The Port Times Record - October 18, 2018

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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. 31, No. 47

October 18, 2018

$1.00

STEVEN NIELSEN

Port Jeff getting back to business Restaurants closed due to Sept. storm reopen

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Horse Sanctuary fundraiser heads to Setauket Also: Shelter Pet of the Week, ‘The Sisters Brothers’ reviewed,’ Kids Halloween Contest

SPACE RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBER ADDRESS

Sources of strength James Nielsen, 17, of Port Jeff Station died this summer, but he’s not done making the world a better place — story A5

Delivering Results f or 30 Years in Port Jefferson Village

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PAGE A2 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 18, 2018

For the next fella who asks if he can buy you a round

Brookhaven to host 2nd annual Health & Wellness Fair

Tell him absolutely! And bring him here!

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The Town of Brookhaven is bringing healthy living back as it plans to host its 2nd annual Health & Wellness Fair Oct. 20. The event will bring more than 20 exhibits to Brookhaven Town Hall, featuring free screenings, free giveaways, interactive activities for both kids and adults, local vendors, with free admission for all Brookhaven residents as well.

The event is being sponsored by JVC Broadcasting, which is advising it will be offering interviews with vendors to be broadcast on JVC’s health and wellness show. The event is being held Saturday, Oct. 20, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Brookhaven Town Hall located at 1 Independence Hill in Farmingville. Brookhaven Town has asked all those interested in attending or in being a vendor to register online at www.brookhavenny.gov/health or call 631-451-9100.

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OCTOBER 18, 2018 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A3

Village

Port Jeff restaurants ravaged by flood reopen OLD FIELDS FACEBOOK

The skies opened and dumped buckets of water on Port Jefferson Village Sept. 25. The area was hit with more than 4 inches of rain during the evening into the night, according to the National Weather Service, leading to severe flooding and leaving behind devastating damage. Two Main Street restaurants — Ruvo East and Old Fields of Port Jefferson — sustained significant damage that night, causing emergency evacuations and significant periods with their doors closed while feverish-paced repairs took place. “I definitely have the best staff in all my restaurants,” said Joe DiNicola, owner of Ruvo. The restaurateur said the possibility of closing the doors to the establishment for good was a distinct possibility, but after weeks of hard work around the clock that possibility went away Oct. 11. “We bonded together and decided we were going to reopen it. Since then that’s been our common goal.” The restaurant reopened Thursday afternoon. DiNicola said the building was inundated with about 3 feet of water as the rain poured down Sept. 25. The repair job required the reupholstering of almost all of the restaurant’s furniture, “gutting”

RUVO FACEBOOK

BY ALEX PETROSKI ALEX@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM

Port Jefferson restaurants Ruvo and Old Fields are back open after sustaining serious damage during a Sept. 25 flood.

and redoing four bathrooms, a new roof, plumbing and electrical work, and more. He said his staff was all retained through the reconstruction process and nobody missed a paycheck. He said he encouraged his staff to take time off, making sure no one was putting in full seven-day work weeks, though many were there up to six days per week, and DiNicola said he was logging 15-hour days and beyond during the cleanup effort.

“We’ve had water in the past — a little bit,” he said. “This was an event that was an anomaly. I just don’t understand. It was just rain.” DiNicola said water poured into Ruvo from the roof, through drains and eventually in the front door. About 20 cars were totaled in the parking lot, he said. The Port Jefferson Fire Department — which sustained substantial damage itself at the Maple Place firehouse — had to assist people in

exiting both Ruvo and Old Fields that night, in addition to helping stranded residents out of about a dozen cars. DiNicola and Old Fields owner David Tunney both heaped praise on the fire department for the work they did that night. “Thank you to all first responders, village workers, volunteers, our staff and to you, our loyal customers, thank you for all of your support,” Ruvo posted on its Facebook page Oct. 12. Old Fields, which is just on the other side of Wynn Lane on Main Street north of Ruvo, was able to reopen Sept. 28, according to Tunney, who said he was thankful the situation there was not worse, sending his condolences to those experiencing recent storms in Florida and the Carolinas. “It has been frantic,” he said. “We worked really hard and diligently to get back open. The water came in quick.” Tunney’s restaurant was closed for two days, compared to nearly two weeks for Ruvo, though he said the job required a team of about 30 people working to clean and sanitize the soggy eatery. He said even in the moment on the night of the flood, he was able to keep things in perspective, joking that he told a member of his staff who asked if they needed some more rags, “no, get some tequila.”

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PAGE A4 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 18, 2018

Shop For A Cause at C The Boutique H

Town TOWN OF BROOKHAVEN

Help us help others! The Boutique HC in Mt. Sinai is proud to sponsor this event for Breast Cancer awareness!

Community Partners For the week of October 22nd-27th, we are proudly donating 10% of proceeds to the Benefit Fund for the Uninsured with Mather Hospital. Friday night, the 26th, we will be having a special “Happy Hour” from 5-8pm with raffles and a special gift for all who attend!

Where the Mount Sinai Miller Place Community Unites with Port Jefferson to Make a Difference in

Editorial comment

Paint P rt Pink

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Check out our events on and and, of course, our website! Please call for more information on this event.

SHOP FOR A CAUSE DURING

Brookhaven Supervisor Ed Romaine and Comsewogue Superintendent Joe Rella along with leaders from dozens of other districts attend the first meeting of Brookhaven’s Council of Governments Committee, a group aiming to reduce taxes through sharing services across taxing districts.

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Brookhaven hosts first joint meeting of government leaders The committee’s title sounds like something out of a science fiction movie, but Town of Brookhaven’s plan to streamline government services is nonfiction and slated for the nearer future than a galaxy far, far away. Brookhaven Town Hall was the setting for the inaugural Council of Governments Committee meeting, a congregation of representatives from across the town’s villages, ambulance and fire and school and library districts Oct. 10. The leaders came together to begin brainstorming strategies to make government more efficient by sharing services with the goal of reducing costs for their mutual taxpayers. The meeting was hosted by Brookhaven Supervisor Ed Romaine (R) and was attended by representatives from the villages of Belle Terre, Shoreham and Port Jefferson; Setauket Fire District; Port Jefferson EMS; Comsewogue, Port Jefferson, Emma S. Clark, and Middle Country libraries; and Shoreham-Wading River, Comsewogue, Port Jefferson and Rocky Point school districts among many others. Brookhaven was recently awarded a $20 million Municipal Consolidation and Efficiency Competition grant by New York State, which will go toward modernizing and reinventing the delivery of services while reducing the burden on taxpayers by reducing redundancy in local governments, pursuing opportunities for increasing shared services, and implementing modernizations and best practices, according to a town press release. The committee will be charged with implementing the changes and identifying additional areas for efficiency and fiscal savings, as well as providing oversight of the 16 MCEC projects. “We’re interested today in talking about what we can do jointly for our mutual constituents to

