
Alex Lipsky
Owner
Lipsky Construction
TAX CERTIORARI
Sean M. Cronin, Esq.
Partner
Cronin & Cronin Law Firm, PLLC
TECH AWARD
Ryan J. Coyne
Chief Technology Officer
SERHANT.
TECH PLATFORM OF THE YEAR
VincePropertyShark
Business Development Manager & Corporate Sales Lead
PropertyShark.com
TITLE COMPANY
HABITAT ABSTRACT
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice of formation of Lily J. Sweets, LLC. Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York SSNY on 11/5/2022. Office: Nassau County. SSNY has been designated for service of process. SSNY shall mail copy of any process served against the LLC, Legal Zoom.com, Inc., 7014 13th Avenue, Suite 202, Brooklyn, NY, 11228. Purpose: any lawful purpose.
137059
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF NASSAU, NRP MORTGAGE TRUST I, Plaintiff, vs. 1480 JERUSALEM LLC, ET AL., Defendant(s).
Pursuant to an Order
Confirming Referee Report and Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered on November 22, 2022, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction on the front steps on the north side of the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 on March 8, 2023 at 2:00 p.m., premises known as 1480 Jerusalem Avenue, North Merrick, NY 11566. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Hempstead, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 55, Block 540 and Lot 68. Approximate amount of judgment is $685,781.26 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index # 612453/2021. This foreclosure sale will be held on the north side steps of the Courthouse, rain or shine. COVID-19 safety protocols will be followed at the foreclosure sale. If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, the Court Appointed Referee will cancel the sale.
Oscar A. Prieto, Esq., Referee
Friedman Vartolo LLP, 85 Broad Street, Suite 501, New York, New York 10004, Attorneys for Plaintiff Firm File No. 211568-1 137066
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF NASSAU, NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE LLC, Plaintiff, vs. HARVEY BERK, ET AL., Defendant(s).
Pursuant to an Order
Confirming Referee Report and Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered on May 2, 2019, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction on the front steps on the north side of the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY on March 15, 2023 at 2:00
p.m., premises known as 1900 Leonard Lane, Hempstead, NY 11566 a/k/a 1900 Leonard Lane, Merrick, NY 11566. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Hempstead, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 62, Block 199 and Lot 15. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index # 17-001247. This foreclosure sale will be held on the north side steps of the Courthouse, rain or shine. COVID-19 safety protocols will be followed at the foreclosure sale. If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, the Court Appointed Referee will cancel the sale.
Joseph Juliano, Esq., Referee Berkman, Henoch, Peterson, & Peddy, P.C., 100 Garden City Plaza, Garden City, NY 11530, Attorneys for Plaintiff
137251
The Merrick Union Free School District is issuing this Request For Proposals (RFP) for the selection of a real estate broker for the purpose of the sale of unused School District property. You are invited to submit proposals in accordance with this RFP. Proposals will be received until 11:00 am on March 8, 2023 directed to the attention of Ryan Butler, Assistant Superintendent for Business, at the Administrative Offices of the School District located at 21 Babylon Road, Merrick, New York 11566. Proposal forms may be obtained at the aforementioned office or by contacting Ryan Butler at 516-992-7260. The Board of Education reserves the right to reject any proposal or to accept part of any proposal.
MERRICK UNION FREE SCHOOL DISTRICT
Dated: February 17, 2023 137355
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE
that pursuant to Article 16 of the Town Law of the State of New York, as amended, a public hearing will be held in the Town Meeting Pavilion, Hempstead Town Hall, 1 Washington Street, Village and Town of Hempstead, Hempstead, New York, on the 28th day of February, 2023 at 7:00 o’clock in the evening of that day, to consider the proposed amendment of Article XXXIV of the Building Zone Ordinance, in relation to flood hazard zones. The proposed amendment is on file in
the office of the Town Clerk of the Town of Hempstead, Hempstead Town Hall, 1 Washington Street, Village and Town of Hempstead, Hempstead, New York, and available at hempsteadny.gov, where it may be inspected during office hours.
ALL PERSONS INTERESTED in the subject matter will be given an opportunity to be heard with reference thereto at the time and place abovedesignated.
