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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. 34, No. 48
October 21, 2021
$1.00 Julianne Mosher
Royals take on Porters A11
PJ ties Greenport in boys soccer
41st annual Setauket Artists exhibition opens this weekend Also: Halloween Happenings on the North Shore, Halloween Kills reviewed
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The auction is back!
Dozens come out to support the Port Jefferson Historical Society — A4
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PAGE A2 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 21, 2021
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OCTOBER 21, 2021 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A3
Village
State completes Route 25A makeover in Setauket and Port Jeff
BY RITA J. EGAN RITA@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
After a summer of slowdowns due to roadwork, it’s finally smooth sailing down Route 25A from Nicolls Road to Main Street/ East Broadway in Port Jefferson. State Assemblyman Steve Englebright (D-Setauket) said he’s delighted the work is completed. “It’s been something we’ve been advocating for a number of years, and it’s been a long time coming, but it’s finally here, and it’s a beautiful job that they’ve done,” he said. Before roadwork could be carried out by the New York State Department of Transportation, National Grid had to perform gas main replacement work, which involved maintenance of the underground distribution system. Work in East Setauket was scheduled to be completed by Memorial Day and in Port Jefferson by the end of June, according to a National Grid spokesperson. In August, National Grid returned because work took longer than expected in some spots. The utility company’s work was necessary
before milling and repaving of Route 25A by the DOT could begin. The project restored the road’s pavement by removing the existing asphalt overlay, repairing any damage to the underlying base and resurfacing with new asphalt. Englebright said last week there were still small spots here and there that still needed residual work done by the DOT, and crews were at the locations. “There were a number of holdups and glitches and delays,” Englebright said. “Quite frankly, the DOT did its best to overcome them, but there were some things that they didn’t really anticipate and found to be more complicated than they thought.” The assemblyman said even though the work took a little longer than anticipated it was still done in the fall time frame that the DOT originally hoped for with the job. In January 2020, former Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) announced $151 million in new funding to complement $743 million in direct state aid provided through the PAVE NY Initiative for local road and bridge projects. Of the allocation, $6.6 million was planned to help renew the Route 25A stretch, according to a press release from the
Route 25A in Setauket and Port Jefferson, pictured above in 2020, included numerous potholes and was in severe disrepair. File photo by Rita J. Egan
governor’s office. Englebright brought the severity of local road conditions to the attention of the state DOT. The designated areas have been subjected to serious degradation due to water seepage into road seams and large clusters
of filled potholes creating rutted, uneven and unsafe surfaces. One of the worst sections was the roadway near the East Setauket Post Office to CVS, but other sections had deteriorated rapidly, including the hill from Poquott into Port Jefferson.
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After missing out in 2020, the Historical Society of Greater Port Jefferson was finally able to host their annual Outdoor Country Auction. On Saturday, Oct. 16, dozens of interested buyers came together outside the Mather House Museum at 115 Prospect St. to bid on more than 200 unique items. Nick Acampora, president of the historical society, said that they were “so happy” to hold the event after COVID-19 canceled last year’s auction. “We love doing the auction because it’s a part of the community,” he said. “It’s so important to us because it’s a great time for everyone, while providing the funds to keep the historical society going.” Acampora said that everything from costumes to furniture was available for auction, many of the items being donated or sold on consignment. Some of them dated as far back as the 1800s, as well as coins from the Greek and Roman empires. While the final figures of money raised for the historical society wasn’t immediately available, Acampora said he thinks the organization did extremely well — but what was most important was bringing
the community back for a fun-filled and interesting get-together. “It was wonderful to welcome everyone back,” he said.
Mover and Shaker
OCTOBER 21, 2021 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A5
New SCCC president has big goals in new role BY JULIANNE MOSHER JULIANNE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM After a long and intensive search, Suffolk County Community College has officially welcomed its new president, Edward Bonahue. Now overseeing the college’s three campuses — Ammerman in Selden, Grant in Brentwood and Eastern in Riverhead — Bonahue said he’s excited to come back to Long Island after leaving for his education and career decades ago. Bonahue grew up in Setauket and attended Nassakeag Elementary School, Murphy Junior High and then Ward Melville High School, Class of 1983. “It was wonderful,” he said. “Growing up in the Three Villages was a wonderful privilege, just because it taught me about the value of education.” As a teen, he taught swimming lessons for the Town of Brookhaven, which he cites as the reason he became so fluent in the different areas of Suffolk County. “I had taught swimming everywhere from Cedar Beach to Shoreham,” he said. “I taught at the Centereach pool, Holtsville pool, West Meadow — it was one way of getting a sense that we live in a bigger place.” Bonahue said he was “one of those kids” who was involved with the arts more than sports — although he did run track during his junior and senior years. “Ward Melville was lucky to have a great arts program,” he said. “They have a great jazz program and I was in that generation of kids where I was in the Jazz Ensemble all three years.” His love of arts and humanities led him to North Carolina upon graduating, where he received his B.A. in English Literature at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem. After his undergrad, Bonahue took a job in Washington, D.C., working as an editor at the U.S. General Services Administration and then as managing editor for Shakespeare Quarterly at the Folger Shakespeare Library. “That convinced me: ‘Oh, yeah, I kind of like this. And I think I’m going to go back to graduate school.’” Bonahue enrolled at the University of North Carolina where he received his M.A. and Ph.D. in English Literature. He then moved with his wife to Gainesville, Florida, to hold the position of visiting assistant professor of humanities at the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at the University of Florida. In 2009, he was a Fulbright Scholar with the U.S. International Education Administrators Program in Germany, and in 2016-2017, he was an Aspen Institute College Excellence
A Ward Melville graduate and former Setauket resident is Suffolk County Community College’s new president. Photos from SCCC
Program Presidential Fellow. And while in Florida, Bonahue eventually headed to Santa Fe College, also in Gainesville, serving as the provost and vice president for Academic Affairs, along with several other roles. But as the years went on, he decided he wanted to head somewhere new and began looking for fresh opportunities. Through networking, he heard about a post back on Long Island – a place he knew very well.
