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The
PORT TIMES RECORD P O R T J E F F E R S O N • B E L L E T E R R E • P O R T J E F F E R S O N S TAT I O N • T E R R Y V I L L E
Vol. 32, No. 16
March 14, 2019
$1.00 KYLE BARR
Loss of a
haven
The Port Jefferson Maryhaven facility for children with developmental disabilities is set to close within two years — A3 KYLE BARR
SPACE RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBER ADDRESS
The state of Brookhaven town
Town supervisor touts Brookhaven’s finances, calls for new environmental and infrastructure projects
A11
Mills Pond Gallery presents In the Garden of Eden exhibit Also: Junior Iron Chef competition in Lake Grove, Business Highlights: Financial
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PAGE A2 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • MARCH 14, 2019
Port Jefferson Village
Jewelry Appraisals
Golf outing May 6 to support PJ prom Port Jefferson 2019 Senior Prom Committee Golf Outing at PJCC at Harbor Hills May 6, 2019
W. Broadway inRegistration Port Jefferson. The committee is Price also asking residentsTime to support with sponsorships Player: Includes - 18 holes of golf, riding cart, as follows: on the tee sign at $100, driving range at The Port Jefferson &2019 Senior at $300, Refreshments Awards DinnerProm $300, cocktail hour11:30 AM beverage $150cart at $300 Committee is asking residents to register for and dinner at $500. the annual golf outing May 6 at Port Jefferson Participants must be 7 years or older, and Non-playing Includes Awards Dinner only must bring golf attire. 6:00 PM spiked$50 Country Club guest: in order to raise funds for the Steel shoes are not Port Jefferson Senior Prom. allowed on the course. Cost is $150 per person, Please support thebe 2019 Portthe Jefferson SeniortoProm with a: (circle one) Participants will given opportunity and dinner is a separate cost of $50 per person. ● club Teegolf Signcourse Sponsorship: use the for a full 18 holes, along To reserve a foursome or$100 for more informawith use of the driving range and putting green. tion, residents are asked to contact Mike Am● Driving Range $300 mike@cyhrealty.com Refreshments will also Sponsorship be provided. brozy at 917-270-7436, ● Cocktail Hour at Sponsorship $300 Registration begins 11:30 with a shotgun tee or Jim Desmond at 631-331-6946, desmondpj@ Sponsorship $300 off set●forBeverage 1 p.m. AnCart awards dinner begins at 6 p.m., optonline.net. Dinner Sponsorship $500 which●will be hosted at Harbor Grill located at 111 Residents are asked to use the form below. BY KYLE BARR KYLE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
It doesn't hurt to periodically check the value of your jewelry. In fact, with ever-escalating prices, it helps! We offer professional appraisals based on knowledge and backed by experience, whether for insurance or for estate evaluation. Please call for an appointment. You could leave a lot richer. We care.
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MARCH 14, 2019 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A3
Port Jefferson
Maryhaven facility in Port Jeff to close after two years BY KYLE BARR KYLE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM A Port Jefferson school for children and young adults with developmental disabilities announced it would be shutting down gradually over the next two years. The Maryhaven Center of Hope, whose entrance is located along Myrtle Avenue in Port Jefferson, announced it will shut down the school over time, regularly moving the children, aged 5 through 21, along with faculty to different Maryhaven facilities on Long Island. “We have to stay open, and we want to stay open until every student is placed,” said Chris Hendriks, a Catholic Health Services of Long Island spokeswoman. “This population requires one-to-one care.” Representatives from Catholic Health Services, which runs Maryhaven, said it would begin winding down the residential school program at the end of the 2018-19 school year. It’s 71 students will need to be placed in other programs. “It is a very difficult decision to close this important program that we have been running for more than 50 years, and we are heartbroken that
The front gate of Maryhaven facility in Port Jefferson. Photo by Kyle Barr
we must do that,” said Maryhaven President and CEO Lewis Grossman in a press release. “But this action is the only fiscally responsible option to secure a strong and vital future for Maryhaven’s many other needed programs.” In a letter posted to the Maryhaven website, Grossman added he anticipates the program would be active throughout the 2019-20
school year. Maryhaven, which aids over 1,500 children and young adults in total, has experienced a significant operating loss at the Port Jeff from 2018 at approximately $1.7 million, according to the press release. The facility off Myrtle Avenue is also aging at an unsustainable rate, Hendriks said. The school said it would
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cost more than $10 million to renovate the building, which was originally constructed in the 1930s. The spokeswoman added the reimbursement rates New York State supplies to the organization has declined in recent years. “The state’s rates that give us the money for caring for these children has not kept up with the pace of cost of living.” the spokeswoman said. “For example, as of this week we got the rates for 2016, so we’re paying well in advance and then have to wait to be reimbursed back.” Several Maryhaven students will be older than 21 after June, Hendriks said. The letter by the Maryhaven CEO said those age 21 or older will be eligible for adult placement through the New York State Office for People with Developmental Disabilities, and some will be able to transfer to other adult programs within Maryhaven. Hendriks said Catholic Health Services is offering monetary incentives for the near 200 workers at the facility to stay on with the health care service provider until the end. Those who stay on will be moved to other Maryhaven or other service centers within the orbit of CHSLI. MARYHAVEN CONTINUED ON A11
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PAGE A4 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • MARCH 14, 2019
County
County announces shared services with municipalities to combat tick-borne illness North Shore communities have found a partner in the battle against ticks and the diseases they carry. On March 6, Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone (D) announced the SuffolkSHARE Public Health Partnership. A part of the county’s shared services initiative, the new partnership will leverage the efforts of 10 local governments and the Suffolk County Department of Health Services to research and combat ticks and tick-borne illness, according to a press release from the county. “This new partnership is another example of local governments
working together to save taxpayer dollars and protect the public health of our residents,” Bellone said in the statement. “By taking collective action, we are expanding education, collection, and analysis to ensure that we have the information and resources at our disposal to deal with these illnesses head on.” With the new partnership, towns and villages will be able to strengthen their efforts to combat ticks in ways that were previously prohibitive due to high cost and limited resources, according to the release. The new partnership draws on efforts that include collecting
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data and procuring materials at lower costs while tracking progress over time. These processes are already underway by the Suffolk County Tick Control Advisory Committee, which researches and combats ticks and associated illnesses. According to the county, each year approximately 650 Suffolk residents contract a tickborne illness, including Lyme disease. Eight villages and two towns will work in conjunction with the county, including Asharoken, Northport, Head of the Harbor, Old Field and Belle Terre, according to the press release. “Protecting public health is a priority for the Village of Belle Terre, and mitigating the risk of ticks and tick-borne illness is an important mission,” Bob Sandak, the Village of Belle Terre mayor, said in a statement. “Having the ability to work with other local governments and Suffolk County on this issue will give us the opportunity to address it effectively and affordably.” Recently, Belle Terre moved to allow deer hunting within the village, citing that New York State is the only governing body that can restrict hunting. Sandak said at a Jan. 15 village meeting, where the possibility of deer culling in part with Port Jefferson Village was discussed, that in the near-mile radius of the village boundaries, there could be as many as 300 deer. It was expected that culling could bring the number of deer down to approximately 50. The Department of Health Services will provide resources and guidance when it comes to ticks, while the county will facilitate testing of samples, collection of data and additional analysis. The cooperative procurement of corn, tickicide and other materials, as well as municipalities working together to collect samples to have them analyzed will happen at a cheaper rate due to consolidation, according to county officials. The county health department and Suffolk County Department of Public Works Vector Control Unit will consult with villages launching their initial efforts at tick mitigation, tick-borne illness mitigation and deer mitigation, which may include municipalities sustaining a four-poster (also known as a deer feeder); using environmental controls, such as landscaping; and utilizing birth control. The participating local governments will assist the Department of Health Services with community education regarding the risk of ticks and how to avoid bites, tick collection for testing and health monitoring of residents. According to the press release, North Haven, Saltaire and Shelter Island already operate four-posters. The deer feeders brush tickicide onto the animals to keep them free of ticks. “While tick-borne illnesses remain a major concern amongst our community, we continue to look for new and innovative ways to protect the public’s health,” said Michael Levine, Village of Old Field mayor, in a statement. “Thanks to the work of County Executive Bellone and the creation of this new partnership, we will now be able to asses tick conditions, develop a comprehensive plan to combat this public health issues, and educate our residents on ways to stay safe.”
— Rita J. Egan
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MARCH 14, 2019 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A5
LEGALS PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF A SPECIAL MEETING OF THE VOTERS OF UNION FREE SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 6, TOWN OF BROOKHAVEN, SUFFOLK COUNTY, NEW YORK, ON BEHALF OF THE PORT JEFFERSON FREE LIBRARY: NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that a special meeting of qualified voters of Union Free School District No. 6, Town of Brookhaven, Suffolk County, New York, will be held in the Port Jefferson Free Library located at 100 Thompson Street, Port Jefferson, New York, on Tuesday, April 2, 2019, at 10:00 a.m., prevailing time for the purpose of voting by paper ballot upon the following items: To adopt the annual Port Jefferson Free Library budget for the fiscal year 2019-2020 and that the Board of Education of School District No. 6 be authorized and directed to raise by taxation the necessary moneys on the taxable property of the district. AND FURTHER NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that for the purpose of voting at such meeting on Tuesday, April 2, 2019 the polls will be opened between the hours of 10:00 a.m. and 9:00 p.m. prevailing time, and the voting will be held in the Port Jefferson Free Library Building. AND FURTHER NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that a copy of the statement of the amount of money which will be required for the ensuing year for the Port Jefferson Free Library’s purposes, exclusive of public moneys, may be seen by any taxpayer in the School District during the seven days immediately preceding said meeting, except holidays, at the Library: 100 Thompson Street, Port Jefferson, New York during regular library hours of service, between 9:30 a.m. and 9:00 p.m. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday; 9:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. on Saturday; 1:00 p.m. and 5:00 p.m. on Sunday, prevailing time. A Budget Information Meeting will be held on Monday, March 25 at 6:30 p.m. in the Library Meeting Room.
To Place A Legal Notice
Email: legals@tbrnewsmedia.com By order of the Board of Education Union Free School District No. 6 Janice Baisley, District Clerk 2/14/19, 2/28/19, 3/14/19, 3/28/19 259 2/14 4x ptr Notice of Formation of: Sabrina Styles LLC. Arts of Org. filed with Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 1/16/2019. Office location: Suffolk County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of the process to the LLC: PO Box 119, Port Jefferson, NY 11776. Purpose: Any lawful purpose 263 2/7 6x ptr NOTICE OF ANNUAL ELECTION AND BUDGET VOTE OF THE COMSEWOGUE PUBLIC LIBRARY TOWN OF BROOKHAVEN, COUNTY OF SUFFOLK, NEW YORK NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the Annual Election and Budget Vote of the qualified voters of the Comsewogue Union Free School District, Town of Brookhaven, Suffolk County, New York, will be held at the Comsewogue Public Library, 170 Terryville Road, Port Jefferson Station, New York, on April 2, 2019, between the hours of 9:30 a.m. and 9:00 p.m. prevailing time, for the purpose of voting, by paper ballot, upon the following items: (1) Proposition to adopt the Annual Budget for the support and maintenance of the Comsewogue Public Library for the 2019-2020 fiscal year and to authorize the requisite portion thereof to be raised by taxation on the taxable property of the Brookhaven-Comsewogue Union Free School District; and (2) Election of one (1) Trustee to the Board of Trustees of the Comsewogue Public Library to fill a five-year term commencing July 1, 2019 and ending June 30, 2024, as a result of the expiration of the term of office presently held by John
Rossini; and FURTHER NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that a copy of the statement of the amount of money which will be required for the ensuing fiscal year for the Comsewogue Public Library’s purposes, may be obtained by any resident in the School District during the fourteen (14) days immediately preceding and on the day of said meeting, except Saturdays, Sundays or holidays, from the Library, located at 170 Terryville Road, Port Jefferson Station, New York, during the hours in which the Library is regularly open for business and online at www. cplib.org; and FURTHER NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the Board of Trustees of the Comsewogue Public Library will conduct a Budget Information Hearing for the purpose of presenting the proposed budget of the Comsewogue Public Library on March 19, 2019 at the Comsewogue Public Library, 170 Terryville Road, Port Jefferson Station, New York 11776 at 6:00 p.m.; and FURTHER NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that petitions nominating candidates for the Office of Trustee of the Comsewogue Public Library shall be filed in the Office of the Clerk of the Library, 170 Terryville Road, Port Jefferson Station, New York, between the hours of 9:30 a.m. and 4:00 p.m., prevailing time, Monday through Friday, but not later than 5:00 p.m., Monday, March 4, 2019. Each petition must be directed to the Office of the Clerk of the Library, must be signed by at least twenty-five (25) qualified voters of the District and must state the residence of each signer and the name and residence of the candidate; and FURTHER NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that personal registration of voters is required either pursuant to section 2014 of the Education Law or pursuant to Article 5 of the Election Law. If a voter has heretofore registered pursuant to section 2014 of the Education Law and has voted at any annual or special district meeting within the past four (4) years, such voter is eligible to vote at this election; if the voter
is registered and eligible to vote pursuant to Article 5 of the Election Law, such voter is also eligible to vote at this election. All other persons who wish to vote must register. Registration may be effected during normal school hours when school is in session at the Office of the District Clerk, Administrative Office, Comsewogue Union Free School District, 290 Norwood Avenue, Port Jefferson Station, NY.; and FURTHER NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that pursuant to the provisions of 2018-a of the Education Law, absentee ballots for the election of Trustee of the Library and for the adoption of the annual budget may be applied for at the Office of the Clerk of the Comsewogue Public Library during regular business hours. Such application must be received by the Office of the Clerk of the Comsewogue Public Library seven (7) days prior to the vote/election if the ballot is to be mailed to the voter or by 5:00 p.m. on the day prior to the vote/election if the ballot is to be personally delivered to the voter. No absentee voter’s ballot shall be canvassed, unless it shall have been received in the Office of the Clerk of the Comsewogue Public Library no later than 5:00 p.m. on the day of the election. A list of all persons to whom absentee ballots shall have been issued will be available in the said Office of the Clerk of the Comsewogue Public Library on each of the five (5) days prior to April 2, 2019 except Saturdays, Sundays and holidays; and FURTHER NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that a qualified voter whose ability to appear personally at the polling place is substantially impaired by reason of permanent illness or physical disability and whose registration record has been marked “permanently disabled” by the Board of Elections pursuant to the provisions of the Election Law shall be entitled to receive an absentee ballot pursuant to the provisions of the Election Law without making separate application for such absentee ballot. Dated: Port Jefferson Station, NY
February 6, 2019
neys for Plaintiff.
