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PORT TIMES RECORD P O R T J E F F E R S O N • B E L L E T E R R E • P O R T J E F F E R S O N S TAT I O N • T E R R Y V I L L E
Vol. 32, No. 40
August 29, 2019
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Keeping the water out Thrill seekers race hand-built, plywood boats around Port Jeff Harbor — A11 SPACE RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBER ADDRESS
Waking before the cock crows
Railroad history exhibit opens at the Port Jeff Village Center
Students will be waking in the early morning come September. Some researchers say they shouldn’t have to.
Also: ‘Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark’ reviewed, Art Exhibits on the North Shore
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PAGE A2 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • AUGUST 29, 2019
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Those who are trying to grow it and sell it on Long Island have a new way to try and get their business on the map. Suffolk County announced that through the Choose LI – Local and Independent initiative, local businesses can request a free “Choose LI” or “Take the Pledge” sign to display at their farm stand, farmers market, fish market, brewery, cidery, distillery or vineyard. The signs, printed on white corrugated plastic measuring either 18 × 24 feet or 30 × 40 feet, can be requested online through the chooseli.org website. To date, more than 46 local businesses have signed up, according to a county press release. “Our local farmstands, fish markets, vineyards and breweries are the backbone of our community and we want residents to continue to take advantage of these locally grown and harvested products,” said Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone (D) in a release. The Choose LI initiative asks local residents and visitors to choose goods from local and independent farmers and fishermen. Suffolk is asking residents to “Take the Pledge” and commit to spending 10 percent of their weekly food
File photo
budget, approximately $17.60, on local and independent food goods. The website includes a searchable and interactive map of all the farmstands, farmers markets, fish markets, vineyards, breweries, cideries and distilleries in Suffolk County The searchable map currently lists 25 farmers markets, 115 farmstands, 33 breweries, 4 distilleries, 2 cideries, 33 fish markets, 51 vineyards, 21 restaurants selling local oysters and 49 flower retailers. Anyone who visits the website can interact with the map, finding the exact address, hours of operation, phone number, and website of the business they are looking for. If your business selling Long Island produce is missing from the county map, please contact Choose LI at chooseli@suffolkcountyny.gov.
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AUGUST 29, 2019 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A3
County
Sleeping soundly North Shore researchers and locals plead to school districts for later start times
Sleep researchers say students who get even 30 minutes more sleep a night will see huge effects on overall performance. Stock photo
BY KYLE BARR AND RITA J. EGAN KYLE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM, RITA@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Come September, middle and high school students across the North Shore will wake up to the harsh sound of alarms, sometimes hours before the sun will rise. Some will wake up late, and rush in and out of the shower, sometimes not having time to eat before they make it to the bus stop, often in the dark where the cicadas continue to buzz and the crickets chirp. Port Jefferson high schoolers will shuffle through the front doors before 7:20 a.m. Students at Ward Melville High School will hear the first bell at 7:05, while Comsewogue students will be in their seats at 7:10. Some scientists across the North Shore have said that needs to change.
