Franklin Square/Elmont
HERALD Belmont opening delayed
Teachers spread love online
Nurses thank lIJ employees
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Vol. 22 No. 17
APRIl 23 - 29, 2020
Neighbors help those in need Elmont residents give away food might having similar problems as businesses stayed idle and the unemployment rate soared. David Schoenwadt’s back According to data from the hurt after he spent last Friday New York State Department of morning handing out food to Labor released on April 16, hundreds, if not thousands, of nearly 60,000 Long Islanders Elmont residents in need. But filed for unemployment insurstill, he said, “I feel so good.” ance the previous week prior, Schoenwadt had been food with more than 28,000 filing in insecure in the past, Nassau County. he noted, and the That is up more Elmont community than 4 percenthelped him get age points over through it. So, when the same period he heard that severlast year. al residents were The data also planning to distribshowed that the ute food to those number of unemChRIs RosADo who needed it amid ployment claims t h e c o r o n av i r u s Volunteer, f i l e d by t h o s e pandemic, he decid- Gateway Youth working in the ed to help out — Outreach care and social despite the fact that assistance indushe is at a higher tries — which risk of dying from Covid-19 due employed roughly 8.6 percent to a cancer diagnosis and heart of Elmont residents in 2000, disease. according to CityData.com — “I think it’s more important increased by more than 42,000 to be a good Christian,” Scho- statewide, and people working enwadt said, adding, “If I didn’t in the administrative and supdo this, I’d feel guilty.” port services industry — nearly Some 600 senior citizens in 10.3 percent of residents in 2000 Elmont have had trouble get- — filed an additional 32,000 ting food, according to State claims. Sen. Todd Kaminsk y, who Those people may have been tasked his staff and interns able to survive on savings for with calling seniors during the the past few weeks, said Allison pandemic, and local officials Puglia, vice president of agenand community activists said cy relations for Island Harvest, they feared that more people Continued on page 3
By MelIssA KoeNIg mkoenig@liherald.com
T
his has been a complete community effort.
Courtesy Lisa Dawn Esposito
lIsA DAwN esPosITo Photoshopped her dog, Dustin, into Antonis Mor’s self-portrait.
Animal-inspired masterpieces F.S. woman Photoshops pets into paintings By MelIssA KoeNIg mkoenig@liherald.com
The spread of the Black Plague in the 14th century led, eventually, to the Renaissance. Now, during the coronavirus pandemic, one Franklin Square woman is creating art of her own — Photoshopping pets into Renaissanceera paintings. Lisa Dawn Esposito, who teaches graphic design at the High School of Arts and Technology in Manhattan, was inspired to spend her new-
found free time creating unique portraits after she saw similar ones selling for up to $600 on Facebook and Etsy. “I thought, that’s a cute idea,” Esposito, 40, said, “but who would pay that much?” So she decided to create her own, and sell them for only $25. She started about two weeks ago by taking photos of her three pets and Photoshopping her dog, Dustin, into Antonis Mor’s self-portrait; her cat, Brutus, into a selfportrait by Jacques-Louis
David; and her other dog, Waffles, into a painting of a knight of unknown provenance. Then, to cheer up her mother, Linda Andersen, while she was sick with Covid-19, Esposito decided to make portraits of Andersen’s dogs. They stayed by her while she suffered from a high fever for three weeks, and Linda Andersen, said she was “petrified that they were going to get sick.” But the dogs — which Continued on page 10