improve the delivery of services, to reduce costs, to share services whenever possible — to do the things that are going to move this town, your school district, your village, your taxing district forward so that our mutual constituents benefit from this,” Romaine said. “I think this is an opportunity for us to redesign how we do things. This is one opportunity where we can reach across jurisdictional lines and say we’re all in this together.” Engineering firm Laberge Group has served as a consultant for the town’s municipal consolidation plans, and representatives Ben Syden and Nicole Allen were on hand at the committee meeting to update the attendees on the status of some of the projects already underway. “A year and a half ago, we asked for your hope, we asked for you to say, ‘Yup, I may be interested in doing this,’” Syden said during the meeting. “Now, we have pilots, we have examples and now we want to deploy this townwide.” The projects will be implemented over a span of two to three years, according to Syden, and the full implementation of the projects is expected to save more than $60 million collectively among the taxing districts over five years. The dissolution of the Village of Mastic Beach and reincorporation into the town, the consolidation of 24 of the town’s 112 special districts including four water districts into the Suffolk County Water Authority and six erosion control districts consolidated into one are among the already completed projects undertaken as part of the MCEC project. Upcoming projects include the consolidation of property tax collection and processing systems with several villages including Port Jefferson and Shoreham, construction of a regional salt storage facility, purchase of regional specialized fleet equipment, expansion of single-stream recycling waste management services to six special districts throughout the town and many more.


OCTOBER 18, 2018 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A5

Village

Port Jeff Station teen lost to cancer remembered as selfless, strong Body tissue belonging to James Nielsen, 17, who died in July, could prove helpful for researchers of aggressive, rare form of cancer

Making sense of loss is never easy, though a Port Jefferson Station family has drawn strength from their 17-year-old son’s bravery and desire to help others, even in his last days. “Bad things happen to people and this just happened to happen to me, and we’re just going to do the best we can with it,” James Nielsen told his father Steven when they learned the 17-yearold had been diagnosed with a form of cancer so rare and devastating only one documented case of survival exists. The Comsewogue High School student was diagnosed with NUT midline carcinoma in December 2017, an aggressive form of cancer akin to a death sentence. Despite the devastating prognosis, the Eagle Scout from Troop 454 engaged in rare, barely fleeting moments of despair, according to his parents, even spending the day he died — July 16, 2018 — playing UNO card games and watching the World Cup. James’ form of cancer is characterized by tumors that form in bones or soft tissue. No effective treatment for NMC exists, there are no guidelines, and current approaches to treatment are based on discussions among a few oncologists who each have had a single experience treating this disease, according to the writings of Dr. Christopher French, a pathologist researching NMC at Dana-Farber/Harvard Cancer Center in Boston, who also advised James’ family after his diagnosis. “The cancer type that he had is extremely rare and he has a yet even rarer variant of that cancer,” French said in a phone interview. “His tumor was really quite unique. It had a different gene, a variant that is extremely uncommon.” In late August 2017, upon arriving at cross-country team practice at Comsewogue, James’ mother Jean Nielsen said she noticed a sizable lump on her son’s leg. She said he brushed off her concern, went to practice, and even ran an additional mile when he got home. That night, she had her husband Steven Nielsen examine James’ leg. He said it looked swollen but not necessarily alarming, but when he touched the tumor it was rock solid. A trip that same night to a walk-in medical clinic led to a visit to Stony Brook University Hospital, and by that weekend the family knew their oldest child of four had cancer. Initially doctors believed he had Ewing’s sarcoma, a diagnosis with a far higher survival rate and clearer treatment options than NMC. In the early stages of his battle, James’ mother said she wrote “treatable and curable” on the first page of a journal the family kept pertaining to his illness. James began what was expected to be a 10-week cycle of chemotherapy, but by the second week of October 2017, it became clear the tumor wasn’t responding to treatment, and immediate surgery

STEVEN NIELSEN

BY ALEX PETROSKI ALEX@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM

Left, James Nielsen during a family trip to Tennessee to take in the 2017 solar eclipse, shortly before his cancer was discovered; and above, the Nielsen family goes pumpkin picking just before surgery to remove a tumor from his right leg.

would be necessary. At about 10 p.m. Oct. 12, 2017, just six hours before he was scheduled to head to Manhattan for surgery at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, James’ surgeon called and informed his parents there was a possibility he would need to remove their son’s entire leg, and not just portions of the thigh muscle and femur as initially expected. “I’ll never forget, he looked at us, he sat silent for a moment, and he goes, ‘OK — we’ll do what we have to do,’” James’ father recalled. “And then it was pretty much, ‘Good night.’” During hour 17 of a 20-hour surgery, the Nielsens were finally informed James would be able to keep his leg. A positive outlook is often cited as essential in situations like James’, and for the Nielsens positivity flowed on a two-way street. “I guess we’ve always just kind of been in the place like, ‘It doesn’t help’ — letting your head spin and certainly getting overwhelmed by emotion — you have to kind of keep everything together for him,” Steven Nielsen said. “He made us so strong. We made him strong, but he led the way.” Being able to salvage his leg was a small, yet short-lived victory. By December, doctors were finally able to pinpoint his diagnosis. Staring down a cancer with such long odds of survival precipitated an unusual response from the Nielsens — a trip to Disney World. “We didn’t let it control us, we controlled it,” the father said. Self-pity was never in James’ vernacular. “We were never naive about the possibilities of what could happen, but we also, all of us, really felt that it wasn’t worth putting your energy there. Put energy toward your cure. And so we

lived life that way.” The family dedicated their son’s last months to embracing life, spending Thanksgiving evening perusing Manhattan after an eight-hour round of chemo, looking at stores on Madison Avenue, a night his father remembered as “magical.” They visited a ranch in upstate New York just weeks before his death, one of James’ favorite places to vacation. They went to the beach. While their focus was getting the most of their time remaining, James’ parents were far from ready to give up the fight. Feeling like their experience at Memorial Sloan Kettering left something to be desired, Steven Nielsen did some research that led him to French. James participated in some clinical trials and spent time at the Boston facility, where he and his father even managed to find time to explore the city and visit colleges with notable pharmacy programs, a field in which James had expressed a future interest. The father’s dogged pursuit of answers for his son led French to mistakenly call him “doctor” during one of their numerous correspondence. “He wrote in a way that made me think that he knew quite a bit about medicine, I just assumed he was a physician,” French said, laughing. Both Nielsens are teachers in the Comsewogue district. French is hoping to soon be provided with donated tissue from James for the purpose of research, one of the teen’s dying wishes. His will be the first cancer cell line, which are living cancer cells used for research, with NMC that French will have been able to get his hands on, an essential gift if there’s any hope for untangling the mysteries of the cancer form. “The tissue that he donated at his autopsy for research was priceless, and potentially a very valu-