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE COMSEWOGUE PUBLIC LIBRARY KEVIN SPENCE, PRESIDENT
288 2/28 4x ptr
279 2/14 4x ptr SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK - COUNTY OF SUFFOLK THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON F/K/A THE BANK OF NEW YORK AS SUCCESSOR TRUSTEE FOR JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, AS TRUSTEE FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE CERTIFICATEHOLDERS OF POPULAR ABS, INC. MORTGAGE PASSTHROUGH CERTIFICATE SERIES 2004-5, V. PATRICIA WEISS, ET AL. NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to a Final Judgment of Foreclosure dated October 25, 2018, and entered in the Office of the Clerk of the County of Suffolk, wherein THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON F/K/A THE BANK OF NEW YORK AS SUCCESSOR TRUSTEE FOR JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, AS TRUSTEE FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE CERTIFICATEHOLDERS OF POPULAR ABS, INC. MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATE SERIES 2004-5 is the Plaintiff and PATRICIA WEISS, ET AL. are the Defendants. I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the BROOKHAVEN TOWN HALL, 1 INDEPENDENCE HILL, FARMINGVILLE, NY 11738, on April 4, 2019 at 11:00AM, premises known as 5 LEHIGH AVENUE, CENTEREACH, NY 11720: District 0200, Section 513.00, Block 01.00, Lot 024.000:
SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK - COUNTY OF SUFFOLK REVERSE MORTGAGE FUNDING, LLC, V. GEORGE CALLAGHAN AS HEIR AT LAW AND NEXT OF KIN OF SUZANNE GALKE, ET AL. NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to a Final Judgment of Foreclosure dated December 19, 2018, and entered in the Office of the Clerk of the County of Suffolk, wherein REVERSE MORTGAGE FUNDING, LLC is the Plaintiff and GEORGE CALLAGHAN AS HEIR AT LAW AND NEXT OF KIN OF SUZANNE GALKE, ET AL. are the Defendants. I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the BROOKHAVEN TOWN HALL, 1 INDEPENDENCE HILL, FARMINGVILLE, NY 11738, on April 9, 2019 at 11:00AM, premises known as 9 MAYSON COURT, SELDEN, NY 11784: District 0200, Section 537.00, Block 03.00, Lot 016.000: ALL THAT CERTAIN PLOT, PIECE OR PARCEL OF LAND, SITUATE, LYING AND BEING IN THE TOWN OF BROOKHAVEN, COUNTY OF SUFFOLK AND STATE OF NEW YORK Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index # 601530/2016. Jan M. Murphy, Esq. - Referee. RAS Boriskin, LLC 900 Merchants Concourse, Suite 310, Westbury, New York 11590, Attorneys for Plaintiff.
ALL THAT CERTAIN PLOT, PIECE OR PARCEL OF LAND, WITH THE BUILDINGS AND IMPROVEMENTS THEREON ERECTED, SITUATE, LYING AND BEING AT CENTEREACH, IN THE TOWN OF BROOKHAVEN, COUNTY OF SUFFOLK AND STATE OF NEW YORK
290 3/7 4x ptr
Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index # 613040/2015. Vincent Messina, Esq. - Referee. RAS Boriskin, LLC 900 Merchants Concourse, Suite 310, Westbury, New York 11590, Attor-
V.
SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK - COUNTY OF SUFFOLK U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION,
JAIME DEGREGORIO; ET AL. NOTICE OF SALE LEGALS con’t on pg. 6
PAGE A6 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • MARCH 14, 2019
LEGALS LEGALS con’t from pg. 5 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to a Final Judgment of Foreclosure dated September 06, 2018, and entered in the Office of the Clerk of the County of Suffolk, wherein U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION is the Plaintiff and JAIME DEGREGORIO, ET AL. are the Defendants. I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the BROOKHAVEN TOWN HALL, 1 INDEPENDENCE HALL, FARMINGVILLE, NY 11738, on April 10, 2019 at 9:30AM, premises known as 143 DANA AVE, MASTIC, NY 11950: District 0200, Section 750.00, Block 5.00, Lot 003.005: ALL THAT CERTAIN PLOT, PIECE OR PARCEL OF LAND SITUATE, LYING AND BEING IN THE TOWN OF BROOKHAVEN, COUNTY OF SUFFOLK AND STATE OF NEW YORK Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index # 612272/2016. Arthur E. Shulman, Esq. - Referee. RAS Boriskin, LLC 900 Merchants Concourse, Suite 310, Westbury, New York 11590, Attorneys for Plaintiff. 292 3/7 4x ptr SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK - COUNTY OF SUFFOLK U.S. BANK TRUST NATIONAL ASSOCIATION AS TRUSTEE OF THE WF VICTORIA GRANTOR TRUST 2016-2, V. BELLE MELINE MEARS EDSALL; ET AL. NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to a Final Judgment of Foreclosure dated August 30, 2018, and entered in the Office of the Clerk of the County of Suffolk, wherein U.S. BANK TRUST NATIONAL ASSOCIATION AS TRUSTEE OF THE WF VICTORIA GRANTOR TRUST 2016-2, is the Plaintiff and BELLE MELINE MEARS EDSALL; ET AL. are the Defendants. I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the BROOKHAVEN TOWN HALL, 1 INDEPENDENCE HILL, FARMINGVILLE, NY 11738, on April 3, 2019 at 11:00AM, premises known as 24 HAWKINS ROAD, STONY
To Place A Legal Notice
Email: legals@tbrnewsmedia.com BROOK, NY 11790: District 0200, Section 219.00, Block 04.00, Lot 010.000: ALL THAT CERTAIN PLOT, PIECE OR PARCEL OF LAND, SITUATE, LYING AND BEING AT STONY BROOK, TOWN OF BROOKHAVEN, SUFFOLK COUNTY, STATE OF NEW YORK Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index # 609649/2015. Armand Araujo, Esq. - Referee. RAS Boriskin, LLC 900 Merchants Concourse, Suite 310, Westbury, New York 11590, Attorneys for Plaintiff. 295 2/28 4x ptr STATE OF NEW YORK SUPREME COURT: COUNTY OF SUFFOLK CHRISTIANA TRUST, A DIVISION OF WILMINGTON SAVINGS FUND SOCIETY, FSB, NOT IN ITS INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY BUT AS TRUSTEE OF ARLP TRUST 3, vs.
Plaintiff,
FRANK E. DENSING, KAREN DENSING A/K/A KAREN M. DENSING A/K/A KAREN SORRENTINO, et al., Defendants NOTICE OF SALE IN FORECLOSURE PLEASE TAKE NOTICE THAT In pursuance of a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered in the office of the County Clerk of Suffolk County on January 11, 2019, I, Daniel A. Russo, Esq., the Referee named in said Judgment, will sell in one parcel at public auction on March 27, 2019 at Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hall, Farmingville, County of Suffolk, State of New York, at 1:00 P.M., the premises described as follows: 49 Richmond Avenue Patchogue, NY 11772 SBL No.: 0200-925.00-01.00008.000 ALL THAT TRACT OF PARCEL OF LAND situate in Patchogue, Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk, New York The premises are sold subject to the provisions of the
Police
filed judgment, Index No. 609921/2016 in the amount of $434,608.15 plus interest and costs. Anthony J. De Marco, Esq. Woods Oviatt Gilman LLP Plaintiff’s Attorney 700 Crossroads Building, 2 State St. Rochester, New York 14614 Tel.: 855-227-5072 296 2/21 4x ptr STATE OF NEW YORK SUPREME COURT: COUNTY OF SUFFOLK CAPITAL ONE, N.A. vs.
Plaintiff,
ROSEMARIE SABATELLI, JAMES E. CARLSON, et al., Defendants NOTICE OF SALE IN FORECLOSURE PLEASE TAKE NOTICE THAT In pursuance of a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered in the office of the County Clerk of Suffolk County on November 13, 2018, I, Donna England, Esq., the Referee named in said Judgment, will sell in one parcel at public auction on March 27, 2019 at Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville, County of Suffolk, State of New York, at 9:00 A.M., the premises described as follows:
Security footage of men who allegedly stole from Terryville Staples. Images from SCPD
Police seek men for allegedly stealing from Terryville Staples Suffolk County Crime Stoppers and Suffolk County Police 6th Precinct Crime Section officers are seeking the public’s help to identify and locate the men who allegedly stole merchandise from a Terryville store in January. Two men allegedly stole cellphone accessories from Staples, located at 5141 Nesconset Highway, Jan. 10 at around 7 p.m. The merchandise was valued at approximately $350.
Suffolk County Crime Stoppers offers a cash reward of up to $5,000 for information that leads to an arrest. Anyone with information about this incident can contact Suffolk County Crime Stoppers to submit an anonymous tip by calling 800-220-TIPS (8477) or texting “SCPD” and your message to “CRIMES” (274637). All calls and text messages will be kept confidential.
— Compiled by Kyle Barr
26 Little Harbor Road Mount Sinai, NY 11766 SBL No.: 0200-068.00-01.00035.000 ALL THAT TRACT OF PARCEL OF LAND situate at Mt. Sinai, Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk and State of New York The premises are sold subject to the provisions of the filed judgment, Index No. 08675/13 in the amount of $351,969.50 plus interest and costs. Anthony J. De Marco, Esq. Woods Oviatt Gilman LLP Plaintiff’s Attorney 700 Crossroads Building, 2 State St. Rochester, New York 14614 Tel.: 855-227-5072 297 2/21 4x ptr LEGALS con’t on pg. 9
Security footage of man who allegedly stole from Selden Target. Image from SCPD
Man sought for allegedly robbing Selden Target Suffolk County Crime Stoppers and Suffolk County Police 6th Precinct Crime Section officers are seeking the public’s help to identify and locate the man who allegedly stole merchandise from a Selden store in February A man stole two Nest surveillance cameras from Target, located at 307 Independence Plaza, Feb.17 at around 9:30 p.m. Suffolk County Crime Stoppers offers a
cash reward of up to $5,000 for information that leads to an arrest. Anyone with information about this incident can contact Suffolk County Crime Stoppers to submit an anonymous tip by calling 800-220-TIPS (8477) or texting “SCPD” and your message to “CRIMES” (274637). All calls and text messages will be kept confidential.
— Compiled by Kyle Barr
MARCH 14, 2019 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A7
County
County Legislature passes bill to recoup compensation from ex-police chief BY DAVID LUCES DLUCES@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Suffolk County officials have set their sights on the wallet of a disgraced ex-police chief, looking to recoup costs of litigation. Nearly three months after Suffolk County legislators tabled a proposal to sue former police chief James Burke over the $1.5 million settlement it paid out to his victim, the Suffolk County Legislature passed a measure March 5 to begin a lawsuit in an attempt to recoup compensation and salary Burke had received up to when he resigned in October 2015. “Burke clearly breached the oath he took as an officer and the duty he owed the county to serve in his capacity faithfully and lawfully,” Legislator Rob Trotta (R-Fort Salonga) said. The Smithtown legislator was the main sponsor of the bill. The bill would authorize the county attorney to file a lawsuit by using “the faithless servant doctrine,” which dates back to the 19th century
and allows employers to recoup all compensation paid to an employee while they acted in a disloyal manner. The resolution was drafted to recover the compensation paid specifically to Burke and no other county employee. “It feels great,” Trotta said. “Finally a victory for Suffolk County taxpayers.” Originally, Trotta wanted to recoup money from a 2018 settlement the county paid to Christopher Loeb, who was shackled and beaten by Burke back in 2012 as part of a cover-up. County attorney Dennis Brown said at a December 2018 Ways and Means Committee public hearing there was no basis for a possible lawsuit and there was no way to recover or recoup the settlement dollars paid in the lawsuit, according to previous reporting by TBR News Media. In the federal civil lawsuit, the county agreed to pay the settlement amount for the civil rights offenses as they were the ex-police chief’s employer at the time. The county also paid the set-
SC Sheriff advocates reading
Legislator Rob Trotta. File photo by Ben Shapiro
tlement for the actions of six other police officers who helped cover up Burke’s actions when he allegedly beat a handcuffed man for stealing a duffle bag from his vehicle. At the same hearing, Howard Miller, a Garden City-based attorney with the law firm Bond Schoeneck & King, presented a case for the county suing Burke for his wages and compensation paid by the county under the faithless servant doctrine. Miller mentioned that he had successfully represented clients at the state level in similar lawsuits, including the William Floyd School District. “This doctrine is designed to create a deterrent to future acts like this, of corruption and misconduct,” Miller said at the December 2018 public hearing. Brown also said in a statement that the Suffolk County Charter authorizes either the county executive or the Legislature to direct legal action. The resolution that was passed by the Legislature provides a framework specific to that action, but
does not limit the ability of the county executive to pursue additional legal action. Trotta hopes the measure sets a precedent that anyone, whether in government or not, will be held accountable for their actions. “Former District Attorney Spota empowered and conspired with Jim Burke and Chris McPartland,” County Executive Steve Bellone (D) spokesperson Jason Elan said in a statement. “Clearly, all three fall under the faithless servant doctrine so any legal action to recoup taxpayerfunded salary and benefits should include each individual.” According to a representative from the county executive’s office, Bellone signed the legislation to recover salary and benefits from Burke on March 11 and further directed a similar suit be filed against ex-District Attorney Thomas Spota and his top aide who have also been indicted on related charges.
Saving a Life EVERY 11 MINUTES Sheriff Errol Toulon Jr. (D) reads to kids at the Middle Country school district. Photo by David Luces
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A lucky group of third-graders at the North Coleman Road Elementary School in Centereach received a visit March 8 from Suffolk County Sheriff Errol Toulon Jr. (D) as part of the New York State Pick a Reading Partner program. The program encourages reading together for at least 20 minutes daily, stressing that reading can be fun and informative, and also that it is the most important activity in a child’s education. Students picked Dr. Seuss books for Toulon to read to them including, “Fox in Socks,” a book full of tongue twisters. “Being a former educator — I hold a doctorate in education — it is extremely
important that we emphasize reading and reading books, not necessarily from a computer, tablet or phone,” Toulon said. “Because this is the basis that will help them get through life.” Third-grade teacher Christina Anderson had similar sentiments saying that reading is vital to a child’s development and that it can open many doors for them. “I was happy he was able to come today — I think the class really enjoyed the experience,” she said. PARP was first developed in 1978 by state Sen. James Donovan, who was the chairman of the State Senate Education Committee. Since 1987, the NYS PTA has continued to administer the program. “Hopefully I can do something like this in a few more schools in the future,” Toulon said.