New appointment at SCCC
Bonahue took on his new role officially on June 28. Under his leadership, he oversees the current enrollment of more than 23,000 credit students and 7,000 continuing education students. “One of the one of the opportunities for Suffolk going forward is to think about how we’re serving all of Suffolk County,” he said. “It’s no secret that the number of traditional students graduating from high school is going down every year. Over time, that’s a lot of students.” While the majority of SCCC students are on the traditional path, Bonahue said that moving forward they need to figure out ways to do better outreach to nontraditional students.
Bonahue said one of his many goals is to converge with employers and help their workers continue their education through Suffolk or connect them with future employees while still in school. He added that in a postCOVID world where there can be gatherings, he would like high school guidance counselors to come and visit. “I think high school students get a lot from recommendations from their teachers and guidance counselors — especially students who are underserved because of the parents haven’t been to college, they don’t have that network of what it’s like to go to college,” Bonahue said. “So, they rely on their teachers and guidance counselors for that information.” He added that one thing that was learned during the 2020 census is Long Island is becoming a more diverse place. “Many have not had the privilege of any exposure to higher education,” he said. “And that’s what community college is for — providing access to educational opportunity and access to economic opportunity for folks who, without it, might be stuck in some kind of dead-end, entry-level service sector job.”
Bonahue noted that SCCC as a college needs to internalize its mission is not only to serve 19-year-old students. “Our mission is also to serve a mom with a baby at home, someone who’s taking care of parents, someone who’s working in a family business, could be a worker who’s already been on the job and has been displaced — those are all of our students,” he said. “I think our mission is to embrace that larger sense of community, and then on top of that there are areas of Suffolk County that have not been particularly well served, or where services are not as strong as elsewhere.” Appointed by SUNY Chancellor Jim Malatras, the SUNY Board of Trustees and the Suffolk Board of Trustees, Bonahue said that in his new role, he wants the college to be an agent of change. “I think they wanted someone who understands that Suffolk County is a diverse place — that it has many constituencies and that the three campuses have different personalities,” he said. “So, someone used the phrase that I checked a lot of boxes for Suffolk. My hope is that also I can present pictures of best practices that are practiced in high performing community colleges across the country, and if those best practices have not been adopted by Suffolk, then I think we have huge opportunities in terms of best practices that relate to community outreach, to academic and student support services, programming, workforce development, transfers and so forth. I think I think I can make a big contribution to Suffolk in a variety of ways.” Bonahue said he plans on being not just on Selden’s Ammerman campus, he wants to be active on all three. “I’m going to try to celebrate Suffolk across the whole county, including being present on all three campuses,” he said. “Each college serves a slightly different demographic, but one of the things I sense is that the college is hungry for a coherent and unified strategy.” Coming back to Long Island was an exciting moment for Bonahue over the summer, but now it’s time for work. Since school started Sept. 2, he has been busy meeting faculty, staff and students, while focusing on his plans to better the local community college. “I loved growing up on Long Island,” he said. “And so, it’s been a pleasure to return here.” Julianne Mosher is an adjunct professor at Suffolk County Community College.
PAGE A6 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 21, 2021
LEGALS NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF SUFFOLK, FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION (“FANNIE MAE”) A CORPORATION ORGANIZED AND EXISTING UNDER THE LAWS OF THE UNITED S TAT E S OF AMERICA, Plaintiff, vs. MYRSA D. BONET A/K/A MYRSA D. B O N E T- PAG L I A R O ; CHRISTOPHER J. PAGLIARO, ET AL., Defendant(s). Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly filed on October 25, 2018, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville, NY on November 10, 2021 at 9:00 a.m., premises known as 1 Miranda Drive, Ridge, NY 11961. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk and State of New York, District 0200, Section 240.00, Block 01.00 and Lot 012.007. Approximate amount of judgment is $361,195.56 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index # 605930/2017. Cash will not be accepted. COVID-19 safety protocols will be followed at the foreclosure sale. Brian T. Egan, Esq., Referee Knuckles, Komosinski & Manfro, LLP, 565 Taxter Road, Suite 590, Elmsford, NY 10523, Attorneys for Plaintiff 4567 10/7 4x ptr
To Place A Legal Notice Email: legals@tbrnewsmedia.com petition signed by at least 25 members of the Port Jefferson Free Library Association. All applications must be received by 9:00 p.m. on Friday, November 12, 2021. Voting will be by paper ballot at the Annual Meeting on Wednesday, January 12, 2022 from 10:00 a.m. 9:00 p.m. Absentee ballots will be available at the Circulation Desk from December 10, 2021 through January 11, 2022. To be eligible for consideration as a candidate or to vote in the election, a person must be at least 18 years old, a member of the Port Jefferson Free Library Association; that is, he/she must be a resident of Union Free School District #6, and have a library card in good standing. PLEASE ADDRESS ALL CORRESPONDENCE TO: ELECTION COMMITTEE PORT JEFFERSON FREE LIBRARY 100 THOMPSON STREET PORT JEFFERSON, NY 11777
The Library Trustees have announced one seat on the Board is due to expire and a new five-year term will be filled by an election during the Annual Meeting. Interested persons are invited to apply. Applications are available at the Circulation Desk. A completed application must include a resume, a written statement of interest, and a written
FURTHER RESOLVED that this expenditure of funds from the Terryville Fire District Purchase of Equipment Capital Reserve Fund shall be subject to a permissive referendum and that the Fire District Secretary shall, within ten days from adoption of this resolution, publish the required notice and otherwise take any steps necessary to effectuate the same; BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF FIRE COMMISSIONERS OF THE TERRYVILLE FIRE DISTRICT Dated : October 14, 2021 Port Jefferson Station, New York Frank Triolo District Secretary 5187 10/21 1x ptr