able tool to perform research with,” French said. “He was just a sweet individual. It tore my heart out when I met him very briefly … It was quite riveting to meet him just sort of knowing the truth, that this was likely to not go well.” For James the decision to donate tissue for research was reflexive and required about two minutes of thought, according to his parents. The teen was known for reusing Dixie cups and napkins because of his aversion to creating waste. “For him it was just what you do — he didn’t think it was a big deal,” his mother said. “What we look to as heroic or whatever is not really that heroic. Sometimes unassuming people are the most heroic, not people who are very vociferous.” She said the family can take some comfort in knowing there’s a possibility James’ struggles could lead to a better future for someone else. “I think if you believe everyone has a purpose, you’d like to think such a horrible result would end with something purposeful, like contributing toward the cure for other people,” the father said. “For us to have him taken away, you hope that that’s the reason.” The Nielsens expressed gratitude for the support and well wishes they’ve received from the community. Some of James’ classmates have taken up fundraising efforts to get a memorial built in downtown Port Jefferson. Members of the school’s marching band wore pins honoring their fallen peer at the homecoming football game this month. Still, his parents stressed James was not interested in pity or ritualistic gestures of remembrance. “He was very kind, very sweet, very familial — old kind of qualities that aren’t maybe appreciated as much these days,” his mom said when asked how she hoped he’d be remembered. “He was very selfless.” To donate to aid in NMC research visit http:// www.myjimmyfundpage.org/give/nmcregistryfund.


PAGE A6 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 18, 2018

Police SCPD Thomas Murphy, 59, of Holbrook, was indicted by the Suffolk County District Attorney’s office on 16 charges related to the Sept. 30 crash that killed 12-year-old Andrew McMorris of Wading River.

Man accused in crash that killed Wading River boy indicted on 16 charges 2018 159321

PEOPLE of the YEAR

BY ALEX PETROSKI ALEX@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM

Nominate outstanding members of the community for

The Port Times Record

Each year, with our readers’ help, we honor the people who have contributed in the communities we serve. ❖ The honorees are profiled in a special edition at the end of the year. ❖ Nominate your choice(s) by emailing alex@tbrnewsmedia.com ❖ Please include your name and contact information, the name and contact information of the individual you’re nominating and why he or she deserves to be a Person of the Year. ❖ DEADLINE: NOVEMBER 15, 2018

2018

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The Holbrook man arrested in connection with the death of a Wading River Boy Scout is facing 16 criminal charges following an indictment by the Suffolk County District Attorney’s office Oct. 12. On Sept. 30 Thomas Murphy was driving a 2016 Mercedes southbound on David Terry Road at approximately 1:55 p.m. when his vehicle struck a group of Boys Scouts who were walking northbound on the shoulder of the roadway. Five Scouts, from Troop 161, ranging in age from 12 to 16, were struck by the vehicle. Andrew McMorris, 12, of Wading River, died from his injuries sustained during the incident Oct. 1. Murphy’s blood alcohol content was allegedly measured at 0.13 percent after the DA’s office secured a warrant to conduct a test, which extrapolated to an estimated 0.19 percent at the time of the crash, according to the DA’s office. The legal limit is 0.08 percent. Murphy, 59, was originally charged with allegedly driving while intoxicated. The indictment added several alleged charges including three counts of aggravated vehicular homicide, second-degree manslaughter, first-degree manslaughter, second-degree assault, second-degree vehicular manslaughter, aggravated driving while intoxicated and others. “Nothing will bring Andrew back, but we will obtain justice in this case on behalf of the

families and Troop 161,” District Attorney Tim Sini (D) said. “My office is committed to handling this case most professionally and most efficiently to ensure that this defendant is held accountable for his actions. Our thoughts and prayers are with the victims, their loved ones and the entire Boy Scout community in the wake of this tragedy.” Murphy was arraigned in Suffolk County Supreme Court Oct. 16 and is due back in court Nov. 27, according to the DA’s office. His attorney did not respond to a request for comment following Murphy’s arrest. He posted $500,000 bond Oct. 1. According to the DA’s office, shortly before 2 p.m. Sept. 30, Murphy was leaving Swan Lake Golf Club to drive home after allegedly drinking alcohol since approximately 9 a.m. Murphy was arrested immediately following the crash by Suffolk County Police 7th Precinct officers, who observed that Murphy allegedly had a strong odor of alcohol on his breath, had slurred speech, had watery, bloodshot and glassy eyes, and was unsteady on his feet, the DA’s office said. Murphy refused a roadside breath test and was transported to the 7th Precinct, where he refused to submit to a chemical test of his blood. According to Newsday, in a statement read by Murphy’s attorney Stephen McCarthy Jr., Murphy apologized for his actions and indicated he would not put McMorris’ family through a lengthy legal battle.


OCTOBER 18, 2018 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A7

Obituary Former St. Charles radiologist Albert S. Trachtenberg BY MOIRA-JO TRACHTENBERG-THIELKING AND MYLES TRACHTENBERG Dr. Albert S. Trachtenberg, of Old Field, died Sept. 20. Trachtenberg grew up in Brooklyn and attended Abraham Lincoln High School, graduating in 1948. He graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Syracuse University in 1951 and received his medical degree from the University of Geneva, Switzerland, in 1957. Although he hadn’t initially planned to attend school in Europe, Trachtenberg was grateful for the experience. It widened his horizons, and he developed a lifelong passion for languages, wine, skiing and fondue. He enjoyed a long and distinguished career as a radiologist. Upon completion of his radiology residency at the Bronx V.A. Hospital, he entered private practice with Radiological Health Services of Smithtown and joined the staff of St. Charles Hospital of Port Jefferson in 1963. The doctor’s expertise and leadership skills resulted in his being named director of radiology for St. Charles Hospital and Rehabilitation Center in 1968, a position he held for 33 years. Trachtenberg was dedicated to bringing cutting-edge imaging technology to the area, including early MRI machines and the first total-body CAT Scan in Suffolk

Village

County in 1977. Trachtenberg served as president of both the Long Island Radiological Society and the St. Charles Medical Board (1969, 1970, 1988) and was elected fellow at the American College of Radiology in 1983. He was a longtime member of the Executive Committee at Maryhaven Center of Hope, The American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine and The Radiological Society of North America. St. Charles Hospital honored Trachtenberg with the Theodore Roosevelt Award for service to the hospital and to the community in 2002, noted in a State of New York Proclamation. More importantly than awards, Trachtenberg cared for his patients as if each and every one was the most valuable. He was highly esteemed among referring physicians and pioneered a mammography technique that allowed for early detection of very small cancers. Dr. Rocco Caruso worked with Trachtenberg at St. Charles for 15 years and treated him when he became sick. Caruso said he remembers Trachtenberg always being extremely helpful when they worked together. “The finest radiologist out here that I remember,” Caruso said. “The thing I liked the most about Al was that he was a human being who when you asked him to go over a film he stopped everything

he was doing and took his time to make sure all your questions were answered and that’s not common across the board anymore. I remember Al as a great radiologist but foremost a great human being. A true doctor. He cared about the patients. I can’t say enough about him.” He was known among friends and family as a renaissance man who in addition to speaking multiple languages and skiing enjoyed painting portraits of friends and family, computer technology, singing, reading, opera, tennis, fishing and sailing, international travel and, in recent years, taking a full course load at State University of New York’s Osher Lifelong Learning Institute. Trachtenberg was a connoisseur of fine wine and an active member of Les Amis du Vin for many years. Trachtenberg loved skiing and continued to do so until just a few years ago, proudly blazing the slopes with the Stratton Mountain Trailblazers, sometimes for more than 100 ski days per season. Trachtenberg was an engaged member of Temple Beth Shalom in Smithtown, where he served as president with dedication and love. Over the years he worshiped at the Israel Congregation of Manchester, Vermont, and, most recently, Temple Isaiah of Stony Brook. Trachtenberg was the loving husband of Pam and the beloved father of Myles and Moira. He

