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Read up on local races before heading to the polls on November 2.
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Trotta condemns alleged corruption in Suffolk County BY JULIANNE MOSHER JULIANNE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Suffolk County Legislator Rob Trotta (R-Fort Salonga) held a press conference last week, criticizing Democrats over the hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign contributions made by the Suffolk County
Police Benevolent Association. Trotta made his case Oct. 21 with paperwork and news clips to back up his claims. This comes less than two weeks before the Nov. 2 election, where he attacked District Attorney Tim Sini (D) and County Executive Steve Bellone (D). “What we have here is New York State election law that’s being violated over and over again every single day — and it’s costing the taxpayers of this county millions of dollars,” Trotta said. According to the legislator, “New York State election law is very clear. All campaign contributions must be voluntary. You cannot force an employee to give you money, but that’s exactly what’s happening here in Suffolk County.” Trotta said that county union employees are being “forced” to give money and cannot get out of doing so. “They write letters to the district attorney, they write letters to the county executive, the coun-ty comptroller and they don’t stop it,” he said. “And that’s wrong. It corrupts county govern-ment and why does it corrupt county government? Because the unions gain so much power by giving money to certain politicians.
Legislator Rob Trotta presents evidence to support his claims of democrats unlawfully taking money from union workers for their political campaigns. Photos by Julianne Mosher
They can never be beat.” A retired Suffolk County police officer himself, Trotta is also seeking reelection next week. He recalled that as an SCPD employee, he approved a $1 per paycheck deduction ($26 a
year) to go to the PBA. However, he said he never authorized additional funds be given to political campaigns. Trotta also said he is just one of two elected officials in the legislature who do not take money from the police union.
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DISTRICT ATTORNEY TIM SINI:
A PROVEN Leader with the Experience We Need to Protect Suffolk County December 21, 2019
Historic Takedown: MS-13 Arrests Deal Blow to Gang Leadership on Long Island
August 31, 2021
Suffolk County has aggressively pushed to hold dealers accountable for overdose deaths
April 23, 2021
PROTECTING SUFFOLK COUNTY 4 DISMANTLING MS-13 4 TAKING ON THE OPIOID CRISIS 4 OPPOSES BAIL REFORM 4 PROTECTING OUR DRINKING WATER FROM POLLUTERS ELECTION DAY
November 2
Suffolk DA, Water Authority Join Forces To Target Drinking Water Pollution
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County
It’s such a wonderful day, File photo by Rita J. Egan
at our shops in Stony Brook Village and SoHo, New York City.
Bellone tests positive for COVID-19 BY DANIEL DUNAIEF DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone (D) tested positive for COVID-19. The County Executive, who is vaccinated and has been observing mask mandates, is unsure of how he contracted the virus. Bellone has mild symptoms and is currently not receiving any medical treatment. “I hope this serves as a reminder to all residents that while we are making incredible progress in the war against COVID-19, we are
not done just yet,” Bellone said in a statement. “I encourage anyone who is eligible to receive their booster shot to do so.” At this point, no other members of his office staff or his family has tested positive. Bellone said he feels in “good health and spirits,” according to the statement. He will continue to carry out the duties of the County Executive. Meanwhile, the percentage of positive tests on a seven-day average in Suffolk County fell below 3% on Oct. 20, dropping to 2.9%, according to
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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
To Place A Legal Notice Email: legals@tbrnewsmedia.com SUBJECT TO PERMISSIVE REFERENDUM NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Board of Fire Commissioners of the Port Jefferson Fire District at a regular meeting thereof held October 13, 2021 duly adopted the following resolution: BE IT RESOLVED pursuant to the Town Law of the State of New York that the Port Jefferson Fire District expend from the Apparatus Reserve Fund for the purchase of a Class A Fire Pumper, a sum not to exceed $750,000.00 and be it further RESOLVED that the cost of said purchase, together with any incidental costs, including publishing, contracts, equipment, etc. to be paid out of the Apparatus reserve fund, presently existing, and be it further R E S O LV E D, that the resolution is adopted subject to permissive referendum as provided in the General Municipal Law of the State of New York and be it further RESOLVED, that the secretary of the Fire District, within ten (10) working days of the adoption of this resolution, publish a notice within the Times-BeaconRecord Newspaper setting forth the date of the adoption of the resolution and an abstract of the resolution concisely stating the purpose and effect thereof and that the resolution was adopted subject to a permissive referendum.
Fire District, in the Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk, State of New York, being duly convened in the regular meeting on October 19, 2021 after due deliberation thereupon did adopt the following resolution: “ R E S O LV E D T H AT an expenditure not to exceed the sum of$18,000 to be made from the Terryville Fire District Purchase of Equipment Capital Reserve Fund in order to purchase: (3) Nonin Co-Pilot system with 8330AA 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 19, 2021 Port Jefferson Station, New York Frank Triolo District Secretary 5247 10/28 1x ptr
What: 2021 Port Jefferson BID Directors Election When: Tuesday, November 2, 2021 Where: Port Jefferson Village Center @ 6:30pm Po r t Je f f e r s o n B I D @ g m a i l . com
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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.
Dated: October 18, 2021 BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF FIRE COMMISSIONERS OF THE PORT JEFFERSON FIRE DISTRICT Barbara Cassidy Secretary 5211 10/28 1x ptr
TERRYVILLE FIRE DISTRICT Port Jefferson Station, New York
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NOTICE OF RESOLUTION
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Board of Fire Commissioners, Terryville
Bellone COVID-19 Continued from A5
the Suffolk County Department of Health. Local health care providers have been encouraged by the overall decline in positive tests, which they attribute in part to ongoing vaccination efforts. The Food and Drug Administration provided emergency use authorization for the Moderna booster for a specific groups of people who were fully vaccinated at least six months ago. Those groups include: people 65 years and older; people 18 through 64 who are considered at high risk; and people 18 through 64 with occupational exposure. The FDA also approved the use of a single booster dose for people who received the Johnson & Johnson vaccine at least two months ago. The FDA also allowed a mix and match approach to boosters, authorizing those who received one type of vaccination to choose a different booster. Local health care providers said studies have shown that people who received the J&J vaccine had a higher antibody response after receiving a Moderna booster. “The available data suggest waning immunity
in some populations who are fully vaccinated,” Acting FDA Commissioner Janet Woodccock said in a statement. “The availability of those authorized boosters is important for continued protection against COVID-19 disease.” Peter Marks, director of the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research said the FDA would gather additional data as quickly as possible to assess the benefits and risks of the us of booster doses in additional populations and plans to update the healthcare community and the public in the coming weeks. For more information on vaccines in the area, residents can go to suffolkcountyny.gov/vaccine. The web site also includes answers to frequently asked questions, such as: what are the side effects after I get the COVID-19 vaccine, is it safe to get a COVID-19 vaccine if I have an underlying medical condition, and what should I do if I am exposed to COVID-19 after being vaccinated. Early in the pandemic, Bellone remained in quarantine and managed his responsibilities from home after Deputy County Executive Peter Scully tested positive for the virus. Bellone didn’t test positive at that point, although he, like so many others in the early days of the disease, waited days for the results of his COVID test.
Support local families with Lions Club 2021 Food Basket Fund Drive We will be going out this year Dear Friends and Supporters, I am proud to contribute my time and on Saturday, Dec. 11. We need your financial support. energy as a Lion in support Last year our food bill of many local charities. was nearly $10,000 and we As a member I am able to helped about 100 families help sponsor a guide dog, and a local shelter. aid local veterans, support I’m asking members of charities like Lions Eye our local community, both Bank, Meals on Wheels, businesses and individuals, and Angela’s House. to support our worthwhile Most rewarding has project by sending a check been our food basket to the Port Jefferson Lions drive where we deliver groceries to families in Club, PO Box 202, Port need during the winter Jefferson, NY 11777, Attn. holidays. food baskets. A typical delivery is to Suggested sponsorship a single mom with several is $50. Any amount will be Rick Giovan children living in a small much appreciated. Thanks apartment nearby. These for your support. families are so thankful to get this food. — Rick Giovan
5329 10/28 1x ptr
NOTICE TO BIDDERS Sealed Bids will be received, publicly opened and read aloud at 11:00 a.m. in the Town Hall Lobby of the Town of Brookhaven, One Independence Hill, Third Floor, Farmingville, NY 11738, for the following item(s) on the dates indicated: BID #21060 – Portable Pitching Mounds November 10, 2021
BID #21061 – Roadway Sign Supports November 10, 2021 Specifications for the abovereferenced bids will be available beginning October 28, 2021. Preferred Method A c c e s s w e b s i t e : b r o o k h a v e n N Y. g o v / Purchasing: click on link for Bids. Follow directions to register and download document.
Questions must be submitted in writing to the following e-mail: PurchasingGroup@ brookhavenny.gov
minorities and womenowned businesses and HUD Section 3 businesses to participate in the bidding process.
The Town of Brookhaven reserves the right to reject and declare invalid any or all bids and to waive any i n f o r m a l i t i e s o r irregularities in the proposals received, all in the best interests of the Town. The Town of Brookhaven welcomes and encourages
Further information can be obtained by calling (631) 451-6252 Kathleen C. Koppenhoefer Deputy Commissioner TOWN OF BROOKHAVEN 5331 10/28 1x ptr
OCTOBER 28, 2021 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A7
ELECTION 2021
PAGE A8 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 28, 2021
Election 2021
Tim Sini and Ray Tierney butt heads in DA race BY RITA J. EGAN RITA@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM The race between Suffolk County District Attorney Tim Sini (D) and prosecutor Ray Tierney, who is running on the Republican and Conservative lines, has been a contentious one. At the forefront, Tierney has questioned whether Sini has been as tough on crime as the DA himself has said, especially regarding the MS-13 gang. The two sat down with TBR News Media’s editorial staff Oct. 11 to discuss several issues including the biggest ones facing Suffolk County.