The science
LATER SCHOOL START TIMES Continued on A5
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Brendan Duffy has worked in St. Charles Hospital’s Sleep Disorders Center for nearly a decade, coming out of working at Stony Brook University as a sleep technician. As he worked in the field, he started seeing significant connections between the effectiveness of individuals during the day and how much sleep they got the night before. For teens, he said, the importance is all the greater. Sleep, he said, has a direct impact on risk-taking versus making smart choices, potential drug use, obesity and depression. “The science is irrefutable,” he said. “Basically, anything you do, whether it’s mentally or physically — it doesn’t directly cause [these harmful decisions], but there’s connections and links.” While some parents would simply tell their kids to get off their phone or computer and go to bed, scientists have said the bodies of young people, specifically teenagers, have internal clocks that are essentially set two hours back. Even if a young person tries to fall asleep at 9 p.m., he or she will struggle to slumber. Duffy said scientists call it the delayed sleep phase, and it directly affects the timing of the body’s melatonin production. During sleep, the body enters what’s called “recovery processes,” which will regulate certain hormones in the brain and effectively flush all waste products from daily brain activity. Without enough sleep, these processes do not have time to work. That is not to mention rapid eye movement sleep. REM sleep is a period during the night where heart rate and breathing quickens, and dreams become more intense. Lauren Hale, a sleep researcher and professor of preventive medicine at Stony Brook University, called this period critical to sleep. The longest period of REM happens in the latest part of the sleep cycle, the one deprived by waking up early. “For decades, scientists have known young people are sleep deprived,” she said. “It’s not that they can get by on six or seven hours of sleep … teenagers are the most at risk of not getting the
PAGE A4 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • AUGUST 29, 2019
Town
Brookhaven IDA rejects tax breaks for proposed Heatherwood apartments BY DAVID LUCES DLUCES@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM The proposed apartment complex project on the property of the Heatherwood Golf Course in South Setauket will not receive a tax benefits package after the Brookhaven Industrial Agency rejected a proposal that would cut property taxes on the land by $3.76 million over 13 years at a hearing Aug. 21. Also included would be $2,854,000 in sales tax exemptions and $420,000 in mortgage recording tax exemptions. In total the developers would see savings of more than $7 million. The decision proved to be a small victory for some area residents who have been against the project since its inception. They were concerned that the proposed tax breaks could negatively affect local school districts and development would increase traffic congestion at the intersection of Route 347 and Arrowhead Lane. Representatives for Heatherwood said at the meeting that they could not move forward with development without the tax breaks. Salvatore Pitti, president of the Port Jefferson Station-Terryville Civic Association, said the notion of developers abandoning the
project was wishful thinking. “We never wanted it from the beginning,” he said. “The entire community has been against it.” The proposed project dates back to 2014 when it was brought up to the Town of Brookhaven zoning board and was approved of a crucial zone change that allowed for apartments on the property. As a part of the approval, the town board required the property owner to donate 40 acres of land to the Manorville Farm Protection Area, remove a billboard at the golf course and construct a sidewalk on the east side of Arrowhead Lane. “The zone changes already occurred,” Pitti said. “We’ve already accepted the fact that it will be developed [eventually]. Why do you need tax breaks if you don’t have the money to build it? It came off as them being more greedy.” In 2018, the Planning Board approved the proposed plans for the company to build on nearly 26 acres of its more than 70-acre property. The project, dubbed the Heatherwood Golf & Villas, will be a 200-unit senior apartment complex catering to individuals 55 and over. The planned project would reduce the 18hole golf course to nine holes to allow developers to build the apartments and would supposedly
Above, a rendering of the future rental units located at Heatherwood Golf & Villas in South Setauket and PJS; left, Sal Pitti of the civic said he’s happy about the IDA’s move. Rendering from Town of Brookhaven Planning Board website, left file photo
bring more revenue to the golf course. IDA members questioned the reason Heatherwood needed tax breaks to move forward with the project. Heatherwood said that the project would create six permanent fulltime jobs, though IDA members said it wasn’t enough jobs to grant it the benefits package. Herb Mones, chair of the Three Village Civic Association land use committee, was
shocked when he first heard that Heatherwood was looking for tax breaks. “I was like ‘You gotta be kidding me,’” Mones said. “It wasn’t enough that they got the zoning approval, but now they need tax breaks — at some point enough is enough. It is corporate greed.” HEATHERWOOD Continued on A14