PAGE A8 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • MARCH 14, 2019
University
Stony Brook Medicine’s new brain surgery is a lifesaver BY DANIEL DUNAIEF DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Danielle Santilli grappled with numerous discomforts, from headaches to nausea to dizziness, especially when she traveled in a car or stood up quickly. After a series of tests, however, she learned she had a wide-necked bifurcation aneurysm, which is one of the more common types of aneurysms. A diagnosis that has potentially severe consequences, an aneurysm is an area in a blood vessel that grows like a balloon. If it ruptures, it can cause dangerous bleeding. Santilli became a patient of Stony Brook Medicine’s interventional radiologist and professor of neurological surgery and radiology David Fiorella. Santilli was thrilled with the timing, as Fiorella was a co-principal investigator on a recently completed U.S. Food and Drug Administration study for a minimally invasive surgical technique that involves implanting a Woven EndoBridge or WEB. “I feel very fortunate,” Santilli said of the opportunity to be one of the first to receive the treatment. The FDA approved the use of the WEB in January. European doctors have used it effectively since 2011. The WEB is a spherical structure that’s braided out of fine-shaped memory filaments of metal called nitinol, which is a combination of nickel and titanium. The WEB behaves more like a rubber band than a paper clip and wants to return to its original shape. Doctors insert it into a microcatheter in the femoral artery near the groin. Once they release it in an aneurysm and stretch it out, the WEB expands into a spherical shape inside the blood vessel. The body grows new tissue over the aneurysm neck along the metal mesh, which is akin to sealing off a well. The alternative for people with this type of aneurysm can often involve more invasive,
open-brained surgery, Fiorella said. The procedure takes about 40 minutes and often requires a one-night hospital stay. Patients with a WEB procedure also require aspirin for a short period, compared with six months of a blood thinner and then aspirin for much longer periods for other surgical alternatives. Fiorella explained that there were two types of aneurysms. An unruptured version typically doesn’t have any symptoms. Doctors usually discover these through a screening for other symptoms or because of a family history. Patients in this group sometimes receive scans for different and unrelated reasons. Robert Walsh, a 66-year-old retiree and resident of South Jamesport, went to a doctor to check himself out after his younger sister died earlier this year from an aneurysm. Tests revealed that he, too, had an aneurysm. A month after his sister died, Walsh had the WEB procedure. Fiorella and his staff “are probably the best I’ve ever encountered,” Walsh said. “I’m impressed with him and his entire staff for everything they did, with follow-ups, calling in prescriptions, getting my pre-op ready. I have a lot of confidence in Dr. Fiorella.” People with a ruptured aneurysm are dealing with bleeding into their brain. This typically causes symptoms like the worst headache people have ever had, vomiting or a loss of consciousness of rapid neurological deterioration. The survival rate for people in these circumstances is lower and depends on whether they make it to the hospital. The WEB is helpful for patients who have a ruptured aneurysm. Other techniques, such as stents, are not usable for patients under these conditions. “A lot of other tools are off the table” with a ruptured aneurysm, but the WEB is “very effective,” Fiorella said. Some potential patients with a wide-necked
Dr. David Fiorella with patient Danielle Santilli who received a new treatment for aneurysms. Photo by Greg Filiano
bifurcation may not be good candidates for a WEB because their aneurysm is too small or too large for the device. Stony Brook has extensive experience with the WEB. Doctors who want to perform a similar procedure at other hospitals need extensive training from experienced physicians who can prepare them for the procedure. Long Island residents should know they have a “major center right here that’s doing work that surpasses anything going on in Long Island or, in most cases, in the city” with
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MARCH 14, 2019 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A9
LEGALS LEGALS con’t from pg. 6 NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF SUFFOLK DEUTSCHE BANK TRUST COMPANY AMERICAS, AS TRUSTEE FOR RESIDENTIAL ACCREDIT LOANS, INC., MORTGAGE ASSET-BACKED PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2007QS2, Plaintiff AGAINST Walter Shannon and Jacqueline Burns-Shannon, et al., Defendant(s) Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly dated December 05, 2018 I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the Front Steps of the Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 independence Hill, Farmingville, NY, on March 22, 2019 at 10:30AM, premises known as 22 COMMUNITY DRIVE, CORAM, NY 11727. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk and State of New York, DISTRICT 0200, SECTION 317.00, BLOCK 02.00, LOT 006.002. Approximate amount of judgment $827,319.85 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment for Index# 609798/2016. ROSE FARRELL LOWE, ESQ., Referee Gross Polowy, LLC Attorney for Plaintiff 1775 Wehrle Drive, Suite 100 Williamsville, NY 14221 299 2/21 4x ptr NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF SUFFOLK HSBC BANK USA, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION AS TRUSTEE FOR NOMURA ASSET ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION, MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2006-AF1, Plaintiff AGAINST Anthony W. Manganello, et al., Defendant(s) Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly dated August 30, 2018 I, the un-
To Place A Legal Notice
Email: legals@tbrnewsmedia.com dersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville, NY 11738, on March 27, 2019 at 11:00AM, premises known as 10 PAUL STREET, PORT JEFFERSON STATION, NY 11776. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk and State of New York, DISTRICT 0200, SECTION 180.00, BLOCK 02.00, LOT 007.000. Approximate amount of judgment $318,760.28 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment for Index# 612242/2015.
and costs. Premises will be sold subject to the Terms of Sale and the filed Judgment, Index No. 29681/2013. Signed February 8, 2019 by Paul R. Feuer, Esq., Referee
Richard J. Kaufman, Esq., Referee
U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE FOR SASCO MORTGAGE LOAN TRUST 2005-WF4,
Gross Polowy, LLC Attorney for Plaintiff 1775 Wehrle Drive, Suite 100 Williamsville, NY 14221 302 2/21 4x ptr SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK, COUNTY OF SUFFOLK. MCCORMICK 110, LLC, v. RAYMON P. WITT a/k/a RAYMONT WITT, ELENA WITT, NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION AND FINANCE TAX CIVIL ENFORCEMENTCO-ATC, RICHARD R. RUYACK, SR., DISCOVER BANK, FIA CARD SERVICES, NA, U.S.A. DEPARTMENT OF TREASURYINTERNAL REVENUT SERVICE; NOTICE OF SALE, Index No. 29681/2013; Assigned Judge: Hon. C. Randall Hinrichs. Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale dated April 19, 2018, Paul R. Feuer, Esq., the undersigned Referee, will sell at public auction at the Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville, New York, on March 21, 2010 at 10:00 o’clock a.m. premises known as 12 Norwood Drive, Hamlet of Blue Point, Town of Brookhaven, New York and designated on the tax map of the Town of Brookhaven as Section 980.90, Block 05.00, and Lot 006.000, being all that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk, and State of New York, as more particularly described in the Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale. Approximate amount of Judgment is $456,898.43, plus interest
Attorneys for Plaintiff: Rider, Weiner & Frankel, P.C. 655 Little Britain Road New Windsor, NY 12553 (845)562-9100 304 2/21 4x ptr STATE OF NEW YORK SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF SUFFOLK SUPPLEMENTAL SUMMONS Index No. 601161/2017
Plaintiff, v. DENISE BALDWIN, ANY UNKNOWN HEIRS, DEVISEES, DISTRIBUTEES OR SUCCESSORS IN INTEREST OF THE LATE THOMAS H. BALDWIN, IF LIVING, AND IF ANY BE DEAD, ANY AND ALL PERSONS WHO ARE SPOUSES, WIDOWS, GRANTEES, MORTGAGEES, LIENORS, HEIRS, DEVISEES, DISTRIBUTEES, EXECUTORS, ADMINISTRATORS, OR SUCCESSORS IN INTEREST OF SUCH OF THEM AS MAY BE DEAD, AND THEIR SPOUSES, HEIRS, DEVISEES, DISTRIBUTEES AND SUCCESSORS IN INTEREST, ALL OF WHOM AND WHOSE NAMES AND PLACES OF RESIDENCE ARE UNKNOWN TO PLAINTIFF, CLERK OF THE SUFFOLK COUNTY TRAFFIC AND PARKING VIOLATIONS AGENCY, TOYOTA MOTOR CREDIT CORPORATION, CREDIT ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION, CITIBANK, N.A., NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION AND FINANCE, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA BY THE INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, Defendants. TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANTS; YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to answer the Complaint in the above action and serve a copy of your Answer on the plaintiff’s attorney within twenty (20) days after the service of this Summons,
exclusive of the day of service, or within thirty (30) days after completion of service where service is made in any other manner than by personal delivery within the State. The United States of America, if designated as a defendant in this action, may answer or appear within sixty (60) days of service hereof. In case of your failure to appear or answer, judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in the Complaint.
or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Islip, County of Suffolk and State of New York, known and designated as Lot No. 5. as shown on a certain map entitled, “Map of Orchard Estates, Section 1,” and filed in the Office of the Clerk of the County of Suffolk on May 19, 1966, as Map No. 4631, which said Lot is more particularly bounded and described as follows:
Suffolk County is designated as the place of trial. The basis of venue is the location of the mortgaged premises.
BEGINNING at a point on the southeasterly side of Newham Avenue, at the extreme northerly end of a curve, having a radius of 20.00 feet and a length of 31.42 feet connecting the southeasterly side of Newham Avenue with the northeasterly side of Commack Road;
NOTICE YOU ARE IN DANGER OF LOSING YOUR HOME If you do not respond to this summons and complaint by serving a copy of the answer on the attorney for the mortgage company who filed this foreclosure proceeding against you and filing the answer with the court, a default judgment may be entered and you can lose your home. Speak to an attorney or go to the court where your case is pending for further information on how to answer the summons and protect your property. Sending a payment to your mortgage company will not stop this foreclosure action. YOU MUST RESPOND BY SERVING A COPY OF THE ANSWER ON THE ATTORNEY FOR THE PLAINTIFF (MORTGAGE COMPANY) AND FILING THE ANSWER WITH THE COURT. This is an attempt to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose. The foregoing summons is served upon you by publication pursuant to an order of Honorable John H. Rouse, Acting Justice of the Supreme Court of the State of New York, signed the 31st day of January, 2019 at Riverhead, New York. The object of this action is to foreclose a mortgage on the following property: Tax I.D. No. 0500-203.0002.00-063.000 ALL that certain plot, piece
RUNNING THENCE North 45 degrees 31 minutes 10 seconds East, along the southeasterly side of Newham Avenue, 85.00 feet; THENCE South 44 degrees 28 minutes 50 seconds East, 110.00 feet; THENCE South 45 degrees 31 minutes 10 seconds West. 105.00 feet to the northeasterly side of Commack Road; THENCE North 44 degrees 28 minutes 50 seconds West, along the northeasterly side of Commack Road, 90.00 feet to the extreme southerly end of the aforementioned curve connecting the northeasterly side of Commack Road with the southeasterly side of Newham Avenue; THENCE northerly along the arc of a curve, bearing to the right, having a radius of 20.00 feet, distance of 31.42 feet to the point or place of BEGINNING. Subject to easements, covenants, and restriction of record. These premises are also known as 921 Commack Road, Brentwood, NY 11717. WOODS OVIATT GILMAN LLP Attorneys for Plaintiff 700 Crossroads Building 2 State Street Rochester, NY 14614 307 2/21 4x ptr
NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT: SUFFOLK COUNTY. WEBSTER BANK NA, Pltf. vs. PENELOPE JASPER, et al, Defts. Index #609502/2015. Pursuant to judgment of foreclosure and sale dated Dec. 24, 2018, I will sell at public auction at Brookhaven Town Hall, One Independence Hill, Farmingville, NY on March 27, 2019 at 10:15 a.m. prem. k/a 615 Granny Road, Middle Island, NY a/k/a District 0200, Section 546.00, Block 02.00, Lot 008.00. Said property located on the northerly side of Granny Road distant 502.76 ft. westerly as measured along the northerly side of Granny Road from the corner formed by the intersection of the northerly side of Granny Road with the westerly side of West Bartlett Rd., being a plot 101.65 ft. x 426.16 ft. x 100 ft. x 444.42 ft. Approx. amt. of judgment is $65,204.17 plus costs and interest. Sold subject to terms and conditions of filed judgment and terms of sale. VINCENT A. CANDURRA, Referee. THE MARGOLIN & WEINREB LAW GROUP, LLP, Attys. for Pltf., 165 Eileen Way, Ste. 101, Syosset, NY. #96520 309 2/21 4x ptr NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF SUFFOLK JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association, Plaintiff AGAINST Joseph Belcastro; Teresa Belcastro a/k/a Theresa Belcastro; et al., Defendant(s) Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly dated August 7, 2018 I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill Farmingville, NY 11738 on April 2, 2019 at 4:00PM, premises known as 110 Boyle Road, Selden, NY 11784. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk, State of NY, District 0200 Section 446.00 Block 01.00 Lot 022.00. Approximate amount of judgment $269,692.21 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index# 609357/2016. Steven Siliato, Esq., Referee Shapiro, DiCaro & Barak, LLC Attorney(s) for the Plaintiff 175 Mile Crossing Boulevard Rochester, New York 14624 (877) 430-4792 LEGALS con’t on pg. 10
PAGE A10 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • MARCH 14, 2019
County
County Legislator Hahn honored for achievements BY RITA J. EGAN RITA@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
A familiar face in the Three Village and Port Jefferson areas was honored for her career achievements the day before International Women’s Day. On March 7, Suffolk County Legislator Kara Hahn (D-Setauket) received the Brookhaven Community Leadership Award at a ceremony held at the Holiday Inn Express Stony Brook. At the event, which was sponsored by the hotel and Gold Coast Bank, Hahn was surrounded by family members, friends and community members, including Brookhaven Town Councilwoman Valerie Cartright (D-Port Jefferson Station), Setauket Fire District Fire Commissioner Jay Gardiner, and Jane Taylor and Carmine Inserra, Three Village Chamber of Commerce 2nd vice president and executive director, respectively. John Tsunis, owner of the Holiday Inn Express Stony Brook and CEO and chairman of Gold Coast Bank, said as a resident of Hahn’s legislative district he is a proud supporter of her and her work. The CEO admired her passing of policies that helped ensure emergency workers were trained in the use of Narcan to revive
patients who overdose and a bill that increased background checks of daycare workers. He also called her a tireless advocate for domestic abuse survivors and a “champion of our environment,” citing her work to help to protect ground and drinking water along with her promotion of recreational activities at local parks. “As we all know, Kara cares deeply for our community, because of her thoughtful leadership Kara was elected to serve as legislature majority leader in 2016 and again in 2017,” he said. Cartright said when she first ran for town office in 2013 she felt “blessed” to know Hahn. The councilwoman described her county counterpart as a worker bee who looks at her job from different perspectives. “What’s so special about Kara Hahn is that she not only looks at things from a legislator perspective, but she looks at it from a community member perspective — a perspective that she’s one of us,” Cartright said. “She’s gone through the process. She understands the struggles and tribulations that many of us have to face within our communities.” Hahn said she was humbled and honored to represent the community. She described the legislative district as an area where people work together to help make it an even better place to
Suffolk County Legislator Kara Hahn, center, receives the Brookhaven Community Leadership Award from Brookhaven Town Councilwoman Valerie Cartright and Holiday Inn Express owner John Tsunis. Photo by Rita J. Egan
live. She cited a recent example where a member of Cartright’s office reached out to her to ask how they could help members of a Port Jefferson Veterans of Foreign Wars post attend the Rocky Point St. Patrick’s Day Parade so they wouldn’t have to park too far away. Hahn reached out to the Holiday Inn Express, and Tsunis offered the hotel’s shuttle bus for the veterans’ use. “That’s the kind of community we have,” Hahn said. “Everybody wants to chip in. Everybody wants to help. Everybody knows it’s a great place
to live and knows that it can be even better. We have a vision for that, and we keep every day trying to find a way to make things better whether it’s for our environment or our schools.” The Brookhaven Community Leadership award has been presented annually since 2014. Past winners include Charlie Lefkowitz, Three Village Chamber of Commerce vice president; Leah Dunaief, TBR News Media publisher; and Gloria Rocchio, president of The Ward Melville Heritage Organization.
