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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. 33, No. 32
July 2, 2020
Learn who is the 2020 top of the class for Port Jeff and Comsewogue A4 PJ Elementary Principal Tom Meehan says he’s retiring in December A5 Suffolk Police Deputy Commissioner talks ongoing protests and race A8
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JULY 02, 2020 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A3
Village of Port Jefferson
Port Jeff Catholic School Set to Close at the End of School Year ters of Wisdom, an order that has deep ties to Long Island, in 1938, then called the Infant Jesus Parish School. It was renamed to Our Lady of Wisdom in 1991. The sisterhood was largely uninvolved with it once it became a regional school, according to Sr. Cathy Sheehan of the Daughters of Wisdom.
BY KYLE BARR KYLE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Our Lady of Wisdom Regional School in Port Jefferson will have closed by the end of the school year and will not reopen for fall2020. The coronavirus pandemic has hurt the institution, and Catholic officials said COVID-19 has exacerbated issues of progressively lagging enrollment. According to a release by the Diocese of Rockville Centre, the school, located on the grounds of the Infant Jesus R.C. Church in Port Jeff, along with two other Catholic schools on Long Island, have suffered from increased competition from public and other secular schools. This has led to more and more financial support needed from local parishes. “Following much analysis and discussion with stakeholders at both the diocesan and parish levels, the pastors of the parishes that support each school have made the difficult decision to close,” the diocese states in the release. Parents will need to work with the diocese’s Department of Education and other school officials to enroll their kids in different Catholic schools on Long Island. “COVID-19 has had a significant financial impact on all of the parishes and schools within
Another American Dream Fulfilled In Your Neighborhood
Remembering Infant Jesus School
The year’s slate of eighth-grade graduates at the Our Lady of Wisdom school in Port Jeff may be the last ones of the Catholic school’s long history. Photo by Kyle Barr
the diocese, resulting in the difficult decision to close these three Catholic elementary schools in order to eliminate the unsustainable financial stress on their parishes,” said Sean Dolan, a diocese spokesperson. The diocese said in the release the school has declined in enrollment by 37 percent to just 66 students in kindergarten through eighthgrade. It is 31 percent, or 79 students, if you consider students from nursery through eighth-grade. The school was financially supported by four
local parishes, including Infant Jesus, St. Gerard Majella in Port Jefferson Station, St. James R.C. Church in Setauket and the St. Louis de Montfort in Sound Beach. The diocese said the four supporting parishes provide around $475,000 in operating support to the school, which accounts for more than 45 percent of the school’s total revenues. Our Lady of Wisdom Principal John Piropato and other school leaders did not return requests for comment. The school was established by the Daugh-
This Land Was Made For You and Me
For the many students who went there over the past 80 years, many remember it as a strict place of learning, whether that fostered a sense of discipline or a harsh atmosphere. Once it transformed into a regional school, many said the place fostered a unique sense of community one couldn’t get from the other expanding school districts on Long Island. Displants from the Port Jefferson/PJS area, folks who live as far away as New Mexico, chimed in remembering their old school. Eileen Powers-Benedict said going to the Infant Jesus School engendered a strong sense of order that helped them get ahead in their school careers. The oldest of nine children, five brothers and three sisters, she would enter the school in 1961 while the last of the Powers children would graduate in 1985. Her father, William OUR LADY OF WISDOM Continued on A9
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PAGE A4 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • JULY 02, 2020
Town
Districts Congratulate 2020 Valedictorians/Salutatorians Port Jefferson
Earl L. Vandermeulen High School is proud to announce that seniors Christine Iasso and Kyle Onghai have been named valedictorian and salutatorian, respectively, of the Class of 2020. Iasso’s well-rounded education and extracurricular activities include being a member of the Academic team, Environmental Club, Interact Club, Mathletes team, captain of the junior varsity basketball team and a junior counselor at vacation Bible school. She also took advantage of the impressive MIT LaunchX, a program that teaches entrepreneurial skills and mindset through starting real companies, with interactive lectures, business simulations, entrepreneur panels and the actual design and launch of a company. The valedictorian will major in sustainable agriculture and food systems at the University of California, Davis. Onghai’s interests in math, investing, entrepreneurship, research and scientific journals have paved the way to being a National Advanced Placement Scholar, a National
Honor Society member, a recipient of a Regents scholarship, captain of the Mathletes team and president of the Latin Club, where he has received five gold medals in the National Latin Exam. He has been honored in advanced calculus on the county level and has been an award winner in the school’s Physics Bowl, Quiz Bowl, Robotics and Science Olympiad. Onghai received the President’s Volunteer Service Award for his church altar service and for working in the patient education department at Stony Brook University Hospital. He took part in the Simons Summer Research Program at Stony Brook University as a researcher in biomedical engineering using MATLAB and quantitative ultrasound. He has been on the varsity tennis team for all four years of high school along with other local athletic pursuits. His musical accomplishments as a cellist and pianist have led him to the Young Artist Program at Stony Brook University and as a participant in Levels 1-6 of the New York State School Music Association Festival. Onghai will attend UCLA and major in mathematics.
Fifth-grader Blake Weaver, student government president, gives uplifting remarks to students during a virutal moving up ceremony. Photo from PJSD
Port Jeff Elementary/Middle Schoolers Move Up in Virutal Ceremonies
Eighty-three fifth-grade students from Edna Louise Spear Elementary School celebrated their move to the next step in their academic careers — Port Jefferson Middle School. Meanwhile the Middle Schoolers were lauded as they move across the hall to the high school. For the elementary students, the virtual mov-
ing-up program of events included a performance of “God Bless America” by Benjamin Amadio; uplifting remarks from student government president Blake Weaver about looking forward to middle school together; congratulatory and inspiring remarks from parents, Superintendent of Schools Jessica Schmettan and Principal
Comsewogue
Two young women lead the top of the class at Comsewogue High School. Valedictorian Daniela Galvez-Cepeda and salutatorian Gianna Alcala have near-identical grade point averages, but both have far different plans for their futures. Galvez-Cepeda finished the year with a weighted GPA of 102.42. During school, she spent much of her time as student government co-president and French Honor Society president, a member of varsity track and field and Athlete Helping Athletes. In addition, she is a National Hispanic Recognition Scholar, Women in Science and Engineering team member at Stony Brook University and a National Merit Scholar Commended Student. In her free time, she said she was a junior volunteer at Mather Hospital, where since 2017 she answered visitors’ questions at the front desk in both English and Spanish and provided them with comfort when needed. She also shadowed nurses on their rounds with patients. She said her best memory of high school was her work setting up a donation drive the school organized in 2017 to help the people in Puerto Rico hurt by Hurricane Maria. “I walked back and forth from the parking lot, unloading cars and trucks and bringing donations into our school’s auditorium,” she said. “My district neighbors were so generous that we filled up our whole auditorium with donations in only one day.” In the fall, Galvez-Cepeda will be attending Williams College in Massachusetts where she will double major in math and physics on the pre-med track. She said her goal is to be a trauma surgeon, but she added she is excited to explore other options down the road. Thomas Meehan; and a message from physical education teacher Françoise Schachner. Assistant Principal Amy Laverty presented Safety Patrol awards and Meehan presented awards in various categories. The fifth-grade teachers then awarded the certificates of achievement to their students and the ceremony concluded with student Iris Park performing on the piano and a virtual art show highlighting classroom and at-home lessons that students created. At the middle school, Principal Robert Neidig hosted a virtual ceremony for the 2020 eighth-grade students who will move up to the high school in September. Eighth-graders Alexa Eichinger sang “The Star-Spangled Banner,” student council pres-
Alcala is moving on to college with a 102.26 weighted GPA. She is a National Merit Scholarship Commended Scholar, Women in Science and Engineering at Stony Brook University, Art Honor Society president, Science Honor Society treasurer, as well as a member of the cross-country, Country Farms equestrian team and band. She said her experiences with WISE and Art Honor Society were especially important to her high school career, though her favorite memory was traveling abroad with classmates to Spain, France and Italy. Though she thanked her friends, family and teachers for inspiring her, she added that Galvez-Cepeda, her friend and competitor for the top academic spot, was also a huge inspiration. “For the past seven years, Dani has been my most brilliant competitor and one of the most kind and generous people I’ve ever known,” Alcala said. “Without her impact on my life, I wouldn’t be half the person I am today.” The salutatorian will be attending the University of Southern California, Viterbi School of Engineering to study environmental engineering. She said she wants to work toward a more sustainable world, especially in the textile industry. Though the coronavirus cut off in-person learning prematurely for the 2020 senior class, the high school’s academic leaders said though they lacked physical contact with teachers and peers, the important thing is to persevere. “High school is the foundation that is setting you up for the success that is to come in your life,” Galvez-Cepeda said. “So, enjoy your time with your friends while learning new things in a safe space together.”
ident Emily Ambrozy offered remarks to her peers and Viviane Kim performed a solo piano piece. Assistant Principal Amy Laverty then read the names of students who were honored with academic excellence awards and Superintendent of Schools Jessica Schmettan offered congratulatory remarks and spoke of the perseverance and resilience of the students. Neidig offered Walt Disney’s quote – “We keep moving forward, opening new doors, and doing new things, because we’re curious and curiosity keeps leading us down new paths” – before culminating the milestone event with his final words of wisdom for the academic year, encouraging the students to make sound decisions regarding their educational careers and future choices.