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AUGUST 29, 2019 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A5 minimum start times to 8:30 a.m. was supported by both houses of the state Legislature before beContinued from A3 ing vetoed by the governor last year. A similar bill is currently going through the legislative process sleep they need.” again. Other states like Virginia and New Jersey Of course, it is not to say modern technol- have started to experiment with later start times. On Long Island, very few districts have ogy has not affected young people. Duffy said phones and computers have meant the brain made significant increases in start times. Van is never given time to rest. Even in down- Gilder said two-thirds of the high schools in time, minds are constantly active, whether New York state (excluding NYC) start before it’s playing video games or simply scrolling 8 a.m., with an average start time around 7:45. Only 2 percent of high schools start after the through Facebook. “They’re not given a break,” Duffy said. recommended time of 8:30, according to him. The main difficulty of encouraging later start “Their brains are constantly processing, times is due to districts being so largely indepenprocessing, processing.” dent from both the state and each other. While Sleep and sports this gives each district particular freedoms, it “I looked at all the school athletic proalso means cooperation is that much harder. A grams that have been decimated by changing district that changes start times would have to their start times, and I couldn’t find anything,” renegotiate with bus companies and find ways Duffy added. “It’s hard for athletes to perform to navigate scheduling sports games between or recover if they’re not sleeping well at the schools with different start times. high school level.” “The state constitution In research, college footmakes it very difficult for ball teams looked at which the State of New York to kids were likely to be injured, pass a law to say when you and those who received less can start,” Van Gilder said. than eight hours of sleep “We need to work with the were 70 percent more likely superintendents.” to be injured, according to However, proponents of Duffy. late start said the benefits That research led him easily outweigh the negato find Start School Later, a tives. nonprofit national advocacy “There are ways around — Barbara Rosati group to change the minit and, to me, this is a imum school start time to strong evidence base for 8:30 a.m., at a minimum. Duffy communicated opportunity to improve adolescent medical with the nonprofit to provide data on the effect health, physical health, academic outcomes, lack of sleep has on players. He has become its safer driving — there is such a positive range athletic liaison. of outcomes,” said Hale of SBU. He points to professional sports teams, many of which have sleep professionals whose jobs are Parents working together In the Three Village Central School District, to set sleep schedules for their players and help more than two dozen parents filled a meetreach peak effectiveness. ing room in Emma S. Clark Memorial Library History of sleep and schools Aug. 23. Barbara Rosati, whose daughter is an Dr. Max Van Gilder is a retired pediatri- eighth-grader in P.J. Gelinas Junior High School, cian and coordinator for the New York branch organized the meeting to discuss the benefits of of Start School Later. He said that while most teenagers starting school later in the day. schools traditionally started at 9 a.m. for most Rosati, a research assistant professor at of the 20th century, the move toward earlier SBU’s Renaissance School of Medicine in the start times was relatively recent, only beginning Department of Physiology and Biophysics, said around 1975 with busing consolidation. Schools during conversations with Van Gilder she disstarted doing multiple bus runs for different covered there are only four high schools in New grade levels, and high school students would be York that begin school as early or earlier than the first ones on these routes. Ward Melville’s 7:05 start time. Because of their For decades, the early start became more internal clocks, she described the teenagers as and more established. Start School Later was constantly being jet lagged. created little more than a decade ago, but it’s “Older kids — adolescents, high schoolonly recently that some states have started to ers, junior high school students — for them try later times. it’s much more difficult to get up early in In 2016, Seattle passed a law moving start the morning, and this has a physiological times from 7:50 to 8:45 a.m. A study of the ef- basis,” Rosati said. fects of that change showed students got an averThe goal of the Aug. 23 meeting was to go age of 34 more minutes of sleep a day or several over studies, create an action plan and then hours over the course of the week. It also showed put that plan into motion. The professor pointan improvement in grades and a reduction in tar- ed toward the studies that show teenagers who diness. The study gave examples that in some are sleep deprived can be more susceptible to classes average grades were up 4.5 points more mood swings and drowsiness, and it can affect than previous classes at the earlier start times. academic and athletic performance as well as In California, a bill that would have moved cause long-term health problems such as anx-
‘We should not be put in the position to choose between education and health for our kids.’