Dr. Albert S. Trachtenberg

loved to spend time with his grandchildren, Myles B. and Jeremy M. Trachtenberg and Acadia and Esther Thielking. As a person, Trachtenberg embraced his friends and family with warmth, love and devotion. He was loved and appreciated by the many people whose lives he touched and will be truly missed. Memorial services were held Sept. 23 at Shalom Memorial Chapels in Smithtown. Burial followed at Setauket’s Agudath Achim Cemetery. Donations can be made in his memory to Cancer Research Institute, 55 Broadway, Suite 1802, New York, NY 10006; the American Heart Association National Center, 7272 Greenville Ave., Dallas, TX 75231; or Maryhaven Center of Hope, 51 Terryville Road, Port Jefferson Station, NY 11776.

SCPD

Suspect arrested for PJS robberies BY ALEX PETROSKI ALEX@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM

Cappy’s Carpets Since 1946

440 MAIN STREET PORT JEFFERSON

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A man wearing a ski mask allegedly entered Speedway gas station in Port Jefferson Station Oct. 13, displayed what appeared to be a handgun and demanded cash, according to Suffolk police. The 6th Squad detectives arrested suspect Devon Tyme Jr., 25, Oct. 16 for his alleged involvement in the incident, following an investigating, which occurred at the gas station located at 501 Patchogue Road in Port Jefferson Station at about 2:30 a.m. Saturday morning, police said. When he allegedly made the request, the

gas station employee did not comply and the robber fled. There were no injuries, police said. Detectives believe this robbery is connected to an alleged armed robbery that occurred at Sunoco gas station, located at 1575 Route 112 in Port Jefferson Station, Oct. 7 at 9:45 a.m. During that incident, Tyme allegedly entered the store, displayed what appeared to be a gun and demanded cash. The clerk complied and the suspect fled. No one was injured. Tyme was charged with first-degree robbery and first-degree attempted robbery. Attorney information for Tyme was not immediately available.

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PAGE A8 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 18, 2018

Perspectives

Solving the opioid crisis

NY-1 in the House

by Rep. Lee Zeldin, would have slashed Medicaid funding, cutting off essential health care services October is National Substance Abuse Preven- from those struggling with addiction. The Repubtion Month, a time when we must confront the lican plan left these patients with unaffordable predark reality that opioids are destroying commu- miums and likely no coverage whatsoever to pay nities across the country, including right here in for treatment. I am fully committed to preserving Suffolk County. As many as 600 lives on Long gains made under the Affordable Care Act, espeIsland were claimed due to overdose last year cially these vital services. alone. Our federal elected leadership can and Addiction does not discriminate by party afshould be decisive agents of change in this epi- filiation. It is ravaging our nation, killing tens of demic, and right now they are not doing enough. thousands, Democrats and Republicans, forcing I was raised in a family of doctors and attended children into foster care and leaving families bro2 1/2 years of medical school before shifting to ken. This should be a bipartisan issue, one that is a career in business. I understand the impact the above the influence of corporate interests. I am engovernment, pharmaceutical incouraged by the bipartisan Opidustry and insurance companies oid Crisis Response Act of 2018, collectively have on all of our which allows for the use of data lives. Congress has to fix this to stop questionable pill orders, crisis to mitigate the destruction. addresses additional support for Big Pharma owns much law enforcement and reauthoof the blame for this crisis and rizes substance abuse programs. needs to take an active hand in We must do more to ban the imfixing what they helped create. port of synthetic opioids from The Ensuring Patient Access China and amend our laws, as and Effective Drug Enforcenecessary, to put targeted subment Act, passed in 2016, drasstances on our banned lists. tically undercuts the U.S. Drug Having said all this, one can Enforcement Administration’s and should always learn more. ability to freeze shipments from As such, our campaign is orgadrug companies to suspicious nizing a community town hallPerry Gershon buyers. We have to repeal this style listening event between legislation, because it gives now and election day. I want to drug companies a free pass and keeps steady the understand the issue better, and a good way is to flow of addictive and potentially harmful drugs hear the views of those most affected in NY-1. into vulnerable communities. We also need to Just as I pledged to never take money from work to lower the cost of Naloxone so our first pharmaceutical or insurance companies, I will responders can carry this life-saving medicine never be bought on this deadly issue. No one with them, whether in urban or rural areas. Long should have to live a life of addiction without help. term, we must reduce the availability of danger- No one should lose their children, sibling or parent ous drugs while also addressing root causes of the to an overdose. And no one should fear that their crisis to stem the rise of opioid abuse in America. elected congressman will side with giant pharmaHowever, we cannot only focus on curtailing ceutical corporations over them. I will hold drug the supply of opioids. We must also support and companies accountable for predatory actions. I care for those who struggle with addiction. Proper will fight to ensure care and rehabilitation for those quality health care coverage is essential. Through struggling with addiction, and I will always side the expansion of Medicaid and removal of lifetime with the families of Long Island. caps, the Affordable Care Act has helped to fund Perry Gershon is an East Hampton resident opioid treatment for millions of Americans. The and the Democratic candidate for New York’s Republicans’ attempted ACA repeal, championed 1st Congressional District.