JULY 02, 2020 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A5
Perspective
An Open Letter to PJSD About Distance Learning This is an open letter to the members of the Port Jefferson board of education, Port Jefferson Teachers Association and Port Jefferson Administrators Association. We hope this letter finds you well and healthy. On behalf of Port Jefferson PTA, PTSA and SEPTA we are reaching out to share our thoughts as the district prepares to re-open in the fall. First and foremost, we would like to thank each of you for your time and dedication to maintaining the excellence we enjoy at Port Jefferson School District. We also want to take this opportunity to express our support for the teachers and administrators as they have navigated distance learning during this unprecedented global pandemic. We feel it is important as the representative parent/teacher organizations in the district that we share with the Board of Education our, as well as many of our members, thoughts and concerns that have arisen regarding the education of our children under the constraints of this pandemic. We hope that by doing this we can come together to create solutions that will allow our district and children to shine as we face the monumental challenges of reopening and keeping everyone safe and healthy. As you know, without a vaccine or a cure for COVID-19 there is a high likelihood that the next school year will be impacted by the pandemic as well. We are aware district administrators are currently planning for this new “normal” and are discussing the possibility of returning in the fall to a “hybrid” model that includes some component of distance learning. In the event this is the case and the district is forced to continue to employ some component of distance learning, we are urging the board of education to ensure that any model employed during the 2020-21 school year provides our students with consistent daily virtual interaction and live instruction. Our children need their teachers to teach them. We understand that some school districts on Long Island delivered “live” teaching district-wide and believe that going forward this would be the best way to maintain the excellence in education that Port Jefferson School District has always provided. We understand that our teachers and administrators were faced with an enormous challenge to develop and provide a distance learning program on very little notice. We understand that it wouldn’t be as comparable to a regular school day. We have all done the best we could, given the circumstances. However, despite everyone’s efforts, the model employed by the district during the spring translated to an inconsistent educational standard/experience across the district. Teachers were given the discretion to “host synchronous and/or asynchronous instructional activities.” This primarily led to little live instruction and an uneven learning experience across the district. While some teachers offered live and/or pre-recorded in-
struction, many did not and instead only posted assignments to Google Classroom (or various other platforms) which then placed the burden of teaching those assignments on the parents. As parents, we of course want to educate our children, but we are not trained educators and many of us still have our own jobs to perform. Being forced to become a teacher and work at the same time becomes an impossible task. This scenario creates an inadequate educational experience for our children putting our kids further behind on the competitive world stage. In addition to the decreased educational standard that has occurred as a result of this crisis it is also concerning that some teachers had weekly “check in’s” and worse still some had no virtual live interaction with their students during the entire length of the school closure. For the few teachers who provided live instruction we applaud their dedication, creativity and adaptability in continuing to deliver excellence in education during these unprecedented times. We are now calling for all of our teachers to provide education at this level of excellence during the next school year in the event the district is forced to employ some sort of hybrid model that includes distance learning. For many parents, the current mindset is that 2019-20 was a lost school year. Were it a limited event affecting the end of a single school year
we understand the crisis of the situation and can accept a lower standard that emergencies demand. However, the reality of the situation is that this pandemic will sadly go on for longer than any of us hoped and we cannot completely let go of the standards our children deserve. This pandemic has forced many changes upon us. All industries have had to adapt. As we weathered the initial crisis, we must now begin to prepare so that the 2020-21 school year is not a lost educational year as well. Given the great educators the district employs coupled with the advances in technology we believe that Port Jefferson School District can excel at this challenge. Let us be the district that leads and that other districts strive to emulate. We urge the board of education, the Teachers’ Association and the Administrator’s Association to approach the 2020-21 school year as an opportunity for Port Jefferson to become recognized as the gold standard in distance learning to the extent the school is not able to return to a traditional school day. As parents, we believe that any distance learning plan should include, at a minimum: • Live virtual and/or pre-recorded teaching that matches the amount of active, teaching time provided during a regular school day. • Daily/weekly “office hours” for any teacher not utilizing “live teaching” so that students can
ask questions regarding content. • Daily check ins for all classes — “attendance” including lists of what is due, when it is due and a way for students to check off that they read and understand. • Support services such as speech, OT, PT and counseling offered in the amounts specified in IEPs through online platforms and teletherapy. • A clear schedule for students to follow with time built in for outdoor time for exercise and play. • Weekly emotional/educational phone call check ins with each student (use teachers, TAs, support staff). Rethinking the way education is delivered is obviously a monumental task. We are confident, however, that our administrators and educators, working together and in consultation with our parents can come up with a plan that continues to deliver an excellent level of education to our students. We here at PTA, PTSA and SEPTA are eager to support the district in any way we can and would love to be involved in the process going forward, sitting on any committees that are convened of stakeholders. To quote high school Principal Dr. Robert Neidig, “[w]e will get through this and we will persevere, after all we are Royals.” Sincerely, Port Jefferson PTA, Port Jefferson PTSA, Port Jefferson SEPTA
Longtime Educator Meehan to Retire in December BY DAVID LUCES DLUCES@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Tom Meehan, current Edna Louise Spear Elementary School principal whose education career spans over 40 years, has announced he will retire in December. Meehan, who originally retired in 2006 from the Middle Country School District, came back to work at the Port Jeff elementary school during the 2011-2012 school year initially on an interim basis. Later that year it was changed to a permanent position. “I thought I was going to be filling in for a couple of weeks, almost 10 years later I’m still here,” he said, jokingly. “I couldn’t have been happier with how these past few years have gone; it’s been great.” The educator said deciding to retire again was a tough decision for him. He hopes students will be able to come back to the building during his last few months on the job. “It broke my heart not being able to see the students these past months,” he said. “I like being in the hallways talking to them and just seeing their excitement.”
Elementary school Principal Tom Meehan is set to retire at the end of the year. Photo from PJSD
Meehan has a long history in Port Jefferson. He has raised his family in the village, he graduated from Port Jefferson High School and is an elected commissioner of the Port Jefferson Fire District. “It’s a great community, I’m proud to be from Port Jeff,” he said. “I’ve gotten to know
a lot of families in the district. I’ve coached some of their kids in baseball. It is nice seeing them grow up here,” he said. The elementary school principal was often seen walking to school every morning, and said he enjoyed being spotted by students who saw him making the trek to work in his suit and hiking boots. For his dedication to Port Jefferson’s students and the greater community, Meehan was chosen as a TBR News Media Person of the Year in 2015. The district hasn’t officially announced a successor, though Meehan said he believes Assistant Principal Amy Laverty would be a great choice for the job. “She would make an excellent principal,” he said. Meehan said he will miss the students and his staff he has gotten to know over the years. In retirement, he is looking forward to going on more hikes and spending more time with his grandchildren and family. “I want to thank the district and community for the opportunity to do this job. It is hard to walk away,” he said.