Dated: Hempstead, New York
February 7, 2023
BY ORDER OF THE TOWN BOARD OF THE TOWN OF HEMPSTEAD
KATE MURRAY
Town Clerk
DONALD X. CLAVIN, JR. Supervisor 137313
LEGAL NOTICE
BELLMORE-MERRICK CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL
DISTRICT
BELLMORE U.F.S.D.
MERRICK U.F.S.D.
NORTH BELLMORE U.F.S.D.
NORTH MERRICK U.F.S.D.
TOWN OF HEMPSTEAD, COUNTY OF NASSAU
NOTICE TO BIDDERS:
In accordance with provision of Section 103 of the General Municipal Law, the Board of Education of the Bellmore-Merrick
Transportation Consortium hereby invites the submission of sealed bids for:
Bellmore-Merrick
Cooperative School Year 2022-2023
Bids will be publicly opened and read at the Bellmore-Merrick Central High School District Business Office, 1260 Meadowbrook Road, North Merrick, New York, on Monday, March 6, 2023, at 10:00 am.
Specifications and Bid
Forms may be obtained from the office of Tom Volpe, Director of Transportation, between the hours of 8:00 am and 4:00 pm.
The Board of Education reserves the right to waive any informalities in or to reject in whole or in part all bids or to accept any bid which in its judgment is in the best interest of the school district.
By order: Board of Education
BELLMORE-MERRICK
CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL
DISTRICT
BELLMORE U.F.S.D.
MERRICK U.F.S.D.
NORTH BELLMORE U.F.S.D.
NORTH MERRICK U.F.S.D. 137358
ON BEHALF OF CSMC TRUST 2015-2, Plaintiffagainst- WAFA ABBOUD, et al Defendant(s).
Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale dated October 25, 2018 and entered on October 26, 2018, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction on the North Side steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court located at 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY on March 23rd, 2023 at 2:00 p.m.
ALL that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, situate, lying and being in the Town of Hempstead, Nassau County, New York, known and designated as Section 63 Block 146 Lot 34.
The Foreclosure Sale will be conducted in accordance with 10th Judicial District’s COVID-19 Policies and Foreclosure Auction Rules.
All bidders must wear a face mask/shield at all times and social distancing must be observed by all bidders at all times. Bidders who do not comply with the face mask and/or the social distancing mandate will be removed from the auction.
The aforementioned auction will be conducted in accordance with the Court System’s COVID-19 mitigation protocols and as such all persons must comply with social distancing, wearing masks and screening practices in effect at the time of this foreclosure sale. Foreclosure Auctions will be held Rain or Shine. If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, then the Court Appointed Referee will cancel the foreclosure auction.
Said premises known as 2739 MERRICK AVENUE, MERRICK, NY Approximate amount of lien $1,216,154.12 plus interest & costs.
Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment and Terms of Sale.
Index Number 003460/2017.
LAWRENCE FARBMAN, ESQ., Referee DRUCKMAN LAW GROUP PLLC Attorney(s) for Plaintiff 242 Drexel Avenue, Westbury, NY 11590 For sale information, please visit www.Auction.com or call (800) 280-2832.
{* Merrick Life*}
137351
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE
SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF NASSAU GREEN TREE SERVICING LLC, Plaintiff AGAINST ELIZABETH VITALE, JACK GANDOLFO, Defendant(s)
Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered September 27, 2018, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the North Side steps of
It’s 2023 — an enlightened era! Still, only about 33 percent of people seeking out psychotherapy are men. The reason for this, it’s been said, is that women are more open to expressing their emotions, and asking for help and support.
Guys, in contrast, are viewed as too macho or self-contained to consider psychotherapy. Damn, they can’t even ask for directions — how can they ask for help when feeling vulnerable, weak, or confused? Why would they want to yackety-yak to a stranger about what’s making them feel unsafe? It’s dropping their protection, exposing the chink in their armor, and letting themselves be blamed; who’d want to do that?
that it requires them to do things they’re uncomfortable with - open up, let yourself be vulnerable, express your feelings and accept help.
Therapy is even more threatening if he’s sent by a spouse making an ultimatum, a work situation that demands it, or a family intervention. He may fear, often rightly so, that he’ll be criticized, ridiculed, patronized, or asked questions that’ll make him look stupid. As a defense against these feelings, he may enter therapy with an attitude of superiority (you can’t teach me anything), entitlement (I’ll do whatever I damn well want to do), and contempt for the process of psychotherapy (this is all bullshit).