Meet the candidates
Sini was first elected to the DA’s office in 2017 and is running for his second term. His background includes being an assistant attorney in the Criminal Division of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York where he ultimately specialized in violent crimes, which included prosecuting murder trials. He went on to serve as Suffolk’s assistant Suffolk County District Attorney Tim Sini and prosecutor Ray Tierney sit down with the TBR News Media editorial staff to discuss their different approaches. Photos by Rita J. Egan deputy county executive for public safety and was appointed to the county police each year. He said since he’s been in office about results.” case involved three years of wiretapping commissioner position in January of 2016. violent crimes are down by about 30% and He also criticized Sini for the number of investigations. The takedown netted a “I love my job,” Sini said. “I wanted to overall crimes more than 20%. He added times his office has used plea bargaining, multitude of arrests, and Sini said his office year-to-date crime is down 7%. serve in my own backyard.” giving the example of a drug dealer that is now prosecuting the cases and is having a “We’ve been very effective in keeping Sini charged with a top count in 2021. lot of success. Tierney also grew up in Suffolk County. The DA said the reason Suffolk safe, and also moving However, he said, a year He began his law career in why many were charged with the criminal justice system in earlier that same dealer was the Suffolk DA’s office under murder conspiracy instead the right direction, but we charged with criminal sale DA James Catterson (R). of murder was because law knew that we had to reform of a controlled substance and The challenging candidate enforcement was able to stop the DA’s office and that’s then allowed to plea. left the DA’s office in 1999 and the killings from happening why I ran initially,” he said. went on to work for a private “If he’s a kingpin in due to the wiretaps used in Weeks before his election 2021, why do you give him firm and returned to the DA’s the investigation. Sini’s predecessor, former a misdemeanor in 2020?” office in 2002 and remained “Our detectives would go DA Tom Spota (D), was Tierney said. for another six years. out and stop the violence, arrested. Sini said the office He then worked in the Sini said pleading in certain and then we charged the has been reformed in various cases is not unusual, and the U.S. Attorney’s Office in the defendants in some cases ways. There has also been DA’s office may not have the Eastern District of New York with murder conspiracy,” he the hiring of more than as an assistant attorney for evidence needed in 2020. —Tim Sini said. “We stopped 10 murders 100 people, an increase in more than 11 years. from happening that way.” He left the office in 2019 —Ray Tierney diversity and an overhauling MS-13 gang He said the office, of the training program. to become an executive Tierney said Sini talks in addition to murder Tierney disputed Sini’s assistant district attorney in crime statistics saying about the biggest MS-13 gang busts and conspiracy pleas, has received pleas to assault the Kings County District shootings are up in Suffolk County, and asked for defendants’ names, pleas and and criminal possession of weapons, which Attorney’s office where he was in charge of the violent criminal enterprises bureau, crime he wants to use his experience in crime sentences. He also asked why not one was have significant sentences attached to them. “We’re making a difference in terms of charged with murder. strategies to bring those numbers down. strategies unit and body worn camera unit. MS-13 on Long Island, there’s no denying “If you have a crime strategies unit, if “Statistics can be manipulated,” Tierney In order to run for Suffolk County DA, Tierney had to leave the Brooklyn office said. “What we’re going to do is we’re going every two weeks you’re letting the statistics that,” Sini said. “And it’s not just the DA’s come out the stats will speak for themselves,” office, and we’re not suggesting otherwise. and is currently Suffolk Regional Off- to index the crimes.” It’s a collaborative effort from the local the prosecutor said. Tierney has criticized Sini’s approach Track Betting Corp.’s chief counsel for Tierney said doing so is an example police department, all the way up to our during his campaign. He said the DA’s office compliance and enforcement. will announce numerous indictments via press of being independent from the police and federal government.” Tierney said there were 46 gang releases but he said the office doesn’t send out county executive. Statistics Sini said his office has been part of one members on the indictment, and each one as many announcements about convictions. Sini said crime since he became police “I don’t dispute for a fact that he has very of the largest MS-13 takedowns, where 96 was responsible for two murders, which CONTINUED ON A9 commissioner and even as DA has gone down splashy arrests,” Tierney said. “I’m talking people were indicted in one county. The
‘Statistics can be manipulated. What we’re going to do is we’re going to index the crimes.’
‘We’re making a difference in terms of MS-13 on Long Island, there’s no denying that.’
OCTOBER 28, 2021 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A9
SINI/TIERNEY
thwart 10 murder conspiracies, all at once, it’s an impossibility. There’s no way that 10 murder conspiracies come to fruition at the exact date of the takedown.” Tierney said Sini seals his cases because he doesn’t want the public to see the plea bargains that he has given. Sini said that was false since indictments are public, except for certain cases that may need to be sealed due to cooperators or under certain circumstances, and it’s appropriate to do so.
Continued from A8
Sini interrupted and said it was murder conspiracy. “Now he said he thwarted 10 murders,” Tierney said. “Now how exactly did he thwart those 10 murders? By arresting them? Well, the manner in which he arrested them was, he had this big splashy takedown after two years and then he arrested all 96 at once. So, in order for that statement to be true, that would have meant that as he prepared his press release, as he called all the media, as he got everything all ready for the takedown, the night before 10 murders became apparent. And then he took those individuals down.” Tierney said he has a problem with that style as “that’s not how it works when we do our MS-13 indictments.” “We take them down as soon as possible,” he said. “We don’t care about the indictment. We care about the results, and you can’t
‘We’re running to be a CEO of a major law firm. I have significant managerial experience with a track record. He has zero.’
Drug epidemic
Sini said the drug epidemic has been one of the most significant public safety problems for more than a decade. He said the approach is investing in prevention, treatment, recovery and law enforcement. “Law enforcement even —Tim Sini plays a role in treatment, too, because you can create and implement diversion programs, where you get low-level offenders who are suffering from addiction into treatment programs,” he said. He added drug offenders also need to be aggressively investigated and prosecuted.
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‘We take them down as soon as possible,” he said. “We don’t care about the indictment. We care about the results ...’
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He has zero.” Sini said he believes his office has done “great work on a number of different fronts,” and he’s running on his record. “We brought some of the most significant cases in the region on a variety of public safety fronts — the drug epidemic, gang violence, human trafficking, environmental crime.” Tierney said he never thought he would get involved in the political process. “I think what we’re seeing is our leadership is gaslighting us,” he said. “We’re being told everything’s great, everything’s wonderful. They are talking points.” Tierney said the main function of the office is to Summing up prosecute. Sini said that Tierney has —Ray Tierney “We are dismissing criticized him for not having cases,” he said. “We’re not as much trial experience indicting cases. This is the as he, and said that’s just management of the office, but an issue of age, since he is younger than the challenger. The DA said to say you’re a CEO and a manager’s office, that while prosecuting is part of the job there it is the prosecutor’s office. We need someone to prosecute those cases.” is more to it. “We’re running to be a CEO of a major The winner of the DA race will hold office law firm,” he said. “I have significant managerial experience with a track record. for the next four years.
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“We’ve done that,” he said. “I’ll give you two examples, both in terms of bringing operators and major trafficker charges the top felony counts, these are significant prosecutions, and we’re leading the state on doing that.” He said the sentences can be 25 years to life. Tierney said he feels the most significant public safety problem is the rise of crime in the county, whether gun violence or the opioid epidemic. He added it’s important to keep an eye on the U.S. southern border as powder fentanyl is being brought into the country. The powder form is sprinkled into cocaine unbeknownst to the buyer.
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PAGE A10 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 28, 2021
Election 2021
Sheriff Toulon speaks on staffing shortage among COVID challenges
BY KYLE BARR DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Errol Toulon Jr. (D) is running again for his seat as the Suffolk County sheriff with the hope to continue his efforts providing aid services for nonviolent inmates alongside the office’s law enforcement work with gangs and sex trafficking. Toulon’s opponent, William Amato, who is running on the Republican ticket, did not respond to multiple requests for a debate with TBR staff. The Suffolk County GOP office confirmed Amato is not actively campaigning. Toulon, who has cross-party endorsements from both the Suffolk Democratic and Conservative parties, said his job as head of his department is “to take the brunt of everything, good and bad. And during these real challenging times, I have to ask, ‘How do I keep my staff calm, how do I keep them safe, how do I feel like they’re still valued?’” And compared to his previous positions in corrections, his current job gives him a satisfaction he hasn’t had before. “I have a job now that directly impacts the community that I live and work in,” he said. The Suffolk County Sheriff’s Office is the law enforcement branch dedicated to managing Suffolk’s jail system. Along with handling inmate populations, the office’s sheriff deputies are responsible for patrolling roadways alongside Suffolk County Police Department, investigating crimes committed on county property as well as managing the Pine Barrens protection hotline. The Sheriff’s Office also contains several specialized bureaus and sections for emergency management, DWI enforcement, domestic violence, among others. Toulon, a former Rikers Island officer and captain, was voted into his first four-year term as sheriff in 2017 and was the first Black man elected to the role in the county’s history. Over those four years, his office has been involved with several high-profile drug and gang investigations, which included fact-finding trips to El Salvador and Los Angeles to investigate the connections of MS-13 to Long Island. He is proud of his office’s accomplishments, including his work with the office’s human trafficking unit and the creation of the START Resource Center, which provides inmates leaving county jails with employment and housing assistance as well as drug treatment and mental health care services. But the year 2020 would throw a monkey wrench into all best-laid plans. Toulon said last year started out rough with the change to New York’s bail reform laws. Then the COVID-19 pandemic created a host of new challenges, especially safeguarding prison populations as well as corrections officers. During COVID’s height, officers kept inmates largely separated, which resulted in a minimal
Suffolk County Sheriff Errol Toulon Jr., above, will be running for his second term this November. His opponent William Amato is not actively campaigning. Photo from Toulon’s office
number of reported cases in Suffolk jails. Still, the year did have its share of tragedies, including the loss of Investigator Sgt. Keith Allison, a 25year veteran of the office who died from issues relating to the virus in December. Recently, the Sheriff’s Office had to cancel its open house and family day due to staff shortages and the spread of the Delta variant. The sheriff’s website reports that, in September, 29 inmates tested positive for COVID, where 26 of those reportedly contracted the virus while in jail. Inmates are required to quarantine in a special housing pod for 14 days before being moved to general housing. Staff must take temperature checks and wear masks when coming into the facilities. And all these extra protections have exacerbated current staffing shortages. Toulon said the Sheriff’s Office is currently down around 180 corrections officers and 43 sheriff’s deputies. The recruitment struggle is one felt across many industries, law enforcement not excluded, though Toulon said his office has a uniquely difficult time getting people to apply, to have applicants pass the required tests and then to keep them on after they’ve had a taste of what can be a trying job at times. The challenge
in recruiting is partially due to what he said has been a degradation of trust between law enforcement and the community since the start of the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests. The Suffolk sheriff has also seen more senior officers retire because of health concerns during the pandemic, and because of COVID they were not able to host any new police classes last year. Though there are currently over 1,700 people who are ready to take the next law enforcement exam in November, the expected acceptance rate is normally around just 15% to 20%, Toulon said. This lack of staff also has the effect of increasing required overtime for current officers, leading to faster burnout. “Sometimes, even when you get through the entire process and they have their first days in a jail when they’re working a lot of overtime, having to deal with inmates … it becomes challenging on the individual, especially someone that’s not used to it,” the sheriff said. It’s another stress on a system that he said requires more financial help to truly give aid to the transient, nonviolent jail populations who need it. Toulon would like to see more psychologists and psychiatrists within the jail
providing counseling, though there’s currently no budget for it. “The mental health institutions throughout New York state were closed in the 1980s or 1990s, and so these individuals are winding up in jail, but [state government] never funded the jails,” he said. “The staffing model for the Sheriff’s Office was really from a 1960s or ’70s version, and it hasn’t been updated to what we need to do to address the particular individuals in our custody.” Though the sheriff said their new initiatives have not increased the office’s budget, he is still banging the drum for more funding. Suffolk County reportedly received approximately $286 million in aid from the federal American Rescue Plan back in May, though Toulon said they have not received any percentage of those funds. County spokesperson Derek Poppe said in an email that no ARP money is slated to go to the sheriff’s department. Challenges still exist for Suffolk jails due to the pandemic. Corrections officers are still required to wear masks on their shifts. At the same time, only around 40% of corrections officers are currently vaccinated. There is no legal requirement for Suffolk law enforcement to be vaccinated in order to work, and while Toulon is fully vaccinated, he said he told his staff to consult their primary care physicians to make that determination. “I understand it’s an individual’s choice at the moment,” he said. The number of people incarcerated in Suffolk jails hovers around 780, according to the sheriff, though that population is transient, and can change from day to day. The Sheriff’s Office, through the Suffolk County Department of Health Services, has tried to provide vaccinations for its inmates, leading to around 350 so far. Still, only approximately 30% to 40% of that jail population is currently vaccinated. “All we can do is just try to encourage the inmates to at least receive the vaccine — hopefully help them learn a little bit more if they’re a little skeptical before making that decision,” he said. As for the future, the sheriff said he wants to work hard to make sure that the majority of the inmate population — all those who are nonviolent and not a danger to the community — receive the social services they need. “Everybody should be held accountable for their actions, I should be very clear on that, and [incarceration] is necessary for those who would do harm to be removed from society,” Toulon said. “But those men and women that are going through domestic violence, substance abuse — we have many victims of human trafficking that are in our custody, many females that we’re working with — we want to help them, empower them so that they can support themselves and support their families.”