PAGE A6 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • JULY 02, 2020
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AA019376 MCGREAL MARY 2 UNDINE RD ROCKY POINT NY 11778
AA019634 MIDDLE ISLAND NY 11953 AVIGNONE NANETTE 29 WHITE OAK ST
AA019392 PAGLINAWAN KASHMERE & ROMERO RODOLFO F 18 UNIVERSITY DR PORT JEFFERSON STAT NY 11776
AA019648 FIONA LIN & KAU LUEN KONG 18 BALFOUR LN STONY BROOK NY 11790
AA019521 REDKO PATRICK 106 QUAKER PATH STONY BROOK NY 11790 AA019541 RAFIQ RANA M 17 CAMP DR SELDEN NY 11784 AA019546 ROTONDI JOHN & GERALDINE 30 GROVE ROAD ROCKY POINT NY 11778 AA019553 DESOLA MICHAEL & GENEVIEVE 40 LONG MEADOW PL CENTEREACH NY 11720 AA019554 LUCERNO ANGEL 224 TREMONT AVE MEDFORD NY 11763 AA019555 NACLERIO ANTHONY 4 KNICKERBOCKER AVE HOLBROOK NY 11741 AA019564 VILLATORO AMILCAR JOEL 28 ROBINWOOD ST MASTIC NY 11950
AA019656 IMRAN ALI 4 OLD COACH RD EAST SETAUKET NY 11733 AA019662 MILLER JOSEPH 11 MISSISSIPPI AVE PORT JEFFERSON STATION NY 11776 AA019665 CHAPUT CHRISTOPHER & CHAPUT DANIELLE MADON‑ NA LAURA L 23 IMPERIAL DR MILLER PLACE NY 11764 AA019688 RONNA JENKINS & JOY T. DETOMASO‑BIENER 18 HUNTINGTON RD SOUND BEACH NY 11789 AA10195 SOTO CLAIRE 16 IMPERIAL DRIVE SELDEN NY 11784 AA16038 SQUATRIGLIA FLORIO 38 VEE JAY DR SHOREHAM NY 11786 AA17497 ZEA FERNEY & CRUZ ELENA 1139 WILLIAM FLOYD PKWY SHIRLEY NY 11967
Incorporated Village of Port Jefferson Building, Planning, and Zon‑ ing 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 Planning Board PURSUANT TO THE PROVISIONS of Article XI, Section 250-50 of the Code of Village of Port Jefferson, please take notice that the Planning Board of the Incorporated Village of Port Jefferson will hold a Public Hearing via ZOOM posted live on YouTube on Thursday 7/16/20 at 6:30PM. (A prehearing work session will begin at 5:00PM) Below is a link to watch a live video of the meeting and public hearing. Public comments may be posted on the link during the public hearing portion of the meeting at 6:30PM. Public comment will be permitted during the public hearing portion of the meeting only. Please include your full name when commenting. h t t p s : // w w w . y o u t u b e . com/c/IncVillageofPortJef‑ fersonOfficial PUBLIC HEARING(S): 68 North Country Rd. (JS) Site Plan Amendment & Conditional Use Permit Application: #0606‑20 Location: South side of North Country Road, east of Oakland Avenue (Vacant Bank of Smithtown bldg.) SCTM: Sec.17, Blk.7, Lot 2 Zoning: P‑O Professional Of‑ fice District Applicant: North Shore Pro‑ fessional Realty Property Owner: Robert Frey Contact: H2M Architects & Engineers Description: Change of Use from a financial office to a non‑medical professional office, a conditional use in the Professional Office P‑O District 681 7/2 1x ptr
Police
Police said they found over two million dollars worth of narcotics, including cocaine and heroin, above, as well as close to $1.5 million in cash during the search of several homes in Suffolk County. Photo from DA’s office
Wading River Man Among Five Indicted in MultiMillion Dollar Drug Smuggling Ring BY KYLE BARR KYLE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
Suffolk County district attorney, Tim Sini (D), announced three people in Suffolk and two from New Jersey were indicted in an alleged multimillion dollar drug trafficking ring, with officials saying they seized over a million in cash, 19 kilograms of drugs and numerous guns during the takedown. Sini announced in a press release that James Sosa, 25, of Wading River, Anthony Leonardi, 46, of Coram, and Brian Sullivan, 24, of Lake Grove, and two other individuals from New Jersey allegedly helped purchase and ferry narcotics, including cocaine and heroin, from the West Coast to Long Island partially during the pandemic. The group used residential homes in Lake Grove, Wading River, Port Jefferson Station, Coram, Selden and Brentwood, the DA said. Sini worked with Suffolk County Police Department, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and the U.S. Postal Service Office of Inspector General. “The magnitude of this drug distribution ring is enormous; they were responsible for peddling millions of dollars in narcotics on an almost weekly basis,” Sini said in the release. “Not only did this organization continue their illicit operation during the coronavirus pandemic, they were also exploiting the limited availability of certain narcotics during the health crisis to generate even greater profits off their sales.” The DA, Suffolk police and DEA launched
the investigation in May 2019 investigating Sosa, Sullivan and their associates. The group allegedly used multiple methods to get the drugs to the East Coast, including cross-country trips in vehicles and airplanes and even through the mail. Police executed warrants June 27 at locations within the six hamlets, which the DA said resulted in seizing 16 kilograms of cocaine, 2 kilograms of heroin, about $1.5 million in cash, around 4,000 oxycodone pills, nine firearms, along with “numerous luxury vehicles” and equipment the DA said is used for packaging and selling drugs. The police had also seized an additional kilogram of cocaine earlier in the investigation. The cocaine had an estimated street value of $1.6 million and the heroin was worth about $520,000. Dashawn Jones, 33, of Passaic, New Jersey, was charged with allegedly operating as a major trafficker and first-degree drug possession. Anthony Cyntje, 22, also of Passaic, was charged with first-degree drug possession and was described as being employed as a correction officer in New Jersey. “This investigation exemplifies how drug traffickers have been impacted by the coronavirus; adapting smuggling methods, transportation routes and money laundering operations to maintain security and social distancing,” said Ray Donovan, New York DEA special agent in charge. Sosa, who was charged with two counts as a major trafficker, among other counts, was arraigned June 28 with bail set from $7.5 million cash or bond. Sosa’s attorney, Glenn Obedin, a criminal defense lawyer in Central Islip, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Sosa, Sullivan and Jones each face 25 years to life in prison if convicted of the top counts, Leonardi 12 1/2 to 25 years and Cyntje 8 1/3 to 25 years, Sini said.
JULY 02, 2020 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A7
County
Restaurant Owners See Positives from Phase 3, Indoor Dining Though Many Still Prefer Safety of Outdoors BY DAVID LUCES DLUCES@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM With Long Island entering Phase 3 of reopening, businesses are looking to bounce back and recover from the shutdown. Restaurant owners are hoping to take advantage of the addition of indoor dining during the summer months. Here’s how owners reacted to the first week of Phase 3. “It has been going really smooth really, better than I expected,” said Indu Kaur, director of operations of The Meadow Club in Port Jefferson Station. At the family’s newest restaurant, SaGhar, on East Broadway in Port Jeff, the rooftop floor and patio has been very busy. Kaur said they plan on accommodating patrons who want indoor seating in the front room of the restaurant that is facing the water. The Curry Club, which the family also runs in Setauket, currently offers outdoor seating at its patio and will have limited indoor seating. “We will keep them six feet apart, there will be different entrances and exits for outdoor and indoor seating,” Kaur said. “For outdoor seating
Indu Kaur, front row on right, joins the Port Jefferson Station/Terryville Chamber of Commerce on the roof deck of the SaGhar restaurant in Port Jeff. She said that space has gotten plenty of use lately. Photo by Joan Nickeson
you will go down different staircases when you enter and leave. Also, we’ve placed hand sanitizers throughout the building.” Kaur said they have gotten good feedback from customers on the outdoor dining layout at SaGhar. “They’ve told us they like the overall ambiance, the decoration of space and are enjoying the outdoor entertainment we are providing,” she said. “Business has started to come back.” With the start of summer and the upcoming Fourth of July weekend, Kaur said they will look to possibly increase tables with the influx of people venturing into the village. In addition, they are in the process of training 20 new employees to add to the staff they already have. “We will try to accommodate walk-in customers as much as possible, but we advise to
make a reservation,” she said. “We want to make sure everyone is safe and feels comfortable.” Charlie Lefkowitz, president of the Three Village Chamber of Commerce, said business owners in the area are “cautiously optimistic” about the current and next stages of reopening. They’re hoping that they can return to normal business operations soon. “There has been a lot of burden put on these businesses; restaurants and retail stores have had to contend with reduced volume of sales, capacity and selling space,” Lefkowitz said. The chamber president added that while take-out orders helped bring in funds for restaurants, outdoor/indoor dining options will allow for these establishments to bounce back. He added that the chamber will continue to assist
businesses in any way it can and help them navigate and understand Phase 4. “They are excited for the summer months and are looking forward to the business it could bring,” he said. Lefkowitz said he thinks post-COVID we will see outdoor seating and retail space during the spring and summer time. “I think it’s something every municipality on Long Island should consider, from what we’ve heard if given the choice, people have preferred outdoor seating,” he said. Tommy Marzano, co-owner of Faradays in Smithtown, said customers have been apprehensive about eating indoors with the majority of them preferring the restaurant’s outdoor seating. “They prefer being outside — some of them don’t want nothing to do with being indoors even if everyone is six feet apart,” he said. Marazano is hopeful that customers will eventually become more comfortable eating indoors again, though he acknowledged it could be a problem in the fall/winters months if COVID is still around and outdoor dining is not an option. He said takeout and delivery options could come back into play for restaurants. Nonetheless, the feedback from customers has been positive, many raving about the restaurant’s garden and patio area. “They are happy to have some bit of normalcy and be able to have a dining experience again,” he said. “We’ve had people tell us that this was the first place they wanted to go eat out, it means a lot that the community wants us to succeed.”
Bernstein to Remain at SBU for 2020-21 Academic Year BY RITA J. EGAN RITA@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
As the 2019-2020 school year comes to a close, Stony Brook University’s recent interim president is returning to familiar territory. Michael Bernstein will remain at SBU, even though his last day as interim president was June 30. On July 1 he returned to his former position as provost and senior vice president for Academic Affairs. Last August, Bernstein took on the role of interim president after the departure of former president, Dr. Samuel L. Stanley Jr. Bernstein said he decided to stay after a request from new university president, Maurie McInnis, who was appointed in March, and added that a search for his replacement may take up to a year as he hopes to move to California in the future. “I’m in a position, I think, to help Maurie as she transitions in as the new president,” he said. “Obviously, we’re very much challenged with planning through this COVID emergency and figuring out how we’re going to manage
the fall semester, not to mention the whole academic year.” While the pandemic got in the way of working on some SBU goals such as strategic revisioning, strengthening a few of the business practices and revitalization of the computer system, he’s confident that McInnis, with whom he has been in constant contact since her appointment, will be prepared to take on the challenges once the 2020 fall semester can begin. Despite the coronavirus pandemic, which required colleges and universities to switch to online learning and hold events virtually since March, Bernstein said he enjoyed his time as interim president overall. “I was surrounded by a superb senior leadership team,” he said. “We were getting a lot done in terms of managing university affairs.” Bernstein said he realized the importance of taking precautions early on once the number of COVID-19 cases started rising in the U.S. “My sense was that we were in the midst of an emerging crisis that was going to accelerate pretty quickly and pretty dramatically,” he said.