Yet perhaps we’re being harsh on men as it’s only fair to acknowledge that traditional talk therapy has always been more oriented toward women’s ways. In therapy, you’re supposed to self-disclose, explore your feelings, reflect on the past, trust your therapist and be open to receiving aid and advice. This is a woman’s dream; expressing feelings is what we want. Opening up to a non-judgmental, listening ear is heaven for us. Feeling understood is what we crave. Trusting another who knows more than we know makes us feel secure.
For many, not all, men it’s different. They tend to be uncomfortable articulating what they feel. It’s tough for them to trust another with their innermost feelings. Since they were kids, they got the message that they need to be tough and competitive. Showing fear is shameful. Being weak is reprehensible. Show your sensitivity and you’ll be ridiculed and ostracized by your peers. Though in today’s climate, there are more relaxed messages about manhood, not all men have received or buy the new message.
Often men feel that there’s no safe environment to express their feelings. Though they may long for emotional intimacy, expressing themselves often backfires on them. Why? Because when a man finally opens up and talks about his feelings, he often feels worse. Too often, he’s told what’s wrong with him, what he should be doing, what he shouldn’t have done. Bruised and hurt, he withdraws to his cave to lick his wounds.
Hence, it’s no wonder that many guys resist traditional talk therapy. They know
Now, before I receive a slew of angry letters, the above description is not true for all men. Yet, it’s true for many. So rather than requiring men to set aside their socialization experience and adapt to traditional therapy, perhaps it’s time for therapy to become more oriented toward guy’s ways. Here are my ideas for what would be effective guy therapy.
■ An emphasis on exploring how you think rather than how you feel.
■ Appealing to a man’s competence and strengths to remedy a situation.
■ Exploring fix-it solutions that bolster a man’s ego.
■ Being sensitive to a man’s discomfort with vulnerability.
■ Emphasizing building something better rather than analyzing problems.
■ Using metaphors men are comfortable with (sports, business, computers, cars, tools) as you run the ball down the field.
When men recognize that psychotherapy respects and values their ways of being in the world, they’ll be open to muscling into the strengths and solutions that therapy can offer.
©2023
Linda Sapadin, Ph.D., psychologist, coach and author specializes in helping people improve their relationships, enhance their lives and overcome procrastination and fear. Contact her at DrSapadin@aol.com. Visit her website at www.PsychWisdom.com.
the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 on March 21, 2023 at 2:30PM, premises known as 46 SHAW DRIVE, MERRICK, NY 11566. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being at
North Merrick, Town of Hempstead, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 56, Block A02, Lot 12A-12B.
Approximate amount of judgment $614,616.06 plus interest and costs.
Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index #007977/2014. The aforementioned auction
will be conducted in accordance with the NASSAU County COVID-19 mitigation protocols and as such all persons must comply with social distancing, wearing masks and screening practices in effect at the time of this foreclosure sale. If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are
other health or safety concerns, then the court appointed referee will cancel the foreclosure auction. Foreclosure Auctions will be held “Rain or Shine”. Jennifer Ettenger, Esq., Referee Gross Polowy, LLC 1775 Wehrle Drive Williamsville, NY 14221 17-001468 74870
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Q. We are in a quandary about insulation. Our house was built in 1948, and isn’t insulated well. We decided to add a master bedroom and kitchen extension and insulate as much as we can. Our building plans examiner wants something call a ResCheck from our architect, and wants to know how much of the house we’re going to do. We only want to tell them about the additions, even though we want to do our attic and the whole exterior from the outside, if we can. We understand that if we tell the plans examiner about the rest of the house, they can make us do a more expensive energy analysis, which we don’t think is necessary. Also, our contractor wants to only insulate the attic floor, but the architect said that the latest energy code requires us to insulate the roof and not the attic floor. Can you advise?
A. It’s frustrating that if you were not in the permit process, you would just insulate, but the moment government learns that you are doing everything the right way, with permits, they make things more involved.
A ResCheck is the name given to a 10-page energy-analysis document, complete with areas of windows and doors, walls, floors and ceilings along with calculated heat loss and energy coefficients. It’s like taking an exam and the way it is done, to be registered with the state online, we don’t get to know if the numbers provided will pass until we get to the end of the document. If it’s failing the requirements, we aren’t shown why, so we have to start over, trying to guess what needs to be beefed up.