LEGALS LEGALS con’t from pg. 9 Dated: February 14, 2019 For sale information, please visit Servicelinkauction.com or call (866) 539-4173 61600 319 2/28 4x ptr SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF SUFFOLK _________________________ ___________ INDEX NO. 061714/2014 ONEWEST BANK FSB, Plaintiff, Plaintiff designates SUFFOLK as the place of trial situs of the real property vs. JAMES SGROI, AS HEIR AND DISTRIBUTEE OF THE ESTATE OF JOSEPH SGROI A/K/A JOSEPH S. SGROI, if living, and if she/he be dead, any and all persons unknown to plaintiff, claiming, or who may claim to have an interest in, or general or specific
To Place A Legal Notice
Email: legals@tbrnewsmedia.com lien upon the real property described in this action; such unknown persons being herein generally described and intended to be included in the following designation, namely: the wife, widow, husband, widower, heirs at law, next of kin, descendants, executors, administrators, devisees, legatees, creditors, trustees, committees, lienors, and assignees of such deceased, any and all persons deriving interest in or lien upon, or title to said real property by, through or under them, or either of them, and their respective wives, widows, husbands, widowers, heirs at law, next of kin, descendants, executors, administrators, devisees, legatees, creditors, trustees, committees, lienors and assigns, all of whom and whose names, except as stated, are unknown to plaintiff; ROBERT SGROI, AS HEIR AND DISTRIBUTEE OF THE ESTATE OF JOSEPH SGROI A/K/A JOSEPH S. SGROI; LANCE SGROI, AS HEIR AND DISTRIBUTEE OF THE ESTATE OF JOSEPH SGROI A/K/A JOSEPH S. SGROI;
TANYA WILSON, AS HEIR AND DISTRIBUTEE OF THE ESTATE OF JOSEPH SGROI A/K/A JOSEPH S. SGROI; MELISSA PRIANTI SMITH , AS HEIR AND DISTRIBUTEE OF THE ESTATE OF JOSEPH SGROI A/K/A JOSEPH S. SGROI; UNKNOWN HEIRS OF THE ESTATE OF JOSEPH SGROI A/K/A JOSEPH S. SGROI; any and all persons unknown to plaintiff, claiming, or who may claim to have an interest in, or general or specific lien upon the real property described in this action; such unknown persons being herein generally described and intended to be included in the following designation, namely: the wife, widow, husband, widower, heirs at law, next of kin, descendants, executors, administrators, devisees, legatees, creditors, trustees, committees, lienors, and assignees of such deceased, any and all persons deriving interest in or lien upon, or title to said real property by, through or under them, or either of them, and their respective wives, widows, husbands, widowers, heirs at
law, next of kin, descendants, executors, administrators, devisees, legatees, creditors, trustees, committees, lienors and assigns, all of whom and whose names, except as stated, are unknown to plaintiff; SECRETARY OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT; WORLDWIDE ASSET PURCHASING LLC SUCCESSOR IN INTEREST TO DIRECT MERCHANT BANK N A; PALISADES COLLECTION, LLC; DISCOVER BANK; INVESTMENT RETRIEVERS INC.; STERLING RECOVERIES INC; UNIFUND CCR PARTNERS; ADVERLIGHT COLLECTIONS INC.; UNIFUND CCR PARTNERS AS ASSIGNEE OF PALISADES COLLECTIONS LLC AS ASSIGNEE OF FIRST USA BANK; WORLDWIDE ASSET PURCHASING LLC; INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE-UNITED STATES OF AMERICA; NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION AND FINANCETAX COMPLIANCE DIVISIONC.O-ATC; THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK; “JOHN DOE 1 to JOHN DOE 25”, said names being
fictitious, the persons or parties intended being the persons, parties, corporations or entities, if any, having or claiming an interest in or lien upon the mortgaged premises described in the complaint, Defendants. _________________________ _____________________ SECOND SUPPLEMENTAL SUMMONS Mortgaged Premises: 6 WATERVILLE DR. SOUND BEACH, NY 11789 To the above-named Defendants YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to answer the complaint in this action and to serve a copy of your answer, or, if the complaint is not served with this summons, to serve a notice of appearance on the Plaintiff’s Attorney within 20 days after the service of this summons, exclusive of the day of service (or within 30 days after the service is complete if this summons is not personally delivered to you within the
State of New York) in the event the United States of America is made a party defendant, the time to answer for the said United States of America shall not expire until (60) days after service of the Summons; and in case of your failure to appear or answer, judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in the complaint. NOTICE OF NATURE OF ACTION AND RELIEF SOUGHT THE OBJECT of the above caption action is to foreclose a Mortgage to secure the sum of $469,342.50 and interest, recorded on December 29, 2005, at Liber M00021202 Page 940, of the Public Records of SUFFOLK County, New York, covering premises known as 6 WATERVILLE DR. SOUND BEACH, NY 11789. The relief sought in the within action is a final judgment directing the sale of the premises described above to satisfy the debt secured by the LEGALS con’t on pg. 14
Port Jefferson/Town MARYHAVEN
MARCH 14, 2019 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A11
of Brentwood, on the petition. “Everyone is like second family, we care so much for our clients. I am devastated for my fellow employees but even more so for the kids.” Maryfran Fantigrossi, who has worked with the school for 30 years, said she has seen the good work the school does for its students. “Special needs children need and deserve a residential school that will help [them] in all facets of their lives to be the best person they can,” Fantigrossi said on the petition. “Maryhaven has done that for years.”
Continued from A3
For the students, Hendriks said where they attend after the Port Jeff facility is closed will be up to their respective school districts. “The way it works is if, for example, the [Smithtown] school district can’t care for a child because they often have behavioral social, medical or behavioral issues, the school districts send them to our facilities and we take care of them,” she said. “Now, in this case it’s up to the school district to find a new location for them with the help of the state, and there are other locations to go to.” Parents of children in the Maryhaven programs were brought in for a special meeting March 12 to discuss their options. Many people who knew of the facility voiced their disappointment of the news on social media. Now a Change.org petition called Save Maryhaven’s Children Services!! has reached more than 8,500 people in support. The petition calls for U.S. Rep. Lee Zeldin (R-Shirley) or Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D), along with other state and federal representatives, to step in and give support to the ailing facility. Some signing the petition said they had children who attend the facility, others claimed they had worked with Maryhaven and were devastated to see it go. “I’ve worked here for 10 years, and the dedi- Maryhaven Center of Hope CEO Lewis Grossman cation of staff is priceless,” said Jennifer Moore, Photo courtesy of Maryhaven website
Town of Brookhaven Supervisor Ed Romaine (R) spoke about finances and upcoming projects at the state of the town address March 11. Photo by Kyle Barr
Brookhaven cites strong finances, vows to improve infrastructure BY KYLE BARR KYLE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM The Town of Brookhaven is boasting of its finances while promising to improve town infrastructure, both in its railways and along its streets. The town will be offering up $150 million to fix and aid town-owned roadways in 2019. Town spokesmen declined to offer more details but said more information will be coming later in the week. “We need to ensure solid infrastructure is in place,” town Supervisor Ed Romaine (R) said. “We cannot wait any longer … we have to bite the bullet, we can’t wait any longer for federal or state assistance.” During a 45-minute speech March 11, Romaine boasted of the town’s finances, citing its 2019 $304.2 million bud— Ed get which stayed within the tax cap while not using any of the town’s fund balance. The supervisor added that fund balance was another point of pride, saying the fund balance grew by 9.4 percent across the six major funds while the town’s bond rating remained at Triple A, according to Standard and Poor’s. He said this fund balance should the town suf-
fer any unexpected financial issues, such as the 2008 recession. Further, he promised explicitly to keep taxes as low as possible, despite the town making up approximately 8 percent of residents’ overall tax bill. “Our residents cannot pay more in taxes,” Romaine said. “I don’t have to tell you, but too many people, young and old, are leaving Long Island.” The town also boasted of its Brookhaven United Consolidation and Efficiency Plan, which has started to look at creating shared services between other local municipalities and the town. The plan is due to a $20 million state grant the town received in June 2018 for the purpose of consolidation. In February, the town went into an agreement with Port Jefferson Village to consolidate its tax receiving methRomaine ods with the town, using $478,000 of the grant funds. Brookhaven Town Receiver of Taxes Louis Marcoccia has said he expects the program will be extended to other villages. In addition to tax receiving, the supervisor said the town has also consolidated services with local municipalities in purchasing road salt and sand, paving, as well as doing road
‘Our residents cannot pay more in taxes.’
clearing during snows such as with the Village of Shoreham. In April, the town has advised it will launch a municipal market portal, which will enable villages and special districts to have full access to all town contracts. Romaine said the plan, once fully implemented over the next few years, will generate an estimated $61 million in savings for the town. Romaine had complaints about the speed of development by New York State, not only on its roads but also the rail network in the town. Brookhaven has three Long Island Rail Road lines, one going through Port Jefferson, the Montauk line and the Ronkonkoma line, the most trafficked, which goes through the center of the town. He continued calls for electrification of these rail lines which has also been supported by state Sen. Ken LaValle (R-Port Jefferson), who appropriated funds for an electrification study on the Port Jeff line.
“We cannot compete in the 21st-century economy with a 19th-century rail system,” Romaine said. “We collect a ton of money for the MTA, but we don’t see it here.” The LIRR has also agreed to relocate the Yaphank train station so it is adjacent to William Floyd Parkway, just south of the Long Island Expressway. He said this will could take much of the burden off the Ronkonkoma train station, whose parking lot is often way past its max capacity. While touting town savings, Romaine said officials were still concerned about the loss of $1.8 million in state aid through — Ed Romaine the NYS Aid and Incentives for Municipalities program. “We need to start working as a region, or we will watch the rest of the country pass us by,” the supervisor said. He also discussed environmental measures, including the town’s solar projects, the water table underground and fears of rising tides.
‘We cannot wait any longer ... we have to bite the bullet, we can’t wait any longer for federal or state assistance.’
PAGE A12 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • MARCH 14, 2019
Perspectives
Brexit: To leave or not to leave, that is the big question From the view of a Brit, drawing parallels to elections in the U.S. BY JOHN BROVEN DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Part 1 of 2 After 46 years, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland is due to leave the European Union March 29 in an exercise that has been labeled Brexit. You may have heard the term on BBC World News, C-SPAN2’s “Prime Minister’s Questions” and John Oliver’s “Last Week Tonight” (HBO), or read about the ongoing saga in The New York Times or The Washington Post. Still, in general the United States media coverage has been relatively muted in what has been a complex, often hard-to-understand process. Yet there are enough parallel circumstances across the pond to warrant making it a big news event over here in the U.S. It certainly matters a lot if, like me, you were born in England and are not happy with the Brexit decision. Before I proceed with my personal observations, let me give a brief backdrop to the Brexit scenario. Brexit is a crude abbreviation of “British exit” from the European political and economic union of 28 countries that allows seamless movement of goods and citizens between each member state. Britain’s withdrawal was determined by a referendum held June 23, 2016, in which the “leave” voters outpointed the “remain” side by 17.4 to 16.1 million. In percentage terms it was 51.89 to 48.11. The turnout was some 33.5 million voters out of a possible 46.5 million, 72.1 percent of the registered electorate. As I’ve been living over here for more than 15 years, I was not allowed to vote along with an estimated 700,000 expats and some 3 million EU citizens living in the UK. Gerrymandering, anyone?
The UK referendum
I well remember the day when Prime Minister David Cameron (Conservative) announced there would be a referendum for Britain to leave the EU after he was re-elected in the general election of May 7, 2015. He had been the country’s leader since 2010 in a coalition government with the pro-European Liberal Democrats, but against all expectation the Conservatives won the election outright. At the time I asked myself, “Why call a referendum?” What I didn’t know was that Cameron wanted to quell once and for all the rebellious EU leavers in his own party and thwart the rise of the populist United Kingdom Independence Party, led by Nigel Farage. To my mind, Cameron compounded his disastrous decision of placing party politics
on a national stage by agreeing to put the referendum to the people in the simplest of terms: • Should the United Kingdom remain a member of the European Union or leave the European Union. Yes or No. The openness of the referendum wording gave voters, fed up with years of austerity, a chance to kick the government without understanding the full consequences of their actions. The many dire economic warnings of a precipitous EU exit, ranging from the Bank of England governor to President Barack Obama (D), were riposted as fearmongering. England and Wales voted to leave, Scotland and Northern Ireland did not. London voted overwhelmingly to remain, but the industrial North — the equivalent of our rust belt — predictably went to the leavers. Not surprisingly, the majority of the 50-and-overs, with their rose-tinted memories, voted to leave. On the other hand, the younger generation was largely in favor of remaining, feeling more European and with less attachment to the days of the British Empire. Interestingly, the peak share of any sector came from women between the ages of 18 and 24, with 80 percent voting to remain. Yet too many millennials, as over here in the last presidential election, did not bother to go to the voting booths. As we have seen from the HBO film, “Brexit: The Uncivil War,” the Vote Leave campaign — led by notorious Cameronbackstabber Boris Johnson, U.S. President Donald Trump (R)-acolyte Farage, prominent Tory politicians such as the overbearing Jacob Rees-Mogg and double-dealer Michael Gove — were always a step ahead of Vote Remain, led by Cameron himself, future prime minister Theresa May and reticent Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn. The leave effort was brilliantly masterminded by Dominic Cummings who outflanked his traditionally minded opponents by using computer algorithms devised by Cambridge Analytica, partly owned — whisper it low — by Robert Mercer from our own Head of the Harbor village on Long Island. With new data available, Cummings understood there was a raft of disaffected voters that had been ignored by politicians of all parties for years. He proceeded to woo them with an appealing slogan, “Let’s take back control,” aided by a red bus carrying the false message that leaving the EU would save the British people £350,000 a week (about $450,000), adding, “Let’s fund our NHS [National Health Service] instead — Vote Leave.” Without justification, it was
John Broven Photo by Diane Wattecamps
said the country would be overrun by Islamic immigrants should Turkey be admitted to the EU. (It hasn’t.) It was a campaign of distorted facts, appealing to those who remembered the good old days when Britannia ruled the waves and the world map was colored mostly British Empire pink. Earlier, I mentioned “parallel circumstances” in relation to the U.S. How about disaffected and ignored voters, a fear campaign based on immigration and Islamophobia, protest votes, absent millennials, discarded trade agreements, gerrymandering, a populist insurrection — and, I hate to say it, fake news. Does that sound familiar?
Events of June 2016
I was in England the week before the referendum and was astonished at how the youthful, vibrant atmosphere I felt on my last visit had evaporated into a sour mood. As a confirmed Europhile, I was even more amazed to see how finely balanced the polls were. The omens were not good, especially when state broadcaster, British Broadcasting Corporation, adopted a neutral stance giving equal time to both campaigns. Why did the leave campaign, with no governmental responsibility or track record, deserve the same coverage as the in-power remainers? I was still in England when staunch remain
campaigner and promising Labour member of parliament, Jo Cox, was murdered June 16, 2016, in her native West Yorkshire at age 41 by a right-wing extremist. Had politics become so divisive that a life had to be taken? Surely, I thought, the British people, with their long-held sense of justice and fair play, would rebel against such a dastardly act and vote for the “good guys” out of respect to Cox. The referendum campaign was halted temporarily, but a news blackout contrived to neutralize any widespread outrage at her death. Referendum night June 23 was covered in full over here by BBC World News. Ironically, with the five-hour time difference, U.S. viewers were more up to date than the sleeping British public. I knew the writing was on the wall when early voting in Sunderland and Swindon went to the leavers. And yet Sunderland, in the relatively impoverished North East, was home to a major Nissan factory (jobs, jobs, jobs), with Swindon in the affluent South West housing a big Honda factory. Both Japanese car companies used their English bases for easy access to the European markets. What were the voters in those towns thinking by voting leave? The leave campaign was victorious. A distraught Cameron resigned July 11, 2016, to be succeeded by May. It was up to her to negotiate a withdrawal agreement with the EU, with a leaving date eventually set for March 29, 2019 — the end of this month. The protracted negotiations have been rocky, to say the least, and the outcome has still not been resolved at this late hour thanks mainly to a problem that should have been foreseen at the time of the referendum but wasn’t: the Irish backstop. Stay tuned. Part 2 will bring matters up to date, with crucial parliamentary votes due to be held this week. John Broven, a member of the TBR News Media editorial team, is an English-born resident of East Setauket, and has written three award-winning (American) music history books. TBR News Media welcomes articles written by our readers from their perspective called Your Turns. The articles average between 500 and 600 words. Like our letters to the editors, they are edited for length, libel, style and good taste. Please include a phone number and address for confirmation as well as a headshot to be used with the Your Turn. Email submissions to rita@tbrnewsmedia.com.