Michael Bernstein on the Stony Brook University campus. Photo from Stony Brook University
“We made a decision to shut down and start canceling major campus events pretty quickly.” He said that the campus nearly closed earlier than it did but the school had to wait for directions from the State University of New York administration to coordinate with the broader school network. Bernstein said the last major event at the campus was the 2020 gala held at the Staller Center March 7. “I had said at that point that we will have no
more major campus events, and we were a little early when we made that decision,” he said. While he received some pushback, he’s glad he made the decision. “I think within a couple of weeks people were circling back to me saying, ‘That was the right decision, thank you for making it as quickly as you did.’ I think it became clear to people that we had to shut everything down.” He added that shortly after the university cut back on public events, students were asked to head home, and spring break was extended to two weeks so the university could prepare for online learning. He said at the last in-person university council meeting, it was realized they were all in the midst of a critical moment in their careers and that everyone would be defined by what decisions were made. While he said it was a challenging time, he remained positive. “There’s the old saying, ‘Calm seas and blue skies do not make good sea captains,’” he said. “You’re not in a leadership position to work when things are calm. When things are calm and fine, you don’t need leaders.”
PAGE A8 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • JULY 02, 2020
County Q&A With Deputy Police Commissioner on Recent Protests/Reforms BY DANIEL DUNAIEF DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Risco Mention-Lewis, who has been a Deputy Police Commissioner since 2012, talked with TBR News Media about the recent protests on Long Island and about the relationship between the police and communities of color. The deputy commissioner supported the Constitutionally protected right to protest. Mention-Lewis was an assistant district attorney in Nassau County and has served as the first African American Deputy Police Commissioner in Suffolk County. In a wide-ranging interview, which is edited for space, Mention-Lewis offered her candid assessment of the civil unrest and the questions about police triggered by the killing of Minneapolis resident George Floyd at the end of May. TBR: What is your role in these protests? Mention-Lewis: I’m the Deputy Police Commissioner. The way I look at it, the time we’re in is the time I was born for. My whole career has brought me to be who I am in this moment in time. TBR: Can you offer some examples? Mention-Lewis: All the things I’ve been doing my career are coming together. I’ve been talking about race my entire career. I’ve been talking about disparate treatment in criminal justice. [I have supported] more resources for previously incarcerated people and people of color my entire career. If we want to drive down crime, you have less reentry to do if you do more intervention. We’re focused on the back end, when we could do much more on the front end. TBR: What are some of the solutions on the front end? Mention-Lewis: Police spend a lot of time in minority communities. They are learning to spend time in the community versus as an outsider. They are learning about the youth centers, resource centers. They are talking to those guys on the corner. When I first got here, I hung out on the corner more than I did anything else. I know that was weird. What is the Deputy Police Commissioner doing on the corner? That’s where you get your connections and your influence, getting to know people. TBR: What sorts of resources do people need? Mention-Lewis: Part of our job is to make information accessible, to make resources accessible. That’s why I work with [County Executive Steve] Bellone and [Babylon Town Supervisor Rich] Schaffer to make sure the resource center has what is needed in a resource center. If I have to travel two to 2.5 hours on a bus, I’m not getting that resume done. Go online? What if I don’t have Internet. What if I only have a laptop or a cell phone? The resource center needs to have computers. Some communities need a Department of Labor in the neighborhood. TBR: Have the police been effective in
making community connections? Mention-Lewis: We’ve done a really good job of getting into our communities. It’s why we didn’t have incidents [during the over 100 protests]. We had people on bikes talking with people before the marches started. TBR: Are the protests creating change? Mention-Lewis: Humans navigating life in white skin have the privilege of not thinking about race, until now. However, because they have not thought about it, they often may not know how to think about it. I’m a practical person. I want resources in the community and also help the Police Department Command understand the framing in the moment. TBR: Are African American residents skeptical of government resources? Mention-Lewis: One of the largest things that the government and policing need to understand: because of the history of America, Black people, even if sometimes you bring the resources, [think] it’s a suspect resource. There’s the Tuskegee experiment [in which Black men with syphilis didn’t receive treatment, even when penicillin became the standard of care in 1947. The study continued until the press reported it, in 1972]. TBR: What’s the impact of the Tuskegee Experiment? Mention-Lewis: There’s always this undercurrent of mistrust, and rightfully so. The Tuskegee experiment went into the early 1970s. We’re talking about recent impacts on Black communities. White communities are not aware all the time. When that body was found in Huntington, people think about lynching. The police may not know, but there are six across the country that Black people are paying attention to. If you don’t know the cultural context, it’s difficult to be having the conversation. TBR: How do you create the cultural context? Mention-Lewis: If there are suicides or murders, it [doesn’t matter] in the sense of cultural context. People are concerned, even if the police say they are all suicides. Even if the police say they are all suicides, people of color say, ‘we know they don’t always tell us the truth, especially when we die.’ TBR: What can help develop that cultural context? Mention-Lewis: We talk to leadership. We talk to families. We have a press conference with all of us and not just the police. When we start thinking about cultural context, how do we communicate taking into account that cultural context? It’s the same with recruitment. We have a low number of African Americans in the police department. We have to talk about the 1,000 pound invisible elephant in the room. TBR: What’s your focus in the Police Department? Mention-Lewis: Criminal justice and driving down violence in communities.
Risco Mention-Lewis, left, was named deputy comissioner in 2012. She said she sees today’s protests as a genuine moment for legitimate reform. File photo
TBR: How do you think Suffolk County has done in the police department? Mention-Lewis: We are ahead of the game. We’ve been working with the Department of Justice for many years. The DOJ is saying we have one of the best implicit bias training programs. They asked us to teach the Ferguson [Missouri Police Department, where a white police officer killed Michael Brown in 2014]. We have been doing community relations in a different way for years. We know how to work with leadership, whether that’s minority, Muslim, Black, Jewish. We know to go to leadership in churches and synagogues to get and receive information to be culturally competent. TBR: What are you doing to improve the process? Mention-Lewis: We are doing traffic stop data to look at whether the stops are fair and just. We are doing a community survey to ask how we are doing. How do you know unless you ask? TBR: Why isn’t the SCPD using body cameras? Mention-Lewis: The biggest reason is the cost. It’s millions of dollars for the cameras plus the storage. It’s a great idea. We should have them, eventually. They are going to be across the United States. TBR: What do you think of the justice system? Mention-Lewis: We are moving in the right direction as a county. The courts should follow suit because we know with sentencing, statistically, nationally, there are issues. All this is, is an opportunity for every aspect of society to look in the mirror and say, ‘what can I do and what knowledge do I need to do my best effort?’ TBR: How do you think the police has responded to protests? Mention-Lewis: We don’t say we are a community response unit. We are not looking to respond when something happens. That’s not our relationship with the community. We do community relations. We want to have a relationship year-round. When something
happens, that’s not the first time you’re talking to us. Whatever community we’re in, we’re looking to be a part of the solution, working with the community to problem solve. We have people on bike patrol getting to know the protesters at every march. TBR: Do you think people believe the police are protecting and serving them? Mention-Lewis: There’s two cultures in policing: the warrior and the guardian. The warrior is what many departments have become. The guardian is what is being promoted as what we should be. Those are just words. How do our actions correspond with that? Black communities in particular have had more of a warrior treatment. How do we partner with the community to listen and deal with problems differently in those communities, effectively but differently? TBR: Do the police serve the variety of communities effectively? Mention-Lewis: You should be able to sit down with us and express what you feel we should have done differently. We should be willing to listen. It doesn’t mean you’re always going to walk away satisfied. We will try to figure out how to do it better. TBR: How is the police department doing in recruiting people from all communities? Mention-Lewis: We worked hard with the community to recruit people of color. In the last recruitment class, 34 percent of the applicants identify as people of color. That hasn’t happened in the history of the department. Right now, there are 2 percent [African Americans] in the department. We’re not perfect, but we are doing the damn thing. TBR: What are some of the easiest things to change? Mention-Lewis: All departments should have implicit bias training. Across the country, I didn’t know this, we banned chokeholds 30 years ago and there’s still people doing it today. We need national standards for policing so that when people across the country have other rules, they don’t affect our reputation. We’re not perfect.