OCTOBER 28, 2021 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A11
Kara Hahn seeks re-election for District 5 she wants to finish all that she has started if reelected Nov. 2. On the Republican ticket is Salvatore Running for her sixth term in office, Suffolk Isabella, who is not actively campaigning and County Legislator Kara Hahn (D-Setauket) said did not respond to a request for a debate with the legislator at TBR News Media offices. Hahn, 50, said this is her last chance to run for her seat, where she has productively worked on a variety of issues throughout the county. “I love what I do,” she said. “I feel like I make a difference.” Over the last several months, Hahn — who serves as the county’s deputy presiding officer — has helped during the county’s experience with the COVID-19 pandemic and its continuous aftermath. “The pandemic really kind of opened up some old wounds from our health care perspective,” she said. “I think it’s clear — there’s more to do to make sure that our health department is ready for next time. I don’t think we’ve done a full-on analysis of how things went, because we’re still Kara Hahn at TBR News Media’s office. Photo by Julianne Mosher facing it.” BY JULIANNE MOSHER JULIANNE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
But the county legislator believes there needs to be a serious review so we as a whole can be better prepared for the next time. COVID-19 also halted several projects Hahn began working on before the pandemic such as the county’s recycling taskforce and emergency room opioid protocols — two of which she hopes to see through if reelected. She currently has two bills underway, one making sure that the county spends its opioid settlement money appropriately. “I feel really strongly that because we have [more than] $100 million, that will be coming to be spent over varying degrees, some of it can be spent immediately,” she said. “There’s time but I don’t think we should be reimbursing ourselves for expenses — I think that opioid settlement money should be spent on treatment and services for prevention.” She said that by creating programs for people with addiction, it could help get a handle on the drug epidemic that skyrocketed during the pandemic and quarantine. Hahn is also an advocate for the COVID vaccine and has been pushing the health department to help get the public vaccinated against the coronavirus. She said that while close to 80% of adults haven gotten their full vaccine, we do not know what percentage is needed across the full population to reach herd immunity, and lower the transmission rates in schools.
Chair of the parks and environment committees, Hahn said she hopes during her next term to see federal funding to go toward infrastructure in her district. She also said she wants to get “a task force going” as the Town of Brookhaven Landfill closes and changes happen with waste removal. Throughout her entire political career, Hahn said she has advocated on the importance of transitioning away from septic systems and how they impact Long Island’s drinking water. While Hahn is seeking her reelection for what would be her last term as legislator, she has also announced she will be campaigning for U.S. Congress next year. “I am running for Congress because I think there’s an opportunity to further help this community by getting someone from here there,” she said. “And I think that could really help.” While opposers might question Hahn’s devotion to her seat if reelected as she seeks higher office, she said she knows it will be difficult, but she is ready. “I know it’s going to be hard, but I’m very committed to this job,” she said. “The reason for me running is to just find yet another way to continue to help and work for this community, and I wouldn’t take that on if I didn’t think I could. I love this community, and this comes first, of course.”
Passion for Brookhaven’s town clerk post ignites as Lent and Costell debate BY KIMBERLY BROWN KIMBERLY@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM TBR News spoke with Town Clerk Donna Lent (R) and Ira Costell (D) over Zoom on Monday. They will be running against each other as the election for town clerk for the Town of Brookhaven approaches quickly. Lent, who is serving her second term as town clerk, has managed day-to-day operations such as issuing death certificates and handicap parking permits, while land-use applications are filed within the office. There are three divisions — licensing, registrar and administrative units — in her department alone, and on some days, Lent says up to 200 people will come into the office. After extensive training, Lent was certified as a registered municipal clerk by the New York State Town Clerks Association in 2017, but before entering public service, she worked as a law office manager and was a small business owner. Her opponent, Costell, has taken leadership roles in environmental causes such as the Suffolk County Watershed Protection Advisory Committee and served as chair of the county’s Pine Barrens Review Commission. He has been passionate about the fight against
opioid addiction and prescription drug abuse. Costell is a New York State-certified addiction and recovery coach and has been involved in various recovery committees. The two opponents came to TBR News Media’s offices to debate their opinions on whose ideas would be best suitable for the town clerk’s position. The concern of making Freedom of Information Law appeals more accessible to the public is something that Costell said he will actively work on if elected. His main argument is that residents of Brookhaven have been left in the dark when it comes to requesting information from the Town Clerk’s Office. However, Lent said if materials or records are not able to be provided, there is a reason as to why not. “They probably haven’t asked for the records correctly, we are not required to create records for them, we only have to provide what is already existing,” she said. “Sometimes people don’t search thoroughly because there was an aspect of something they weren’t unaware of that we were able to shed light on.” Rebutting Lent’s argument, Costell said he had very serious questions about the FOIL process as there were nearly 14,000 requests last
year in the town’s Law Department. “I would like to work as part of that process for an audit to figure out how we can streamline that process,” he said. Costell feels the information on the town’s website is not readily available to residents. “When initiating a public hearing notice on the town’s website, the information about the hearing is not connected to the notice, so residents don’t always know about the particulars of what’s being proposed in the public hearing,” he said. Lent said the Town Clerk’s Office does the public hearing notices, which are readily available on the website as soon as they go up. However, the town clerk does not make the determination on what needs to get posted because the notice is from what the Law Department already drafted. “It is incumbent upon the clerk in my belief, to coordinate and collaborate, not to just handle a piece of paper and move it on to the next level,” Costell said. In regards to communicating with the Town of Brookhaven, he said the software the office is using should be able to have direct sign-ups for people who are interested in a particular issue so people from various areas do not have to rely on someone from a different town to tell them there’s a hearing related to something they are
interested in. However, Lent said there is a sign-up system within civic clerks for alerts and areas of topic. She noted that residents can call her office to be added to get notifications as well. Costell believes that the Town Clerk’s Office should have more outreach to the public on a quarterly basis by using town facilities such as senior centers and recreational programs, to help residents navigate the online services or to assist communities that don’t have access to broadband. “We have been improving that process, that’s why we changed our software system last February,” Lent said. “There has been a period of adjustment for residents that were accustomed to finding documents within the old system, but if you use the search bar at the top it will take you to whatever you are looking for.” Disagreeing with Lent, Costell said he thinks the website is hard to navigate and should have the option to be translated to Spanish. Lent feels her opponent will be biting off more than he can chew if elected as town clerk. “Everyone has hopes dreams and aspirations of what a job may be like, but it’s not until you get into the job that you have to face the reality of day-to-day operations and restrictions,” Lent said.
PAGE A12 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 28, 2021
Election 2021– Sample Ballot 1
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OFFICE
(Vote for up to Eight)
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Republican
Conservative
12
District Attorney
(Vote for up to Two)
(Vote for One)
13
14
Sheriff
(Vote for One)
15
16
County Legislator
District Court Judge
(Vote for One)
(Vote for up to Two)
(5th District)
(6th District)
(Vote for One)
Democratic
Democratic
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Democratic
Democratic
Democratic
Democratic
Democratic
Democratic
Democratic
Democratic
Democratic
Democratic
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Susan B Heckman
Vito M DeStefano
Christopher Conrad D Modelewski Singer
Danielle M Peterson
Eileen Daly Sapraicone
Elizabeth Steven A FoxMcDonough Pilewski
Mary E Porter
Timothy D Sini
Errol D Toulon Jr
Kara Hahn
Stephen L Ukeiley
Republican
Republican
Republican
Republican
Republican
Republican
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Vito M DeStefano
Christopher Conrad D Modelewski Singer
Danielle M Peterson
Eileen Daly Sapraicone
Elizabeth Steven A FoxMcDonough Pilewski
Mary E Porter
Alfred C Graf
Raymond A William Tierney Amato
Salvatore SB Isabella
Stephen L Ukeiley
Conservative
Conservative
Conservative
Conservative
Conservative
Conservative
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Vito M DeStefano
Christopher Conrad D Modelewski Singer
Danielle M Peterson
Eileen Daly Sapraicone
Elizabeth Steven A FoxMcDonough Pilewski
Mary E Porter
Alfred C Graf
Raymond A Errol D Tierney Toulon Jr
Salvatore SB Isabella
Ira P Costell Republican 17
Karen M Wilutis
Conservative
Susan B Heckman
Democratic 17
Karen M Wilutis
Republican
Susan B Heckman
17
Town Clerk
Democratic
Timothy S Driscoll
C
11
1
Timothy S Driscoll
B
(Vote for One)
10
Family Court Judge
Democratic
Timothy S Driscoll
A
9
County Court Judge
Justice of the Supreme Court 10th Judicial District
Donna Lent Conservative 17
Stephen L Ukeiley
Karen M Wilutis
Donna Lent
Write-in
Write-in
Write-in
Working Families 14
Working Families
Kara Hahn
D Keep Crime Low 12
Keep Crime Low
Timothy D Sini
E
Write-in
Write-in
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Official Ballot for the General Election PR-ONovember POSAL ONE02, , AN2021 AMENDMENT County of SUFFOLK Amending the Apportionment and Redistricting Process LD# 5 Brookhaven E.D.(s): 1 Commissioners Board of Elections
Healthful
f the New York each person to onment. Shall the
This proposed constitutional amendment would freeze the number of state senators at 63, amend the process for the counting of the state's population, delete certain provisions that violate the United States Constitution, repeal, and amend certain requirements for the appointment of the co-executive directors of the redistricting commission and amend the manner of drawing district lines for congressional and state legislative offices. Shall the proposed amendment be approved?
Yes
PROPOSAL TWO, AN AMENDMENT Right to Clean Air, Clean Water, and a Healthful Environment
PROPOSAL THREE, AN AMENDMENT Eliminating Ten-Day-Advance Voter Registration RequiremSee ent Instructions on the other side
The proposed amendment to Article 1 of the New York Constitution would establish the right of each person to clean air and water and a healthful environment. Shall the proposed amendment be approved?
The proposed amendment would delete the current requirement in Article 2, § 5 that a citizen be registered to vote at least ten days before an election and would allow the Legislature to enact laws permitting a citizen to register to vote less than ten days before the election. Shall the proposed amendment be approved?
No
Yes
PROPOSAL THREE, AN AMENDMENT Eliminating Ten-Day-Advance Voter Registration Requirement
PROPOSAL FOUR, AN AMENDMENT Authorizing No-Excuse Absentee Ballot Voting
The proposed amendment would delete the current requirement in Article 2, § 5 that a citizen be registered to vote at least ten days before an election and would allow the Legislature to enact laws permitting a citizen to register to vote less than ten days before the election. Shall the proposed amendment be approved?