4700 10/7 3x ptr TERRYVILLE FIRE DISTRICT Port Jefferson Station, New York Notice of formation of Clowder Cats LLC. Arts of Org. filed with Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 09/23/2021. Office location: 135 Middle Country Road, Ridge, Suffolk County. Process of service to Traci Teabo, 135 Middle Country Road, Ridge, New York 11962. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. 5105 10/21 6x ptr
PORT JEFFERSON FREE LIBRARY TRUSTEE POSITION
RESOLVED THAT an expenditure not to exceed the sum of $20,000 to be made from the Terryville Fire District Purchase of Equipment Capital Reserve Fund in order to purchase: (4) Mobile radios. Smoke machine. Bunker Gear
TERRYVILLE FIRE DISTRICT Port Jefferson Station, New York NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Board of Fire Commissioners, Terryville Fire District, in the Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk, State of New York, being duly convened in the regular meeting on October 14, 2021 after due deliberation thereupon did adopt the following resolution:
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Board of Fire Commissioners, Terryville Fire District, in the Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk, State of New York, being duly convened in the regular meeting on October 14, 2021 after due deliberation thereupon did adopt the following resolution: RESOLVED THAT an expenditure not to exceed the sum of $180,000 to be made from the Terryville Fire District Buildings & Grounds Capital Reserve Fund in order to purchase: Floor replacements at Station 1 and Station 2, Station 1 Boiler replacement, Air Duct Cleaning, Shop roofing. Dispatch Chairs, FURTHER RESOLVED that this expenditure of funds from the Terryville Fire District Buildings & Grounds Capital Reserve Fund shall be subject to a permissive referendum and that the
Hope Children’s Fund hosts 5K fundraiser Suffolk County Legislator Kara Hahn (D-Setauket) is a daily runner who has participated in many local races, but her effort on the Port Jefferson/Setauket Greenway on Saturday, Oct. 16 in the Annual Kenya/USA Bi-Continental race was special. For the last 17 years, Hope Children’s Fund, a local not-for-profit, has held a 5K fundraiser in support of the Jerusha Mwiraria Hope Children’s Home for AIDS-affected former street children in Meru, Kenya. Hahn came in first among the female competitors in this year’s event with a time of 28:52. The overall winner was Setauket resident Donald Dodge, with his time of 24:28. The Kenyan times were inconclusive, but in all of the competitions since 2005, the Kenyans have won 16 times. Photos from Larry Hohler
Fire District Secretary shall, within ten days from adoption of this resolution, publish the required notice and otherwise take any steps necessary to effectuate the same. BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF FIRE COMMISSIONERS OF THE TERRYVILLE FIRE DISTRICT Dated: October 14, 2021 Port Jefferson Station, New York Frank Triolo District Secretary
5188 10/21 1x ptr
PUBLIC NOTICE The Board of Fire Commissioners of the Terryville Fire District, at their regular meeting held October 14, 2021, have changed the dates of the following listed meetings for 2021; Thursday, November 11 to Tuesday, November 9 6:00 PM
Tuesday, November 23 6:00 PM Thursday, December 9 to Wednesday, December 8 6:00 PM Thursday, December 23 to Monday, December 20 6:00 PM By Order of the Board of Fire Commissioners Frank Triolo District Secretary 5195 10/21 1x ptr
Thursday, November 25 to
OCTOBER 21, 2021 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A7
Community News County remembers pregnancy and infant loss with a ‘Wave of Light’ BY JULIANNE MOSHER JULIANNE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM To honor of National Pregnancy and Infant Loss Awareness Day, one local woman has spearheaded a county-wide event to honor and remember the little lives lost. Elizabeth Kennedy, of Rocky Point, shared her story nearly two years ago with Legislator Sarah Anker (D-Mount Sinai), sparking the Suffolk County Legislature to unanimously approve a resolution, and designate Oct. 15 as “Pregnancy and Infant Loss Remembrance Awareness Day” back in 2020. Sponsored by Anker, it was introduced to increase awareness of the causes and impacts surrounding pregnancy and infant loss and to improve understanding, support and potential resources for those who grieve the loss of a pregnancy or an infant. Kennedy lost her second child, who was named Grace, when she was 26 weeks and six days pregnant on Feb. 25, 2018. Struck with grief she felt that she needed to find an outlet to help her cope with her loss, so she began researching different infant loss support groups. Through her online search, she found the Star Legacy Foundation — a national organization whose mission is to increase awareness, support research, promote education and encourage advocacy and family
support regarding stillbirth, pregnancy loss, and neonatal death. After helping to organize a virtual candle lighting — called the “Wave of Light” — on Zoom to show respect for families and loved ones who have experienced loss last year, she and her fellow organizers decided to finally host an in-person event for 2021 at Heritage Park on Friday, Oct. 15. At 6:45 p.m. nearly a dozen people came together to mourn and share their stories for one of the county’s first Wave of Light events at the park. “I think it’s important to have advocates like Elizabeth Kennedy to provide these types of events to help people understand that they’re not the only ones dealing with these challenges,” Anker said. “There are so many women, and even men, that need to understand they are not the only ones that have that have experienced the sense of tremendous loss.” According to the Star Foundation, thousands of families in the United States experience pregnancy and infant loss each year. In the United States there are approximately 24,000 stillbirths, or 1 out of 160 births, a year. In addition to stillbirths, current research suggests that between 10% and 20% of medically confirmed pregnancies end in miscarriage. While 2020 was the first year Suffolk County
Photo by Julianne Mosher
acknowledged the day, the month of October was proclaimed as “Pregnancy and Infant Loss Awareness Month” by President Ronald Reagan in 1988.2021 was special to Kennedy and her family, because they were able to stand together in-person. “Compared to last year, this was so much better and it’s nice to have everybody here with us,” she said at the event. County Legislator Kara Hahn (D-Setauket)
also visited the ceremony and helped light candles, too. “No one can understand the loss of a child, but we can certainly together try to educate others and try to share our love and our support and empathy and compassion to try to help,” she said. As for Gracie, the Kennedy family knows she’s looking down smiling. “She continues to inspire,” Anker said.