wrong address due to these shared street names with the same zip code in the Town of RiverSome issues that may seem like small pota- head. These kinds of mistakes can be avoided, toes for out-of-towners are actually the highest and these problems can be alleviated by aspriorities for East End residents. There should signing a new and unique zip code to Flanders, be no left or right, conservative or liberal, when Riverside and Northampton. it comes to joining forces to deliver important The House also passed my bipartisan legiswins that we can all work together on to im- lation to protect affordable mortgages for our prove quality of life on Long Island. nation’s veterans. Our nation’s service memFor example, we just secured three major bers, veterans and their families have made legislative victories for our district in our na- a tremendous sacrifice in service to our great tion’s capital — victories that will have a posi- nation and the freedoms and liberties that make tive impact on the ground in our communities, this country the greatest in the world. They one of them being the enactment into law of have earned nothing less than our unwavermy legislation that requires the ing support when transitionFederal Aviation Administraing back into civilian life, and tion to reconsider the deeply such a critical part of living flawed North Shore helicopout the American Dream they ter route to address the noise fought so hard to protect is impact on affected communithe dream of home ownership. ties, improve altitude enforceOn Long Island, where home ment and consider alternative prices are higher than in many routes, including an all-water other parts of the country, enroute over the Atlantic Ocean. suring certainty in the market Summer after summer, resiand access to affordable mortdents’ quality of life has sufgages for our nation’s veterans fered due to the persistent isis the least we can do as they sue of helicopter noise on the transition into civilian life. East End, and Congress must Most importantly, these hold their feet to the fire. Now three major victories were in Lee Zeldin their voices will finally be just one week in Washington. heard, including a public hearEach and every week spent ing that will soon be taking place in the coming away from my family and my home on Long weeks and a public comment period about to be Island I want to make count, fighting to imopened as well. prove Long Islanders’ everyday lives. Right Additionally, the House passed my legisla- now, we’re seeing one of these efforts come to tion to create a new, unique zip code for the fruition with the emergency dredge of Moriches hamlets of Flanders, Riverside and Northamp- Inlet underway right now. From working with ton, in the Town of Southampton, which cur- the Army Corps to secure the approval of the rently share a zip code with the neighboring emergency dredge to securing the necessary Town of Riverhead. While the delay of de- funding to complete it, this emergency dredge liveries caused by sharing a zip code is a nui- is a big win for Long Island boaters and fishersance and heavily impacts residents’ quality of men, and the tackle shops and businesses that life, above all else, it is a safety hazard. These support them. packages can hold important goods like mediIt is an honor to represent our home in our cations, which are critical for a person’s health nation’s capital. and well-being. They can also cause major Lee Zeldin is a Shirley resident and the U.S. problems for police, first responders and other representative for New York’s 1st Congressional emergency personnel, who may arrive at the District, seeking a third term in November.

BY PERRY GERSHON

BY LEE ZELDIN


OCTOBER 18, 2018 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A9

Town

BY KYLE BARR KYLE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM The Wading River-Shoreham Chamber of Commerce hosted its first Fall Festival and Zombie Walk Oct. 13, and while cold rain fell throughout the morning, the community still came out in costume to celebrate the arrival of autumn. While Halloween is still about two weeks

away, kids dressed up in costume as zombies, firefighters, superheroes and many others, to march in a short parade from St. John the Baptist Church to the Wading River duck ponds. Though not many kids participated in the walk because of the rain, young people still participated in a pumpkin decorating contest and crafts — and shopped with adults at booths featuring local vendors.

KYLE BARR

A wonder-fall festival in Wading River

It’s The Season To Be Merry On The North Shore Come Celebrate With Us In Our Holiday Issue! Special Opportunity For All Village Merchants to Advertise in the Annual -Second Annual An Invitation to the Twenty

es Dickens Festival son Village •Charl Port JefferSaturday 3, 2017 & Sunday December 2 &

THANK YOU FROM THE DICKENS FESTIVAL COMMITTEE Media Times Beacon Record News Jefferson Incorporated Village of Port Council – Greater Port Jefferson Arts Northern Brookhaven Arts Council Port Jefferson BID The Bridgeport and Port Jefferson Steamboat Company

Empire National Bank People's United Bank Bridgehampton National Bank Stony Brook Children's Hospital The Rinx Port Jefferson Harbor Education & Arts Conservancy

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PAGE A10 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 18, 2018

National

CDC recommends flu shots for all before end of October METRO

BY KYLE BARR KYLE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM

Along with falling leaves, colder weather and comfy sweaters, autumn also brings the flu, and while the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said last year’s season was one of the worst on record, only time will tell how serious this season will be. Despite the prevalence of the influenza virus and availability of vaccines, the virus still remains deadly on an annual basis. The CDC reported an estimated 80,000 people in the U.S. died from health complications related to influenza during the 2017-18 season, the highest fatality rate compared to any contemporary season on record since first published in 1976. Of those deaths 183 were children, the most since 171 died in the 2012-13. Approximately 80 percent of those children who died did not receive a flu vaccination, according to the CDC. The 2017-18 flu season yielded 30,453 influenza-related hospitalizations from October 2017 through April 2018. People 65 years or older accounted for the majority of those hospitalizations, according to the CDC. Overall hospitalization rates were also the highest on record. Influenza viruses are hard to pin down, as

Flu shots are available at many pharmacies and from doctors. The CDC recommends everyone 6 months and older gets one before the end of October.

they come in several forms which can require different vaccinations. The influenza A virus was the preeminent strand throughout the 201718 season, though influenza B viruses showed up in different parts of the season.

The CDC report for 2017-18 said the flu shot was only 25 percent effective against the H3N2 virus and 65 percent against H1N1, both type A viruses. Meanwhile it was 49 percent effective against B viruses. The report estimated

the overall vaccine effectiveness at 40 percent, meaning it reduced a person’s overall risk of having to seek medical care for flu illness at that rate. The CDC still strongly recommends vaccines as the best way to prevent contracting the virus, but especially for children at least 6 months old, and people aged 50 and older. Children aged 6 months through 8 years who require two doses should receive the first vaccination as soon as possible, and their next dose four weeks later, according to the CDC. For those looking to travel this season the CDC recommends a vaccination two or more weeks before departure. The new vaccines being rolled out for the 2018-19 flu season will contain agents to specifically target the A(H1N1) and A(H3N2) viruses along with the usual B viruses. The CDC recommends everyone 6 months or older gets a shot before the end of October. Flu shots are available at most primary care physicians, but also in CVS Pharmacy, Rite Aid and Walgreens stores free with most insurance plans. The shot is also available in pharmacies in local Stop & Shop, Walmart, Target and Kmart stores. Many colleges, such as Stony Brook University, are offering flu shots to its students. Call your doctor or local pharmacy to ask whether they currently supply flu shots.

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OCTOBER 18, 2018 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A11

We’ve been planning for your big arrival too. We’re almost ready to introduce you to the brand new Center for Mothers and Babies at Huntington Hospital. Private, family-friendly rooms are designed to fill you with comfort and confidence while in a state of the art facility. It’ll be the perfect place to meet your little one, supported by Northwell’s OBGYN expertise and located at an award winning hospital right in your community. Learn more at Northwell.edu/inspiredbyyou.

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PAGE A12 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 18, 2018

Sports — Game of the week BILL LANDON

Comsewogue 2 Centereach 0

Comsewogue field hockey shuts out Centereach The Comsewogue Warriors field hockey team defeated Centereach High School at home in a shutout Oct. 12, blanking the Cougars 2-0. After a 4-0 away loss to Northport Oct. 15, the Warriors stand at 5-8 this season. Clockwise from above, Comsewogue junior Olivia Fantigrossi jumps into the arms of senior Mairead Micheline after a Warrior goal; senior Sophia Azzara passes the ball to freshman Shannon Harrington in front of the cage; eighth-grader Alyssa Deacy flicks the ball ahead; Micheline clears the ball; and Azzara fires upfield.