iety, diabetes, eating disorders and cardiovascular problems. “We’re spending a lot of money in this district to make our schools better and improve their performance, and then we undermine the kids with things like sleep deprivation,” Rosati said. “We undermine not only their health but academic performance.” Parents at the meeting agreed they need to be sympathetic to the school board, and Rosati added that she believed, based on prior experience, that the board would be willing to help. “We have to show them our support, and at the same time we have to make sure they are willing to do this and feel committed to such an effort, because this is not something that you do halfheartedly,” she said. Frances Hanlon, who has a sixthPage grade student in Setauket Elementary School, agreed that the parents can work with the board trustees and that it wasn’t an us-versus-them issue. “We can’t be, ‘We know better than you and why aren’t you?’” Hanlon said. “We all have to work on this together and that’s what’s going to make a change.” Rosati and those in attendance are set to survey how many families are in the district and, when the school year begins, will start a petition for those in favor of late start times to sign. Among the suggestions parents had were bringing the late school start presentation that Rosati created to the school board and PTA meetings throughout the district, with further plans to record and send it by email to parents. One mother also suggested that high school students join the parents at BOE meetings. Rosati said she would also like to have experts such as Van Gilder and Hale present a talk for the board trustees. “We can use the help of these professionals to inform the board that there is really solid scientific evidence, and we’re not just doing this because we’re lazy and don’t want to get up early in the morning,” Rosati said. “We’re doing this because we care about our children’s mental health and academic achievement.”
Stock photo
LATER SCHOOL START TIMES
Editorial comment
Reaction from districts
Both of Duffy’s kids are already graduates of the Port Jefferson School District, and he has yet to present in front of the school board, saying he wants to gain more traction in the community before bringing it to school officials. He has been trying to get support through posts on social media. “It really can’t come just from me, it has to come from the community,” he said. Though Hale has gone in front of school boards at Shoreham-Wading River and a committee in Smithtown, she lives in Northport and has two young girls at elementary school level. She has also written editorials in scientific journals about the topic. When Rosati attended a Three Village board of education meeting in June, she said a few trustees told her that starting high school later in the day could lead to eliminating some of the music
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programs while teams may not be able to compete against neighboring schools in sporting games. After her appearance before the school board, she said she researched a number of schools on Long Island, including Jericho High School which starts at 9 a.m. and saw that they could still manage to have music programs and play schools at sports with different start times. A statement from the Three Village School District said it had commissioned a lengthy discussion regarding school start times, but while it was in support of the research, it identified negative impacts to the athletic programs, transportation, BOCES offerings and elementary music. The district said it also conducted an informal survey of a small portion of the student population, who said they were not in favor of later starts, but Three Village added it was only used to gather anecdotal information. There are a few things parents can do to aid their child’s sleep beyond the later start. Rosati offered some tips, including regular bedtimes, providing balanced meals, curfew on screen times, and limiting extracurricular activities and the intake of sugar and caffeine in the evening hours. She and her husband have tried their best to follow those guidelines, but she said they still kept their daughter home multiple days due to sleep deprivation last academic year. “We should not be put in the position to choose between education and health for our kids,” Rosati said. When asked, Shoreham-Wading River, Port Jefferson and Northport school districts all said they were not currently looking into later start times. Still, Hale said despite her frustrations with the reaction from some districts she’s continuing to argue for later start times. “We need to work together with communities so that parents and teachers and school board members understand this is for the benefit of the students and the community,” she said. “You don’t have to look hard to see the benefits of this.” Rosati plans to host another meeting Sept. 10 at the Emma S. Clark Memorial Library in Setauket from 7:30 to 9 p.m.