Stanley Feltman, veteran and former TBR person of the year BY RITA J. EGAN RITA@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Stanley Feltman of Coram, a 2019 TBR News Media Brookhaven Person of the Year and World War II veteran, died Sept. 23. He was 95. Feltman was known to many as the veteran who sold poppies at the Middle Island Walmart to raise money for his fellow veterans. Often he would have a shopping cart filled with articles and wartime photos. Some days he would take a break from his regular location and collect money at the Walmart in Centereach or East Setauket. In a 2019 TBR News Media interview, Feltman said he had met so many generous people through the years. He usually would collect between $80 and $100 after standing there for two hours. One day a gentleman shook his hand and noticed he was cold and bought him a jacket from the store. One woman gave him a $20 bill one day saying it was for him to keep. “I took the $20, and when she left, I threw it in the pot,” he said. “I don’t need the money.” A member of the Jewish War Veterans of the USA Col. Mickey Marcus Post 336, Feltman would bring the donations to the post’s monthly meetings where he and his fellow members decided where the money should go. Post
Comdr. Norman Weitz said over a few years they have been able to donate more than $21,000 thanks to Feltman’s fundraising efforts. The post is a regular contributor to many veterans causes, including the Long Island State Veterans Home at Stony Brook University. “My father was more proud of what he did with selling poppies for the veterans than anything he did in the war,” his son Richard said in a recent phone interview. “That was to him most important — selling poppies was his lifeline.” His son said he and his brother Scott were proud of his father not only because he was a WW II vet but also because he gave back to other veterans. “The fact that he was giving back to other veterans who might need help and providing them money to be able to give them things that they may have needed — especially those vets coming back from the War on Terrorism and not necessarily getting what World War II vets got when they returned — I couldn’t be happier with my father,” Richard Feltman said. Stanley Feltman, who was born April 5, 1926, in Flatbush, Brooklyn, was a B-29 tail gunner and double ace in the U.S. Army Air Corps, which he joined after he graduated from
Stan Feltman, above in a 2019 photo, sold poppies at local Walmart stores to raise money for fellow veterans. Photo by Rita J. Egan
high school in 1944. Feltman one time after being shot down had to escape on a raft. When a fellow soldier slipped off the raft into sharkinfested waters, Feltman dove down to save him and grabbed him by the collar. Feltman earned the Bronze Star Medal for saving the man’s life. The medal wasn’t the only one earned during his service, as he gained more medals in total
throughout his time in the Air Corps, even though they were no longer in his possession. Richard Feltman said local elected officials helped the family reissue many of his father’s medals when he was inducted into the Four Chaplains Society in 2020 for the work he had done selling poppies. During this time in the Army Air Corps, he became an amateur boxer. One day when he was being bullied by another soldier for being Jewish, he punched him. When a drill sergeant witnessed the fight and Feltman’s skill, he encouraged Feltman to take up boxing where he was undefeated. After his time in the service, Feltman went on to become a carpet salesperson. In addition to raising money for veterans, Feltman participated in lectures at schools and senior groups, including Erasmus Hall High School where he attended while growing up in Brooklyn. He also was interviewed for the Library of Congress Veterans History Project, an initiative established to collect and preserve firsthand remembrances of wartime veterans. Feltman was predeceased by his wife, Marilyn. He leaves behind his two sons Richard and Scott and five grandchildren. Funeral services were held Sept. 24 at New Montefiore Cemetery in West Babylon.
PAGE A8 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 21, 2021
Hometown History
Charles A. Scanlan, a story in stone BY KENNETH BRADY DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Cedar Hill Cemetery is located in Port Jefferson on a commanding site high above the village’s downtown and harbor. Among those at rest in the cemetery, there are over 40 soldiers and sailors who served with the North during the Civil War. Capt. C. A. Scanlan is also buried in the cemetery, but he fought against the Union forces in the South’s Lost Cause. His tombstone is inscribed with “C.S.A.,” the initials representing the Confederate States of America. Who was this former Rebel officer and how did he become one of Port Jefferson’s permanent residents? Charles Anthony Scanlan was born in Beaufort, South Carolina, in 1825. Married twice, he had a daughter with his first wife. Scanlan worked as a shipsmith on the docks in Charleston, South Carolina, worshipped at the city’s First Baptist Church, was a Freemason, and belonged to the local militia. After South Carolina seceded from the Union, Federal troops transferred from the
garrison at Fort Moultrie to the stronger Fort Sumter, both part of Charleston’s harbor defenses. Scanlan was among the Carolinians who then occupied the abandoned Fort Moultrie. Scanlan began his duties at the emplacement on Jan. 1, 1861, served as an acting military storekeeper and readied the stronghold’s guns and ordinance for what would become the bombardment of Fort Sumter. The action began on April 12, 1861, when a ring of Confederate batteries around Charleston Harbor hammered Fort Sumter, the barrage announcing the start of the Civil War. Described as a “sergeant” in a later account of the assault, Scanlan led a detachment of six men in Fort Moultrie’s magazine, one of the emplacements blasting the Union forces Following the evacuation of the Federal garrison at Fort Sumter, Scanlan was assigned to Fort Walker on South Carolina’s Hilton Head Island. In official accounts of the battle, Scanlan was identified as a “lieutenant” and commended for his work in the citadel’s magazine. After tours at South Carolina’s Castle