Village of Port Jefferson
JULY 02, 2020 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A9
Local Conservative Group Files Permit for July 4 Parade on Main Street BY KYLE BARR KYLE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM After the Port Jefferson Fire Department announced it was canceling this year’s Fourth of July parade due to the ongoing pandemic, a local conservative group announced it would host its own parade to mark the standout American holiday. However, this new community-run parade has made some waves within the village because of the event’s political undertones. The Setauket Patriots, a local right-wing social media group, established the event they called Patriot Day Parade which was advertised on Facebook. They invited local fire departments, floats, classic cars or anyone else looking to participate. Because of concerns with distancing, Village of Port Jefferson officials requested the parade take place in vehicles. The Setauket Patriots also advertised for people to wear masks. “All politics aside, this is not a political event, all people are invited,” said a representative of the Setauket Patriots who asked not to be named so as to not be attacked on social media. “We should come together for the birth of our nation.” The parade is scheduled to meet up at 10 a.m. at Railroad Avenue then start marching at 11. The Facebook event said it has been in contact with Suffolk County Police who will escort the parade and close all streets along the route, though police did not respond to requests for
Anna Liscia
Longtime Stony Brook resident, Anna Liscia (née Sanfilippo), died June 8 on her 91st birthday. Born and raised in Brooklyn, Anna moved to Stony Brook in December 1961 with her late husband, Nicholas V. Liscia and lived in the same residence on Black Duck Drive until her death. She was an active member of the St. James R.C. Church in Setauket, in the early years as a Catholic Daughter of the Americas and a member of the Altar Rosary Society, and most recently working tirelessly in the parish Ministry of Consolation. For several years in the 1960s, she worked in the kitchen at the Maryhaven group home in Port Jefferson, where she became close with many of the residents. Before her retirement in 1991,
confirmation. The route will take it down Main Setauket Patriots representative. The group paid Street, take a left on West Broadway and stop in the application and safety fees attached to the front of Village Hall where it will disburse, acpermit application, which has been sent for recording to Village Administrator Joe Palumbo. view. Because the next official village meeting The parade has at least partially been in reis scheduled for July 6, Palumbo said the village sponse to a recent protest march held in Port Jeftrustees and mayor are to be polled on the apferson. The Setauket Patriots description of their plication, but no decision has been made as of parade on Facebook incorrectly states that the press time. Because July 4 is a federal holiday, Village of Port Jefferson canceled the regular the decision on the application must be made July 4 parade, as that event is instead handled before that date. annually by the fire department. The post points In mid-June, the Port Jefferson Fire Departto the recent Black Lives Matter march held in ment announced it would not be hosting its annuPort Jefferson June 18, which village officials al parade, and in a letter, Todd Stumpf, Port Jefgranted a permit for, as why a 4th of July parade ferson Fire Department chief, cited COVID-19 should be hosted as well. That June protest was concerns as why it was being canceled. created by students at Stony Brook University, In May and early June, the village considwho submitted the permit application which was Port Jeffersons Fourth of July Parade in 2017. File photo ered hosting its annual fireworks show at a later unanimously approved by the village board at date than July 4, but by June 15 had canceled its June 15 meeting. anyone who attends is free to wave whatever the show it usually hosts at East Beach, with The Setauket Patriots’ post said that march flag they want because that’s what this country officials citing safety needs and an inability for shut down Main Street for four hours, but a is built on,” the post continued. people to socially distance considering the numTBR News Media reporter who was on the As of Tuesday, June 30, village officials said bers of crowds who usually come down for the scene said it only lasted for two, and after hold- they have worked through the application with a annual display. ing speeches at Village Hall the crowd quickly disbursed. Daughters of Wisdom who served the people of the The Setauket Patriots also OUR LADY OF WISDOM Port Jefferson area for so many years.” She passed wrote that despite comments away this year on April 8. Continued from A3 from detractors that the paNot everyone accepted the nun’s punishment lightrade would be a rally for Powers, a deacon, was a frequent clergy visitor. Her ly. Deborah Keating, who now lives in Florida, said she President Donald Trump (R), mother, Tatty Powers, was a volunteer who did read- graduated eighth-grade from the school in ’69, describthe march “is a July 4th Paings to those in prekindergarten through first grade. ing it as “a nightmare,” saying that some nuns could be rade PERIOD.” Powers-Benedict’s three children also went through abusive. “It’s not a Trump rally, but the school. “Sr. Ann Michael, if you saw her coming, you
she worked for 20 years as a caring member of the staff at St. James Nursing Home. She loved cooking and spending time with her family at West Meadow Creek. She also loved to dance and was a lively presence any place there was music. Offbeat and vivacious, she was loved by many and will be missed by all who knew her. Anna is survived by her children Annette Nagy, of Fort Myers, Florida; Theresa Weinert, of Coxsackie; Nicholas M. Liscia, of Cortlandt Manor; Julia Jacobus of Papillion, Nebraska; Philip Liscia, of Ridge, New York, and Fort Myers, Florida; and Laura Lestrade of Stony Brook; 17 adoring grandchildren and 26 great-grandchildren. Anna is also survived by her twin sister, Frances Botta, formerly of Fort Salonga.
She said while she understands why the school had to close, she is disappointed other parents will never have the choice to send their children there. “The education for my siblings and me was all business, some of us came out a year ahead in foreign language and mathematics, although individualized instruction was not in style,” she said. “There was a tremendous air of compassion that supported students and their families in times of trouble and strife.” Michael Langan, who now lives in Ridgefield, Connecticut, was one of six children of World War II veterans Robert and Elizabeth Langan. He would graduate from the Infant Jesus School in 1968. He remembers even before the convent went up next to Infant Jesus church in the late ‘60s, when the nuns lived at a convent at St. Charles Hospital. The nuns would walk to the school or have a station wagon take them in bad weather. Many of the nuns who taught at the school when he was there, Langan said, originated from Ontario, Canada. Many had marked French accents. Back then, he said behavioral discipline was very much the norm, including some amount of corporal punishment. “But in fact that was true of public and parochial schools back in the ’50s and ’60s,” he said, Back then, he remembers, class sizes were much larger than today, with around 50 students. One particular nun, Sr. Mary, he said, had “a beautiful soul — emblematic of the dedication of the
knew you had better pray for your life,” Keating said. Though at the same time, her brother, who she said had Down syndrome, attended the Maryhaven facility in Port Jeff, which is also run by the Catholic church. There, she said the staff was very kind to him, and he went on to work as a janitor in the Maryhaven facility, He has since retired after working there 25 years, and lives with Keating at her home in Florida. Things did change, especially as the years went by and the school changed names and leadership. MaryKate Henry, who lives in Babylon village, grew up in a middle-class household in Coram that she said worked hard to provide the Our Lady of Wisdom tuition for her and her siblings. She went there as it transformed into a regional school, and graduated eighthgrade in 2000 with a class of just 19. Her largest class size was in fourth=grade with 36 kids taught by one teacher. To this day, she still has friends that went there in her elementary years. “That’s what I loved about OLOW — as we called it — everybody knew everybody, who your parents were and what they did and everyone was there for each other,” she said. Faith was very much a part of the Catholic school, and she said that sense of religiousness has carried over into today. Her kids now attend the Babylon school district, and with a relatively small class size, she said it’s one of the things she hopes to have for her kids, a place that fosters community.
PAGE A10 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • JULY 02, 2020
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COLLEGE APPLICATIONS DONE VIRTUALLY Find the Best-Fit college for you. Then lets craft the Perfect College Application. Understand what colleges are looking for. Then let me help you navigate the entire process, from the college essay, supplements, resumes to the deadlines. Reasonable Rates. References available. Call Joann: 631-338-9558
PIANO - GUITAR - BASS All ages-levels-styles. Many local references. Recommended by all area schools. Tony Mann, 631-473-3443, 631-332-6005
GIVE YOUR CHILD A COMPETITIVE EDGE FOR LIFE with Oyster and Outbound’s Foreign language lessons. Online or in person. Adults welcome too. Use code SAFESUMMER for 10% off. 631-921-3078, www.oysterandoutboound.com
YOUR AD HERE! Call 631.751.7663
Finds Under 50 CRAFTSMAN motorcycle jack, $50.00 Call 631-689-1664. DVD RECORDER AND PLAYER asking $45.00 Call 631-744-3722. FIRST ALERT BRK9120B6CP HARDWIRED SMOKE DETECTOR with back-up battery, white, brand new in box, two available at $10 each, Call 631-836-8654. HODGMAN MACKENZIE WADERS size 12 boot, hardly used, like new $25.00 leave message 631-327-7915. WREATH MADE OF SHELLS. Free. Call 473-5432
J]k[m]\ 9faeYdk >gj 9\ghlagf .(0 Jgml] ))* Hgjl B]^^]jkgf KlYlagf .+)&,/+&.+++ 8kYn]Yh]lYfaeYdj]k[m] 8kYn]Yh]lYfaeYdj]k[m]
Finds Under 50 KOOKIE LAMB VINTAGE COOKIE JAR. Excellent Condition. $50. Call 631-928-8995. MEN’S FUJI PALISADE BIKE, Used, Made in Japan. $50 631-751-3940 NEW RIVAL CHOCOLATE FOUNTAIN. $40. Call 631-732-2763 RAZOR CITYBUG kids folding kick scooter, $10.00, Teddy, 631-928-5392 ok condition. SABER SAW 5/8� Stroke, variable speeds, and includes 10 jigsaw blades. Excellent Condition. $25. 631-473-0963 SEARS PRO-FORM LOW PROFILE TREADMILL good condition, $50.00 Call 631-689-2823. The
CLA
SSIFIED
DEADLINE
is Tuesday at noon. If you want to advertise, do it soon! Call
631.751.7663
or
631.331.1154
Kaya is a little Dachshund Mix Texan who was on death row, pregnant and ready to pop with 13 puppies! Sadly, 4 died. All her puppies were adopted but now Kaya needs a home. She is about 8 years old and a wonderful loving dog. She needs a home where she can be the spoiled princess.
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Merchandise
TENDER LOVING PET CARE, LLC. Pet Sitting Services. When you need to leave town, why disrupt your pet’s routine. Let your pets enjoy the comforts of home while receiving TLC from a PSI Certified professional Pet Sitter. Experienced, reliable. Ins/Bonded. 631-675-1938 tenderlovingpetcarellc.com
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VIAGRA & CIALIS! 60 pills for $99. 100 pills for $150. FREE shipping. Money back guaranteed! 1-855-579-8907
Pets/Pet Services
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Health, Fitness & Beauty
Automobiles/Trucks Vans/Rec Vehicles
! FREE
FIRST AID
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For a FREE brochure call:
KIT
WHEN YOU ORDER!
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JULY 02, 2020 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A11
WE ARE:
CONTACT US:
BASIC AD RATES • FIRST 20 WORDS
The Village TIMES HERALD The Village BEACON RECORD The Port TIMES RECORD The TIMES of Smithtown The TIMES of Middle Country The TIMES of Huntington, Northport & East Northport
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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.