OCTOBER 18, 2018 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A13

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PAGE A14 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 18, 2018

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OCTOBER 18, 2018 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A15

E M PL OY M E N T / C A R E E R S Help Wanted

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631–331–1154 OR 631–751–7663

Services

Experience a must, PC license preferred. Salary, Commission and full benefits package.

EARN SALARY & COMMISSION WORKING ON EXCITING HISTORICAL MULTIMEDIA PROJECTS & SUPPLEMENTS!

NEED HELP?

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Come work for a company committed to success, teamwork and their employees. Great pay, sick days, holidays and vacation pay Arborists, climbers and/or ground man wanted! Clean license – manual shift CDL preferred

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Family First Home Companions provides older adults the ability to live life the way they want; independently and on their own terms. Our services provide in-home assistance to help with daily activities such as meal preparation, light housekeeping, grocery shopping, errands, bathing and dressing supervision, and general support in the home. 9G JCUG Ä? GWKDÄšG JOTRS HROM PCRÄ› Ä›KMG Ä›O HTĚĚ Ä›KMG GUGN SOMG ÄšKUG KN POSKÄ›KONS %CĚĚ Ä›OFCX Ä›O SEJGFTÄšG CN KNÄ›GRUKGV CÄ› DGÄ›VGGN CM PM /ON (RK

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WEEKDAY EVENING COUNSELOR: Concern for Independent Living. Shoreham (Mon-Fri; 4pm-12am). Assist individuals with mental illness in residential setting. Must have experience. Email resume to lynnbennett@concernhousing.org.

Job Seekers

TBR NEWSMEDIA

Š101864

PUBLISHER’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 Gov’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.

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

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Help Wanted

Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154


PAGE A16 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 18, 2018

E M PL OY M E N T / C A R E E R S Saturday mornings a must

Concern for Independent Living is seeking a weekday counselor to assist individuals with mental illness in residential setting. Must have experience working with indiv. w/mental illness.

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Email resume to lynnbennett@concernhousing.org

PART-TIME ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT

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Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154


OCTOBER 18, 2018 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A17

SERV ICES COME HOME TO A CLEAN HOUSE! Attention to detail is our priority. Excellent References. Serving the Three Village Area. Call Jacquie or Joyce 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 Geek on Site! Virus Removal, Data Recovery! 24/7 Emergency Service, Inhome, 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 FARRELL ELECTRIC Serving Suffolk for over 40 years All types electrical work, service changes, landscape lighting, automatic standby generators. 631-928-0684 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

Fences

Handyman Services

SMITHPOINT FENCE. Vinyl Fence Sale! Wood, PVC, Chain Link Stockade. Free estimates. Commercial/Residential. 70 Jayne Blvd., PJS. Lic.37690-H/Ins. 631-743-9797 www.smithpointfence.com.

Financial Services GUARANTEED LIFE INSURANCE (AGES 50-80) No Medical exam and Premiums never increase. FREE CONSULTATIVE REVIEW OF EXISTING POLICIES. riveraconsultingmjg@gmail (516) 695-4086

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$$$, free estimates. Vincent Alfano 631-286-1407 REFINISHING & RESTORATION Antiques restored, repairing recane, reupholstery, touch-ups kitchen, front doors, 40 yrs exp, SAVE$$$, free estimates. Vincent Alfano 631-286-1407

Gardening/Design Architecture DOWN THE GARDEN PATH *Garden Rooms *Focal Point Gardens. Designed and Maintained JUST FOR YOU. Create a “splash” of color w/perennials or Patio Pots. Marsha, 631-689-8140 or cell# 516-314-1489

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

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. 844-782-7096 *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 LONG HILL CARPENTRY 40 years experience All phases of home improvement. Old & Historic Restorations. Lic.#H22336/Ins. 631-751-1764 longhill7511764@aol.com SAFE BATHROOM RENOVATIONS in just one day! Update to safety now. Grab bars, no slip flooring & seated showers. Call for a free in-home consultation. 844-782-7096

Home Improvement 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 PROTECT YOUR FAMILY LANDSCAPING & GARDENS Save 20% off any service with Environmentally safe treatments. GYPSY MOTHS, TICKS, MOSQUITOES. Call for a free consultation. 631-751-4880. www.ClovisAxiom.com 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.

Painting/Spackling/ Wallpaper

Legal Services REAL ESTATE ATTORNEY Buy/Sell/Mortgage Problems. Attorney & Real Estate Bkr, PROBATE/CRIMINAL/ BUSINESS. Richard H. Lovell, P.C., 10748 Cross Bay, Ozone Park, NY, 11417 718-835-9300 LovellLawnewyork@gmail.com

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 REVERSE MORTGAGE: Homeowners age 62+ turn your home equity into tax free cash! Speak with an expert today and receive a free booklet. 1-877-580-3720

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 GREG TRINKLE PAINTING & GUTTER CLEANING Powerwashing, window washing, staining. Neat, reliable, 25 years experience. Free Estimates. Lic/Ins.#31398-H 631-331-0976

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

Power Washing EXTERIOR CLEANING SPECIALISTS Roof cleaning, pressure washing/softwashing, deck restorations, gutter maintenance. SQUEAKY CLEAN PROPERTY SOLUTIONS 631-387-2156 www.SqueakyCleanli.com

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

FALL IS HERE!

Call Our Classifieds Advertising Department

Firewood • Chimney Work • Home Improvement Painting & Siding • Furniture Restoration • Heating & Plumbing, etc.

Special Rates NOW Available!

~Advertise Your Seasonal Services~

631-331–1154 or 631-751–7663

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Cleaning

Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154


PAGE A18 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 18, 2018

PROF E S SION A L & B U SI N E S S ;/, 7* +6*;69

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Place Your Ad in the

Reasonable Rates, Dependable Service, Plenty of References

Single size • $228/4 weeks

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HOME SERV ICES

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Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154

ANDREW SHIKORA Master Electrician Commercial/Industrial/Residential

Port Jefferson • 631.291.8754

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TIMES BEACON RECORD CLASSIFIEDS â– 631.331.1154 0R 631.751.7663


OCTOBER 18, 2018 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A19

HOME SERV ICES

Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154 PAGE F

THREE VILLAGE HOME IMPROVEMENT

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631-331–1154 or 631-751–7663

Special Rates NOW Available!