I like to do these in the presence of clients so they understand that it’s serious business, not just some form to fill out. Unfortunately, I don’t get to do these analyses in front of the contractors who often contradict the ResCheck by substituting lesser fiberglass batting for the higher-rated foam material, to save money and labor, since they usually need to get a subcontractor to install foam instead of using their own cheaper laborers.
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In general, when your project constitutes more than 50 percent of home building area or dollar value compared with the home value, then the examiner wants a more expensive and involved Home Energy Rating System engineer to provide a much more detailed report. This includes a test at the end of the construction in which the home is pressurized using air fans, then gauges are applied, usually at a front door opening, to determine how quickly the house loses pressure, thereby gauging the amount of gaps where air can leak to the atmosphere. This gives an accurate idea of how much cold or heated air can get into the house, which you’re trying to avoid by insulating.
Since this is a big question, tune in to my next column for the rest of the answer. Stay warm and good luck!
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There are all types of numbers associated with politicians. Pollsters are constantly bombarding us with numbers. Defeated candidates keep complaining that they won, and say they have the numbers to prove it. But the bottom line in this discussion is that the number 2 is by far the worst number to be attached to any political figure.
As living proof of the value of being second, I cite Vice President Kamala Harris and New York Lt. Gov. Antonio Delgado. There is no question that either of them would become No. 1 if anything happened to her/his boss. But looking at their scope of responsibilities shows that they have very little to do. Harris is rarely in the news, primarily because she hasn’t been given that much to do on a daily basis. She’s called upon to attend important funerals, but the press rarely says much about her.
With the 2024 presidential election coming up, there is speculation about whether President Biden will make Harris his running mate if he decides to run again. Most political observers think she would be a drag on the 2024 ticket, because she hasn’t been associated with any winning issues. Shortly after she took on her official duties, the president assigned her the responsibility of helping solve the border crisis, which is proving more difficult than curing cancer. There was an opportunity for Harris to make some serious recommendations on how to solve the crisis, but she felt the issue was too toxic and declined to actively take on the role. She has been lobbying for the passage of the George Floyd Act, which would better clarify what the role of the police should be, but she wouldn’t be able to make any waves without Biden doing the heavy lifting. There’s also a possibility that the president has chosen not to boost her credentials because of the 2020
debates, when she went out of her way to attack Biden on school segregation. No matter how you try to define the role of the vice president, it’s very hard to write out a list of specifications. The president decides what the V.P.’s job will be, and there are many examples of presidents giving their vice presidents serious duties. President George W. Bush delegated most of his high-level duties to Dick Cheney, and many claimed that Cheney became the real president. But the late Vice President James Nance Garner, who served under Franklin Roosevelt, is said to have had the best definition of the job, describing the vice president’s job as not being worth “a bucket of warm spit.”
Delgado’s situation is an interesting one. He’s a graduate of Colgate University and Harvard Law School. He was a very effective member of Congress who was willing to resign to take on the No. 2 position in Albany. Gov. Kathy Hochul spent every waking hour of her time as lieutenant governor traveling to every
corner of the state. She got to know every local chamber of commerce, and elected officials marveled at her nonstop visits. There is no doubt that her tenacity helped her get elected governor.
Currently, however, the only job Delgado has is to preside over the State Senate, which isn’t the most exciting work. No doubt after April 1, when the state budget is out of the way, Hochul will decide what role he will play. Delgado is personable and articulate, and was well received during his campaign swings. He could be a great advocate for the governor’s programs. She is badly in need of someone who can reach out to the Assembly and Senate members and make some friends. Delgado could help her a great deal in that role.
But either way, being No. 2 in government is hardly the best job in the business.
Jerry Kremer was an Assemblyman for 23 years, and chaired the Assembly’s Ways and Means Committee for 12 years. He now heads Empire Government Strategies, a business development and legislative strategy firm. Comments about this column? jkremer@liherald.com.
Don’t mess with puppies, George. From what I’ve read and what I’ve heard in statements coming out of your very own mouth, you seem estranged from most commonly held beliefs of what is true and what is false, what is a factual statement and what is a lie. What happened and what didn’t happen.