JOB OPPORTUNITY $18.50 P/H NYC $16 P/H LI Up to $13.50 P/H UPSTATE NY CDPAP Caregiver Hourly Pay Rate! Under NYS CDPAP Medicaid program you can hire your family or friends for your care. Phone: 347-713-3553
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The following are some of our available categories listed in the order in which they appear. â&#x20AC;¢ Garage Sales â&#x20AC;¢ Computer Services â&#x20AC;¢ Announcements â&#x20AC;¢ Electricians â&#x20AC;¢ Antiques & Collectibles â&#x20AC;¢ Financial Services â&#x20AC;¢ Automobiles/Trucks etc. â&#x20AC;¢ Furniture Repair â&#x20AC;¢ Finds under $50 â&#x20AC;¢ Handyman Services â&#x20AC;¢ Health/Fitness/Beauty â&#x20AC;¢ Home Improvement â&#x20AC;¢ Merchandise â&#x20AC;¢ Lawn & Landscaping â&#x20AC;¢ Personals â&#x20AC;¢ Painting/Wallpaper â&#x20AC;¢ Novenas â&#x20AC;¢ Plumbing/Heating â&#x20AC;¢ Pets/Pet Services â&#x20AC;¢ Power Washing â&#x20AC;¢ Professional Services â&#x20AC;¢ Roofing/Siding â&#x20AC;¢ Schools/Instruction/Tutoring â&#x20AC;¢ Tree Work â&#x20AC;¢ Wanted to Buy â&#x20AC;¢ Window Cleaning â&#x20AC;¢ Employment â&#x20AC;¢ Real Estate â&#x20AC;¢ Cleaning â&#x20AC;¢ Residential Property â&#x20AC;¢ Commercial Property â&#x20AC;¢ Out of State Property DEADLINE: Tuesday at Noon
DENTAL Insurance
*(7 7+( *5,//(5Å&#x201C;6 %81'/(
4 (5 oz.) Butcherâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Cut Filet Mignon 4 (4 oz.) Boneless Pork Chops 4 (4 oz.) Omaha Steaks Burgers 4 (3 oz.) Gourmet Jumbo Franks 4 (2.8 oz.) Potatoes au Gratin 4 (4 oz.) Caramel Apple Tartlets Omaha Steaks Seasoning Packet
INDEX
CALL THE CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT Ì&#x2020; Ì&#x2020; WZ Ì&#x2020; Ì&#x2020;
tbrnewsmedia.com tbrnewsmedia.com tbrnewsmedia.com tbrnewsmedia.com tbrnewsmedia.com tbrnewsmedia.com tbrnewsmedia.com
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Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
);3 )*7=< 7=: ;8-+1)4; Place your ad by Tuesday noon and it will appear in that Thursdayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s editions.
tbrnewsmedia.com tbrnewsmedia.com tbrnewsmedia.com tbrnewsmedia.com tbrnewsmedia.com tbrnewsmedia.com tbrnewsmedia.com
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PAGE A12 â&#x20AC;˘ THE PORT TIMES RECORD â&#x20AC;˘ JULY 02, 2020
SERV ICES Cespool Services
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
Fences
MR SEWERMAN CESSPOOL SERVICE All types of cesspool servicing, all work guaranteed, family owned and operated since 1985, 631-924-7502. Licensed and Insured.
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.
SMITHPOINT FENCE. DEER PROBLEM? WE CAN HELP! 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. 28 years experience. Lic.#47595-H/Insured. 631-875-5856
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
Furniture/Restoration/ Repairs REFINISHING & RESTORATION Antiques restored, repairing recane, reupholstery, touch-ups kitchen, front doors, 40 yrs exp, SAVE$$$, free estimates. Vincent Alfano 631-707-1228
Gutters/Leaders
ANTHEM ELECTRIC MASTER ELECTRICIAN Quality Light & Power since 2004. Commercial, Industrial, Residential. Port Jefferson. Please call 631-291-8754 Andrew@Anthem-Electric.net
GREG TRINKLE PAINTING & GUTTER CLEANING Powerwashing, window washing, staining. Neat, reliable, 25 years experience. Free Estimates. Lic/Ins.#31398-H. 631-331-0976
SOUNDVIEW ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING Prompt* Reliable* Professional. Residential/Commercial, Free Estimates. Ins/Lic#57478-ME. Owner Operator, 631-828-4675 See our Display Ad in the Home Services Directory
Exterminating Scientific Exterminating Services letâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s all stay safe, ecological protection, ticks, ants, mosquitoes, termites, Natural Organic products 631-265-5252-See Display ad for more information.
Handyman Services HANDYMAN SERVICES AND PAINTING. Dependable, Honest, Professional. No job too small. Call Steve 631-831-3089. See Display Ad JOHNâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S A-1 HANDYMAN SERVICE *Crown moldings* Wainscoting/raised panels. Kitchen/Bathroom Specialist. Painting/windows/ceramic tile, finished-basements. All types repairs. Dependable craftsmanship. Reasonable rates. Lic/Ins.#19136-H. 631-744-0976 c.631-697-3518
Housesitting Services
Lawn & Landscaping
TRAVELING? Need someone to check on your home? Contact Tender Loving Pet Care, LLC. Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re more than just pets. Insured/Bonded. 631-675-1938
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
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. BLUSTAR CONSTRUCTION The North Shoreâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Most Trusted Renovation Experts. 631-751-0751 We love small jobs too! Suffolk Lic. #48714-H, Ins. See Our Display Ad 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 MJD BONILLA CONSTRUCTION All Phases of Construction! Masonry,, Blacktop Driveways, Decks, Fences, Waterproofing, roofing, Retaining Walls, Painting. Danny 631-882-7410.
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
Landscape Materials J. BRENZINSKI INC. Landscape Material Delivery Service. MULCH, SOIL, STONE. Delivery 7 days a week. Prompt and courteous service. Call with your Material Needs. 631-566-1826 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 BOY SCOUT COMPENSATION FUND - Anyone that was inappropriately touched by a Scout leader deserves justice and financial compensation! Victims may be eligible for a significant cash settlement. Time to file is limited. Call Now! 844-587-2494 Recently Diagnosed w/Lung Cancer or Mesothelioma? Exposed to Asbestos Pre-1980 at Work or Navy? You May Be Entitled to a Significant Cash Award! Smoking History Okay! 888-912-3150
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 DISH TV $59.99 For 190 Channels + $14.95 High Speed Internet. Free Installation, Smart HD DVR Included, Free Voice Remote. Some restrictions apply. 1-888-609-9405
Miscellaneous GET DIRECTV! ONLY $35/month! 155 Channels & 1000s of Shows/Movies on Demand. (w/SELECT All Included Package). PLUS Stream on Up to FIVE Screens Simultaneously at No Additional Cost. Call DIRECTV, 1-888-534-6918
Painting/Spackling/ Wallpaper ALL PRO PAINTING INTERIOR/EXTERIOR Power Washing, Staining, Wallpaper Removal. Free estimates. Lic/Ins #19604HI 631-696-8150. Nick BOBâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S PAINTING SERVICE 25 Years Experience. Interior/Exterior Painting, Spackling, Staining, Wallpaper Removal, Staining and Deck Restoration Power Washing. Free Estimates. Lic/Ins. #17981. 631-744-8859 COUNTY-WIDE PAINTING INTERIOR/EXTERIOR Painting/Staining. Quality workmanship. Living and Serving Three Village Area for over 30 years. Lic#37153-H. 631-751-8280 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 â&#x20AC;&#x153;PAINTING WITH PRIDEâ&#x20AC;? Interiors/exteriors. Staining & deck restoration, power-washing, wallpaper removal, sheetrocktape/spackling, carpentry/trimwork. Lead paint certified. References. Free estimates. Lic./Ins. SINCE 1989 Ryan Southworth. See Display Ad. 631-331-5556
Power Washing POWERWASHING PETE Sanitize your home professionally- house, deck, fence, roof, driveway, pavers and outdoor furniture. $50 off any job! Free Estimates. Call 631-240-3313. Powerwashpete.com. See Display Ad for more Info.
Power Washing EXTERIOR CLEANING SPECIALISTS Roof cleaning, pressure washing/softwashing, deck restorations, gutter maintenance. Squeaky Clean Property Solutions 631-387-2156 www.SqueakyCleanli.com WORKING & LIVING IN THE THREE VILLAGES FOR 30 YEARS. Owner does the work, guarantees satisfaction. COUNTY-WIDE, Lic/Ins. 37153-H, 631-751-8280
Tree Work ARBOR-VISTA TREE CARE A COMPLETE TREE CARE SERVICE devoted to the care of trees. Maintenance pruning, water-view 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
Tree Spraying ALL PURPOSE LANDSCAPING Tree spraying, exterminating, owner operated, licensed/insured, 631-924-4099 See Display Ad for coupon and more information.
TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA The TIMES of Huntington, Northport & E. Northport â&#x20AC;˘ Huntington â&#x20AC;˘ Greenlawn â&#x20AC;˘ Halesite â&#x20AC;˘ Lloyd Harbor â&#x20AC;˘ Cold Spring Harbor
â&#x20AC;˘ Miller Place â&#x20AC;˘ Sound Beach â&#x20AC;˘ Rocky Point â&#x20AC;˘ Shoreham â&#x20AC;˘ Wading River â&#x20AC;˘ Baiting Hollow â&#x20AC;˘ Mt. Sinai
The Village TIMES HERALD
The Port TIMES RECORD
â&#x20AC;˘ Stony Brook â&#x20AC;˘ Strongâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Neck â&#x20AC;˘ Setauket â&#x20AC;˘ Old Field â&#x20AC;˘ Poquott
â&#x20AC;˘ Port Jefferson â&#x20AC;˘ Port Jefferson Sta. â&#x20AC;˘ Harbor Hills â&#x20AC;˘ Belle Terre
The TIMES of Smithtown â&#x20AC;˘ Smithtown â&#x20AC;˘ Hauppauge â&#x20AC;˘ Commack â&#x20AC;˘ E. Fort Salonga â&#x20AC;˘ San Remo
â&#x20AC;˘ Kings Park â&#x20AC;˘ St. James â&#x20AC;˘ Nissequogue â&#x20AC;˘ Head of the Harbor
The TIMES of Middle Country â&#x20AC;˘ Selden â&#x20AC;˘ Centereach â&#x20AC;˘ Lake Grove
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â&#x20AC;˘ Northport â&#x20AC;˘ E. Northport â&#x20AC;˘ Eatons Neck â&#x20AC;˘ Asharoken â&#x20AC;˘ Centerport â&#x20AC;˘ W. Fort Salonga
The Village BEACON RECORD
JULY 02, 2020 â&#x20AC;¢ THE PORT TIMES RECORD â&#x20AC;¢ PAGE A13
PROF E S SION A L & B U SI N E S S 723 '2//$5 3$,' $500
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UP TO
$1000
EVERY CAR GUARANTEED!
FOR REPAIRS!
-81. &$5 &211(&7,21
CA$H FOR ALL CAR$ & CA$H FOR JUNK CAR$ WANTED No Keys No Title No Problem
FREE Pickup
©107131
Avoid Costly Tow Fees &$//
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©107074
FOR YOUR JUNK CARS, TRUCKS, VANS & AUTOS NEEDING ENGINES, HEAD GASKETS & TRANSMISSIONS
5 %28*
Habla Español
Lic. # 7112911/Ins.
(631) 445-1848
Professional Services Directory Double size â&#x20AC;¢ $296/4 weeks
FREE (631) 751.7663 or (631) 331.1154
©107058
*LYH <RXU &KLOG $ &RPSHWLWLYH (GJH )RU /LIH Use code SAFESUMMER
2)) by July 15th
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Ask about our 13 & 26 week special rates
Buy 4 weeks and get the 5th week
©107134
©101328
Place Your Ad in the
Single size â&#x20AC;¢ $228/4 weeks
PAGE P
DMV CERTIFIED 7002706
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Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
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Check out our Internet site: tbrnewsmedia.com & find your ads!
Call Our Classifieds Advertising Department 631â&#x20AC;&#x201C;331â&#x20AC;&#x201C;1154 or 631â&#x20AC;&#x201C;751â&#x20AC;&#x201C;7663
©101466
Bonus!
Appear in all 6 of our papers for 1 price! Receive a Free 20 word line ad under our service column listings!
PAGE A14 â&#x20AC;˘ THE PORT TIMES RECORD â&#x20AC;˘ JULY 02, 2020
HOME SERV ICES
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154 PAGE F
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LANDSCAPE MATERIAL DELIVERY SERVICE
ECOLOGICAL PROTECTION
Š106587
DELIVERY 7 DAYS A WEEK!
Prompt & Courteous Service CALL WITH YOUR MATERIAL NEEDS
631-566-1826
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Since 1995 Family Owned & Operated
DECKS ONLY
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BUILDERS & DESIGNERS OF OUTDOOR LIVING BY NORTHERN CONSTRUCTION OF LI INC.
105 Broadway Greenlawn 631.651.8478 www.DecksOnly.com
Š106859
FREE ESTIMATES
(631) 882-7410 â&#x20AC;˘ Ask for Danny
Licensed/Insured
Š106339
Masonry â&#x20AC;˘ Stone & Brick Work Concrete â&#x20AC;˘ Patios â&#x20AC;˘ Pool Patios Sidewalks â&#x20AC;˘ Stoops â&#x20AC;˘ Blacktop Driveways â&#x20AC;˘ Decks â&#x20AC;˘ Fences Waterproofing â&#x20AC;˘ Fire Pits â&#x20AC;˘ Retaining Walls Painting LICENSED & INSURED HI-61193
We follow all CDC/ Covid-19 safety guidelines
Š106526
70 Jayne Blvd., Port Jeff Station (631) 743-9797
While you maintain your familyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s safety, we HELP to PROTECT your HEALTH and PROPERTY from Pest-Borne Diseases
Š107051
Special Thanks to All Our Essential Workers STAY SAFE!
â&#x20AC;˘ MULCH â&#x20AC;˘ â&#x20AC;˘ SOIL â&#x20AC;˘ â&#x20AC;˘ STONE â&#x20AC;˘
LETâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S ALL STAY SAFE
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LICENSED/ INSURED (Lic. # 46456-H)
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Vacation Rentals OCEAN CITY, MARYLAND. Best selection of full/partial week rentals. Call for FREE color Brochure. Holiday Real Estate, Inc: 1-800-638-2102 Online reservations: www.holidayoc.com. $50 discount - new rentals. Code: “WelcomeBack” (Expires 2020-09-01)
SETAUKET HOUSE FOR RENT Lovely 4 bedroom, 2 bath Ranch near West Meadow Beach, updated kitchen with granite, hardwood floors, good closets, washer/dryer. Dining room leading to outside deck, living room with white brick fireplace. Extra large finished basement with wet bar. Heavily treed dead end road. 2 car garage, circular driveway, generator, 3 Village school district, non smoker. Terrific landlord, 3/4 acre. $3400/month. Call 631-433-0350 ALSO AVAILABLE FOR SALE.
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PAGE A18 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • JULY 02, 2020
Editorial Letters to the Editor The Kids Are (Not) All Right Things We Can do Against Ticks It was the winter of 2007 to 2008 when the financial crisis hit. Years of excessive risky loans by banks (and others) and a downturn in the subprime lending market resulted in several years of economic hurt. Many lost their jobs and homes. Some say we truly have never recovered. For the young people graduating high school or college just over a decade ago, it was walking blind toward a cliff’s edge. They went through school with certain expectations, but the jobs once promised to be there upon graduation were gone. In the following years, young people took what was available, much of the time it was low-paying service industry jobs without a real hope of promotion. A new kind of employment, something people started to call the “gig economy,” was born. People worked freelance without a chance for receiving health insurance through an employer or have any kind of job security. Now we face a new impending time of economic peril, and there are many thousands of young people graduating this year from high school or college on Long Island. We as parents and residents need to ask ourselves, “What will we do for them to make sure they can make it out there in a time of wild unpredictability and economic inhospitability?” Research indicates that people who graduate in a time of economic tension can remain in worse straits than their peers for over a decade. A 2019 study in the Journal of Labor Economics showed the pay and employment rate for people who graduated during the Great Recession have remained relatively low, even after several years. Millennials, the youngest of whom are 24 while the oldest are nearing 40, hold just 3 percent of America’s wealth compared to 21 percent that the baby boomer generation held at around the same age, according to a 2019 U.S. Federal Reserve report. This is a pivotal time for young people entering the job market, as not only is this when they can start to accrue wealth and build up savings, but it’s a means to start grinding away at what can be tens of thousands of dollars in student loans. Without early starts to their careers, young people will end up running in place, making enough to live but not enough to build their credit or finances (though on Long Island it’s rare they will be able to afford the rent to even the smallest apartment). It’s time as a nation we seriously have to consider governmental action to save the future for our graduates. Yes, that includes student loan forgiveness programs, as there is potentially no worse idea than saddling a young person — who likely never even signed a check before — with thousands upon thousands in debt to either private firms or the U.S. government. Even more people will be looking to college as a way to build their job prospects, so it’s time we look at additional subsidies for college. We should also start thinking of handing out incentives to companies willing to hire people fresh out of school. An unregulated financial sector helped cause the 2008 economic collapse. Now with the pandemic, more research has shown if the government, both state and federal, had responded to the crisis with lockdowns sooner, we could have saved more lives and potentially restarted our economy faster and smoother. What’s done is done, but the fact is young people had no part in causing this economic downturn. Let’s have us as parents and neighbors think about how we can still help young people get ahead in life, for the sake of their entire generation.
Letters … We welcome your letters. They should be no longer than 400 words and may be edited for length, libel, style and good taste. We do not publish anonymous letters. Please include a phone number and address for confirmation. Email letters to kyle@tbrnewsmedia.com or mail them to The Port times Record, P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733.