PAGE A20 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 18, 2018

HOME SERV ICES Stacy’s Carpet Cleaning and Powerwashing Powerwashing Homes Decks/Patios Concrete • Fences

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MARSHA BURGER 631.689.8140 • Cell 516.314.1489 marshaburger31@yahoo.com

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REFERENCES AVAILABLE

Construction longhill7511764@aol.com

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OCTOBER 18, 2018 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A21

R E A L ESTATE

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PAGE A22 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 18, 2018

Opinion

Editorial

Coming together to save money

On Long Island, the cost of property taxes weighs heavily on many people’s minds. In Brookhaven, the town is working with villages, schools, libraries, and other special districts to consolidate municipal services, which should lead to savings for homeowners. Any initiative to save taxpayers money is a worthwhile endeavor in our book. After a two-year long process, New York State recently awarded Town of Brookhaven a $20 million grant for its application as part of the Municipal Consolidation and Efficiency Competition. The grant is a byproduct of Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s (D) attempts to cut costs, share services and streamline inefficiencies in order to reduce property taxpayers’ burdens statewide. In a field of finalists that were all upstate counties other than Brookhaven, the town came out on top, and Brookhaven Supervisor Ed Romaine (R) wasted no time in gathering representatives from villages, ambulance and fire districts, school districts and library districts to create a Council of Governments Committee. On Oct. 10 the council met to discuss the best practices of governance, shared services and intermunicipal opportunities expected to come from the $20 million cash influx. Due to his leadership qualities and ability to work across party lines, we have confidence that Romaine has the ability to implement the money in an effective way. Project proposals have included using town contracts to buy in bulk things like asphalt replacement, which can save money for villages since the town can get a better price due to its size. Villages such as Port Jefferson could benefit not only from highway services but a town purchasing portal, electronic records management and storage. While we know the council is in good hands, we hope the committee will take a serious look at how to run each agency more efficiently, even if some are not consolidated, and we also have suggestions for the future. In addition to implementing current plans established during the grant application stage, the council hopes to explore possible other future initiatives. As the town moves forward, one suggestion we have with any potential plans is to call on local village officials and district heads to organize public meetings where residents can attend and discuss their concerns with town officials or brainstorm suggestions. We also hope that Brookhaven will lead the way for other municipalities outside its scope. While we know not every town has the privilege of a $20 million grant, after implementing changes in Brookhaven, we hope to see town leaders reach out to other towns in Suffolk County for examples and suggestions to save their residents money. The chance to save taxpayers money has the potential to cross town lines in the next few years.

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 alex@tbrnewsmedia.com or mail them to The Port Times Record, P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733.

Letters to the editor

Pre-election good news for Americans Over the last couple years the United States has enjoyed some very significant, verifiable successes in several critical areas, including but not limited to fighting MS-13, foreign policy and the economy. MS-13 has been a devastating, deadly presence, especially in minority communities on Long Island. Hosted by Republican Congressmen Peter King and Lee Zeldin, high-ranking officials, including the director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and President Donald Trump (R), have come here, shining a bright national light on the crisis. Gang arrests have been way up, and discovery of mutilated remains way down, with Zeldin subsequently being endorsed by 11 law enforcement groups. It wasn’t long ago there was a homicidal ISIS caliphate growing in the Middle East; NATO allies were not meeting their financial commitments; and North Korea was holding American hostages, testing nuclear devices and, while flying missiles over Japan, threatening our mainland.

Changing the rules of engagement greatly shortened the life of the extremist Islamic state, and NATO members now reluctantly throw more money into the common defense kitty. North Korea has returned U.S. hostages, along with our veterans’ remains; suspended nuclear tests and launching rockets over Japan; and stopped making apocalyptic threats against our 50 states. The economy has made some undeniably positive, easily confirmed gains. The third-quarter gross domestic product was 4.2 percent. Manufacturing is up. Employment numbers — jobless claims at the lowest level in nearly five decades — have been especially good for those Americans who seemed forgotten. Blue-collar jobs grew at the fastest rate in more than three decades. African-American and Hispanic-American unemployment rates have both reached record lows, while youth unemployment reached its lowest level in more than 50 years. Poverty rates for African-Americans and

Hispanic-Americans have reached their lowest levels ever recorded. Job openings, for the first time on record, outnumber job seekers. A weakened MS-13, shrinking ISIS caliphate, and more generous NATO is good for us. North Korean Supreme Leader Kim Jong-un tapping the brakes on his own nuclear proliferation lessens one, clear and present, here and now, catastrophic threat to the environment, which is great for everybody. And seeing today’s blue-collar workers, youth and minorities enjoy virtually unprecedented access to a strong economy and job market should be seen as really heartening, especially for those who fancy themselves as champions of those three groups. Coming up to the November elections, there’s plenty of provably good news for the United States. It would be a shame to wreck, at the polls, policies generating the recent good fortune for so many fellow Americans, including those in our minority communities. Jim Soviero East Setauket

Time for Zeldin to believe scientific evidence I am writing this letter just after watching television reports of Category 4 Hurricane Michael slamming into the Florida Panhandle. The main thing that I can think of right now is, “What is the matter with Lee Zeldin?” He did not cause this hurricane but he refuses to believe overwhelming scientific evidence naming human activity as the major cause of global warming. His attitude seems to be, “Ho-hum just another storm of the century.” I would like to paraphrase an old Bob Dylan song: “How many times must a major hurricane strike before the climate change deniers are forever banned?” Maybe the answer is blowing in the wind — pun intended — as the song goes. Instead

Mini-Lee Zeldin (R) is following in lockstep with the Trump administration policy of “deny, deny, deny” any credible science; destroying the EPA; and supporting increased emissions of greenhouse gases in the process. I occasionally follow the congressman’s Facebook page. Zeldin likes to tout various environmental actions that he participates in and is proud of. I checked the League of Conservation Voters website, and Zeldin has one of the worst scores in New York state. Maybe the congressman will change his mind in 20 or 30 years when his backyard is underwater during high tide. The problem is by then it prob-

ably will be too late. Since casting my first ballot in 1968, I have generally been registered as an Independent. Only very recently, I have changed to Democrat, largely due to President Donald Trump (R) and the scary idiocy of the GOP. Zeldin may be a nice guy, but he is just a rubber stamp for Trump. Please do not support Mini-Lee Zeldin. I will vote for Perry Gershon (D) in the congressional election. Zeldin calls him Park Avenue Perry. I don’t care if he is from Patchogue, Poquott or Park Avenue. I just want Zeldin sent back to Mastic-Shirley. Paul Hart Stony Brook

Character assassination backfiring on Dems The relentless series of attacks on President Donald Trump (R) began on election night 2016 as the polls were closing, and the shock and disbelief were just beginning to set in. The Democrat-controlled press had to dust off their war plans that they thought they’d never need to unwrap, as Hillary Clinton (D) was a shoo-in, at least until midnight Eastern Time. The paid provocateurs soon followed, culminating in anarchy in the streets and late night “comedy” shows eschewing the comedy

for endless anti-Trump diatribes. None of it is working, and most of it is backfiring, badly. The endless attempts at character assassination, the horrendous treatment of Judge Kavanaugh, etc., remind me of the classic Road Runner-Wile E. Coyote cartoons. Naturally, Trump is “road runner,” thwarting every bomb, anvil and trap set for him by the Soros/DNC “coyotes.” I was prompted to write this letter after learning of a California judge throwing out a

defamation case started by esteemed actress Stormy Daniels. The “road runner” metaphor may reach new heights of relevance here. Since Daniel’s camp was ordered to pay court costs that may reach upward of $1 million, the brainwashed fools who employed GoFundMe for her legal bills may ultimately discover they’ve “go funded” Trump instead. Now that’s funny. “Meep, meep,” indeed. Michael Meltzer Stony Brook