Assiduously, I have ignored the media high jinks and political circus surrounding your behavior, but last week’s revelation of the alleged puppy caper in Pennsylvania’s Amish country in 2017 unleashes my inner Cujo.
Oh yes, the temptation to joke is overwhelming due to the ridiculousness of many of your quasi-legal escapades and the seemingly endless stream of revelations concerning your grandiose claims, self-promotion and transgressions.
Last week we read in The Washington Post that a farmer in Pennsylvania had come forward with a story about you “buying” golden retriever puppies from him with rubber checks. Other
farmers have come forward with similar claims. Related to these charges is the story about the “charity” you claim to have established, Friends of Pets United, but the Post reported that no IRS records of the group could be found. It also reported that you stole money that had been raised to help a disabled veteran care for a dying dog. A disabled veteran?? A dying dog?? What’s wrong with you, George?
I am very disappointed in you. If I were your mother — but oh, wait, your mother died tragically in the 9/11 attacks, unless she didn’t. Can’t be sure. Well, if I were your mother, I would get you some help. The impulse among us in the media is to point at you, since you have become something of a one-man sideshow. But dude, you need serious therapeutic intervention.
New York City, or worked for a bank, or owned various houses, or knew people in the Pulse nightclub shooting, or graduated from NYU or played high-stakes volleyball.
Some say your name isn’t even George Santos. Pinning down the truth as torrents of lies pour from your mouth is like pinning down Jell-O. You are inventive and indefatigable in your stream of wishful thinking out loud, Walter Mitty on a bad trip.
How long will the Republicans allow the public evisceration to continue?
What we can be sure of is that you aren’t Jewish, or Jew-ish, despite your repeated claims to the contrary. According to The Forward, even though you said that your grandparents escaped the Holocaust, they actually were safe and sound in Brazil at the time. There’s no proof you were really mugged on your way to pay a delinquent rent check in
Mostly this is terribly sad. You need help, but you won’t find it in Congress or any public office, for now. Why not step down and save yourself further humiliation?
You can’t expect assistance from your mates in Congress, George. As long as you have a pulse and can vote the party line, they will let the public evisceration continue. You won’t find solace in Congress or real collegiality or decency. You are a GOP vote. Full stop.
Readers, from my perch in the press, the buffoonery of George Santos and his enablers fits perfectly into this time and space. Congress and the Senate have always had their share of nudniks, but Santos is part of a wave of new-age
liars. The toxic lies spewing from people like Marjorie Taylor Green, Rick Scott, Mike Lee, Lauren Boebert and Ron Johnson are poisoning the processes of government. They are all using Santos in what has become a spectacle and a shame.
Last, a shout-out to our neighbors in the 3rd Congressional District, the people of Mineola, Great Neck, North Hills, Port Washington and Oyster Bay. Assuming all of you are literate and somewhat paying attention, how did George Santos sweep by you and right into office? Was holding a Republican seat really a wise trade-off for allowing a candidate with not even a passing appreciation for the truth represent your interests in the People’s House?
As we approach the birthday of another George, the George of American history, who could not tell a lie, I wonder what the people of that era would do with someone like Mr. Santos? Hopefully summon some empathy and not put him on public display. During the reign of another George, King George the First of England, someone like our George might have officially played the part of the fool.
Now we don’t quite know what to do with him.
Copyright 2023 Randi Kreiss. Randi can be reached at randik3@aol.com.
Who’s got less to do, the vice president or the lieutenant governor?JERRY KREMER
the Kansas City Chiefs edged the Philadelphia Eagles in the NFL’s biggest game Sunday night, watched by more than 100 million people around the world.
But more than 50 million sports fans here at home in the United States had more invested in the game than pride in their favorite team. They wagered as much as $16 billion on Super Bowl LVII, according to the American Gaming Association. And just like football, someone’s going to win, which means someone has to lose. The thing is, being on the wrong side of a good bet is more common than not.
The money bet on the Chiefs and the Eagles was said to be more than double the total spent last year, when the Los Angeles Rams defeated the Cincinnati Bengals. And these days that betting involves more than just choosing which team will win.
Take prop bets, more formally known as proposition bets. They aren’t tied to the outcome of the game — like traditional spreads, moneylines and totals. Instead, they focus on more non-traditional occurrences like the length of the national anthem, or what color Gatorade will be poured on the winning coach.