Interior view of Fort Moultrie, Charleston, South Carolina, April 1861, where Scanlan served during the attack on Fort Sumter. Photo from a stereograph; Library of Congress
Pinckney and Fort Beauregard, Scanlan was assigned to Fort Sumter, where he was wounded in August 1863 during the Union’s bombardment of the Confederate stronghold. Scanlan ended his days in the military as a captain. He returned to Charleston where he resumed his work as a shipsmith, later pursuing an entirely new career. Phosphate rocks, which existed in large quantities near Charleston, were used in the manufacture of commercial fertilizer. Scanlan fabricated machinery that improved the dredging of the valuable rock from South Carolina’s riverbeds. Securing patents on his inventions in 1877 and 1883, Scanlan profited handsomely from the Scanlan’s tombstone at Port Jefferson’s Cedar Hill Cemetery. extensive phosphate Photo by Kenneth C. Brady digging in the Ashley paleontologists used the specimens in their River region. During the mining operations, fossils were studies of early forms of life. Growing older, Scanlan reflected on his found in the phosphate deposits. Fascinated with natural history, Scanlan began gathering years in the military, thinking that at the time the specimens, amassing the largest private of the Civil War he had been “in the right” to collection of fossils in South Carolina and support disunion, but later coming to believe he had fought in a “mistaken cause.” among the largest in the nation. Although he had once worn Confederate Following the death of his second wife Eliza in 1890, Scanlan moved to Port Jefferson Gray, Scanlan was treated respectfully in to live with his daughter Mary Estelle who Port Jefferson by his former foes. During had married Henry Randall, a prominent Port Decoration Day ceremonies at Cedar Hill Cemetery in May 1905, he was among those Jefferson businessman and banker. The Randalls spent summers at their honored by Lewis O. Conklin Post 627, Grand house on Port Jefferson’s Myrtle Avenue and Army of the Republic (GAR), a Union veteran winters at their home in Brooklyn, with the organization with a “camp” in the village. Scanlan died in Brooklyn in 1907. elder Scanlan joining in the seasonal move. Scanlan quickly became well-known in Following Baptist services held at his sonPort Jefferson. In 1893, he exhibited portions in-law’s Port Jefferson home, Scanlan was of his fossil collection at the village’s Athena buried at Cedar Hill Cemetery. In 1913, Scanlan’s massive collection of Hall (Theatre Three) and later in many of fossils, amounting to over nine barrels of Port Jefferson’s storefronts. But two events brought Scanlan even wider diggings, was sold by his estate to Connecticut’s acclaim. His fossils were displayed at the Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences and at where Scanlan’s legacy lives on. Kenneth Brady has served as the Port the Agricultural Palace during the Charleston Exposition, both shows earning Scanlan rave Jefferson Village Historian and president of the Port Jefferson Conservancy, as s well as reviews for his superb collection. Besides providing his fossils for public on the boards of the Suffolk County Historical viewing, Scanlan donated items from his Society, Greater Port Jefferson Arts Council collection to universities and museums and Port Jefferson Historical Society. He is a in the United States and abroad, where longtime resident of Port Jefferson.
School News
From left, Port Jefferson Middle School art teacher Stacey Schuman, Board of Education President Ellen Boehm, District Director of Music and Fine Arts Michael Caravello and Earl L. Vandermeulen High School freshman Mia Cormier. Photo from PJSD
OCTOBER 21, 2021 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A9
Port Jefferson student-artist honored The Port Jefferson School District congratulates Earl L. Vandermeulen High School freshman Mia Cormier for her artistic talents. She was recognized at the Oct. 12 board of education meeting. Mia’s work was featured on the school district’s 2021-22 calendar. District Director of Music and Fine Arts Michael Caravello
introduced Mia to the board members and spoke highly of her efforts last school year with the computer graphicdigital landscape project under the guidance of Port Jefferson Middle School art teacher Stacey Schuman. Mia was presented with a framed copy of her artwork, and she and Schuman were both presented with certificates of appreciation.
Shared vision of Port Jefferson Board of Education commended
Port Jefferson School District Board of Education members were honored for their efforts throughout the year on behalf of the students in the district at the Oct. 12 board of education meeting. The special accolades highlighted the New York State School Board Association’s School Board Recognition Week (Oct. 1822) and the annual awareness campaign spotlights the important role that school board members have within a school district. Port Jefferson’s seven board members — President Ellen Boehm, Vice President Tracy Zamek and trustees Randi DeWitt, David Keegan, Ravi Singh, Rene Tidwell
and Ryan Walker — were commended for their tireless efforts on behalf of students, staff and community residents. Superintendent of Schools Jessica Schmettan introduced members of the district leadership team — Mary Kay Butera (president of the United Paraprofessionals Association), Anthony Butera (president of the Port Jefferson Teachers Association), Michael Caravello (president of the Port Jefferson Administrators Association) and Merrill Dona (president of the Port Jefferson Office Staff Association) — who all had words of appreciation for the board of education’s service and stewardship of the school district.