PAGE A6 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • AUGUST 29, 2019
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Police
Patchogue man killed in Port Jefferson motorcycle crash A Patchogue man died in Port Jefferson Friday, Aug. 23, after his motorcycle left the road and struck a tree, police said. Friends and family established a roadside memorial for Jason Russo, 35, along Sheep Pasture Road near Willis Avenue, on the north side of the small bridge with pictures, flowers and candles spelling out his name. Friends and family came to pay respects throughout the weekend into Monday. Suffolk County police said Russo was operating a 2008 Kawasaki motorcycle westbound on Sheep Pasture Road when he lost control of the vehicle, left the roadway and struck a tree at around 6:45 p.m. He was transported to John T. Mather Memorial Hospital in Port Jefferson where he was pronounced dead. The motorcycle was impounded for a safety
Friends and family laid a memorial for Jason Russo at the crash site on Sheep Pasture Road. Photo by Kyle Barr
check. Police have asked for anyone with information about this crash to call the 6th Squad at 631-854-8652.
— Compiled by Kyle Barr
Selden student killed in PJS hit-and-run Newfield High School students are mourning the loss of a classmate. On its website, Middle Country school district shared the news of the death of senior Jenna Perez, 17, who was the victim of a hit-and-run accident that occurred Aug. 24 along Route 347 in Port Jefferson Station. “It is with a heavy heart that I inform you of the tragic loss of one of our own,” Principal Scott Graviano said in the statement. “Jenna Perez, scheduled to start her senior year at Newfield, was killed in a hit-and-run accident last night in Port Jefferson Station.” The high school started providing grief counselors as of Aug. 26, according to the statement. “Please keep Jenna, her twin sister Janell, her family and friends in your thoughts and prayers,” Graviano added. Perez, of Selden, was crossing Nesconset Highway southbound, approximately 300 feet west of Terryville Road in Port Jefferson Station, when she was struck by a vehicle believed to be traveling westbound on the roadway at around 9:25 p.m. Aug. 24, according to Suffolk County Police Department. The driver fled the scene in the vehicle.
Perez left work at Five Guys and was walking to Taco Bell when she was hit, according to SCPD officials. Where she was crossing there is no light or crosswalk, and it’s possible she was hit by more than one vehicle. The high school senior was pronounced dead at the scene by a physician assistant from the Office of the Suffolk County Medical Examiner. A GoFundMe page has been set up to help Perez’s family with burial costs. On that page organizer Emily Keuler describes the Newfield student as “a beautiful, hardworking, intelligent teenager who strived to create a good life for herself, despite obstacles that may have come her way.” As of Aug. 28, nearly $7,500 had already been raised, surpassing the $5,000 goal. “She did not deserve the fate she suffered at the hands of someone so careless and negligent in their actions,” Keuler wrote in the post. Detectives are asking anyone with information on this crash to call the Major Case Unit at 631-852-6555 or Crime Stoppers at 800-220-TIPS (8477). All calls will be kept confidential.
— Compiled by Rita J. Egan
AUGUST 29, 2019 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A7
LEGALS SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF SUFFOLK WELLS FARGO BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE FOR MASTR ASSET BACKED SECURITIES TRUST 2005-OPT1, MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2005OPT1, V. DONALD SCHWEIZER, ET AL NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to a Final Judgment of Foreclosure dated May 08, 2019, and entered in the Office of the Clerk of the County of Suffolk, wherein WELLS FARGO BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE FOR MASTR ASSET BACKED SECURITIES TRUST 2005-OPT1, MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2005-OPT1 