The proposed amendment would delete from the current provision on absentee ballots the requirement that an absentee voter must be unable to appear at the polls by reason of absence from the county or illness or physical disability. Shall the proposed amendment be approved?
Yes
No
Yes
No
Instructions
Mark the oval to the above/left of the name of your choice. To vote for a candidate whose name is not printed on the ballot, print the name clearly in the box labeled 'write-in', staying within the box. Any mark or writing outside the spaces provided for voting may void the entire ballot.
No
Yes
No
PROPOSAL FOUR, AN AMENDME Authorizing No-Excuse AbsenteRem e Ba
both The proposed amendment would de current provision on absentee ballots that an absentee voter must be unab the polls by reason of absence from illness or physical disability. Shall the amendment be approved?
Yes
No
PROPOSAL FIVE, AN AMENDMENT Increasing the Jurisdiction of the New York City Civil Court The proposed amendment would increase the New York City Civil Court's jurisdiction by allowing it to hear and decide claims for up to $50,000 instead of the current jurisdictional limit of $25,000. Shall the proposed amendment be approved?
Yes
No
309
Instructions for Voting on Questions and Proposals
The number of choices is listed for each contest. Do not mark the ballot for more candidates than allowed. If you do, your vote in that contest will not count. If you make a mistake, or want to change your vote, ask a poll worker for a new ballot.
To vote on a question or proposal, mark the oval below your choice. If you make a mistake, or want to change your vote, ask a poll worker for a new
OCTOBER 28, 2021 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A13
University
Maurie McInnis is inaugurated as Stony Brook University’s sixth president BY KIMBERLY BROWN KIMBERLY@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Stony Brook University celebrated the inauguration of Maurie McInnis as the university’s sixth president on Saturday, Oct. 23, at the Island Federal Arena, Stony Brook. Standing before students, alumni, local officials and representatives from universities across the country as well as family and friends, McInnis was proudly given her title as president. Transporting the crowd back to 1962, when Stony Brook University was merely a handful of buildings that has sprouted out of a field where potatoes were farmed, McInnis said the 800 students who first began their journey at the university would know that big plans were in the works. “Out of these potato fields and muddy woods on Long Island, an educational powerhouse would soon emerge, and in less than a decade our university grew ten-fold to 8,000 students and ambitiously recruited the faculty and staff that would come to define this institution,” McInnis said. Nobel Prize-winning physicist Chen Ning Yang came to Stony Brook in 1965 and became the university’s first director of the Institute of Theoretical Physics. To which McInnis said he must have sensed the university was making big moves and breaking new ground in areas of science. “Looking around the arena today, I see that same bold spirit that attracted Yang and legions of other distinguished faculty,” she said. “Thank you for joining me as we celebrate the luminous and ambitious future of Stony Brook University.” McInnis thanked the crowd for trusting her to lead the institution. Also touching on her own family’s heritage, which is rich in careers of education, she mentioned her great-grandparents and grandparents were both teachers. Her parents were also college professors and her husband is a first-generation college graduate. “I have dedicated my life’s work to this enterprise and I am thrilled and honored to apply my knowledge, experience and energy to Stony Brook University,” she said. “What I have
learned is that our institution yesterday, today and tomorrow is a university of dreaming big, of expanding the reach of discovery and creating knowledge for the benefit of society.” In 1973, the university welcomed Rich Gelfond, who came from a disadvantaged household in Plainview. Stepping foot onto the campus for the first time as a college student, Gelfond went full force in his academics by working on the school newspaper, designing his own curriculum, winning an election to be the first student on the university council as well as guest teaching at his own sports sociology class. “He was delivering on his potential, and then some, because he had found a university that valued the promise of first-generation college students,” she said. “He had found a university that wanted to empower its students to be their best.” McInnis said after college, Gelfond went on to be a successful investment banker, acquiring IMAX Corporation in 1994 where he remains CEO today. Touching on the topic of COVID-19, McInnis said she is proud of the way Stony Brook University has succeeded in the past year and a half by providing superior patient care and extending its reach across Long Island to care for new communities. “The power of a public research university is that it has the ability and the duty to benefit the community around it, as well as foster the groundbreaking discoveries that can impact the world for generations to come,” she said. As the university’s newest president, McInnis wants to ensure that Stony Brook is leading the way, serving the community and tackling the global challenges that face us in the coming century. “I look forward to seeing all that we can achieve,” she said. “The moment is upon us. Seawolves, let’s answer this call to greatness.” As chief executive for Stony Brook, McInnis also oversees Stony Brook Medicine, Long Island’s premier academic medical center, which encompasses five health sciences schools, four hospitals and 200 communitybased health care settings.
Stony Brook University celebrated the inaugeration of its new president, Maurie McInnis before the homecoming game on Oct. 23. Photos by Kimberly Brown
PAGE A14 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 28, 2021
Health
St. Charles Hospital offers veterans smiles and more Rogovitz has circled Nov. 3 on his calendar with highlighter in multiple colors. The retired marine has been eating soft foods. Rogovitz owes his life to his son Gene, who urged him to see a doctor for a general checkup in 2016. The doctor found early stage prostate cancer, which is in remission. Rogovitz is convinced he developed cancer during his service in Vietnam, when he was given a bag of defoliant and was told to rip it open and scatter it in the grass. In addition, he lay in fields sprayed with Agent Orange. Despite his health battles, Rogovitz, who calls himself a “young 74,” enjoys surfing with his son and his nine-year-old grandson, Gavin. In addition to biting into an apple, which he hasn’t done in about 12 years, he hopes to chew on an ear of corn on the cob.
BY DANIEL DUNAIEF DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Charles Rogovitz hopes to get bottom dentures so he can relieve the stomach pain he gets from partially chewed food and can eat an apple again. Todd Warren needs to have a root canal to become eligible for a new kidney. Rogovitz and Warren are two of the veterans who will attend free Port Jeffersonbased St. Charles Hospital’s “Give Vets a Smile” clinic on Nov. 3. The event, which has become biannual this year and is fully booked, will provide dental care for 20 to 25 veterans. Currently sponsored by a grant from Mother Cabrini Foundation, St. Charles has been providing an annual dental clinic for veterans since 2016. “Our goal is to reach out to the [veterans] who do not have traditional insurance through employers,” and who “fall through the cracks,” Dr. Keri Logan, director in the Department of Dentistry at St. Charles, explained in an email. “That includes veterans who are not 100% disabled and perhaps make too much money for Medicaid, those that are homeless and the like.” St. Charles hopes to “get as much done for them as possible,” which means that appointments typically include a visit with a hygienist as well as a dentist, Dr. Logan added. Dr. Logan explained that veterans who do not have insurance or the means to go to a dentist regularly for routine cleanings and treatment have an increased incidence of cavities, infections and/or periodontal disease. The event is in memory of Mark Cherches, who spent 57 years at St. Charles Hospital’s Dental Clinic and played a key role in bringing Give Veterans a Smile day to the hospital. Dr. Cherches “heard of this from another facility a few years back and he was instrumental in giving us the idea,” Dr. Logan explained. St. Charles is hosting the event at the Stephen B. Gold Dental Clinic. Ruth Gold, wife of the late Stephen Gold, who was a pediatric dentist and for whom the clinic is named, appreciates the fact that the clinic is expanding with outreach programs to help the community. The daughter of World War II veteran Milton Kalish, Gold is thankful for members of the armed forces who are “defending our country.” Gold added that her husband would be “pleased” with the effort. “These are people who wouldn’t ordinarily go out to get their teeth checked, so this is very important.”
Rogovitz
Indeed, Rogovitz hasn’t been to a dentist in a quarter of a century.
Warren
Photos clockwise starting from top: Rogovitz with his son Gene and his grandson Gavin surfing at Gilgo Beach in Babylon; Todd Warren; Charles Rogovitz. Photos from Warren and Rogovitz
A retired contractor who was a sergeant in the Marine Corps in Vietnam in 1967, 1968 and 1969, Rogovitz has lost his bottom teeth over the years, pulling them out when they come loose. A resident of Babylon Village, Rogovitz has visited dentists, who estimated that it
would cost $2,400 and about eight months to provide dentures for his lower jaw. He also needs dentures on his upper jaw. “I’m hoping for the best,” Rogovitz said. “Worst comes to worst, I’ll get a lower denture and I’ll be able to masticate my food properly and not have stomach issues.”
A veteran of the Navy who went on three deployments during Desert Storm, Warren has received dialysis three days a week for over 18 months. Warren, whose rank was Petty Officer 2nd Class E5, would like to join the list for a kidney transplant. “You have to be cleared by all these departments first,” said Warren, who is a resident of Bay Shore. “One of them is dental.” Unable to do much walking in part because of his kidney and in part because of his congestive heart failure, Warren can’t join the organ recipient list until he has root canal. “All of that is holding me up,” Warren said. “I have to get this root canal to get this kidney transplant.” While St. Charles Hospital can’t guarantee any specific treatment, the dental clinic does offer root canal work as a part of that day’s free dental service for veterans. Warren, who is 53, has sole custody of his nine-year-old son, Malachi. An athlete in high school who played basketball and soccer and ran track, Warren is limited in what he can do with his son in his current condition. Warren had two teeth extracted at the Veterans Administration and is also hoping to fill that hole. When he drinks, he sometimes struggles to control the flow of liquid, causing him to choke on soda or water. “I’m trying to do the best I can” with the missing teeth in the bottom of his mouth and the need for a root canal in the top, he said. On behalf of himself and other veterans, Warren is grateful to St. Charles Hospital. “I appreciate what they’re doing,” Warren said. “Let’s take care of the vets who were willing to put their lives on the line for this country.”
OCTOBER 28, 2021 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A15
When existing laws couldn’t protect our environment from illegal dumping, Kara Hahn did. When leaders failed to address the plastic pollution crisis, Kara Hahn did. When governments didn’t address the epidemic of drug overdose deaths, Kara Hahn did. And when Washington wouldn’t pass common sense gun legislation, Kara Hahn did.
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On Tuesday, November 2nd Vote to Keep Kara Hahn as our Suffolk County 5th District Legislator Vote Row A
PAGE A16 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 28, 2021
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OCTOBER 28, 2021 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A17
Law Office of Tara A. Scully, P.C. Providing a holistic approach to legal counseling regarding matters including:
Photos by Julianne Mosher
BY JULIANNE MOSHER JULIANNE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
On Saturday, Oct. 23, the Greater Port Jefferson Chamber of Commerce teamed up with local health care providers for their 12th annual Health and Wellness Fest. According to Barbara Ransome, director of operations with the chamber, the fair is usually held at Port Jefferson High School — but due to the COVID-19 pandemic, it was moved to a new venue, The Meadow Club, located at 1147 Route 112 in Port Jefferson Station. “We’re very happy to have the event after not having it for one year,” she added. “The new venue is working out great and it could be a new tradition for us.”
The purpose of the Port Jeff Health and Wellness Fest is to promote good health to all in the local areas of Port Jefferson by providing important information for all of one’s health and wellness needs. Ransome said that over 50 vendors participated this year, including Stony Brook Medicine, Catholic Health, Northwell Health, New York Cancer & Blood Specialists and other chamber partners. Stony Brook University students with Music and Medicine performed songs for visitors throughout the event. “I’m very pleased,” she said. Little ones who came with family members were able to trick-or-treat out of cars and received other goodies from the vendors, some who were in costume.