MARCH 14, 2019 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A13
School News
Edna Louise Spear Elementary School
Hats off to reading
Port Jefferson’s Edna Louise Spear Elementary School students joined thousands of schools nationwide to celebrate the birthday of renowned author Dr. Seuss and Read Across America Day. To plan for the annual celebration, school librarian Selinda Stout encouraged students at all grade levels to share their favorite book with their peers. A total of 28 students were assigned as these special guest readers and to honor the author, many dressed in stripes, crazy hats and striped socks. “I was happily overwhelmed with the number of students who wanted to parLibrarian Selinda Stout, with students Hannah Shakeri and Aven Fox, celebrates ticipate,” Stout said. “They Read Across America Day on March 1. Photo from PJSD did a fabulous job reading balloons donated by Party Hardy and a to their peers, which is not an easy thing to do. I was proud of all of them.” large decorated Dr. Seuss-inspired sheet The Dr. Seuss theme was carried out in cake for the entire school staff donated by the decorated library and adults dressed as local bakery La Bonne Boulangerie. Stout also held a raffle with prizes including “The Cat in the Hat” and “The Grinch” made ice cream from Kilwins and the Frigate, and several appearances throughout the day. Numerous local businesses contributed gift certificates to Port Jeff Bowl, Applebee’s to the celebration including red-and-white and Panera Bread.
SBU educators visit fifth-graders for sea anemone study
When students in Kari Costanzo’s fifthgrade class at Edna Louise Spear Elementary School started their Living Systems science curriculum, the opportunity to investigate starlet sea anemones came to life when they worked with two scientific educators who also happen to be parents to a student in the class. Gerald Thomsen, a professor in Stony Brook University’s Department of Biochemistry and Cell Biology, and Julia Todorov-Thomsen, a biologist and marine scientist, conducted a lab experiment with the students, in which they observed the anemones eating marine life before cutting a piece off them to investigate the regeneration process. The students recorded their observations on sketch pads, and Gerald Thomsen returned a week later to check out their investigative findings. As Costanzo guided the students in what they could record, how the anemones changed shape during the experiment and asking them to present and explain their findings, she recognized that their curiosity was piqued and their enthusiasm was compounded
Gerald Thomsen with students Isabela Thomsen and McKayla Pallard. Photo from PJSD
by the professional visits. “They all had great questions about how anemones can regenerate while other organisms cannot,” Costanzo said and as Thomsen pointed out, for scientific investigation, there are no right or wrong answers. “As we document our work and share our research, it’s just a cool thing to show off,” he said.
Most motivated student Alexa Wonderland receives a plaque from Rotary Club of Port Jefferson President Michael Sceiford and member Kathleen Taveira. Photo from PJSD
A Port Jefferson Middle School sixth-grader, Alexa Wonderland, was honored as Most Motivated Student of the Month by the Rotary Club of Port Jefferson. Alexa was recognized for her motivation, hard work and dedication to her school and
Obituaries Frank Timmons
Frank T. Timmons of Miller Place, and formerly of Farmingdale, passed March 5. He was 63. He was the beloved husband of Mary; loving father of Matthew and Kevin (Mina); cherished grandfather of Nico; treasured brother of Thomas (Margie), Patrick (Carol), Michael, John Cindy (Linda), Anne (Richie) Tortoso, Jeanne (Dennis Nowak) Timmons and Vincent (Chrissy); and of loved son-in-law Anthony and Mary Olivari. In addition, Frank is survived by his brothersIn-law Tony, Bill (Nora) & David (Lori) Olivari; siblings Thomas (Margie), Patrick (Carol), Michael, John and Cindy (Linda), Anne (Richie) Tortoso, Jeanne (Dennis Nowak) Timmons and Vincent (Chrissy); and his many nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by his parents Eugene and Grace Timmons A funeral Mass was celebrated at St. Louis de Montfort R.C. Church in Sound Beach while interment followed at Holy Sepulchre Cemetery in Coram. In lieu of flowers, the family asks for donations to be made to Hope House Ministries, Hope House Ministries, located at 675 High St., Port Jefferson. Arrangements were entrusted to the care of Branch Funeral Home of Miller Place. An online guest book is available at www. branchfh.com.
the local community at a Rotary luncheon. She was nominated by the members of the sixth-grade faculty for the honor. “We are so proud of Alexa’s many accomplishments, both in school and in the community,” Principal Robert Neidig said.
Frances Cannata
Frances Cannata of Port Jefferson Station died Feb. 19. She was 92. She was the beloved wife of the late Salvatore; cherished mother of Rosalie Rodriguez, Richard Cannata, and the late Salvatore Cannata; the loving grandmother of Thomas, Anthony and Francesca Yanotti; and great grandmother of Charlotte, Stella, and Elijah. Frances is also survived by her siblings Carlo Piacentino, Dolores DiMuro along with her many nieces, nephews, other family members and friends. A funeral Mass was celebrated at Infant Jesus R.C. Church and interment followed at Holy Sepulchre Cemetery in Coram. Arrangements were entrusted to the Branch Funeral Home of Miller Place. An online guest book at is available at www.branchfh.com.
Times Beacon Record News Media publishes free obituaries as a service to our readers. Announcements may be emailed to kyle@ tbrnewsmedia.com. For further information, please call 631-751-7744, ext. 107.
PAGE A14 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • MARCH 14, 2019
LEGALS LEGALS con’t from pg. 10 Mortgage described above. SUFFOLK County is designated as the place of trial because the real property affected by this action is located in said county. NOTICE YOU ARE IN DANGER OF LOSING YOUR HOME If you do not respond to this summons and complaint by serving a copy of the answer on the attorney for the mortgage company who filed this foreclosure proceeding against you and filing the answer with the court, a default judgment may be entered and you can lose your home. Speak to an attorney or go to the court where your case is pending for further information on how to answer the summons and protect your property. Sending a payment to the mortgage company will not stop the foreclosure action. YOU MUST RESPOND BY SERVING A COPY OF THE ANSWER ON THE ATTORNEY FOR THE PLAINTIFF (MORTGAGE COMPANY) AND FILING THE ANSWER WITH THE COURT. RAS BORISKIN, LLC Attorney for Plaintiff BY: Amoy Montaque-Smith, ESQ. 900 Merchants Concourse, Suite 310 Westbury, NY 11590 516-280-7675 320 2/21 4x ptr NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF SUFFOLK ASTORIA FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION, Plaintiff AGAINST BARBARA K. RILEY, TIMOTHY RILEY, et al., Defendant(s) Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly dated October 17, 2018 I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 In-
To Place A Legal Notice
Email: legals@tbrnewsmedia.com dependence Hill, Farmingville, NY 11738, on April 04, 2019 at 9:30AM, premises known as 9 HARVARD ROAD, SHOREHAM, NY 11786. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk and State of New York, DISTRICT 0200, SECTION 059.00, BLOCK 01.00, LOT 005.000. Approximate amount of judgment $390,971.31 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment for Index# 063855/2014.
175 Mile Crossing Boulevard Rochester, New York 14624 (877) 430-4792
PAUL R. FEUER, ESQ., Referee
AGAINST
Gross Polowy, LLC Attorney for Plaintiff 1775 Wehrle Drive, Suite 100 Williamsville, NY 14221 321 2/28 4x ptr NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF SUFFOLK JPMorgan Chase Bank, N. A., Plaintiff AGAINST Mary Larson a/k/a Mary V. Larson a/k/a Mary Victoria Larson, as Trustee of the Mary V. Larson Trust, dated July 30, 2003; et al., Defendant(s) Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly dated March 6, 2018 I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill Farmingville, NY 11738 on March 28, 2019 at 10:30AM, premises known as 32 Rockaway Drive, Sound Beach, NY 11789. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being in the Township of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk, State of NY, District 0200 Section 029.00 Block 11.00 Lot 020.000. Approximate amount of judgment $132,486.13 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index# 608208/2017. Annette Eaderesto, Esq., Referee Shapiro, DiCaro & Barak, LLC Attorney(s) for the Plaintiff
Dated: February 6, 2019 For sale information, please visit www.Auction.com or call (800) 280-2832 322 2/21 4x ptr NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF SUFFOLK JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association, Plaintiff
Paul J. Winton; Defendant(s)
et
al.,
Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly dated September 5, 2018 I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville, New York, 11738 on March 27, 2019 at 1:30PM, premises known as 4 Arrowhead Court, Centereach, NY 11720. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk, State of NY, District 200 Section 279.00 Block 02.00 Lot 012.000. Approximate amount of judgment $400,309.87 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index# 603530/2015. Daniel Russo, Esq., Referee Shapiro, DiCaro & Barak, LLC Attorney(s) for the Plaintiff 175 Mile Crossing Boulevard Rochester, New York 14624 (877) 430-4792 Dated: February 5, 2019 323 2/21 4x ptr NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF SUFFOLK DITECH FINANCIAL LLC F/K/A GREEN TREE SERVICING LLC, Plaintiff AGAINST Edward Marinelli, et al., Defendant(s) Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly dated December 21, 2018 I, the
undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville, NY 11738, on April 05, 2019 at 9:30AM, premises known as 10 JANET STREET, PORT JEFFERSON STATION, NY 11776. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk and State of New York, DISTRICT 0200, SECTION 280.00, BLOCK 05.00, LOT 028.000. Approximate amount of judgment $475,520.83 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment for Index# 606601/2016. James M. Burke, Esq., Referee Gross Polowy, LLC Attorney for Plaintiff 1775 Wehrle Drive, Suite 100 Williamsville, NY 14221 330 3/7 4x ptr NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT SUFFOLK COUNTY LAKEVIEW LOAN SERVICING, LLC., Plaintiff against ANITA E. VALLEJO, et al Defendants Attorney for Plaintiff(s) Schiller, Knapp, Lefkowitz & Hertzel, LLP, 200 John James Audubon Parkway, Suite 202, Amherst, NY 14228 Attorney (s) for Plaintiff (s). Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered January 11, 2019, I will sell at public auction to the highest bidder at Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville, NY 11738 on April 3, 2019 at 10:00 AM. Premises known as 21 Terapin Street, Mastic, NY 11950. District 0200 Sec 908.00 Block 03.00 Lot 005.000. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being at Mastic, Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk and State of New York. Approximate Amount of Judgment is $240,042.47 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index No 616131/2016. For sale information, please visit www.Auction.com or call (800) 280-2832.
Kevin Gilvary, Esq., Referee 1610809 332 2/28 4x ptr NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT SUFFOLK COUNTY THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON FKA THE BANK OF NEW YORK AS TRUSTEE FOR THE CERTIFICATEHOLDERS OF THE CWABS INC. ASSETBACKED CERTIFICATES SERIES 2006-24, Plaintiff against ANTHONY KLAMM, et al Defendants Attorney for Plaintiff(s) Druckman Law Group PLLC, 242 Drexel Avenue, Westbury, NY 11590 Attorney (s) for Plaintiff (s). Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered January 23, 2019, I will sell at public auction to the highest bidder at Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville, NY 11738 on March 29, 2019 at 10:30 AM. Premises known as 148 Rosemont Ave., Farmingville, NY 11738. District 0200 Sec 603.00 Block 06.00 Lot 010.000. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, situate, lying and being in the Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk and State of New York. Approximate Amount of Judgment is $499,704.48 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index No 609892/2016. For sale information, please visit www. Auction.com or call (800) 2802832. Annette Eaderesto, Esq., Referee 37257 333 2/28 4x ptr STATE OF NEW YORK SUPREME COURT: COUNTY OF SUFFOLK DITECH FINANCIAL LLC F/K/A GREEN TREE SERVICING LLC vs.
Plaintiff,
Foreclosure and Sale entered in the office of the County Clerk of Suffolk County on January 14, 2019, I, Geri Henle, Esq., the Referee named in said Judgment, will sell in one parcel at public auction on April 4, 2019 at Brookhaven Town Hall, Independence Hill, Farmingville, County of Suffolk, State of New York, at 2:00 P.M., the premises described as follows: 104 Alice Street Port Jefferson, NY 11777 SBL No.: 0206-020.00-05.00006.003 ALL THAT TRACT OF PARCEL OF LAND situate in the Incorporated Village of Port Jefferson, Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk and State of New York The premises are sold subject to the provisions of the filed judgment, Index No. 025969/2012 in the amount of $331,585.28 plus interest and costs. Anthony J. De Marco, Esq. Woods Oviatt Gilman LLP Plaintiff’s Attorney 700 Crossroads Building, 2 State St. Rochester, New York 14614 Tel.: 855-227-5072 336 2/28 4x ptr NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF SUFFOLK U.S. Bank National Association, as Trustee, successor in interest to Wilmington Trust Company, as Trustee, successor in interest to Bank of America, National Association, as Trustee, successor by merger to LaSalle Bank National Association, as Trustee for Structured Asset Investment Loan Trust Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates Series 2005-1, Plaintiff AGAINST Salvatore Russo; Chantal Russo; et al., Defendant(s)
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE THAT
Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly dated December 11, 2018 I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville, New York, 11738 on April 3, 2019 at 10:30AM, premises known as 38 Chanel Drive East, Shirley,
In pursuance of a Judgment of
LEGALS con’t on pg. 15
JOHN GAMBO, JR., et al., Defendants NOTICE OF SALE IN FORECLOSURE
MARCH 14, 2019 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A15
LEGALS LEGALS con’t from pg. 14 NY 11967. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Shirley, County of Suffolk, State of NY, District 0200 Section 978.80 Block 01.00 Lot 031.000. Approximate amount of judgment $274,424.57 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index# 070079/2014. Tarsha Smith, Esq., Referee Shapiro, DiCaro & Barak, LLC Attorney(s) for the Plaintiff 175 Mile Crossing Boulevard Rochester, New York 14624 (877) 430-4792 344 2/28 4x ptr STATE OF NEW YORK SUPREME COURT: COUNTY OF SUFFOLK U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, NOT IN ITS INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY BUT SOLELY AS TRUSTEE FOR THE RMAC TRUST, SERIES 2016-CTT, vs.