Prop bets are currently the biggest driver of revenue for many sports gambling sites, according to news reports. That is, except in New York, where the law requires that all bets be tied to the game itself.
To the Editor:
Nassau Legislator Josh Lafazan’s recommendations last week to prevent future egregious candidate misrepresentations a la George Santos (“A useful way to enshrine a name we’d sooner forget”) are unnecessary and provide for a cure worse that the disease. Lafazan’s recommendations are to enshrine in law at all levels the following:
1. Mandatory background checks for all candidates “just like any employee.” There are significant legal restrictions on the nature and scope of employee background checks, and this is unnecessary, as the most rudimentary opposition research would have exposed Santos.
2. Barring anyone with an open foreign arrest warrant from holding office. Lafazan couldn’t possibly have thought this through. So, any foreign country simply has to issue an arrest warrant to remove our public officials? Talk about foreign interference in elections.
Even with those restrictions, New York-based gamblers placed more than $472 million in legal sports bets during the Super Bowl between the Rams and Bengals — part of a larger $16 billion wagered in the first year of legalized online betting in New York. So far, based on the weekly figures from the state gaming commission, this year’s figure is predicted to be even larger. All from a practice that didn’t even exist here a couple years ago.
There are currently nine different mobile applications legally recognized by the state, with FanDuel, DraftKings and Caesar’s Sportsbook among the bigger ones. FanDuel and DraftKings began a decade or so ago, focused on fantasy sports, in which fans build their own teams and compete against each other using real-life game statistics.
But as sports gambling has gained more widespread legal acceptance, the influence of those two companies has grown, and they have shifted gears and focused most of their attention on this new, much-more-lucrative market.
There are strong opinions on both sides on whether gambling should be legal, or if it’s even moral. But something many agree on is that if you’re going to gamble, do it responsibly. Wager only what you can afford to lose. Don’t stretch — or even break — those limits.
And no different than a casino, mobile and online sports betting can also lead to problem gambling.
Like many addictions, gambling can be attributed to the release of dopamine brought on by the thrill of risk-taking and the potential rewards. Gambling, for the most part, is perfectly legal. But then again, so are cigarettes and alcohol.
But gambling is sometimes considered a “hidden addiction,” because it’s not something that might be as obvious as drugs or alcohol, manifesting physical symptoms, although some gamblers have problems with sleep, anxiety, depression and guilt.
For the working-class poor, gambling can also create a perpetual loop in which addicts throw away much-needed and typically hard-earned cash that would otherwise be spent on necessities like housing and food.
The good thing, however, is that there are services in place to help. The Long Island Problem Gambling Resource Center, for example, offers several services for individuals and families impacted by gambling.
These issues shouldn’t necessarily disqualify any talk of bringing a new casino to Uniondale, but they certainly should be part of the conversation — a big part of it. Every resource should be available to keep wagering responsible, and to avoid the destruction of families — both functionally and economically.
As always, if you or a loved one are dealing with problem gambling, you can get help by calling (516) 266-8342, or visiting NYProblemGambling.org.
Viewing the American political scene today, I can’t help thinking about what Yeats wrote more than a century ago: “Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold; Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world.”
I’m not suggesting anarchy is imminent, or that our governmental structures are collapsing, but there are warning signs that should be heeded for our nation to cope with the enormous challenges facing America at home — and throughout the world — effectively. Not only is there bitter partisanship between the parties, there are also bitter divisions within them.
There can be honest debate as to when this severe fracturing began. Politics is always a combat sport. The days of peace, love and harmony — the “good old days” — never existed. Certainly not during the 28 years I was in Congress. But no matter how bitter the debate and severe the divisions were, certain lines weren’t crossed. Richard Nixon had reason to contest the 1960 election results, but gracefully conceded the race to John F. Kennedy. Al
Gore challenged George W. Bush’s razorthin electoral vote margin in 2000, but conceded with class after losing a similarly razor-thin 5-4 decision in the U.S. Supreme Court.
I believe the major turning point in the rules of political combat was the 2016 TrumpClinton race and its aftermath. It wasn’t just the heated charges and countercharges of the campaign, but the refusal of some Democrats to accept Trump’s victory, and much of the mainstream media’s defense of their erroneous predictions.