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Port Jeff Chamber hosts 12th annual Health and Wellness Fest
PAGE A18 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 28, 2021
Hometown History: Echo fades away BY KENNETH BRADY DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
For some of the residents of Comsewogue, now Port Jefferson Station, getting the mail once meant traveling from three to five miles to the post office in downtown Port Jefferson. Tired of the inconvenience, a group of Comsewogue’s citizens petitioned the government in 1888 to establish a post office within their community. The Postmaster General responded that so many places in the State ended in “ogue” that to avoid confusion Comsewogue would have to be renamed if a post office was to be considered for the area. The name Comsewogue and its many variants was an Algonkian term meaning “a walking place,” had appeared in Brookhaven Town records as early as 1805 and was rich in etymology and history. Nevertheless, the petitioners acquiesced and submitted several names as Comsewogue’s replacement: South Port Jefferson, Port Jefferson South, Maple Hill, Enterprise, Cedar Grove, and Jefferson Heights. Each was rejected, either for being too common or too long. In the next round of proposals, William I. Wyckoff suggested Echo, the same name as a famous racehorse once owned by Comsewogue’s Nathaniel Dickerson. Echo — only four letters long — was accepted by the postal authorities and Charles A. Squires appointed as the office’s first postmaster. A native of Good Ground (Hampton Bays), Squires had begun work as the depot agent at
Photos clockwise from top: The Hotel Echo was located immediately north of the LIRR tracks; The Echo Building on the west side of Main Street housed the Charles A. Squires Real Estate Agency, Port Jefferson Echo newspaper and Port Jefferson Station Post Office; Charles A. Squires, the ‘father of Port Jefferson Station.’ Bottom photos by Arthur S. Greene. All photos from the Kenneth C. Brady Digital Archive
the Port Jefferson Railroad Station in 1886 and soon earned a reputation in Comsewogue for his competence and geniality. Under Squires’ able leadership, the Echo Post Office opened in a building on the west side of today’s Main Street (Route 25A), immediately north of the LIRR tracks. Squires also championed his bailiwick in the Port Jefferson Echo, a newspaper that he had founded with G. Frederick Hallock in 1892. The “Republican journal” helped establish the uniqueness of Echo and operated out of the same building as the Echo Post Office. Following A. Jay Tefft’s purchase of the Echo in 1899, Squires devoted his considerable energies to buying and selling real estate, developing several subdivisions in the area including Belle Croft, Norton Park, Fairview Place, and Bergen Estates. In 1904, Echo’s post office and newspaper, along with Squires’ Real Estate Agency, resettled a few steps north on Main Street in the new Echo Building. Hugo Kreitzberg then transformed the unoccupied property resulting from the move into the Hotel Echo. The Echo Post Office was renamed the Port Jefferson Station Post Office in 1910. Squires had led a popular petition drive in support of the change and later became known as the “father of Port Jefferson Station.” Key among the reasons for the switch, it
was argued that Echo was a “meaningless place name” and that the presence of the Port Jefferson Railroad Station best defined the area. After being called home for 22 years, Echo just faded away. Kenneth Brady has served as the Port
Jefferson Village Historian and president of the Port Jefferson Conservancy, as s well as on the boards of the Suffolk County Historical Society, Greater Port Jefferson Arts Council and Port Jefferson Historical Society. He is a longtime resident of Port Jefferson.
OCTOBER 28, 2021 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A19
School News
Senior Living Port Jefferson
Photo from PJSD
Line sculptures in Port Jefferson Edna Louise Spear Elementary School kindergarten students are creating line sculptures. They are learning about different types of lines, including horizontal, vertical, zig-zag and spiral, and how to make their
artwork 3D. “It’s a fun way for them to explore the element of line, and expand their art vocabulary as well as learn the basics of creating in the art room,” art teacher Meghan McCarthy said.
Port Jefferson students virtually welcome Holocaust survivor
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Earl L. Vandermeulen High School welcomed Holocaust survivor Ruth Elenberg Eisenberg to speak about her experiences as a child when Nazis occupied her hometown in Eastern Galicia (now Ukraine). Social studies teacher Bryan Vaccaro’s class virtually met Elenberg Eisenberg — a volunteer at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum — as she spoke of her
personal history of hardship and fortitude, including a daring escape from her family’s home and her father’s subsequent death in a labor camp. The class discussion enabled students to gain a better perspective on this important moment in history. Photo from PJSD
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PAGE A20 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 28, 2021
School News
Port Jefferson students conduct research in Shinnecock Bay
Earl L. Vandermeulen High School students in Mr. Jonathan Maletta’s AP Environmental Science class visited the Southampton campus of SUNY Stony Brook’s School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences. The group sailed aboard the R/V Peconic into Shinnecock Bay to conduct field studies of the local marine environment. Students observed water quality parameters including dissolved oxygen content, turbidity and the presence of phytoplankton species. They learned about the importance of the eelgrass community as a keystone species that supports a wealth of biodiversity in Shinnecock Bay. Samples of marine life were collected using specialized trawl fishing gear to observe benthic species (crustacea, finfish and shellfish). Students had an authentic, hands-
on marine science experience, searching through their catch for unique organisms with interesting adaptations including the decorator crab’s ability to camouflage and the calico (female) crab’s ability to carry offspring on the ventral side of its body until their release as plankton in the ocean. Species such as black sea bass, tautog, pipefish, and even tropical species of shrimp, “carried” in by the warm Gulf Stream current to Long Island were part of the catch. Students returned to school and are caring for some of the specimens they collected. “I really enjoyed learning about the diversity of life we have in our local ecosystems and how those ecosystems are influenced by human activities.” said senior Andrew Patterson. Classmate Arik Sen added that “the trip definitely heightened my understating of the content.”
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Earl L. Vandermeulen High School students with SOMAS educator Chris Paparo. Photo from PJSD
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OCTOBER 28, 2021 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A21
Fall fun during Port Jeff’s Harvest Fest
Story and photos by Julianne Mosher It was a day full of fall festivities on Saturday, Oct. 23 when the Village of Port Jefferson hosted its 2021 Harvest Fest, showcasing tons of Halloween fun. From 10 a.m. until 3 p.m., the Port Jefferson Harbor Education & Arts Conservancy held a window painting contest to decorate the outside of the Village Center. Nearly two-dozen children grabbed their paint and brushes to show off their Halloween-inspired artwork, inclouding everything from steaming hot chocolate in a mug to ghosts, skeletons and a creepy toy doll. Along with pumpkin carvings and craftting, families were able to go on a secret scavenger hunt — which featured an appearance from the Pirates at Large. The afternoon ended with a costumed dog parade along East Main Street, where furry friends dressed to the nines with their favorite humans.
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PAGE A22 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 28, 2021
PEOPLE of the YEAR
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Nominate outstanding members of the community for
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BEHIND ON RENT DUE TO COVID-19? Emergency Rental Assistance Can Help This program can pay up to 12 months of past due rent and up to 3 months of future rent. It can also pay 12 months of past due utility bills for Brookhaven residents. Did you lose income/wages due to the COVID-19 Pandemic?
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Have questions? Call us at 844-NY1RENT (844-691-7368) or fill out an inquiry form at BrookhavenNY.gov/rent. Visit otda.ny.gov/ERAP to fill out an online application. Please apply today!
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OCTOBER 28, 2021 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A23
Port Jefferson’s Royal homecoming
STORY AND PHOTOS BY JULIANNE MOSHER JULIANNE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Royal spirit was in the air this past weekend when the 2021 homecoming festivities began. Students, faculty, administrators, board of education members and community residents headed down to Main Street in Port Jefferson village to watch the student-run parade filled with festive floats. Vehicles sporting floats from each grade level at Earl L. Vandermeulen High School, Port Jefferson Middle School and even one from Edna Louise Spear Elementary School made their ways down the street as bystanders cheered the Royals on. Kicked off with an appearance from the Port Jefferson Fire Department, Royal cheerleaders marched along and football players roared as they got ready for their big homecoming game. The fun continued at a celebration in front of the high school with a recognition ceremony of senior football payers and cheerleaders before the afternoon game against Bayport-Blue Point.
PAGE A24 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 28, 2021
Sports
tbrnewsmedia.com Goforto more sports photos
Kings Park 35 Comsewogue 7
Kingsmen rain on Warrior homecoming game BY BILL LANDON DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
The Kingsmen of Kings Park raided Warrior nation and put a damper on Comsewogue’s homecoming football game Oct 23 where the Warriors struggled to find traction. Kings Park quarterback Jonathon Borkowski punched in for the score on a keeper in the final minute of the opening quarter and followed it up four minutes later with 10-yard touchdown run to put his team out front 14-0. On Comsewogue’s ensuing possession Kings Park cornerback Kyle Weeks
stepped in front of Brady Shannon’s shovel pass for a pick six that covered 41 yards. Kings Park senior Mert Duman whose foot was perfect on the day made it 21-0 at the half. Jonathan Borkowski’s 10-yard run found the endzone midway through the 3rd quarter for the 28-0 lead. Kings Park senior Nick Laviano broke free for a 60-yard run early in the 4th for a 35-0 advantage. Shannon the senior quarterback would avoid the shutout in the closing minutes with an 11-yard run for the score and with Josh Carrolls kick concluded the game for your 35-7 final. The win lifts Kings Park to 5-1 in DivIII while the loss drops the Warriors to 2-5. Comsewogue concludes their 2021 campaign when they retake the field Oct 29 hosting Hills West. Kings Park is also back in action on Oct 29 with a road game against East Islip. Kickoff for both games is 6 p.m.
Photos by Bill Landon
OCTOBER 28, 2021 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A25
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The following are some of our available categories listed in the order in which they appear. • Garage Sales • Computer Services • Announcements • Electricians • Antiques & Collectibles • Financial Services • Automobiles/Trucks etc. • Furniture Repair • Finds under $50 • Handyman Services • Health/Fitness/Beauty • Home Improvement • Merchandise • Lawn & Landscaping • Personals • Painting/Wallpaper • Novenas • Plumbing/Heating • Pets/Pet Services • Power Washing • Professional Services • Roofing/Siding • Schools/Instruction/Tutoring • Tree Work • Wanted to Buy • Window Cleaning • Employment • Real Estate • Cleaning • Residential Property • Commercial Property • Out of State Property DEADLINE: Tuesday at Noon
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Includes the Participating (in GA: Designated) Providers and Preventive Benefits Rider. Product not available in all states. Acceptance guaranteed for one insurance policy/certificate of this type. Contact us for complete details about this insurance solicitation. This specific offer is not available in CO; call 1-800-969-4781 or respond for similar offer. Certificate C250A (ID: C250E; PA: C250Q); Insurance Policy P150 (GA: P150GA; NY: P150NY; OK: P150OK; TN: P150TN); Rider kinds B438/B439 (GA: B439B). 48560 6255
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6 Newspapers/Internet Site ~ Huntington to Wading River ~ Deadline: Tuesday at noon. Call 631–331–1154 or 631–751–7663 • TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA • tbrnewsmedia.com
OCTOBER 28, 2021 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A27
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
E M PL OY M E N T / C A R E E R S HELP WANTED SPECIAL!