Plaintiff,
WILLIAM J. ELEFANTE, Defendants NOTICE OF SALE IN FORECLOSURE PLEASE TAKE NOTICE THAT In pursuance of a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered in the office of the County Clerk of Suffolk County on November 19, 2018, I, David H. Besso, Esq., the Referee named in said Judgment, will sell in one parcel at public auction on April 9, 2019 at Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville, County of Suffolk, State of New York, at 8:45 A.M., the premises described as follows: 31 Panamoka Trail Ridge, NY 11961 SBL No.: 0200-244.00-02.00025.000 ALL THAT TRACT OF PARCEL OF LAND situate in the Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk and State of New York The premises are sold subject to the provisions of the filed
To Place A Legal Notice
Email: legals@tbrnewsmedia.com judgment, Index No. 07831/13 in the amount of $227,388.80 plus interest and costs. Anthony J. De Marco, Esq. Woods Oviatt Gilman LLP Plaintiff’s Attorney 700 Crossroads Building, 2 State St. Rochester, New York 14614 Tel.: 855-227-5072 350 3/7 4x ptr NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF SUFFOLK JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association, Plaintiff AGAINST Paul Maldonado; Luz Devito a/k/a Luz Maldonado; et al., Defendant(s) Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly dated January 7, 2019 I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville, New York, 11738 on April 8, 2019 at 10:00AM, premises known as 18 Marfo Lane, Centereach, NY 11720. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk, State of NY, District 0200 section 565.00 Block 03.00 Lot 007.000. Approximate amount of judgment $496,232.89 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index# 12-32006. Armand Araujo, Esq., Referee Shapiro, DiCaro & Barak, LLC Attorney(s) for the Plaintiff 175 Mile Crossing Boulevard Rochester, New York 14624 (877) 430-4792 Dated: February 18, 2019 353 3/7 4x ptr TERRYVILLE FIRE DISTRICT Port Jefferson Station, New York NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Board of Fire Commissioners, Terryville Fire District, in the Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk, State of New York, being duly convened in the regular meeting on February 28, 2019 after due delibera-
tion thereupon did adopt the following resolution: “RESOLVED THAT an expenditure not to exceed the sum of $10,000 to be made from the Terryville Fire District Buildings & Grounds Capital Reserve Fund in order to purchase: Hall Tables Televisions Electrical Projects Folding tables FURTHER RESOLVED that this expenditure of funds from the Terryville Fire District Buildings & Grounds Capital Reserve Fund shall be subject to a permissive referendum and that the Fire District Secretary shall, within ten days from adoption of this resolution, publish the required notice and otherwise take any steps necessary to effectuate the same.” BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF FIRE COMMISSIONERS OF THE TERRYVILLE FIRE DISTRICT Dated: February 28, 2019 Port Jefferson Station, New York Frank Triolo District Secretary 365 3/14 1x ptr TERRYVILLE FIRE DISTRICT Port Jefferson Station, New York NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Board of Fire Commissioners, Terryville Fire District, in the Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk, State of New York, being duly convened in the regular meeting on February 28, 2019 after due deliberation thereupon did adopt the following resolution: “RESOLVED THAT an expenditure not to exceed the sum of $140,000 to be made from the Terryville Fire District Purchase of Equipment Capital Reserve Fund in order to purchase: APX Portable Radios w/Accessories GTR 8000 Base Radio w/all accessories Minitor VI Charger Amplifiers FURTHER RESOLVED that this expenditure of funds from the Terryville Fire District Purchase of Equipment Capital Reserve Fund shall
be subject to a permissive referendum and that the Fire District Secretary shall, within ten days from adoption of this resolution, publish the required notice and otherwise take any steps necessary to effectuate the same.” BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF FIRE COMMISSIONERS OF THE TERRYVILLE FIRE DISTRICT Dated: February 28, 2019 Port Jefferson Station, New York Frank Triolo District Secretary 366 3/14 1x ptr NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT SUFFOLK COUNTY MTGLQ INVESTORS, Plaintiff against
LP,
LANE M. BUBKA, ESQ., AS GUARDIAN AD LITEM FOR THE RESPECTIVE HEIRSATLAW, NEXT-OF-KIN, DISTRIBUTEES, EXECUTORS, ADMINISTRATORS, TRUSTEES, DEVISEES, LEGATEES, ASSIGNEES, LIENORS, CREDITORS AND SUCCESSORS IN INTEREST AND GENERALLY ALL PERSONS HAVING OR CLAIMING UNDER, BY OR THROUGH JAMES J. BERKLEY WHO MAY BE DECEASED BY PURCHASE, INHERITANCE, LIEN OR OTHERWISE, ANY RIGHT, TITLE OR INTEREST IN THE REAL PROPERTY DESCRIBED IN THE COMPLAINT, et al Defendants Attorney for Plaintiff(s) Knuckles, Komosinski & Manfro, LLP, 565 Taxter Road, Suite 590, Elmsford, NY 10523 Attorney (s) for Plaintiff (s). Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered January 22, 2019, I will sell at public auction to the highest bidder at Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville, NY 11738 on April 17, 2019 at 9:30 AM. Premises known as 19 Baybright Drive, Shirley, NY 11967. Sec 981.80 Block 04.00 Lot 013.000. All that certain lot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being at Manor of S George
near Mastic in the Township of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk, State of New York. Approximate Amount of Judgment is $245,462.55 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index No 24338/10. Cash will not be accepted at the sale. Elsie Acevedo, Esq., Referee 2267-001795 371 3/14 4x ptr SUPREME COURT – COUNTY OF SUFFOLK OCWEN LOAN SERVICING, LLC, Plaintiff against CARLOS BARRETO, ROSE BARRETO, et al Defendant(s). Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered on May 9, 2017. I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the front steps of the Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville, N.Y. on the 16th day of April, 2019 at 10:00 a.m. premises described as follows: All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, situate, lying and being in the Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk and State of New York. Said premises known as 52 Clearview Avenue, Selden, N.Y. 11784. (District: 0200, Section: 571.00, Block: 01.00, Lot: 007.000). Approximate amount of lien $ 409,726.88 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed judgment and terms of sale. Index No. 36527-12. Valerie S. Manzo, Esq., Referee. McCabe, Weisberg, & Conway, LLC Attorney(s) for Plaintiff 145 Huguenot Street Suite 210 New Rochelle, New York 10801 (914) 636-8900 372 3/14 4x ptr COMSEWOGUE SCHOOL DISTRICT County of Suffolk Town of Brookhaven State of New York REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL The Board of Education of B r o o k h av e n - C o m s e w o g u e
Union Free School District, Port Jefferson Station, Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk, New York, hereby invites the submission of proposals in a sealed envelope for the following: Physical Therapy Services Occupational Therapy Services Special Education Related Services Nursing Services Proposals will be received until Friday, May 3, 2019 at 1:00 P.M. in the District Administration Office at 290 Norwood Avenue, Port Jefferson Station, New York, at which time and place all proposals will be publicly opened, but will not be read aloud. Any interested party may attend. There will be no discussion at the time of the opening of the proposals. The names of the proposing firms shall be available following the proposal opening. Proposal packets may be obtained at the same office by calling the Pupil Personnel Office at (631) 474-8127. The Board of Education reserves the right to waive any informalities in the proposals, or to reject any or all proposals or to accept any proposals, which in the opinion of the Board of Education, will be in the best interest of the school district. Board of Education Brookhaven-Comsewogue Union Free School District 290 Norwood Avenue Town of Brookhaven Suffolk County, New York 380 3/14 1x ptr NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF SUFFOLK U.S. BANK NA, SUCCESSOR TRUSTEE TO WACHOVIA BANK, N.A., AS TRUSTEE, IN TRUST FOR AND FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE CERTIFICATEHOLDERS OF MULTICLASS MORTGAGE PASSTHROUGH CERTIFICATES SERIES 2005-2, Against
Plaintiff,
MARIA ALFARO, ALFARO, ET AL., LEGALS con’t on pg. 16
FLORIDA
PAGE A16 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • MARCH 14, 2019
LEGALS LEGALS con’t from pg. 15 Defendant(s). Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale, duly entered on 5/3/2018, I, the undersigned Referee, will sell at public auction, at Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville, NY 11738, on 4/15/2019 at 9:15 am, premises known as 75 Jayne Ave, Patchogue, NY 11772, and described as follows: ALL that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the Village of Patchogue, Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk and State of New York, and designated on the tax maps of the Suffolk County Treasurer as Section 005.00, Block 06.00 and Lot 019.000 The approximate amount of the current Judgment lien is $563,302.04 plus interest and costs. The Premises will be sold subject to provisions of the aforesaid Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale; Index # 25739/2010. Christopher M. Hahn, Esq., Referee. SHELDON MAY & ASSOCIATES Attorneys at Law, 255 Merrick Road, Rockville Centre, NY 11570 Dated: 2/19/2019 File Number: 32694 MNB 385 3/14 4x ptr
To Place A Legal Notice
Email: legals@tbrnewsmedia.com NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF Suffolk, Wilmington Savings Fund Society, FSB, as Trustee for Stanwich Mortgage Loan Trust A, Plaintiff, vs. Eric T. Donovan, ET AL., Defendant(s). Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly filed on May 24, 2017, and an Order granting a Substitute Referee and an Extension to Conduct Foreclosure Sale dated December 7, 2018, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville, NY on April 12, 2019 at 10:00 a.m., premises known as 56 Cherry Road, Rocky Point, NY 11778. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk and State of New York, District 0200, Section 054.00, Block 01.000 and Lot 013.000. Approximate amount of judgment is $336,176.84 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index # 45184/2010. If the sale is set aside for any reason, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the deposit paid. The Purchaser shall have no further recourse against the
Mortgagor, the Mortgagee, the Mortgagee’s attorney, or the Referee. Peter L. Kramer, Esq., Referee Roach & Lin, P.C. FKA Peter T. Roach & Associates, P.C., 6901 Jericho Turnpike, Suite 240, Syosset, New York 11791, Attorneys for Plaintiff 408 3/14 4x ptr Incorporated Village of Port Jefferson 88 North Country Rd. Port Jefferson, N.Y. 11777 Ph. (631) 473-4744 Fx. (631) 473-2049 www.portjeff.com PUBLIC NOTICE Inc. Village of Port Jefferson Zoning Board of Appeals PURSUANT TO THE PROVISIONS of Article XI, Section 250-50 of the Code of Village of Port Jefferson, the Zoning Board of Appeals will hold a public hearing on March 28, 2019 at 7:30PM at Village Hall, 121 West Broadway, Port Jefferson, NY 11777. (A pre-hearing work session will begin at 7:00PM) 7:30PM PUBLIC HEARINGS: 407 East Main St. Appeal No. #545-19 Location: Post Office SCTM: Sec.12, Blk.10, Lot 3.3
Zoning: C-1 Central Commercial Property Owner: Colasti Family L.P. Applicant: Colasti Family L.P. Contact: John J. Coughlin Ré, Nielsen, Huber & Coughlin, LLP Applicant requires a variance from VPJ Code ARTICLE VII District Bulk and Parking Regulations §250-27(D) (1) (c) which establishes that the minimum parking stall width shall be nine feet; minimum length shall be 20 feet. The subject application shows two (2) undersized parking stalls with lengths less than the required 20 feet. Respectfully submitted, Cindy Suarez, Secretary to the Planning & Zoning Boards March 8, 2019 409 3/14 1x ptr NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF MEMBERS OF THE PORT JEFFERSON B.I.D MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION INC. Notice is hereby given that the annual meeting of members of The PORT JEFFERSON B.I.D MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION INC. will be held at the village center, 101 East Broadway, Port Jefferson, County of Suffolk, State of New York. On Tuesday April 2, 2019 at 6:30pm The purpose of the annual
meeting is as follows:
BID #19025 – UNIFORMS FOR RECREATION (2019) MARCH 27, 2019
1.The election of directors 2. The transaction of such other business as may properly come before the meeting of the members pursuant to the New York Not for profit corporation law and general municipal law or any adjournment thereof.
Specifications for the abovereferenced bid will be available beginning March 14, 2019. Preferred Method • Access website: brookhavenNY.gov/Purchasing: click on link for Bids. • Follow directions to register and download document. • Questions must be submitted in writing to the following e-mail: PurchasingGroup@ brookhavenny.gov
3. If you are unable to attend in person you are requested to sign and execute a proxy naming a person you authorize to vote on your behalf and to deliver to the same person named therein to be presented at the meeting so that your membership may be represented and voted at the meeting. Your proxy should state your name,address and whether you are the owner of the commercial property,a commercial tenant of property located in the district, or a tenant in an apartment or complex
The Town of Brookhaven reserves the right to reject and declare invalid any or all bids and to waive any informalities or irregularities in the proposals received, all in the best interests of the Town. The Town of Brookhaven welcomes and encourages minorities and women-owned businesses and HUD Section 3 businesses to participate in the bidding process.
Tom Schafer , President 410 3/14 4x ptr
Further information can be obtained by calling (631) 4516252
NOTICE TO BIDDERS Sealed Bids will be received, publicly opened and read aloud at 11:00 a.m. in the Division of Purchasing of the Town of Brookhaven, One Independence Hill, Third Floor, Farmingville, NY 11738, for the following item(s) on the dates indicated:
Kathleen C. Koppenhoefer Deputy Commissioner TOWN OF BROOKHAVEN 412 3/14 1x ptr
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Finding a new home About a dozen animals adopted thanks to Sound Beach Civic Association’s sixth pet adoption event, which was renamed this year to honor a fallen friend of the event
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TBR NEWS MEDIA 631–331–1154 or 631–751–7663
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Enrolled to Practice Before the IRS Kevin Kelly, J.D., E.A. Over 30 years of experience and thousands of returns prepared Free review of prior year returns
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The Village BEACON RECORD • Miller Place • Baiting Hollow • Sound Beach • Mt. Sinai • Rocky Point • Shoreham • Wading River
The Village TIMES HERALD • Stony Brook • Strong’s Neck • Setauket • Old Field • Poquott
The Port TIMES RECORD • Port Jefferson • Port Jefferson Sta. • Harbor Hills • Belle Terre
The TIMES of Smithtown • Smithtown • Hauppauge • Commack • E. Fort Salonga • San Remo
• Kings Park • St. James • Nissequogue • Head of the Harbor
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The TIMES of Middle Country • Selden • Centereach • Lake Grove
The TIMES of Huntington, Northport & East Northport • Cold Spring Harbor • Lloyd Harbor • Lloyd Neck • Halesite • Huntington Bay • Greenlawn
• Centerport • Asharoken • Eaton's Neck • Fort Salonga -West
101468©
TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA • 185 Rte. 25A, Setauket, N.Y. 11733 • Phone# 631.331.1154 or 631.751.7663
MARCH 14, 2019 â&#x20AC;˘ THE PORT TIMES RECORD â&#x20AC;˘ PAGE A19
E M PL OY M E N T / C A R E E R S Help Wanted BARTENDERS/WAITSTAFF/BUFFET SERVERS NEEDED p/t, weekends required, reliable and responsible, will train, apply in person Majestic Gardens 420 Rte 25A Rocky Point, NY
101872
CALL 751-7744
SUMMER HELP 3 Village Area. Buildings and grounds outside work, 6/1-8/19. (Approximately). M-F, 9am-4pm, hard worker, reliable, minimum age 18. Email detail to: pdilucca@stonybrookvillage.com
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is Tuesday at noon. If you want to advertise, do it soon! &DOO
631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
Registered Nurse Child Care Workers (Per Diem, Full and Part Time)- must be available afternoons, evenings & weekends High School Diploma & Valid Drivers License Required 2450 North Wading River Road, Wading River, NY 11792 â&#x20AC;˘ Administrative Office (Building 21) Š103145
(631) 929-6200 phone # (631) 929-6203 fax Apply at www.littleflowerny.org on our careers page.
tbrnewsmedia.com
Spanish/English preferred
Email detail to: pdilucca@ stonybrookvillage.com
BARTENDERS/ WAITSTAFF BUFFET SERVERS NEEDED Part-time, weekends required. Reliable and responsible. Will train, apply in person.
MAJESTIC GARDENS 420 Rte. 25A Rocky Point, NY
Š102018
Clean NY driverâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s license required. Email lssetauket@gmail.com
Landscape Nursery Assistant Smithtown Varied duties include: Labeling Inventory Ordering Supplies Grounds & Plant Care Email lssetauket@gmail.com
Excellent Sales Opportunity for Good Communicator at Award-Winning News Media Groupâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s North Shore Market and Beyond
Positions are available for our Wading River Residential Treatment Center Program
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Full-time/Seasonal 5 years experience
www.littleflowerny.org wadingriver-jobs@lfchild.org Little Flower will be hosting a Job Fair on Saturday, March 16, 2019 NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY from 10:30 am - 3 pm
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3 Village Area. Buildings and grounds outside work, 6/1-8/19. (Approximately). M-F, 9 am - 4 pm, hard worker, reliable, minimum age 18.
LANDSCAPE CREW MANAGER SMITHTOWN
EARN SALARY & COMMISSION WORKING ON EXCITING HISTORICAL AND MULTIMEDIA PROJECTS & SUPPLEMENTS!