Having had encounters with ticks in the past, I understood very well Leah Dunaief’s June 25 editorial entitled “Beastly Bedfellows.” Readers may be interested to know that such encounters can be minimized by wearing insect-repellent clothing. Such clothing may be found online by searching for “insect shield.” If you wish, you can purchase an entire outfit, including hats, scarves, shirts, slacks, and socks. Margaret Foster Port Jefferson
File photo
Losing the Culture of Our Past I am a proud veteran and past member of the greatest generation. With regret: our founders no longer rest in peace as they weep for the nation with which they were blessed. Clouds of internal rebellion now endanger our nation in violent demonstrations. Radical protesters violate our structure of law and order. Anarchy grows with confused response to this
danger. Arson to neighborhood stores and violence against police continue. Objective truth: Our present society no longer represents the culture of our fathers’ past intent. Moral laws have surrendered to a progressive society of no absolutes. Established structured laws are in denial, leaving rational judgment in total disfunction. Reality: The blessings of our Dec-
laration of Independence, Constitution and our Federalist Papers are the very soul of our republic. Many citizens no longer hold these truths. Let us once again return to the glory that the greatest national deity has granted us. God bless America. Leonard Henderson Port Jefferson
Mourning the Murders of Two Good Men
During the recent riots, two longstanding and very well-regarded members of the law enforcement community were murdered. On June 2 David Dorn, a retired police captain with over 40 years of experience, was killed while working security at a St. Louis pawnshop. His death was live-streamed on Facebook. A few days prior to that, Federal Protective Services officer, David Underwood, was shot, in drive-by fashion, multiple times and killed while guarding the Ronald V. Dellums Federal Building complex in Oakland, California. Both lawmen happened to be black. Here are heartbroken, grieving family members, in their own words as reported in the media. Dorn’s son, Brian Powell, said, “He couldn’t stay retired. My dad is that kind of person — he believed in black and blue. Police work ran through his veins.” Powell’s message to the person who pulled the trigger was, “We can do things
in a peaceful, calm manner. We don’t have to go about destroying our communities like that.” Dorn’s widow, Sgt. Ann Dorn of the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department, said, “He dedicated his life to the City of St. Louis,” adding, “We need to come together as a community and do better. We need to teach our young people that life is very precious.” Underwood’s sister, Angela Underwood Jacobs on Fox News recently seemed to convey both a deep sense of loss, and an inability to comprehend how the tragic story of the unprovoked murder of her federal officer brother just seemed to disappear. “My heart and my family’s heart is broken,” she said. “It feels as though there is a difference in life. Meaning that, on one hand, George Floyd and my brother’s situations are very different. At the same time, they are both African-American men. There has been so much talk regarding George Floyd and his family,
which is fine. However, I think at the same time, my brother should be recognized as well for literally going into work every day and putting his life on the line for us. It saddens me that he has not received the same type of — his memory hasn’t been as prevalent in the news and media as I think it should be.” “I have not received any calls from anyone of color that are leaders in the country, and I’m wondering, why didn’t I get a phone call?” she wondered. “Why has someone not reached out to our family to see how we are doing?” Stephan Cannon, 24, of St. Louis, has been charged with first-degree murder, and several other counts related to the killing of Capt. Dorn. As of this writing, the media remains virtually mute on the drive-by killing of Officer Underwood. No arrests have been made. . Jim Soviero Setauket
The opinions of columnists and letter writers are their own. They do not speak for the newspaper.
JULY 02, 2020 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A19
Opinion
Believing in the Power of American Innovation
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merica was reluctant to enter both World Wars and yet we won them both, at a tremendous cost to previous generations. Today, as we continue to battle through the coronavirus, I’d like to think we will persevere. We don’t need political spin. We have plenty of that from both sides. We need a sense of optimism, of shared purpose and of a keen belief that we will prevail through hard work D. None and a readiness to of the above innovate and adapt. We see so many BY DANIEL DUNAIEF horrific headlines about the number of people who test positive and who are threatening the capacity of health care systems
in Florida and Texas, among others. Even as we do everything we can to protect our health and the safety of our friends and family, we need to believe in ourselves and in our ability to work together. Defeating the virus takes more than ignoring it or claiming victory for political expediency. Whoever wins this presidential election in this incredibly challenging year will have enormous work to do. Even a vaccine that is tested and produced in mass quantities by the early part of next year, which seems spectacularly optimistic but is still possible, doesn’t automatically put us back on the path to the world of 2019. After all, the flu vaccine doesn’t eradicate the illness. It comes back with a vengeance some years. Some people who receive the shot still get sick, oftentimes with less severe symptoms. We need to recognize that the world has changed. We’ve had time to process it and to adjust, even if we’re sick of the new rules. We need to use all the space we have to turn what
seems like a nuisance and an inconvenience into a modern triumph. The country can and should rethink everything from ways to attend sporting events to the specific needs of the home office. Maybe sports stadiums should remove seats, put picnic tables in front of patrons and make the game-time experience for fans look different because, for the foreseeable future, it will be. Yes, I know, that will cost an incredible amount of money, but it would also give patrons a chance to enjoy their own space, instead of hoping for a time machine that brings us back to an era when we gave strangers a high five when our team scored. Maybe waiters and waitresses can provide virtual personalized service, connecting through online services that deliver, via conveyor belt beneath those tables, contactless food to guests. We need to renovate our homes to enjoy the new reality. Maybe we need virtual artwork we can add to our walls, that helps expand our small rooms and that changes at the flick of a
switch. Maybe we also can figure out ways to create virtual assembly lines, where workers provide their part of a mechanized process from a distance, in a basement, workspace, or outside in their enclosed yards. It may not be as efficient, because someone might have to transport those parts, but those driving opportunities also create jobs for people who become a part of a new, virtual factory. We may want to go back to the way things were, but we need to recognize the realities, and the opportunities, that come from moving forward. Moving on will require us to develop new ideas, create new jobs, and believe in ourselves. We have survived and thrived through challenges before, by pulling together, by innovating, and by tapping into the combination of ingenuity and hard work. People are prepared to put in the effort to earn their own version of the American Dream. We need innovations, new businesses, and inspirations that reignite the economy, while protecting our health.
Happy Birthday to the United States of America!
O
! say, can you see, by the dawn’s early light, What so proudly we hailed at the twilight’s last gleaming, Whose broad stripes and bright stars through the perilous fight, O’er the ramparts we watch’d were so gallantly streaming? And the rocket’s red glare, the bombs bursting in air, Gave proof through the night that our flag was still there, O say, does that star-spangled Between banner yet wave O’er the land you and me of the free and the BY LEAH S. DUNAIEF home of the brave? Yes, that is the first stanza of our national anthem, the star-spangled banner. It has been my experience, at ballgames and other public
gatherings (remember those?) where the anthem has played, that many Americans do not know all the words. In fact, not a lot of the words. In truth, not any of the words beyond the first two sentences. Confess: that’s you or your spouse or your children. Now there is always a story behind every creation. In honor of our nation’s upcoming birthday, I thought I would tell you some of the controversial story and remind you of the words of at least the first and last of the four stanzas written by Francis Scott Key. So who was Francis Scott Key and how did he come to write these words? Key was a good-looking, rich American lawyer, author and amateur poet who was from Frederick, Maryland. Born August 1, 1779, three years after the start of the Revolutionary War, he lived to be 63, dying at the beginning of 1843. He was married to Mary (“Polly”) Tayloe Lloyd and they had eleven children. Incidentally, F. Scott Fitzgerald was a distant relative. We remember that we learned of Key viewing the attack by the British on Fort McHenry from a ship outside Baltimore during the brief War of 1812, and how he
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could not tell, through the dark night, if the fort had fallen to the enemy. But at dawn, when he saw the flag still flying, he was inspired to write the poem in 1814 that was to become our national song. His friends called him “Frank,” which often blended with Key to come out “Frankie.” He had a high profile, having been part of Andrew Jackson’s Kitchen Cabinet, the unofficial advisers who were so influential. He defended a young Sam Houston in court on the latter’s trial over beating up an Ohio congressman. He was U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia, and he prosecuted the would-be assassin of President Jackson, who by the way was a Southern slaveholder. Key, as a youth, had almost become an Episcopal priest, helped found two seminaries and wrote about poetry’s influence on religion. He also had a complicated and contradictory relationship with slavery. He personally owned six slaves, though he allegedly opposed the practice and eventually set them all free. Yet he did not do so for the many slaves his wife inherited and who worked the farm that provided much of the family’s income. He represented
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slaves for free in court who were trying to win their freedom, yet he was bitterly opposed to the abolitionist movement, and as U.S. district attorney, challenged its efforts. He strongly supported the colonization of former slaves in Africa, helping to found the colony of Liberia. It is no surprise, then, that in the recent rush to tear down statues, his was toppled on Friday, June 19, in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park. Today we have come to recognize that the imperfect Key is inseparably linked with slavery and pride in our nation. O thus be it ever when free men shall stand Between their lov’d homes and the war’s desolation! Bless’d with victory and peace, may the Heaven-rescued land Praise the Power that hath made and preserv’d us a nation Then conquer we must, when our cause it is just, And this be our motto: “In God is our trust!” And the star-spangled banner in triumph shall wave O’er the land of the free and the home of the brave.
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PAGE A20 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • JULY 02, 2020
Despite a Pandemic
A Reason to Celebrate
What would have been a series of students lining up all across the North Shore to accept their diplomas has become a mishmash of drive-up ceremonies, displays held via video conference, slide shows or whatever means a district has come up with to celebrate the 2020 senior class while the pandemic has put a stop to in-person learning. Both Port Jeff and Comsewogue school districts are waiting to hear if New York State will change graduations restricting them to 150. Port Jefferson plans on events including graduation and prom come August. Comsewogue has hosted numerous socially distanced events in June, including a senior
slideshow in a drive-in style at the high school parking lot. Seniors caught up on remembrances and their grade school careers. Then on June 25, the district hosted a car parade send-off for the seniors. Teachers, administrators and parents lined up along the high school bus loop to cheer on their students. High schoolers, most dressed in their cap and gown, rode through with many hanging outside windows and sunroofs to wave farewell to their school. Comsewogue Superintendent Jenn Quinn said the events were so successful, “We might consider them again in future years. Top three photos by Kyle Barr; bottom photos by David Rebori