OCTOBER 18, 2018 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A23

Opinion

After a spectacular start, breaking up is hard to do

W

e had such a wonderful relationship. I wondered whether this was it. Could this be the one that I remember years from now, that I think about when I’m feeling down, or that I go back to when I hear the phrase “the good old days”? It was better than good for a while. You were incredible and so supremely satisfying. There was electricity, energy D. None and a belief that of the above this connection was something exBY DANIEL DUNAIEF traordinary. It gave me so much to look forward to, day in and day

out, because I knew you’d be there for me. I was dealing with a lot this summer. My family moved to North Carolina. I lost the close proximity to the friends, neighbors and nearby family I’d taken for granted for all these years. It was harder to see you at first. But that didn’t stop the connection, from allowing me to enjoy the promising magic ride. Maybe modern technology minimized the distance, maybe it was just some perceived link, but I believed in you, in us, from so far away. My wife has become accustomed to the annual search for this kind of closeness with you. She’s extraordinarily supportive of my emotional well-being. She knows that I need you, even if you don’t always seem to need me. She appreciates that I don’t need to try to defeat this kind of addiction. She knows that I had a connection with you long before she came along and she doesn’t try to get in the way of that. She hasn’t tried to change

me or turn my attention to other passions. She also knows that, when all is right between you and me, she and I have a better relationship because I’m a better-adjusted person who believes anything is possible. It was such a whirlwind this time. Even when you seemed on the precipice of disappointing, you found a way to come through. You put a smile on my face as I went to bed, knowing that you’d done it again and that the sky really was the limit. Of course, I recognized that it would never be so spectacular for all these months. I knew there’d be some nights when I might feel like pulling away, when I might think about dedicating my time, attention and passion elsewhere. I didn’t disconnect because I wanted it to work out. I pushed the warning signs away, even if I started to feel as if the separation and the potential through the middle of the summer fell short of my hopes.

Ultimately, as you know all too well, people remember the biggest moments. When these monumental days arrived, you seemed ready. Initially, you didn’t disappoint. But, then, something happened. It was as if the nagging concerns I had through the summer came back to haunt us. You hadn’t changed at all: It’s just that I saw the weaknesses, the deficiencies and the problems that limited you. You fought bravely to hold on, but it just wasn’t meant to be. The Red Sox and their fans, as it turns out, will continue to move forward, driven by the belief that those 108 wins will propel them all the way to the World Series. For me, I can only look back and smile, wondering about what could have been after that spectacular start and hope that, maybe next year, the Yankees and their dedicated fans from near and far will bask in the progression from summer success to the fall classic.

A 21st-century Machiavellian morality tale

I

t’s as if we are living in a James Bond movie but with one small difference: These events are real. A Saudi journalist walked into his country’s embassy in Turkey, we learn, and never came out. He entered at 1:14 p.m. Oct. 2, around the time he had been instructed to come, to pick up papers that would enable him to wed his Turkish fiancée. The wedding was scheduled for the next day. She was waiting outside in the car for him to re-emerge. There Between is video of him entering the building you and me but none of him BY LEAH S. DUNAIEF leaving. She waits outside but in vain. She does not see him again. The journalist, we continue to learn, is Jamal Khashoggi, a dissident in his country and critic

of the royal family who felt sufficiently at risk to leave and move to the United States. He lived in Virginia and was a Saudi contributor to the Washington Post, for which he said he could write freely. Khashoggi was good friends with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan. In addition to the video at the Saudi Consulate, there are further videos of two Saudi charter planes landing at the Istanbul airport the preceding night and that same day. Those disembarking were 15 men, all apparently known to the Turkish officials as members of Saudi intelligence. One was identified as an autopsy specialist who carried a bone saw. They all came to the embassy. Late in the afternoon, all reboarded the planes and returned to Saudi Arabia. Turkish authorities claim to have video and audio showing that Khashoggi was killed in his country’s embassy and his body dismembered. To date, they have not shown the evidence, claiming they do not want to expose intelligence sources. Until now the Saudi government has denied any knowledge or connection with the events in the embassy but has in the last couple of days changed its story. As a

TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA We welcome letters, photographs, comments and story ideas. Send your items to P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733 or email alex@tbrnewsmedia.com. Times Beacon Record Newspapers are published every Thursday. Subscription $49/year • 631-751-7744 www.tbrnewsmedia.com • Contents copyright 2018

result, it now suggests that the journalist was accidentally killed while being interrogated. Aside from the morbid fascination with these events, why should we in the United States care? We are directly involved because Khashoggi, though still a Saudi Arabian citizen, lived here and was a well-known columnist. Further, Saudi Arabia is a fulcrum of President Donald Trump’s Mideast policy, both in the context of any Israeli-Palestinian peace plan, in the Middle East wars and also in our effort to diminish the influence of Iran. In addition, the Saudis buy billions of dollars of military arms from us and play a major role in the supply chain of oil. The president’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, is known to have cultivated a close relationship with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who is effectively controlling the government. In the past, members of the Bush family too, while in office, were closely tied to the Saudi royals. Now prominent members of Congress are urging Trump to impose economic sanctions on Saudi Arabia. Trump is caught between all of the previously given reasons not to alienate the

EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Leah S. Dunaief GENERAL MANAGER Johness Kuisel MANAGING EDITOR Alex Petroski EDITOR Alex Petroski

LEISURE EDITOR Heidi Sutton ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Kathryn Mandracchia DIR. OF MEDIA PRODUCTIONS Michael Tessler

Saudi government, and the outrage and disgust of world leaders at a possible grisly murder that is assumed to have been authorized by “MBS” — how the crown prince is known. Revulsion is plain to see as some corporate leaders have withdrawn from a global economic conference, the Future Investment Initiative — known as “Davos in the Desert” — that is scheduled in Riyadh for next week. The conference is seen as something of a prestigious triumph for MBS. So far, Trump has offered the suggestion that “rogue killers” may be responsible for the possible murder, even as he threatened “severe punishment” if the Saudi royal family were found to be involved. Steve Mnuchin, the Treasury secretary, is still slated to participate in the conference. A decision on his going is expected by Friday. So what will carry the day here, humanitarian or political concerns? Will the world move on, forgetting a single journalist in the interests of Machiavellian gain? Or will there be an honest, vigorous investigation as this morality tale plays out across the globe? Stay tuned.

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 A24 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 18, 2018

Meet the difference makers.

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