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TBR NEWSMEDIA
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TO SUBSCRIBE
JOB OPPORTUNITY: $18 P/H NYC * $15 P/H LI *$14.50 P/H Upstate NY If you currently care for your relatives or friends who have Medicaid or Medicare, you may be eligible to start working for them as a personal assistant. No Certificates needed. (347)462-2610 (347)565-6200
LANDSCAPE NURSERY ASSISTANT. Smithtown. Varied duties include: labeling, inventory, ordering supplies, grounds and plant care. Email lssetauket@gmail.com
Š101634
AIRLINE CAREERS Start Here. Get trained as FAA certified Aviation Technician. Financial aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. Call AIM for free information. 866-296-7094
THE SOUND BEACH FIRE DISTRICT FULL TIME BUILDING MAINTENANCE PERSON Duties include repair of interior/exterior of the firehouse, painting, some plumbing repairs, heating/A/C maintenance. PT ADMINISTRATION ASST. Assist Dist. Treasurer & Dist. Manager. Must have good organizational skills, be Microsoft Office and Red Allert proficient, have knowledge of current bookkeeping methods. SUBMIT RESUME to Lynnann Frank, at fax number 631-744-6490 or email to Lfrank@SoundBeachFD.org
LANDSCAPE CREW MANAGER SMITHTOWN. Full Time/Seasonal. 5 years experience. Spanish/English preferred. Clean NY driverâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s license required. Email lssetauket@gmail.com
SUMMER HELP
Š103087
EXCELLENT SALES OPPORTUNITY for GOOD COMMUNICATOR at Award Winning News Media Groupâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s North Shore Market and Beyond. Earn salary & commission selling working on exciting Historical Multimedia Projects & Supplements. Call Kathryn at 631-751-7744 or email resume to: kjm@tbrnewspapers.com TBR NEWSMEDIA
Help Wanted
Š102971
PUBLISHERâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S EMPLOYMENT NOTICE: All employment advertising in this newspaper is subject to section 296 of the human rights law which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, creed, national origin, disability, marital status, sex, age or arrest conviction record or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination. Title 29, U.S. Code Chap 630, excludes the Federal Govâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t. from the age discrimination provisions. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for employment which is in violation of the law. Our readers are informed that employment offerings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
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Help Wanted
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
PAGE A20 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • MARCH 14, 2019
SERV ICES Cleaning COME HOME TO A CLEAN HOUSE! Attention to detail is OUR PRIORITY. Excellent References. Serving the Three Village Area. Call Jacquie at 347-840-0890
Clean-Ups LET STEVE DO IT Clean-ups, yards, basements, whole house, painting, tree work, local moving and anything else. Totally overwhelmed? Call Steve @ 631-745-2598, leave message.
Computer Services/ Repairs COMPUTER ISSUES? FREE DIAGNOSIS BY GEEKS ON SITE! Virus Removal, Data Recovery! 24/7 EMERGENCY SERVICE, In-home repair/ On-line solutions. $20 OFF ANY SERVICE! 844-892-3990
Decks DECKS ONLY BUILDERS & DESIGNERS Of Outdoor Living By Northern Construction of LI. Decks, Patios/Hardscapes, Pergolas, Outdoor Kitchens and Lighting. Since 1995. Lic/Ins. 3rd Party Financing Available. 105 Broadway, Greenlawn. 631-651-8478. www.DecksOnly.com
Electricians ANTHEM ELECTRIC MASTER ELECTRICIAN Quality Light & Power since 2004. Commercial, Industrial, Residential. Port Jefferson. Please call 631-291-8754 Andrew@Anthem-Electric.net GREENLITE ELECTRIC, INC. Repairs, installations, motor controls, PV systems. Piotr Dziadula, Master Electrician. Lic. #4694-ME/Ins. 631-331-3449
101558
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Fences SMITHPOINT FENCE. EARLY BIRD VINYL FENCE SALE! 10% off installatiion. Wood, PVC, Chain Link, Stockade. Free estimates. Now offering 12 month interest free financing. Commercial/Residential. 70 Jayne Blvd., PJS. Lic.37690-H/Ins. 631-743-9797 www.smithpointfence.com.
Floor Services/Sales FINE SANDING & REFINISHING Wood Floor Installations Craig Aliperti, Wood Floors LLC. All work done by owner. 26 years experience. Lic.#47595-H/Insured. 631-875-5856
Furniture/Restoration/ Repairs REFINISHING & RESTORATION Antiques restored, repairing recane, reupholstery, touch-ups kitchen, front doors, 40 yrs exp, SAVE$$$, free estimates. Vincent Alfano 631-286-1407
Handyman Services JOHN’S A-1 HANDYMAN SERVICE *Crown moldings* Wainscoting/raised panels. Kitchen/ Bathroom Specialist. Painting, windows, finished basements, ceramic tile. All types repairs. Dependable craftsmanship. Reasonable rates. Lic/Ins. #19136-H. 631-744-0976 c.631 697-3518
Interior Decorating/ Design TRISTATE CUSTOM WINDOW TREATMENTS. Blinds, Shades, Draperies, Shutters, Motorization, Measure and Installation. FREE SHOP AT HOME SERVICE 165 Middle Country Rd, Middle Island, NY 11953 Office: 631-448-8497 Mobile: 631-978-8158 Lic. #58820-H/Insured
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154 Housesitting Services TRAVELING? Need someone to check on your home? Contact Tender Loving Pet Care, LLC. We’re more than just pets. Insured/Bonded. 631-675-1938
Home Improvement ALL PHASES OF HOME IMPROVEMENT From attic to your basement, no job too big or too small, RCJ Construction www.rcjconstruction.com commercial/residential, lic/ins 631-580-4518. BATHROOM RENOVATIONS EASY ONE DAY updates! We specialize in safe bathing. Grab bars, no slip flooring & seated showers. Call for a free in-home consultation. 888-657-9488. *BluStar Construction* The North Shore’s Most Trusted Renovation Experts. 631-751-0751 Suffolk Lic. #48714-H, Ins. See Our Display Ad CREATIVE DESIGN CERAMIC TILE AND BATH bathrooms, kitchens from design to completion, serving Suffolk County for 32 years, shop at home services, contractor direct pricing on all materials, Office 631-588-1345, Mobile 631-682-2290 www.creativedesignhomeremodeling.com LAMPS FIXED, $65. In Home Service!! Handy Howard. My cell 646-996-7628 LONG HILL CARPENTRY 40 years experience All phases of home improvement. Old & Historic Restorations. Lic.#H22336/Ins. 631-751-1764 longhill7511764@aol.com THREE VILLAGE HOME IMPROVEMENT Kitchens & Baths, Ceramic Tile, Hardwood floors, Windows/ Doors, Interior Finish trim, Interior/Exterior Painting, Composite Decking, Wood Shingles. Serving the community for 30 years. Rich Beresford, 631-689-3169
Lawn & Landscaping PRIVACY HEDGES - SPRING BLOWOUT SALE. 5ft Leyland, Cypress or Green Giant Arborvitae, now only, $49 each. Beautiful, Nursery Grown. FREE installation/FREE delivery. Limited Supply! Order Now: 802-922-6947. www.discounttreefarm.com
Lawn & Landscaping SETAUKET LANDSCAPE DESIGN Stone Driveways/Walkways, Walls/Stairs/Patios/Masonry, Brickwork/Repairs Land Clearing/Drainage,Grading/ Excavating. Plantings/Mulch, Rain Gardens. Steve Antos, 631-689-6082 setauketlandscape.com Serving Three Villages SWAN COVE LANDSCAPING Lawn Maintenance, Clean-ups, Shrub/Tree Pruning, Removals. Landscape Design/Installation, Ponds/Waterfalls, Stone Walls. Firewood. Free estimates. Lic/Ins.631-689-8089
Landscape Materials SCREENED TOP SOIL Mulch, compost, decorative and driveway stone, concrete pavers, sand/block/portland. Fertilizer and seed. JOS. M. TROFFA MATERIALS CORP. 631-928-4665, www.troffa.com
Legal Services LUNG CANCER? AND AGE 60+? You and your family may be entitled to significant cash award. Call 866-951-9073 for information. No Risk, No money out of pocket.
Masonry CARL BONGIORNO LANDSCAPE/MASON CONTRACTOR All phases Masonry Work:Stone Walls, Patios, Poolscapes. All phases of Landscaping Design. Theme Gardens. Residential & Commercial. Lic/Ins. 631-928-2110
Miscellaneous A PLACE FOR MOM has helped over a million families find senior living. Our trusted, local advisors help find solutions to your unique needs at no cost to you. Call: 1-800-404-8852 DIRECT TV & AT&T 155 channels & 1000s of shows/movies on Demand. (w/SELECT Package). AT&T Internet 99 percent reliability. Unlimited texts to 120 countries w/AT&T Wireless. Call for Free quote, 1-888-534-6918
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Oil Burner Services DAD’S OIL SERVICE Family Owned & Operated Radiant Heat, Hot Water Heaters, Boiler Installations, Baseboard, Oil Tanks, Seasonal Startups. Installations and Repairs. “We take care of all your Home Heating Needs” 631-828-6959
Painting/Spackling/ Wallpaper ALL PRO PAINTING INTERIOR/EXTERIOR Power Washing, Staining, Wallpaper Removal. Free estimates. Lic/Ins #19604HI 631-696-8150. Nick BOB’S PAINTING SERVICE 25 Years Experience. Interior/Exterior Painting, Spackling, Staining, Wallpaper Removal, Staining & Deck Restoration Power Washing. Free Estimates. Lic/Ins. #17981. 631-744-8859 COUNTY-WIDE PAINTING INTERIOR/EXTERIOR Painting/Staining. Quality workmanship. Living and Serving 3 Village Area for over 25 years. Lic#37153-H. 631-751-8280 ED’S PAINTING INTERIOR/EXTERIOR Wallpaper removal, spackling, sheetrock repair. Over 25 years experience. Commercial/Residential Reasonable rates. 631-704-7547 LaROTONDA PAINTING & DESIGN Interior/exterior, sheetrock repairs, taping/spackling, wallpaper removal, Faux, decorative finishings. Free estimates. Lic.#53278-H/Ins. Ross LaRotonda 631-689-5998 WORTH PAINTING “PAINTING WITH PRIDE” Interiors/exteriors. Faux finishes, power-washing, wallpaper removal, sheetrocktape/spackling, carpentry/trimwork. Lead paint certified. References. Free estimates. Lic./Ins. SINCE 1989 Ryan Southworth, 631-331-5556
Roofing/Siding JOSEPH BONVENTRE CONSTRUCTION Roofing, siding, windows, decks, repairs. Quality work, guaranteed. Owner operated. Over 25 years experience. Lic/Ins. #55301-H. Call or Text 631-428-6791
Tree Work ARBOR-VISTA TREE CARE Complete Tree care service devoted to the care of trees. Maintenance pruning, waterview work, sun-trimming, elevating, pool areas, storm thinning, large tree removal, stump grinding. Wood chips. Lic#18902HI. Free estimates. 631-246-5377 CLOVIS OUTDOOR SERVICES LTD. Expert Tree Removal AND Pruning. Landscape Design and maintenance, Edible Gardens, Plant Healthcare,Exterior Lighting. 631-751-4880 clovisoutdoors@gmail.com RANDALL BROTHERS TREE SERVICE Planting, pruning, removals, stump grinding. Free Estimates. Fully insured. LIC# 50701-H. 631-862-9291 SUNBURST TREE EXPERTS Since 1974, our history of customer satisfaction is second to none. Pruning/removals/planting, plant health care. Insect/ Disease Management. ASK ABOUT GYPSY MOTH AND TICK SPRAYS Bonded employees. Lic/Ins. #8864HI 631-744-1577
TV Services/Sales EARTHLINK HIGH SPEED Internet. As Low As $14.95/mth (for the first 3 months.) Reliable High Speed Fiber Optic Technology. Stream Videos, Music and More! Call Earthlink Today 1-855-970-1623 SPECTRUM TRIPLE PLAY! TV, Internet & Voice for $29.99 each. 60 MB per second speed. No contract or commitment. More Channels. Faster Internet. Unlimited Voice. Call 1-855-977-7198
TIMES BEACON RECORD CLASSIFIEDS ■ 631.331.1154 0R 631.751.7663
MARCH 14, 2019 â&#x20AC;˘ THE PORT TIMES RECORD â&#x20AC;˘ PAGE A21
PROF E S SION A L & B U SI N E S S ;/, 7* +6*;69
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Phone: (631) 821-2558
Email: jim@pc-d-o-c.com
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ANDREW SHIKORA Master Electrician Port Jefferson â&#x20AC;˘ 631.291.8754
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ANTHEM ELECTRIC
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â&#x20AC;˘ Free In-House 3D Design â&#x20AC;˘ Financing Available (3rd party)
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PAGE A22 â&#x20AC;¢ THE PORT TIMES RECORD â&#x20AC;¢ MARCH 14, 2019
HOME SERV ICES
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MARCH 14, 2019 â&#x20AC;˘ THE PORT TIMES RECORD â&#x20AC;˘ PAGE A23
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55 OR OLDER Like new, fully renovated, 1-2 BR home at Strathmore Gate East. Move in, affordable taxes and common fees. $250,000. STRATHMORE EAST 631-698-3400
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Out of State SEBASTIAN, FLORIDA (East Coast) Beach Cove is an Age Restricted. Community where friends are easily made. Sebastian is an “Old Florida” fishing village with a quaint atmosphere yet excellent medical facilities, shopping and restaurants. Direct flights from Newark to Vero Beach. New manufactured homes from $114,900. 772-581-0080 www.beach-cove.com
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SAT/SUN Open House by Appointment PORT JEFFERSON VILLAGE 415 LIBERTY AV. NEW CONSTRUCTION. 55+ CONDO 1 Unit left! Waterview Community, Main flr master bdrm, time to customize, Taxes under $5,000. Price $895,000 SMITHTOWN 17 Franciscan Ln, New To Market. Post Modern, 5 Bdrms, IG heated/salt pool, fin bsmnt, $799,000 Reduced MT SINAI 9 Avolet Ct, Briarwood, 4 Bdrms, full unfin bsmnt, 2 car garage, $649,000 MT SINAI 23 Hamlet Dr. New Listing. Main flr master, Inner Circle location, Full unfin. bsmt, $899 000 SETAUKET 8 Diploma. Ranch, Gated Three Village Club, expanded fam rm, pri master suite, Fbsmt, pond view, $749,000 ST JAMES 23 Monterrey Dr, Gated Hamlet Estates, New To Market, Lake Front, Master Suite, Chef’s kitchen, $1,075,000 SO SETAUKET 24 Hancock Ct, Post Modern, Heated IG Pool, Hot Tub, Cabana, Full Fin. Bsmt w/walk out, 5 Bdrms, New to the Market, $849,990 DENNIS P. CONSALVO ALIANO REAL ESTATE Lic.Real Estate Salesperson www.longisland-realestate.net 631-724-1000 YOUR AD HERE! Call 631.751.7663
SATURDAY 3/16 12:30-2:00pm. SETAUKET 25 Brewster Ln. Waterfront Farm Ranch, 4 BR, 4 bths, master built custom home. SD#1. MLS#3100321. $2,990,000. SUNDAY 3/17 12:30-2:00pm SETAUKET 25 Brewster Ln. Waterfront Farm Ranch, 4 BR, 4 bths, master built custom home. SD#1. MLS#3100321. $2,990,000. DANIEL GALE SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY 631.689.6980 SUNDAY 3/17 11AM-1PM ST. JAMES 31 Richie Ct. Updated 4 Br 2.5 Ba, Col. Mstr w/Ba, New Appl, Hwflr, New Roof and Driveway. Mls#3098364. $549,999 JUSTIN BRAUN COACH REALTORS 631-751-603-2064
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PAGE A26 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • MARCH 14, 2019
Opinion
Editorial
Unaffordable housing The phrase has become oxymoronic. It’s like a bad riddle: What is something everyone needs, but fewer people on Long Island can have? They call it affordable housing. The real question is, affordable to whom? Smithtown just recently hosted its second housing lotto in a year for affordable housing developments March 11. Another lotto is coming up to bat March 26 for three one-bedroom units with a total monthly gross rent of $2,300; and one two-bedroom unit with a total monthly gross rent of $3,200. The Suffolk County Legislature’s Welfare to Work Commission, which advises the Legislature on issues related to poverty in the county, released a report in 2018 that detailed the holes in affordable housing and government programs. The report describes that if a family wants to rent, only 18 percent of available housing is rental, compared to the national average of 37 percent. Market rate for monthly apartment rentals in Suffolk was $1,589 in 2017, according to census data, meaning families in that market would have to earn $57,204 — 52 percent of the area median income — a year if they spent 30 percent of their income on the apartment costs. In Smithtown, average rental costs are upward of $2,500 for a one-bedroom apartment, according to online rent tracker RENTCafé. It’s hard to call such options such as the lottos in Smithtown truly “cheap,” mostly because each is only cheap by comparison. The Town of Huntington hosted a lotto for Harborfields Estates March 5 with 608 first-time home-buyer applicants entered in that drawing. It’s a staggering number of people all bidding on the hope of owning a four-bedroom home valued $350,125. Real estate taxes on the unit are estimated to be $9,700 annually and estimated HOA fees will be approximately $460 annually. The county report noted the 2017 Suffolk yearly median income was $110,800, while the median price of a home in 2017 was $376,000, according to census data. If an individual or family spent 30 percent of income on housing costs, the national and suggested average, they would have to earn $125,000 a year to afford the median home price. These lotteries are an opportunity for the average person looking for a home on Long Island to have the chance to start a life here, but there’s also something dystopian about the entire idea of gambling a chance to be able to afford something as basic as a residence, whether that means renting or owning. Not to mention, anybody who is making less than the area median income knows just how tough it is to find truly affordable living anywhere along the North Shore. It’s not to say these lotteries aren’t helping those whose names are drawn, but one wonders at the state of some of the hundreds of people who apply for these lottos who then walk away empty handed. While certainly a few of those applying may already own homes or rent apartments and are just looking for a cheaper option, the very nature of a lottery draws upon the desperate. Municipalities at every end of the Island are complaining about brain drain, of Long Islanders fleeing to seek cheaper housing options elsewhere. Their governments need to look at the issue holistically and take an approach that affects communities as a whole, rather than for select individuals.