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From left, Port Jefferson Board of Education members student representative Lucy DeWitt, trustee Randi DeWitt, trustee Rene Tidwell, president Ellen Boehm, trustee David Keegan, (from left, back) trustee Dr. Ravi Singh, trustee Ryan Walker, vice president Tracy Zamek. Photo from PJSD
PAGE A10 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 21, 2021
Port Jefferson health classes tackle serious topics for high school students BY JULIANNE MOSHER JULIANNE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Students at Earl L. Vandermeulen High School have been welcoming special guests this month in Michael Maletta’s health classes to cover reallife issues, while taking notes on preventative measures for bad situations. On Monday, Oct. 18, April Manis, an educator with the Long Island Coalition Against Domestic Violence, presented a lesson that’s timely and serious for young people — what is and isn’t normal in a relationship. While Maletta said he’s been hosting guests on a variety of topics over the last two decades, Manis said that there has been a county-wide increase in inquiries from LIADV since the disappearance and murder of Bayport native, Gabby Petito. Petito went missing last month while on a cross-country road trip with her boyfriend, Brian Laundrie. Last week, her remains were found in Wyoming and Laundrie – who is a person of interest — has not been seen in weeks. “With the pandemic, we haven’t been doing programs as much in-person — we still have been doing a lot of virtual — but it’s not the same. I love to see the students faces and the participation is so much better in-person,” she said. “I do feel like they get a lot out of it, and nobody teaches people how to be in a relationship, so it’s important to
hear some healthy tips.” The health class helps to cover and address differences between caring, supportive relationships and controlling or abusive relationships in an interactive program. Manis played a game called “Stay or Go?” which consisted of several real-life experiences that show unhealthy relationship traits, focusing on power dynamics, patterns, boundaries and compromises that often arise in relationships. “I try to keep them awake and engaged,” Manis said. “And even if they just remember one or two things, then we did something.” Maletta said that LIADV has been coming into his class for more than 20 years and he asks them to visit because the reality is that students will be in relationships and learning about healthy habits in those relationships is important. “I tell my parents in back-to-school nights that I want to be an advocate for them. What are some of the concerns that they have for the child because I can there for their concerns,” he said. “Fortunately, health class is wide-reaching, and we talk about things like depression, stress, bullying, suicide, drug abuse, drug use, relationships, contraception — all these different real-life situations that they’re going to go through.” Maletta added he tries to do different things to get through to his students. “Although the district currently provides the
April Manis with the Long Island Coalition Against Domestic Violence in Michale Malett’as health class. Photo by Julianne Mosher
required mental health education by New York State Education Department, the program was initiated by health teacher Mike Maletta, as part of a series of social-emotional instruction and resources to further expand on the mental and social-emotional health of Port Jefferson \ students,” said Director of Health, Physical Education, Athletics and Nursing Adam Sherrard.
Earlier this month, Response of Suffolk County spoke to students about depression, anxiety, stress and suicide, while this week the Suffolk County Police Department will be speaking about cyber law and safety. In December, Outreach House will speak about drug addiction through the eyes of recovering teenage drug addicts that live at the facility.
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Sports
Go to tbrnewsmedia.com for more sports photos
Royals tie Porters 2-2
BY BILL LANDON DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM It was a game that began in brilliant sunshine turned to a driving rain. When the rain stopped, the wind picked up before darkness ended the contest which left Port Jefferson in a 2-2 tie with Greenport Oct. 18. Greenport struck first when Ricky Campos scored but Port Jeff’s Daniel Owen evened the score late in the first half. Jonah
Plaster was the spark in the second half when he scored the Royals go-ahead goal at the 18-minute mark for a 2-1 lead. Declan Crowley made it a new game when he scored six minutes later. As daylight grew short the game went to a 10-minute overtime period without a decision for a 2-2 final in the league VII matchup. Port Jeff junior Jonathan Bosewell had five saves in net.
— All photos by Bill Landon
PAGE A12 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 21, 2021
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OCTOBER 21, 2021 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A17
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PAGE A18 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 21, 2021
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PAGE A20 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 21, 2021
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OCTOBER 21, 2021 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A21
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PAGE A22 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 21, 2021
Editorial
Letters to the Editor What’s wrong with today’s politics
Stock photo
Fall cleanups Over the summer, dozens of nonprofits and organizations hosted beach and park cleanups across Long Island. People came together with their trash bags in hand to pick up debris and trash. Families made days out of it, grabbing dinner afterward with the kids. Couples turned it into a bonding experience. While it’s inspirational and helpful for members of the community to work together to clean up the communities in which we live, shouldn’t the town government take the lead with these efforts? To that end, the road along Route 25A in Setauket has eyesores that detract from the beauty and safety of our community, including several dead trees, overgrown gardens, leaves and debris. Street lights that protect pedestrians and help drivers navigate the area are dimming, making them less useful as we approach days with less sunlight. Long Islanders receive and appreciate the return on investment from their taxes, particularly when roads are cleared after a storm or when children receive excellent educations from public schools. Given the tax bill, however, shouldn’t the town be able to use some of that money for upkeep? The community doesn’t police itself and shouldn’t need to clean up accumulating messes or detritus from trees or other vegetative growth. Residents can, and should, dispose of their own trash. Landlords should also take responsibility for the space outside their residences. As for those public places the village, town or county oversees, those responsible for upkeep on those properties should step up their game. We appreciate the work the municipalities do, particularly under difficult circumstances and, at times, with limited resources. We are also grateful to the go-getters whose efforts enhance the beauty of the communities we share. At the same time, we need our elected officials and people with authority to take action to remove these dead trees, fix dim lights and remove garbage by the side of the road. The effort they put in now will save money and aggravation later, as well as improve the local environment.
The most recent letter to the editor attacking Congressman Lee Zeldin [R-NY1] by frequent letter writer Shoshana Hershkowitz [“Public health has become politicized,” Oct. 7] is a good example of what is wrong with today’s politics. She accuses Zeldin of playing politics and yet her entire letter— as all of her quite numerous anti-Zeldin letters do — proceeds to leave out facts. The congressman is simply calling for a more reasonable policy that respects our heroes in health care, while avoiding staffing shortages at the worst possible time. Why do progressives embrace authoritative measures so quickly against health care workers that were literally putting their own lives in danger in the beginning of the pandemic? Why is it so unthinkable for Ms. Hershkowitz to give a health care worker who has had COVID-19 and acquired natural immunity a testing option? Or why couldn’t the policy allow for workers to wear an N95 mask when dealing with patients? The supply of masks that actually stop virus particles — unlike cloth masks — has increased and these professionals are trained to properly wear them. Why is naturally acquired immunity not embraced by progressives even though there have been numerous studies released by reputable sources, including the Cleveland Clinic, Washington University in St. Louis, a Johns Hopkins University professor and a major study out of Israel, that show it can be more effective than vaccinated immunity, and that prior COVID infection induces “robust” and “longlived immune response”? Why do all the people that claim to “follow the science” leave out any mention of these options for health care workers? They deserve more than a lawn sign saying “thank you,” they deserve reasonable, sensible, fact-based options. Another disturbing issue revealed in her anti-Zeldin letter is what is destroying civil discourse and politics in this country. She stated it is “a failure of leadership and of morals.” That is the problem, folks. Why can’t the discussion stay on topic regarding science and facts and reason? Is it really immoral to offer health care workers — many of whom are our neighbors that risked their lives — a safe way to keep doing their jobs?