BRYANT FUNERAL HOME Seeking Door Greeter P/T (approx. 10-15 hrs/week) For weekday/night and weekend shifts Please e-mail resume to: wecare@bryantfh.com
COMPUTER & IT TRAINING PROGRAM! Train ONLINE to get the skills to become a Computer & Help Desk Professional now, Grants and Scholarships available for certain programs for qualified applicants. Call CTI for details, (844) 947-0192 (M-F 8am-6pm ET)
P/T SALES/CUSTOMER SERVICE Inside position selling advertising for an award-winning community news media group, Fax resume to 631-751-4165 or email resume to Class@tbrnewspapers.com. See our display ad for more information.
RECEPTIONIST / PART TIME Busy East Setauket Real Estate Office is seeking a motivated team player with strong computer skills, clear, friendly speaking voice, professional appearance & excellent customer service skills. Part time position Wed mornings 10-2 and Friday afternoons from 1-5 & Saturday 9 to 5. Weekends a must. Please E-Mail Resume to Setauket.Office @Elliman.com or call 631.751.6000
SHOREHAM-WADING RIVER CSD Part-Time Monitors Needed: $15.50 per hour Substitutes Needed: Substitute Food Service Workers $17.50/hr. Substitute Nurses $175/day Submit letter of interest/resume to: Brian Heyward, Assistant Superintendent for Human Resources 250B Route 25A Shoreham, NY 11786 bheyward@swr.k12.ny.us
Warehouse – Picker/Forklift. Entry Level, will train. PC literate, must be able to lift/move 25-50 pounds. Work as part of a team. FT 9 am-6 pm, health benefits.
WAREHOUSE PICKER/ FORKLIFT. Entry Level, will train. PC literate, must be able to lift/move 25-50 pounds. Work as part of a team. FT 9 am-6 pm, health benefits. Apply in person Tower Fasteners 1690 No. Ocean Ave, Holtsville, or email resume careers@ towerfast.com.
Call Classifieds for sizes and pricing. 631–331–1154 or 631–751–7663 Help Wanted
Shoreham-Wading River CSD
WE HAVE THE HELP YOU NEED HHA, LPN, Nurse’s Aide, Childcare, Housekeeping & Day Workers. No Fees to Employers. Call Evons Services 516-505-5510
CLASSIFIED DEADLINE is Tuesday at noon. If you want to advertise, do it soon! 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
$15.50/hr. $19.50/hr. $17.50/hr. $175/day $18.00/hr. $15.50/hr.
Part-Time Sales/Customer Service Seeking Door Greeter P/T (approx. 10-15 hrs/week) For weekday/night and weekend shi�s
Please e-mail resume to: wecare@bryan�h.com
MOUNT SINAI SCHOOL DISTRICT School District Aides & Custodial Substitute Positions available throughout the District
©44150
Please email resume to : Maureen Poerio @ mpoerio@mtsinai.k12.ny.us
Fax resume to 631-751-4165 email resume: class@tbrnewspapers.com
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Tower Fasteners 1690 No. Ocean Ave, Holtsville, or email resume careers@towerfast.com.
TRAIN AT HOME TO DO MEDICAL BILLING! Become a Medical Office Professional online at CTI! Get Trained, Certified & ready to work in months! Call 855-543-6440. The Mission, Program Information and Tuition is located at CareerTechnical. edu/consumer-information. (M-F 8am-6pm ET)
Display Ads Buy 2 Weeks - Get 2 FREE
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Apply in person
SHOREHAM-WADING RIVER CSD Part-Time Monitors needed, substitutes needed, cooks, substitute Food service workers, substitute nurses, substitute teaching assistants, substitute special education aides submit letter of interest/resume to: Brian Heyward, Assistant Superintendent for Human Resources 250B Route 25A Shoreham, NY 11786 bheyward@swr.k12.ny.us
49390
LYNEER STAFFING SOLUTIONS Hiring Mail Sorters, Data Entry $15.00, Forklifts $17.50, Mystery Shoppers Ages 21-25 $20.00. 860 Long Island Ave., D e e r P a r k N Y 11 7 2 9 631-586-4699
MOUNT SINAI SCHOOL DISTRICT School District Aides and Custodial Substitutes, positions available throughout the district, please email resume to: Maureen Poerio at mpoerio@mtsinai.k12.ny.us.
©Fill000036
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
53610
Help Wanted
©105747
Help Wanted
PAGE A28 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 28, 2021
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
E M PL OY M E N T / C A R E E R S Busy East Setauket Real Estate Office is seeking a motivated team player with strong computer skills, clear, friendly speaking voice, professional appearance & excellent customer service skills. Part-time position Wed mornings 10-2 and Friday afternoons from 1-5 & Saturday 9 to 5. Weekends a must.
Looking for that perfect career? or that perfect employee? Search our employment section each week!
©101793
Receptionist / Part-Time
TIMES BEACON RECORD CLASSIFIED ADS
Please E-Mail Resume to Setauket.Office @Elliman.com or call 631.751.6000
©49470
©49360
631.331.1154 or 631.751.7663
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
SERV ICES Cable/Telephone WIREMAN CABLEMAN Professional wiring services. Free estimates. All work guaranteed. Call 516-433-WIRE (9473), 631-667-WIRE (9473) or text 516-353-1118. SEE DISPLAY AD FOR MORE INFORMATION.
Carpentry LONG HILL CARPENTRY 45 years experience All phases of home improvement. Old & Historic Restorations. Lic.#H22336/Ins. 631-751-1764 longhill7511764@aol.com
Cesspool Services MR SEWERMAN CESSPOOL SERVICE All types of cesspool servicing, all work guaranteed, family owned and operated since 1985, 631-924-7502. Licensed and Insured.
Cleaning COME HOME TO A CLEAN HOUSE! Attention to detail is MY PRIORITY. Serving the Three Village Area. Call Jacquie 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.
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
ADVERTISE FOR RESULTS 631-751-7663 FILL000061
Exterminating REACT PEST CONTROL INC. Wasps, Yellow Jackets Nesting in your home! Protect your home before those pesky nests are built. SEE DISPLAY AD FOR MORE INFORMATION.
Fences SMITHPOINT FENCE. DEER PROBLEM? WE CAN HELP! Wood, PVC, Chain Link, Stockade. Free estimates. Now offering 12 month interest free financing. Commercial/Residential. 70 Jayne Blvd., PJS. Lic.37690H/Ins. 631-743-9797 www.smithpointfence.com.
Furniture/Restoration/ Repairs REFINISHING & RESTORATION Antiques restored, repairing recane, reupholstery, touch-ups kitchen, front doors, 40 yrs exp, SAVE$$$, free estimates. Vincent Alfano 631-707-1228
Handyman Services HANDYMAN SERVICES AND PAINTING. Dependable, Honest, Professional. No job too small. Call Steve 631-831-3089. SEE DISPLAY AD FOR MORE INFORMATION.
Home Improvement ALL PHASES OF HOME IMPROVEMENT From attic to your basement, RCJ Construction www.rcjconstruction.com commercial/residential, lic/ins 631-580-4518. BLUSTAR CONSTRUCTION The North Shore’s Most Trusted Renovation Experts. 631-751-0751 We love small jobs too! Suffolk Lic. #48714-H, Ins. SEE OUR DISPLAY AD FOR MORE INFORMATION.
Floor Services/Sales FINE SANDING & REFINISHING Wood Floor Installations Craig Aliperti, Wood Floors LLC. All work done by owner. 29 years experience. Lic.#47595-H/Insured. 631-875-5856
E L I M I N AT E G U T T E R CLEANING FOREVER! LeafFilter, the most advanced debrisblocking gutter protection. Schedule a FREE LeafFilter estimate today.15% off and 0% financing for those who qualify. PLUS Senior & Military Discounts. Call 1-877-763-2379
Home Improvement FUSARO HOME IMPROVEMENTS Fall In love with your home all over again. We set the industry standard for quality craftmanshift and home remodeling. Call 631-399-2095 and SEE OUR DISPLAY FOR MORE INFORMATION LAMPS FIXED, $65. In Home Service!! Handy Howard. My cell 646-996-7628 NEVER PAY FOR COVERED HOME REPAIRS AGAIN, Complete Care Home Warranty, Covers all major systems and appliances. 30 day risk free. $200.00 OFF +2 FREE Months, 866-440-6501 THE GENERAC PWRcell, a solar plus battery storage system. SAVE money, reduce your reliance on the grid, prepare for power outages and power your home. Full installation services available. $0 Down Financing Option. Request a FREE, no obligation, quote today. Call 1-888-871-0194 WIREMAN/CABLEMAN Flat TVs mounted, Phone, TVs & Computer wiring installed & serviced, camera & stereos, HDTV Antennas, FREE TV www.davewireman.com Call Dave 516-433-WIRE (9473) 631-667-WIRE (9473) or Text 516-353-1118
ADVERTISE FOR RESULTS 631-751-7663 FILL000060
Home Repairs/ Construction J O E ’ S G E N E R A L CONTRACTING Update your Home Now! Over 45 years of experience. Call 631-744-0752. SEE DISPLAY AD FOR MORE INFORMATION.
Lawn & Landscaping BE GREEN. BE ORGANIC. Our reputation is growing great lawns & landscapes for over 30 years. Edmerald Magic Lawn Care. 631-261-4600, www.emeraldmagic.com SEE OUR DISPLAY AD FOR MORE INFORMATION. GOT VINES? Poison Ivy is dangerous to us but invasive vines and noxious weeds are dangerous to your trees and landscapes! Call 631-286-4600 and SEE DISPLAY AD FOR MORE INFORMATION. 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, Cleanups, Shrub/Tree Pruning, Removals. Landscape Design/ Installation, Ponds/Waterfalls, Stone Walls. Firewood. Free estimates. Lic/Ins.631-6898089
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
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
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 and Deck Restoration Power Washing. Free Estimates. Lic/Ins. #17981. 631-744-8859 LA ROTONDA PAINTING & DESIGN Interior/exterior, sheetrock repairs, taping/spackling, wallpaper removal, faux, decorative finishings. Free estimates. Lic. #53278-H/Ins. Ross LaRotonda 631-689-5998
OCTOBER 28, 2021 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A29
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
SERV ICES Power Washing
Painting/Spackling/ Wallpaper WORTH PAINTING “PAINTING WITH PRIDE” Interiors/exteriors. Staining & deck restoration, powerwashing, wallpaper removal, sheetrocktape/spackling, carpentry/trimwork. Lead paint certified. References. Free estimates. Lic./Ins. SINCE 1989 Ryan Southworth. SEE DISPLAY AD FOR MORE INFO. 631-331-5556
EXTRA! EXTRA! ADVERTISE HERE! ©FILL000050
Power Washing
EXTERIOR CLEANING SPECIALISTS Roof cleaning, pressure washing/softwashing, gutter maintenance. Squeaky Clean Property Solutions 631-387-2156 www. SqueakyCleanli.com
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Restorations
THREE VILLAGE POWERWASHING LLC Protect your investment & freshen up your home, outside furniture, garage doors, gazebo, decks, patio, fence, porches, shed, etc Threevillagepowerwashing.com 631-678-7313.