Letters to the editor
Remembering a different President Johnson In response to the Between You and Me column: “President Johnson: a Civil Rights Hero,” published on Feb. 28. Can a leopard change its spots? I was politically active at the time and remember then Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson [D-Texas] as a power in the “Solid South” which comprised 11 to 15 racially segregated states that voted staunchly and safely Democratic. Last week or so, PBS did a special
on Sammy Davis Jr. In 1960, Davis married May Britt, a white actress of some note. Davis joined Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin campaigning for John F. Kennedy. The Solid South continued in the Democratic column and Kennedy was elected president. Martin and Sinatra were invited to Kennedy’s inaugural ball, but Davis was not. The reason: Davis would probably dance with his wife, and the Solid South could not tolerate a black
man dancing with a white woman, even if it was his wife. Davis was shattered. The Kennedys detested Johnson but JFK took him as a vice president to keep the Solid South in the Democratic block of votes. Can a leopard change its spots? It seems so. The Solid South changed its spots in 1968 and has done so ever since. Donard Pranzo Port Jefferson
A wall splits people and their land apart Truth Imposed. Some of our leadership want to build a wall across our southern border, some do not. Each seems to be fixated on disparate versions of the truth. Each seems to believe that imposing a truth is the same as arriving at one. It is politically dangerous to arrive at a truth about a major public question on which the nation’s establishment is dead wrong, so leaders stay dug in. On a bluntly personal level, what do the farmers, ranchers and people in the
communities who own the land, work and live there think of the wall? Real people who grow up, go to school, fall in love, have families, worship and die there. They see it as a “scar, a cut that has been sutured.” Most of us from a distance imagine the border as being this uninhabited, desolate place that belongs to the government. So why not build a wall along the border? Another imposed truth. That wall runs through private property, in some cases up to a mile from
the actual border, separating folks from all they own on the southern side of an 18foot wall. The government condemned only a thin strip of land, suitable for building a wall, from landowners while splitting their properties in two. They can see their barns, reservoirs and grazing land through steel slats but have no access to them. A truth you imposed is not equivalent to a truth arrived at. Jerry Reynolds Coram
Insurance should cover overdose treatment Suffolk County led with 337 overdose deaths for New York state between 20092013 without a close call. The Bronx came in second with 121 less fatalities, while many of us here in Suffolk still are in denial of what is going on around us. Personally, I know the struggles of addiction firsthand and have seen its destructive nature drag bright spirits to unrecognizable places. These are our children, parents and friends fighting an internal battle that I can only describe as crippling. For many, medication-assisted treatment provides a beacon of hope for recovery and a chance at restoring normality to life. Meanwhile, insurance companies are making it increasingly difficult for individuals seeking treatment to receive essential MATs like buprenorphine — including one medication with the brand name Suboxone — at an affordable price due to insurance coverage changes and prior authorizations placed on the medication. In 2007, nearly 90 percent of Medicare plans
covered buprenorphine without restriction and this number has decreased drastically to 35 percent by 2018. Buprenorphine should be covered by insurance companies without restrictions or prior authorizations to provide accessible treatment for opioid-use disorder. This is one of the three medications approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to treat opioid-use disorder and is recommended by Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, a branch of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Research suggests that MATs such as buprenorphine in combination with counseling result in better health outcomes. While many medical professionals are being trained on providing in-office buprenorphine, physicians report delay due to prior authorizations and barriers to patient care. Buprenorphine is safe and effective. It has been linked to decreases in opioid use and overdoses. It lowers the potential
for misuse due to the ability of drugs to level off at a certain dosage. If these medications are not readily available, we are creating a barrier to treatment. Only two out of every 10 individuals looking for substance abuse treatment can receive it at the time they want. If people cannot access treatment when they want it, they may not get another opportunity. Health care is a basic human right. Some may argue that medication treatment is not sobriety. However, research supports MATs like buprenorphine over abstinence-based approaches due to higher success rates and safer outcomes for patients. Some may need this additional support to serve as a springboard in their recovery. Easy access to MATs like buprenorphine is critical to provide accessible treatment for those searching to climb their way out of a grave being dug by addiction. Jennifer Minett Coram
The opinions of columnists and letter writers are their own. They do not speak for the newspaper.
MARCH 14, 2019 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A27
Opinion
Pi Day reminds us of the numbers in our lives
W
hat better day than today, March 14, to celebrate numbers? In case you haven’t heard, math teachers around the country have been getting in on the calendar action for 31 years, designating the day before Caesar’s dreaded Ides of March as pi day, because the first three numbers of this month and day — 3, 1, 4 — are the same as pi, the Greek letter D. None that is a mathematical constant and of the above makes calculations BY DANIEL DUNAIEF like the area and circumference of a circle possible. We can become numb to numbers, but they are everywhere and help define and shape even
the non-perfectly circular parts of our lives. We have a social security number, a birth date, a birth order, height and weight, and a street address, with a latitude and longitude, if we’re especially numerically inclined. Numbers save us, as computer codes using numbers keep planes from flying at the same altitude. Numbers tell us what to wear, as the temperature, especially around this time of year, dictates whether we take a sweatshirt, jacket or heavy coat. We use them when we’re ordering food, paying for a meal in a restaurant and counting calories. They are a part of music as they dictate rhythms and tempos, and of history, allowing us to keep the order of events straight. We use numbers to keep track of landmarks, like the year of our graduation from high school or college, the year we met or married our partners, or the years our children were born. Numbers help us track the time of year. Even a warm day in February doesn’t make it July, just as a cold day in June doesn’t turn the calendar to November.
People complain regularly that they aren’t good at math or science, and yet they can calculate the time it takes to get to school to pick up their kids, get them home to do their homework, cook dinner and manage a budget, all of which requires an awareness of the numbers that populate our lives. We know when to get up because of the numbers flashing on the phone or alarm clock near the side of our bed, which are unfortunately an hour, 60 minutes or 3,600 seconds ahead thanks to daylight savings time. Many of our numbers are in base 10, but not all, as our 24-hour clocks, 24-hour days, 12-month years and seven-day weeks celebrate other calculations. Numbers start early in our lives, as parents share their children’s height and weight and, if they’re preparing themselves for a lifetime of monitoring their children’s achievements, their Apgar scores. Children read Dr. Seuss’ “One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish.” We use numbers to connect the dots in a game, drawing lines that
form an image of Dumbo or a giraffe. Numbers progress through our elementary education — “I’m 10 and I’m in fifth grade” — and they follow us in all of our activities: “I got a 94 on my social studies test.” Imagine life without numbers, just for 60 seconds or so. Would everything be relative? How would we track winners and losers in anything, from the biggest house to the best basketball team? Would we understand how warm or cold the day had become by developing a sliding scale system? Would we have enough ways to capture the difference between 58 degrees Fahrenheit and 71 degrees? Objects that appear uncountable cause confusion or awe. Look in the sky and try to count the stars, or study a jar of M&Ms and try to calculate the number of candies. A picture may be worth a thousand words, but a number tells its own tale — it was a six-alarm fire, I had 37 friends at my birthday party or I walked a mile in a circle, which means the diameter of that circle was about 1,680 feet — thanks to pi.
Winning the game of New Year’s resolutions
S
o, how are those New Year’s resolutions going? Do you even remember what they were? If you are sticking to them, heartfelt congratulations. You are one of few with the discipline and tenacity to hang on. But if you are in the majority for having slipped or temporarily abandoned your resolves, here is some help. It’s called habits. Habits can be a valuable tool to change your life, Between both for the better you and me and not. By that I BY LEAH S. DUNAIEF mean, we can slip into some unwelcome behaviors and they become habits almost before we realize it. Or we can consciously take control and set out to break or redefine or make new ones, and as they become part of a routine,
they become easier to follow. This is all far simpler than it sounds, of course. There is a whole branch of science dealing with habits, the unconscious behavioral patterns formed to deal with actions. “We do not so much direct our own actions as become shaped by them,” wrote Jeffrey Kluger in his introductory chapter for a special edition from Time Inc. called “The Power of Habits.” He points out, by quoting Léon Dumont — the 19th century French psychologist and philosopher — that “a garment, after having been worn a certain amount of time, clings to the shape of the body better than when it was new. There has been a change in the tissue, and this change is a new habit of cohesion.” That is certainly true of the old, comfy pair of slippers that, despite their age, you hate to replace them, and the old pair of pants that have come to fit you like a glove. Accordingly, the manner of our actions “fashion for themselves in the nervous system more and more appropriate paths.” Kluger here is again quoting Dumont, who studied the science of laughter, of gratitude, of empathy and, for our purposes here, the science of habits.
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William James, the American philosopher greatly influenced by Dumont, suggested that people were little more than “bundles of habits.” The point of all this is to build on the idea that if we can shape our brains and the rest of our nervous systems the way we shape a pair of pants, we can control and redirect our lives to follow the actions we wish to take, namely our resolutions to be better. Think about how many of our daily moves are just programmed in. We get up in the morning and automatically brush our teeth, take a shower, dress, put up the coffee, get our keys, slide behind the wheel of the car, place the coffee cup in the holder, drive to work, all probably while thinking of something else. Occasionally we are surprised to find we have arrived at our destination without consciously paying attention to the route. Almost all of that execution was the result of habit. Well, suppose you built another step in there, like running 20 minutes on that treadmill or stationary bike collecting dust in your basement before you got into the shower. You like to watch the morning TV shows? Jog along
EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Leah S. Dunaief GENERAL MANAGER Johness Kuisel MANAGING EDITOR Kyle Barr EDITOR Kyle Barr
LEISURE EDITOR Heidi Sutton ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Kathryn Mandracchia DIR. OF MEDIA PRODUCTIONS Michael Tessler
with them as you watch. If you repeat that action for awhile, it could become a habit and presto! You are doing the recommended minutes of exercise a week without the ironclad discipline seemingly required each day. It just becomes as much a habit as brushing your teeth. If you are forever locked into dipping into the candy jar in the evenings, and you find you are gaining weight, substitute chilled blueberries or red grapes from a cut-glass bowl within reach of your fingers. Of course you have to remember to buy the blueberries or grapes beforehand, wash them and keep them in the refrigerator at the ready. Complex habits, like procrastination or chronic lateness or smoking are harder to unlearn — but not impossible. We can rewire ourselves, using substitutions or rewards, splinting a bad habit onto a good one for support or hanging out with those whose actions we would like to emulate. Here’s the bottom line: We can do it. It will just take time for a new behavior to feel part of our routine, an average of two weeks or so. To become a habit will average 66 days.
ART AND PRODUCTION DIRECTOR Beth Heller Mason INTERNET STRATEGY DIRECTOR Rob Alfano CLASSIFIEDS DIRECTOR Ellen Segal
BUSINESS MANAGER Sandi Gross CREDIT MANAGER Diane Wattecamps CIRCULATION MANAGER Courtney Biondo
PAGE A28 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • MARCH 14, 2019 HOURS: MONDAY - THURSDAY 9AM - 8PM FRIDAY 9AM - 6PM SATURDAY 9AM - 5PM SUNDAY 11AM - 4PM
NOT JUST A BETTER DEAL, A BETTER DEALERSHIP.
Premium Luxury
2019 Lincoln MKC
060
2019 Lincoln Navigator
.9%
- Just Announced -
260
.9%
APR
APR
for
mos.
With Lincoln AFS Financing
for
mos.
$1,000 Bonus CasH + $1,500 Conquest Cash
2019 Lincoln Nautilus
060
.9% APR
for mos. $500 Bonus CasH With Lincoln AFS Financing
With Lincoln AFS Financing
631-727-2200 RiverheadLincoln.com 1419 Route 58 Riverhead, NY 11901
146140
2019 Lincoln MKC - $1,000 Bonus Cash (PGM #11715) + $1,500 Competitive Conquest Bonus Cash (PGM #30285). Not all buyers will qualify for Lincoln AFS financing. 0.9% APR financing for 60 months at $17.05 per month per $1,000 financed regardless of down payment (PGM #20505). Competitive Conquest is available to customers who currently own or lease a 1995 or newer non-Ford/Lincoln/Mercury vehicle. Customer must have owned or leased the eligible vehicle for a minimum of 30 days prior to the sale date of the new vehicle. Trade-in or lease termination not required. Residency restrictions apply. For all offers, take new retail delivery from an authorized Lincoln dealer’s stock by 4/1/19. See dealer for qualifications and complete details. 2019 Lincoln Nautilus - $500 Bonus Cash (PGM #11715). Not all buyers will qualify for Lincoln AFS financing. 0.9% APR financing for 60 months at $17.05 per month per $1,000 financed regardless of down payment (PGM #20505). Residency restrictions apply. For all offers, take new retail delivery from an authorized Lincoln dealer’s stock by 4/1/19. See dealer for qualifications and complete details. 2019 Lincoln Navigator - Not all buyers will qualify for Lincoln AFS financing. 2.9% APR financing for 60 months at $17.92 per month per $1,000 financed regardless of down payment (PGM #20505). Residency restrictions apply. Take new retail delivery from an authorized Lincoln dealer’s stock by 4/1/19. See dealer for qualifications and complete details. ©2019 Riverhead Ford Lincoln