Nor was it just the refusal of prominent Democrats such as Rep. John Lewis to attend President Trump’s inauguration, but the allegations made by Democratic leaders, the intelligence community and major segments of the mainstream media that Trump’s election resulted from his campaign colluding with Russia.
This led to the Mueller investigation, which went on for almost two years, tying up the Trump administration and — with media support — giving credibility to the unprecedented belief that an American president was elected by colluding with a foreign enemy.
Being on the House Intelligence Committee and sitting through endless hearings, listening to countless witnesses and
studying reports and analyses, I was convinced there was no collusion whatever. Stripped of defensive rhetoric, the Mueller report reached the same conclusion. But the damage had been done, and the political well was further poisoned.
Then there were the riots in the summer of 2020, which raged throughout the country following the police killing of George Floyd. At least six people were killed. Cities like Spokane, Washington, and Portland, Oregon, were under siege. New York streets became nightly war zones. Police stations were attacked and set on fire. Churches were vandalized. The White House itself was threatened.
Yet Democratic leaders offered only perfunctory disapproval of the violence, emphasizing that most demonstrations were “peaceful.” Following a night of violence in Brooklyn — in which bottles and other objects were thrown at cops — then Gov. Andrew Cuomo said, “I stand with the protesters.”
In Manhattan, the Democratic district attorney refused to prosecute hundreds arrested for looting and rioting, including a getaway driver aiding those caught on video vandalizing St. Patrick’s Cathedral. All further poisoning the well.
Then, beginning on election night in 2020, Trump — citing no credible evi-
dence — charged that the election was “rigged” and “stolen.” Never explaining why, in a rigged election, Republicans would pick up 12 House seats while he lost the popular vote to Joe Biden by more than 7 million, Trump continued to attack the results.
The culmination of this constant onslaught — whether intended or not — was the disgraceful and violent assault on the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. No rational American — certainly no Republican claiming to be a patriot — can defend that outrage in any way.
Shockingly, however, too many Republicans are willing to minimize the violence as just a protest out of control, and still deny the election results.
What the nation saw last month, when it took 15 ballots over five days for Republicans to elect Rep. Kevin McCarthy speaker of the House, was a further rejection of tradition and civility. It is an ominous sign that this was the most protracted election for speaker since the decade preceding the Civil War.
It’s time for the sane forces on both sides to step forward. The United States has come too far as a nation, and faces too many challenges, to allow the voices of anarchy to prevail over our traditions and values.
Peter King is a former congressman, and a former chair of the House Committee on Homeland Security. A version of this essay originally appeared in The Hill.
Framework by Tim Baker3. Make it a misdemeanor (i.e. a crime) for a candidate to lie about his or her background. Just what we need: candidates routinely trading criminal charges. (“You only graduated cum laude, not magna cum laude!”) Again, basic opposition research is all that’s needed, not competing police reports.
This is an example of a politician giving the appearance of “doing something” about a problem that may very well make it worse.
TeRRANCe J. NOLAN LynbrookTo the editor:
As a student of history, I am distressed each day as I read and listen to the news, and I wonder:
When did it become appropriate to ignore a congressional subpoena and then be rewarded with the speakership of the U.S. House of Representatives, the thirdmost important position in the nation?
Why is it OK for Supreme Court nominees to lie at their confirmation hearings and then, after being appointed, overturn decades of court precedent?
When was it determined that politicians
should be permitted to ignore experts in curriculum, history scholars, trained teachers and trained librarians to ban books, whitewash American history and ban topics that are contrary to their ideas? Isn’t the purpose of education to expose students to diverse ideas?
When did it become fashionable to elect people to Congress who lie, yell, curse and bully — people who have no ability to legislate, and no understanding of the word “compromise”?
When did we turn our backs on the hardfought-for rights of all people and return to the days when voting rights were restricted?
In the end, the real question is, when will the moderates in government, and the many moderates in the country, stand up to the extremists on both ends of the political spectrum? Left alone, they will destroy our democracy. We would be wise to remember the words of the German Lutheran pastor Martin Niemoller, about the Nazis.
“First they came for the socialists, and I did not speak out — Because I was not a socialist. Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did not speak out — Because I was not a trade unionist. Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out — Because I was not a Jew. Then they came for me — and there was no one left to speak for me.”
ReNA BOLOGNA Bayville
the turning point in the rules of political combat was the 2016 TrumpClinton race.
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