Satellite TV
LUX DEVELOPMENT GROUP Historical restorations, extensions & dormers, cedar siding & clapboard installation, basements, kitchens, doors & windows, finished carpentry & moulding, SEE OUR DISPLAY AD FOR MORE INFORMATION Call 631-283-2266.
Did You Know You Can See
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Tree Work
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RANDALL BROTHERS TREE SERVICE Planting, pruning, removals, stump grinding. Free Estimates. Fully insured. LIC# 50701-H. 631-862-9291
Tree Work ARBOR-VISTA TREE CARE A COMPLETE TREE CARE SERVICE devoted to the care of trees. Maintenance pruning, water-view work, sun-trimming, elevating, pool areas, storm thinning, large tree removal, stump grinding. Wood chips. Lic#18902HI. Free estimates. 631-246-5377
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
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
AUTOMOTI V E SERV ICES JUNK CARS $$$ TOP CASH PAID $$$ AUTOMOTIVE BOUGHT All Trucks, Cars & Vans
Toyota, Honda, Nissan, Domestic/Foreign
SERVICES DIRECTORY PLEASE CALL
CALL US LAST WE’LL BEAT ANY PRICE USED AUTO PARTS LICENSED • BONDED INSURED
631.500.1015
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FOR DETAILS AND SPECIAL RATES 631-331-1154 OR 631-751-7663
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GIVE THIS AD TO THE DRIVER and receive an extra $50.
Highest prices paid for fixable vehicles. Also buy motorcycles and muscle cars.
ask for mark • 631-258-7919
CA$H FOR ALL CAR$ & CA$H FOR JUNK CAR$ WANTED No Keys No Title No Problem
FREE Pickup Habla Español
DMV CERTIFIED 7002706
Lic. # 7112911/Ins.
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PROF E S SION A L & B U SI N E S S • Glassware • Military Items • China • Anything Old or Unusual LICENSED & BONDED
Call 631-633-9108
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WOMEN’S RESTORATIVE BODYWORK Monique Zodda
Manage: Chronic Pain & Anxiety Enhance: Wellness & Mobility Restore: Mind-Body Balance
Brad Merila Certified Piano Technician 6 Barnwell Lane, Stony Brook
631.681.9723 bluesmanpianotuning@gmail.com bluesmanpianotuning.com ©49590
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• Old Mirrors • Lamps • Clocks • Watches • Furniture
Blues Man Piano Tuning
903 Main St. Port Jefferson NY 11777
631-704-4865 Healingmoceanmassage.amtamembers.com ©107173
ALWAYS BUYING
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
PAGE A30 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 28, 2021
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
HOME SERV ICES
INTERIOR • EXTERIOR
EXTERIOR CLEANING SPECIALISTS Roof Cleaning No Pressure, Safe Foam Process Removal of black/green algae stains, moss and lichen
Taping Spackling
Decorative Finishes
Power Washing
Pressure Washing/Softwashing Siding, Decks, Patios, Fences
Gutter Maintenance Cleaning, Leaf Guards Wallpaper Removal
P.O. Box 151, Saint James, NY ©48710
Licensed #55467-H & Fully Insured
Faux Finishes
631–689–5998 Lic. # 53278-H/Ins.
ALL PRO PAINTING ALL WORK GUARANTEED FREE ESTIMATES INTERIOR • EXTERIOR • POWERWASHING CUSTOM WORK • STAINING • WALLPAPER REMOVAL
EXPERIENCED AND RELIABLE
Specializing in Paver Restoration
Nick Cordovano 631–696–8150 LICENSED #19604-H & INSURED
Protect Your Investment & Freshen Up Your:
ThreeVillagePowerWashing.com 48660
s i l Fal ! e r e H
Insured
631-678-7313
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Fence Porches Shed Etc. ©50680
Home Gazebo Outside Furniture Decks Garage Doors Patio
(631) 744-1577
RANDALL BROTHERS TREE SERVICE
ADVERTISE YOUR SEASONAL SERVICES Heating & Plumbing • Painting Roofing • Siding • Windows All Maintenance & Repair Services Firewood • Chimney Work Call our Classifieds Advertising Department at
631�331�1154 or 631�751�7663 SPECIAL RATES NOW AVAILABLE
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631.387.2156 • SqueakyCleanLI.com m
PAINTING & DESIGN
Planting Grinding
Free Estimates
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OCTOBER 28, 2021 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A31
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
HOME SERV ICES REFERENCES AVAILABLE
Craig Aliperti, Wood Floors, LLC
Fine Sanding
Wood Floor Installations
longhill7511764@aol.com ✔ All Phases of Home Improvement ✔ Old & Historic Home Restorations ✔ Extensions & Dormers ✔ Kitchens & Baths
10% OFF
Old Wood Floors Made Beautiful All Work Done By Owner
✔ Siding & Windows ✔ Porches & Decks ✔ Aging in Place Remodeling ✔ Custom Carpentry: Built-ins, Pantries, and More
Lic. #47595-H/Insured
©49300
Full Service contractor – complete jobs from start to finish
29 YEARS EXPERIENCE
631-875-5856
Licensed H-22336 and fully insured 49650
RCJ
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45 YEARS EXPERIENCE
GOT VINES?
CO N S T R U C T I O N From Your Attic To Your Basement
All Phases of Home Improvement ©52270
FYI‚
C U S TO M F I N I S H E D C A R P E N T RY & M O L D I N G
www.rcjconstruction.com
Luxdevelopment.com
(631) 580-4518 COMMERCIAL/RESIDENTIAL • LIC. #H-32198/INS | OWNER OPERATED
631-283-2266
SAVE THE TREES - CONTROL THE VINES
BE GREEN...GO ORGANIC!
BOB’S PAINTING SERVICE
“Our reputation is growing great lawns & landscapes for over 30 years!”
40 Y E A RS EX PER IENCE O wne r O pe rat ed S i n c e 19 78
631-744-8859 Lic./Ins. (#17,981)
PROVEN ORGANIC OPTIONS AVAILABLE Contact us for FREE lab soil test & estimate ©53410
FREE ESTIMATES
REFERENCES GLADLY GIVEN
• Interiors • Exteriors • Cabinet Refinishing, Staining & Painting • Faux Finishes • Power Washing • Wallpaper Removal • Tape & Spackling • Staining & Deck Restoration BBB A1 Rating #1 Recommendation on BBB website
CERTIFIED LEAD PAINT REMOVAL
Craig den Hartog Professional Horticulturist Certified Organic Green Guerilla NOFA Acredited
“We take pride in our work” FREE ESTIMATES
Ryan Southworth 631-331-5556
Licensed/Insured #37074-H; RI 18499-10-34230
Since 1989
Old Town Blooms Planter
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CALLS PROMPTLY RETURNED
©48690
• Interiors • Exteriors • Powerwashing • Staining & Deck Restoration • Wallpaper Removal • Gutter Cleaning • Spackling & Wall Restoration
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Poison Ivy is dangerous to us but Invasive Vines and Noxious Weeds are dangerous to your trees and landscapes! Natural is soon a Jungle! For a more park-like property, call for a free estimate!
SPECIALIZING IN FINISHED BASEMENTS
Owner is a Three Village Resident for Over 30 Years Licensed #55203-H & Fully Insured
www.GotPoisonIvy.com 631-286-4600
K I TC H E N S • B AT H R O O M S • D O O R S • W I N D O W S • T I L E • F LO O R I N G
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Historical Restorations Extensions & Dormers Cedar Siding & Clapboard Installation Basement Renovations Kitchens & Bathrooms Doors & Windows Finish Carpentry & Moulding
(631) 286-4600 www.emeraldmagic.com
Licensed 18320-H & Insured
PAGE A32 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 28, 2021
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
HOME SERV ICES DECKS ONLY®
BUILDERS & DESIGNERS OF OUTDOOR LIVING BY NORTHERN CONSTRUCTION OF LI INC.
PROFESSIONAL WIRING SERVICES
105 Broadway Greenlawn 631.651.8478 www.DecksOnly.com
If you see this,
Licensed/Insured
Call us.
WATCH TV FREE. SAVE$$$ • Flat TVs Mounted • HDTV Antennas Installed • Camera Systems Installed • Telephone Jacks & Cable TV Extensions Installed
• Free In-House 3D Design • Financing Available (3rd party)
FREE ESTIMATES Al Work Guaranteed
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516-433-WIRE (9473) 631-667-WIRE (9473) 516-353-1118 (TEXT)
VINCENT ALFANO FURNITURE RESTORATION
Family Owned
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AND
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NO JOB TOO SMALL Lic. #32000-H/Ins.
OVER 45 YEARS EXPERIENCE
Joe’s General Contracting UPDATE YOUR HOME • All Forms of Masonry • Driveways/Sidewalks • Pavers/ Brick/Block Work • Culture Stone Lic. 3637H
• Home Improvements • New Construction • Revitalization Projects • Residential/Commercial
631–744–0752
Ins.
FUSARO HOME IMPROVEMENTS
LAMPS FIXED $ 65
PAINTING
DEPENDABLE • HONEST • PROFESSIONAL
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©25040
Since 1995 Family Owned & Operated
In Home Service !! Handy Howard
My Cell 646-996-7628
Fall in Love with Your Home All Over Again We set the industry standard in quality remodeling for your kitchen, baths, windows, basement, decks, siding, custom mica, dry wall and paint. Tiki Bar Call Now for Free Estimates. Specialist 631-399-2095 • fusarohomeimprovements.com Licensed and Insured #15,279 HI
©52050
MATERIALS CORP
631-928-4665
Construction
Topsoil * Mulch * Compost Fine Sand * Paver Sand * Concrete Sand
DEER PROBLEM? WE CAN HELP.
Additions & renovations, decks, windows, doors, siding, kitchens, baths, roofs & custom carpentry. We love small jobs too!
Specializing in all phases of fencing: Wood • PVC • Chain Link • Stockade
Owner/Operator has 25+ years serving The North Shore
Now offering 12 month interest-free financing
New Location
Please call our Stony Brook office today for a FREE in home consultation
FREE ESTIMATES COMMERCIAL/ RESIDENTIAL
www.BluStarBuilders.com Lic. #48714-H & Insured
70 Comsewogue Road, Suite 9, East Setauket
32220
©31410
70 Jayne Blvd., Port Jeff Station (631) 743-9797
©48910
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PAGE A34 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 28, 2021
Editorial
Endorsements 2021 Sini is leading DA’s office in Kara Hahn will continue to lead in 2021 the right direction
We were impressed with the passion of both Tim Sini (D) and Ray Tierney (R), and they both brought good ideas to the table during the recent TBR News Media debate. They also were ready to back up what they said during the interview with documentation. While Tierney has more experience in the courtroom, Sini made a good point during the debate that being DA is more than being a prosecutor, it’s also about managing the office. This is an important fact as the DA’s office, like many in Suffolk County, has a great deal of taxpayers money to manage. We felt that the current DA has more of a sense of the overall responsibilities. The relationships Sini has forged through the years with fellow elected officials in the county are also important. Being voted into office after Tom Spota (D) was removed as DA, Sini was
Photo by Rita J. Egan
tasked with revamping the office. We think he has done a good job in doing so, and we would like to see him continue in the office. We hope that Tierney, who said he never thought he would be involved in politics, will stay in the arena. He has a lot of good ideas and the passion behind them to fight for the public.
