April 15, 2016

Page 1

THE

CityREVIEW NewRochelle April 15 & 22, 2016 | Vol. 4, Number 8 | www.cityreviewnr.com

Change in graduation robes sparks controversy

Yet another deal

By SARAH VARNEY Education Reporter

A revised agreement to hand over the operations of Rye Playland to Standard Amusements is set to slash $26 million in proposed county-funded projects, if approved. For story, see page 8. File photo

3 red light cameras in use citywide, more to come By SIBYLLA CHIPAZIWA Editorial Assistant New Rochelle has now joined the cities of Mount Vernon and Yonkers in using cameras to cut down on red light violations. The red light cameras will be placed at various intersections. Up to four cameras have been installed as of January, and three cameras will begin functioning on Wednesday, April 13, after press time, meaning that violators will be ticketed. New Rochelle police Capt. Adrian Navarrete of the Police Services Division, which con-

sists of the department’s Traffic Unit, told the Review that the three, four-way intersections where red light cameras will be operating starting this week are Main Street and North Avenue, North and Lincoln avenues and Main Street and Weyman Avenue. Other intersections that are being considered for additional red light cameras include Main Street and Kings Highway, and North Avenue and Huguenot Street, the site of a fatal car accident in 2011. The remaining eight cameras will be installed and operational at a later date. Gary Torigian, a former 44-

year resident of New Rochelle and owner of Spectators on North Avenue, said that many cities are beginning to use red light cameras as part of traffic enforcement, adding that the cities believe it’s going to make roads safer. He said he did not know the cameras in New Rochelle existed. “Older people driving can be startled by [the cameras],” he said. “I actually got flashed in Mount Vernon for running a red light; I was distracted when I went through it. [The cameras] are a moneymaker, that’s what it is. They’ll tell you it’s about

safety, but it’s not. Cities are looking for money any way they can get it.” Brekford Corp., a public safety solutions company based in Hanover, Maryland, has been responsible for installing the traffic cameras. The city agreed to a three-year contract with the company in February 2015, with an option for renewal, at no cost to the city. The city will capture 65 percent of the revenue generated, with the contractor taking the remaining 35 percent, according cameras continued on page 7

In an attempt to be inclusive to lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender students, some schools in Westchester County, including New Rochelle High School, are moving away from assigning seniors gender-specific graduation robes. Public high schools in Tuckahoe and Mamaroneck currently wear black gowns for all graduating seniors. Public high schools in Eastchester, Rye and Harrison still require their male students to wear colored gowns while the women wear white. In the case of Bronxville, male students wear white tuxedo jackets and black pants while the female students wear white dresses. At the Feb. 23 meeting of the New Rochelle school district’s Board of Education, high school Principal Reginald Richardson appeared with three students to ask that board members approve the senior class’ decision to move away from graduates wearing the traditional genderspecific purple and white robes in exchange for solid purple garb for all. District Superintendent Dr. Brian Osborne pointed out that the decision rested with the high school and its students and that the board had no standing to rule on the change. According to Richardson and the students, the traditional assignment of white robes for girls and purple for boys was making some students uncomfortable.

In a letter sent home to parents of graduating seniors, Richardson explained that the adoption of a single color cap and gown would provide a more comfortable experience for some students. He said the change would “create an atmosphere that allows all of our students to enjoy the capstone event of their high school career equally, without the anxiety or fear that genderspecific colors might cause.” This June, students will be able to choose which color gown to wear, and all gowns will be solid purple when the class of 2017 crosses the stage. But this is not a change all are in favor of. During the Board of Education meeting held on Tuesday, April 5, more than a dozen New Rochelle High School graduates ranging in age from 18 to 80 stepped up to the podium one by one to passionately denounce the change. While some parents simply objected to New Rochelle High School ending a long-standing tradition in making the switch to all-purple graduation robes, other parents were unhappy with the motivation behind the change being made. “A man is a man and a woman is a woman,” Mark McLean, a New Rochelle High School alum, pronounced at the end of his remarks. New Rochelle resident Pearl Quarles spoke out against the change in defense of the purple robes continued on page 8

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April 15, 2016 by The City Review New Rochelle - Issuu