I have not heard Republican leaders say to not get vaccinated. I am not against vaccines. I am against people who make every issue a moral one when it is something that can be addressed fairly by making reasonable accommodations for the health care workers who most certainly earned them. Charles Cozzolino Setauket
A vote for Ira Costell
I write this letter in support of Ira Costell for Brookhaven town clerk. In the 15 years that I have lived in the Town of Brookhaven, I have found town government to be opaque in regard to transparency and information. Costell’s commitment to transforming how local government works will be the breath of fresh air that this town needs. This past summer I attended a public hearing of the Town Board regarding rezoning the area around the Brookhaven Landfill in Yaphank. To my dismay, residents of this area were not notified of the rezoning, and the information about the rezoning was not made available to the public on the town website until a couple of days before the hearing. This is just one example of what needs to change in how our town government operates. Residents deserve a navigable website where they can access information in a timely manner. The inefficiency of our town operation costs us unnecessary funds. Everyone in Brookhaven knows that to get the permits you require, you have to hire an expediter. Given that we live in one of the most expensive areas in the nation, having to hire an expediter for processes is ridiculous. Too many of us are already struggling to afford to live on Long Island and having to spend thousands of additional dollars for permission to do house projects is another example of why we desperately need change in Brookhaven Town. Another place that our local government is sorely lacking is that of providing requested information. The Freedom of Information Law requires public records to be made available upon request. As a member of the Brookhaven Landfill Action & Remediation Group, I can attest that our group’s FOIL requests have come up against a cone of silence, despite repeated asking for this information. Good government is dependent on freedom and accessibility of information, and Brookhaven Town has failed spectacularly on that front. The office of the town clerk is one that interfaces regularly with the public,
whether it is for birth certificates, death certificates, marriage licenses or permits. We need a person in the office who will compassionately interact with residents. Having seen Ira Costell do just that in our community, I know he will be a town clerk that delivers on muchneeded transparency and efficiency with graciousness. He has long been a figure in our community dedicated to caring for others, whether it is through his work on the opioid crisis or on environmental issues. He will bring that passion for public service to the office of town clerk and give us the government we deserve. Shoshana Hershkowitz South Setauket
Biden needs to end the filibuster
In November 2020, millions of voters like me went to the polls and cast a ballot for Joe Biden [D]. Now, with a relentless GOP attack on our voting rights underway, I’m asking President Biden to return the favor. It’s time for Biden to go further than talking about supporting voting rights legislation. We need him to come out and fully support ending the filibuster so the U.S. Senate can finally pass voting rights legislation like the Freedom to Vote Act and the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act. With the filibuster intact, these bills stand little chance of passing. We need the president to use his power of office to pressure the Senate to end the filibuster and clear a path for voting rights reform. We can’t outorganize voter suppression. History will remember how Biden handles these attacks on our right to vote. I’m urging him to do the right thing. Tricia Kilcommons Miller Place
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OCTOBER 21, 2021 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A23
Opinion Thoughts on items to include in a 2021 time capsule
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ith 10 weeks left until the end of 2021, it seems fitting to consider what we might put into a time capsule that future generations might open to understand the strange world that was so incredibly different from the one just two years ago. Here are a few items I’d throw into a box I’d bury or shoot into space. — Masks. Even with so many events where people aren’t wearing masks, including huge D. None gatherings of fans at sporting events, masks of the above are still a part of our BY DANIEL DUNAIEF lives in 2021. — A Netflix app. I’m not a streaming TV person. Most of my regular TV watching involves sports or movies (many of which I’ve seen a few times before). Still, I got caught up in the “Stranger Things” phenomenon and am now impressed with the storylines from
“Madam Secretary,” which include prescient references to our withdrawal from Afghanistan and to the potential (and now real) pandemic. — Pet paraphernalia. The number of homes with pets has climbed dramatically, as people who seemed unwilling or uninterested in having dogs are out with their collection of poop bags, leashes and pieces of dog food to entice the wayward wanderer in the right direction. — A zoom app. Even with people returning to work, many of us are still interacting with large groups of people on a divided screen. Future generations may find all this normal and the start of eSocializing and virtual working. Many of us today are still trying to figure out where to look and avoid the temptation to scrutinize our own image. — Cargo ships. The year started off in March with the blocking of the Suez Canal. For six days, the Ever Given kept one of the world’s most important canals from functioning, blocking container ships from going from the Mediterranean Sea to the Red Sea. As the year has progressed, concerns about shortages and supply chains have triggered fears about empty shelves.