Toulon the only pick for county sheriff With current Suffolk County Sheriff Errol Toulon Jr.’s (D) only opponent effectively just a name on a ballot box, as he is not actively campaigning, Suffolk voters only really have one choice come Nov. 2. However, we can still give our sincere endorsement to Toulon, who for the past four years has been a pillar of integrity in law enforcement and beyond. Our interview with Toulon also revealed just how hard change can be regarding Suffolk’s jail system. Despite inroads with trying to help the county’s nonviolent jail population, especially with great ideas like the sheriff’s START Resource Center, a lack of adequate funds for more in-house psychologist staff means it remains tough to give people aid before they reenter society. We agree with Toulon that mental health remains a constant problem in society. The nonprofit advocacy group Prison Policy Initiative reports that more than 44% of locally run jail populations are diagnosed with a mental illness. It only makes sense to get them help when in jail before they have another encounter with law enforcement.
We hope that Toulon keeps pushing for such funds. It was also concerning to hear just how understaffed the sheriff’s department currently is, and it remains incumbent on Suffolk officials along with the Sheriff’s Office to recruit staff. Unfortunately, like much of the law enforcement community, too many of the Sheriff’s Office law enforcement remain unvaccinated. Combined with them interacting with a population of inmates with low vaccination rates, the spread of COVID-19 among officers and inmates remains a key concern. While we appreciate the COVID precautions in Suffolk jails, and while we understand there is no requirement in Suffolk that law enforcement be vaccinated, we believe top brass of law enforcement need to do more to campaign for vaccinations among staff. Still, Toulon remains a steadfast and effective sheriff who has found support from both sides of the political divide. We hope he continues with the good work and we look forward to the next four years.
Hahn has proven herself over the last several years in her position as county legislator. The current deputy presiding officer, she has done wonderful things for the local community and has always been there to help her constituents when asked. As an elected official who cares for her environment, Hahn has sponsored legislation to reduce the use of single-use plastics, ban the sale of products containing microbeads, increased fines for illegal dumping and preserved open spaces in Setauket and Port Jefferson Station. She has improved public access to county parkland by adding parking facilities where none previously existed at McAllister County Park in Belle Terre and new amenities at Forsythe Meadow County Park and Old Field Farm by West Meadow Beach. But she has also been an advocate for victims of domestic violence and a supporter of small business. Hahn’s opponent, Republican Salvatore Isabella, has not been actively campaigning and refused to talk to media throughout his
run. While he may be a placeholder, we are disappointed that the political party chose not to have someone serious on the ballot. Hahn, however, should be applauded for her constant professionalism and dedication to her community — so much so that she has announced a bid for the Democratic Party’s nomination to run for U.S. Congress next year in New York’s 1st Congressional District. Her advocacy for the environment, mental and public health, as well as the safety of everyone from children to first responders is admirable. We know that for her last legislative run, she will continue to represent her constituents well and be there as a helpful leader just as she has over the last six terms. Incumbent Kara Hahn (D-Setauket) was the only one who responded to TBR News Media’s invitation for an in-person debate for the election of county legislator for District 5. We’re looking forward to seeing what her next accomplishments for the county will be.
Keep Donna Lent as town clerk In the race for Town of Brookhaven’s town clerk, TBR News Media endorses Donna Lent (R) for the position. We believe Lent is the right choice as her experience as town clerk since 2013 has helped the Town of Brookhaven in many different ways. Not only is her experience and realistic view of the community something we can all respect, but she has shown us she has not halted in her work when it comes to helping the community such as getting the right permits and documentation they may need. We were impressed by her detailed responses when posed with the issue of software difficulties and the FOIL process, and we appreciate her continuing efforts to
help make information readily available to the public. Although we are inspired by the passion, vigor and refreshing ideas her opponent Ira Costell (D) has for the position, we hope he continues to use his passion toward other public services. We were especially impressed by his desire to help with mental health problems. Perhaps he could be named “mental health czar” by the town supervisor? Costell is knowledgeable about the Town of Brookhaven and will go out of his way to help the community. Understanding there are restrictions to the position as town clerk, TBR sees the improvements made by Lent and we hope to see her make even more if reelected.
OCTOBER 28, 2021 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A35
Opinion
Thanking clinical trial volunteers who make treatments and vaccinations possible
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f your children are under the age of 12 and the Food and Drug Administration soon approves a COVID-19 vaccine, you’ll have many people to thank for the opportunity to return them to a more normal, and safer, childhood, including four-year-old Maggie, seven-year-old Lily and eight-and-a-half-yearold Dan Barsi. The three siblings, who live in East Setauket with their parents James and Jennifer Barsi, recently participated in a clinical trial for the COVID-19 D. None vaccine at Stony Brook Hospital. While the of the above children don’t know BY DANIEL DUNAIEF whether they received vaccinations for the virus or the placebo, they are three of numerous children who volunteered to test the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine to make sure it was safe before health care providers administer it to the broader population.
Their children “knew what they were signing up for,” said Dr. James Barsi, a pediatric orthopedic surgeon. “It’s something to help other people.” Indeed, the community benefits from volunteers like the Barsis, who participate in clinical trials that evaluate the effectiveness of the treatment, help determine the correct doses, and reveal potential side effects before the rest of the population gets the COVID-19 vaccine or any other medicine or therapeutic intervention. “We would never make advances in medicine without families — adults and children — volunteering to participate in clinical trials,” said Dr. Sharon Nachman, Chief of the Division of Pediatric Infectious Diseases at Stony Brook Children’s Hospital. Some treatments for a range of illnesses or conditions look promising in the earlier stages of clinical development, such as phase 1 or phase 2. When they reach phase 3, during which researchers provide medicine to a much larger volunteer population, they sometimes fall short of expectations. “Companies will tout drugs as the next best thing,” Dr. Nachman said. “When they get
into phase 3, they are not better than standard therapy.” Clinical trials on even an ineffective drug or one that produces side effects, however, can help pharmaceutical companies and health care providers by signaling what these professionals should look for in future treatments, Dr. Nachman added. While volunteers of any age take risks by participating in these studies, they also have considerable medical oversight. “They are well protected,” Dr. Nachman said. “When you participate in a clinical trial, you don’t just have two sets of eyes on you; you have 100 sets of eyes.” Volunteers for clinical trials not only take some risk before everyone else in the community, but they also experience regular testing and monitoring. The Barsi children, for example, had to have blood work and nose swabs. “We call it a brain swab,” Jennifer Barsi said. “The kids are so excited about getting a treat afterwards, but they still have to do the hard thing.” Health care professionals throughout Long Island shared their appreciation for clinical
trial volunteers. Without them “none of these innovative therapies and drugs would exist,” said Stephanie Solito, Research Manager of the Oncology Service Line at Catholic Health, which includes Smithtown-based St. Catherine of Siena and Port Jefferson-based St. Charles Hospital. When Daniel Loen, Catholic Health’s Vice President of Oncology Services, takes any medicine, he appreciates that patients were “willing to sacrifice something or take on some kind of increased risk to get on a trial for the good of humanity and medicine.” As for the specific COVID-19 pediatric trials, Dr. Nachman said parents and children have to approve to participate. Doctors talk with children in an age-appropriate way about these clinical trials. Dan Barsi was born at 25 weeks old. He stayed in the hospital for several months and is now a healthy child. Jennifer and James felt that this was their opportunity to give back to the next generation. The children who participated in clinical research before Dan was born helped make it possible for him to get the best treatment, and now they feel they’re doing the same thing.
to tell us anything more that perhaps we hadn’t elicited with our questioning. We have written up the details of each interview in a separate article for the election section. And we discuss the candidates at the end of each hour and come to a conclusion for the endorsement. Most of the time, the editorial group was unanimous because the choices were fairly direct. But for a couple of races, we talked over the pros and cons of each candidate at length before making the selection. These endorsements are based on both the in-depth interviews and the considerable information we know about the incumbents since we have been covering them closely throughout their terms in office. Of course, after reading the stories, you may or may not agree with our conclusions. Our job is to get you thinking. The many hours that are given to this task, throughout the month of October, are a service for our readers. We are privileged to enjoy an extended face-to-face time with those standing for election, and we feel an obligation to pass along
whatever information, facts and impressions we gather during these sessions. We sincerely hope we help in the sometimes-difficult job of casting a responsible vote. Each year we include in the election section a sample ballot that we are able to procure from the Suffolk County Board of Elections because readers have told us that it is a great advantage for them to receive the ballot at the voting poll already knowing how it is laid out. Our editorial board is made up of staffers with different political leanings, but when we put our journalists’ hats on, we try to judge each race strictly on the merits of the opposing candidates. And while it is technically possible for me to be tyrannical about the final selections, that is almost never the case. We decide by majority rule. Sincere thanks to the talented staff who join in this extra work each year. We truly believe that we are watchdogs for the people, and nowhere is that more necessary than in reporting about government and its office holders. We hope we have helped you, whether you read by newspaper and/or online. Now please vote.
Election special from TBR News Media
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nside this issue is a treasure trove of firsthand information about the candidates and the issues in the coming election. How do I know? Because we, the different members of the editorial board of Times Beacon Record Newspapers, personally interviewed 25 people running for office across the three towns that we serve: Brookhaven, Smithtown and Huntington. The offices the candidates are running for are all local, which means that these are the officials who Between you and me will have the most direct effect on our lives. BY LEAH S. DUNAIEF The positions range this year from county legislators to town supervisors, town council, town clerk, district attorney and sheriff. We asked them questions without bias, seeking only to understand who
they were, what they believed and what we could expect from each of them, should they be elected — or re-elected, as the case might be. The setting in our conference room was relaxed, and we hoped comfortable, with opponents for each office seated together around the table responding to questions put to them by our editors and reporters. Sometimes there were four candidates, sometimes only one who might be running unopposed or against a shadow opponent, but mostly there were two during each session. Most of the time, the hour goes by calmly, but occasionally the opponents get testy with each other — they may even become openly hostile. At one such session some years ago, one of the candidates invited the other out to the back parking lot “to settle things.” When the other began to take off his jacket, we quickly intervened. But there were no such flare-ups this year. The answers were timed in an attempt to get to the main ideas without running on too long. There was ample time at the end for each visitor
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 julianne@tbrnewsmedia.com. Times Beacon Record Newspapers are published every Thursday. Subscription $59/year • 631-751-7744 www.tbrnewsmedia.com • Contents copyright 2021
EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Leah S. Dunaief GENERAL MANAGER Johness Kuisel MANAGING EDITOR Rita J. Egan EDITOR Julianne Mosher LEISURE EDITOR Heidi Sutton
COPY EDITOR John Broven ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Kathleen Gobos ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES Elizabeth Bongiorno Robin Lemkin Larry Stahl Minnie Yancey SPECIAL PROJECTS MANAGER Kathryn Mandracchia
ART AND PRODUCTION DIRECTOR Beth Heller Mason PRODUCTION Janet Fortuna Sharon Nicholson CLASSIFIEDS DIRECTOR & SUBSCRIPTIONS MANAGER Sheila Murray
CLASSIFIEDS Joann Brady BUSINESS MANAGER Sandi Gross CIRCULATION MANAGER Courtney Biondo INTERNET STRATEGY DIRECTOR Rob Alfano
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PAGE A36 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • OCTOBER 28, 2021
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