— A small model of the Enterprise. The ship from the show “Star Trek” seems apt in a 2021 time capsule in part because William Shatner, who played the fictional Captain James T. Kirk (or admiral, if you’re also a fan of the movies), traveled briefly into space. In many ways, the science fiction of the past — a telephone that allowed you to look at someone else — is the fact of the present, with FaceTime and the aforementioned zoom. — Competing signs. Protesting seems to have returned in full force this year. As the year comes to a close, people who do and don’t believe in vaccinations often stand on opposite sides of a road, shouting at cars, each other and the wind to get their messages across. — A syringe. We started the year with people over 65 and in vulnerable groups getting their first doses of a vaccine that has slowed the progression of COVID-19, and we’re ending it with the distribution of booster shots for this population and, eventually, for others who received a vaccine eight months earlier. — Take-out menus. I would throw several take-out menus, along with instructions about leaving food at a front door, into the time capsule. While numerous restaurants are operating close to
their in-dining capacity, some of us are still eating the same food at home. — An Amazon box. Barely a day goes by when I don’t see an Amazon delivery truck in the neighborhood, leaving the familiar smiling boxes at my neighbors’ front doors. — Broken glass. I would include some carefully protected broken glass to reflect some of the divisions in the country and to remember the moment protesters stormed the capital, overwhelming the police and sending politicians scrambling for cover. — Houses of gold. I would throw in a golden house, to show how the value of homes, particularly those outside of a city, increased amid an urban exodus. — A Broadway playbill. My wife and I saw a musical for the first time in over two years. We were thrilled to attend “Wicked.” The combination of songs, staging, acting, and lighting transported us back to the land of Oz. Judging from the thunderous applause at the end from a fully masked audience, we were not the only ones grateful to enjoy the incredible talents of performers who must have struggled amid the shutdown.
With frogs in my pool and woodpeckers on my shingles, I wonder what Nature plans next
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here I was, tapping on my computer keyboard, when what sounded like a pneumatic drill started tapping right outside my window. I jumped up, ran down the hall, out the front door and around the house to be greeted by the sight of an unperturbed woodpecker. Busily bobbing his beak into my shingles, he ignored me for a few seconds, despite my frantic hand waving and yelling, then cocked his head to see what the fuss was about. We looked at each other but he didn’t leave. I picked up a pine cone that had fallen on my driveway and threw it in his direction, along Between with a couple of words I you and me wouldn’t repeat in polite BY LEAH S. DUNAIEF company. Slowly, letting me know it was his idea, he flew away.
He left behind three black holes on the side of the house, each the size of a quarter. I went back inside to my computer, and then there he was again, rat-tat-tatting on the shingles. The words, “How much wood could a woodpecker peck if a woodpecker would peck wood?” passed through my mind as I again ran out the door and yelled. This time he moved away more quickly. I made a little pile of pine cones along the side of my driveway and returned to my computer. Not five minutes later, the scene repeated itself. I replenished my arsenal, knowing he would be back, and he was. Good heavens, what was I to do, stand guard all day? What if I hadn’t been home? From the number and size of the holes, he had clearly been there before. A truce seemed at hand. I pulled out my cell phone and dialed my neighbor. Yes, he was aware that there was an energetic woodpecker among us. In fact, hadn’t I heard? The neighbor on the other side of my house was having his wood shingles removed and replaced with vinyl that looked like wood but obviously didn’t taste the same. Maybe
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the culprit had just moved over to my shingles. Next, I called my trusty neighborhood hardware store. Yes, they had heard of such a problem before and they did have one possible remedy, a roll of reflective tape for $7 that I should cut into 3-foot strips and hang from my house. We rushed down to get the tape and also bought a roll of twine. Back home we did as instructed, knotted the red and silver streamers to the twine at five-foot intervals as if on a clothesline, then hung the entire line high up across the side of the house. We repeated the process for the front of the house where he had also started pecking. I am lucky to have saintly friends who executed these maneuvers on ladders for me. When it was done, we stood back and looked at the handwork. The house looked decorated for Halloween. As you might expect of me, I researched “woodpeckers” on my computer and found four reasons that woodpeckers would carry on this way. The first was to make a “satisfyingly loud noise and proclaim that this was his territory and attract a
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mate.” Bully for him. The other three explanations were less romantic but more practical: to find food in the shingles, especially larvae of carpenter bees, leafcutter bees and grass bagworms; to store food; for nesting. I further found some good news, or at least some consolation. It seems that ancient cultures associated woodpeckers with luck, prosperity and spiritual healing. To other cultures they represented hard work, perseverance, strength and determination. Woodpeckers are, apparently, among the most intelligent and smartest birds in the world. More good news in the form of fortune cookie messages: When they appear, it is time to unleash one’s potential and change any situation to one’s best advantage. From woodpeckers one can imbibe the skills of being resourceful and determined. They encourage the power to unshackle ingenuity and creativity in those around them. Well, now you know. Whatever success ensues, I will owe it to my woodpecker. P.S. After one more short visit, he has not come back.
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AwardWinning Newspapers 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020
Year After Year
PAGE A24 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 21, 2021
East End Eye is now part of Northwell Health Eye Institute. 669 Whiskey Road, Ridge, NY 11961 (631) 744-8020 251 East Oakland Avenue, Port Jefferson, NY 11777 (631) 473-5329 329 East Main Street, Suite 10, Smithtown, NY 11787 (631) 265-2580 46850 Route 48, Southold, NY 11971 (631) 765-0088 937 East Main Street, Riverhead, NY 11901 (631) 369-0777 Scott B. Sheren, MD Eric T. Vinokur, MD Daniel C. Hamou, MD Marc Dinowitz, MD Ilana Forchheimer, MD
Geoffrey Weisman, MD Andrew R. Bontempo, OD Tami Lapp, OD Cynthia Zara, OD
The Northwell Health Eye Institute is a select network of Northwell physicians with over 60 subspecialty ophthalmologists across 25 locations throughout the New York metropolitan area. 51710
After many years of proudly serving our community, the board certified ophthalmologists and optometrists of East End Eye are now part of Northwell Health Eye Institute and Northwell Health Physician Partners. Dedicated to providing high quality compassionate care, we use the latest research and technology to coordinate care plans personalized for each patient’s needs, with a focus on wellness.