is the Plaintiff and DONALD SCHWEIZER, ET AL. are the Defendant(s). I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the BROOKHAVEN TOWN HALL, 1 INDEPENDENCE HILL, FARMINGVILLE, NY 11738, on September 10, 2019 at 10:30 AM, premises known as 11 COLUMBINE RD, ROCKY POINT A/K/A BROOKHAVEN, NY 11778: District 0200, Section 078.00, Block 01.00, Lot 022.000: ALL THAT CERTAIN PLOT, PIECE OR PARCEL OF LAND, SITUATE, LYING AND BEING IN THE TOWN OF BROOKHAVEN, COUNTY OF SUFFOLK AND STATE OF NEW YORK Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index # 600283/2015. Annette Eaderesto, Esq. - Referee. RAS Boriskin, LLC 900 Merchants Concourse, Suite 310, Westbury, New York 11590, Attorneys for Plaintiff. 786 8/8 4x ptr SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF SUFFOLK THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON F/K/A THE BANK
To Place A Legal Notice
Email: legals@tbrnewsmedia.com OF NEW YORK AS SUCCESSOR TRUSTEE FOR JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, AS TRUSTEE FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE CERTIFICATEHOLDERS OF POPULAR ABS, INC. MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATE SERIES 20045, V. PATRICIA WEISS, ET. AL. NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to a Final Judgment of Foreclosure dated October 25, 2018, and entered in the Office of the Clerk of the County of Suffolk, wherein THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON F/K/A THE BANK OF NEW YORK AS SUCCESSOR TRUSTEE FOR JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, AS TRUSTEE FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE CERTIFICATEHOLDERS OF POPULAR ABS, INC. MORTGAGE PASSTHROUGH CERTIFICATE SERIES 2004-5 is the Plaintiff and PATRICIA WEISS, ET AL. are the Defendant(s). I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the BROOKHAVEN TOWN HALL, 1 INDEPENDENCE HILL, FARMINGVILLE, NY 11738, on September 09, 2019 at 2:30PM, premises known as 5 LEHIGH AVENUE, CENTEREACH, NY 11720: District 0200, Section 513.00, Block 01.00, Lot 024.000: ALL THAT CERTAIN PLOT, PIECE OR PARCEL OF LAND, WITH THE BUILDINGS AND IMPROVEMENTS THEREON ERECTED, SITUATE, LYING AND BEING AT CENTEREACH, IN THE TOWN OF BROOKHAVEN, COUNTY OF SUFFOLK AND STATE OF NEW YORK Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index # 613040/2015. Vincent J. Messina, Jr, Esq. - Referee. RAS Boriskin, LLC 900 Merchants Concourse, Suite 310, Westbury, New York 11590, Attorneys for Plaintiff. 796 8/8 4x ptr
AS TRUSTEE FOR THE POOLING AND SERVICING AGREEMENT DATED AS OF OCTOBER 1, 2004 PARK PLACE SECURITIES, INC. ASSETBACKED PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES SERIES 2004-MHQ1,
OF SUFFOLK HSBC BANK USA, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION AS TRUSTEE FOR NOMURA ASSET ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION, MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2006-AF1, Plaintiff
V.
AGAINST
MICHAEL J. KUJAN, ET. AL.
ANTHONY W. MANGANELLO, ET AL., Defendant(s)
NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to a Final Amended Judgment of Foreclosure dated May 1, 2019, and entered in the Office of the Clerk of the County of Suffolk, wherein WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A., AS TRUSTEE FOR THE POOLING AND SERVICING AGREEMENT DATED AS OF OCTOBER 1, 2004 PARK PLACE SECURITIES, INC. ASSETBACKED PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES SERIES 2004-MHQ1 is the Plaintiff and MICHAEL J. KUJAN, ET AL. are the Defendant(s). I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the BROOKHAVEN TOWN HALL, 1 INDEPENDENCE HILL, FARMINGVILLE, NY 11738, on September 25, 2019 at 9:00 AM, premises known as 129 DAHLIA DR, MASTIC BEACH, NY 11951: District 0200, Section 979.00, Block 20.00, Lot 031.000 FKA District 0209, Section 022.00, Block 10.00, Lot 031.000 FKA District 0200, Section 979.00, Block 10.00, Lot 031.000 ALL THAT CERTAIN PLOT, PIECE OR PARCEL OF LAND, WITH THE BUILDINGS AND IMPROVEMENTS THERON ERECTED, SITUATE, LYING AND BEING IN THE TOWN OF BROOKHAVEN, COUNTY OF SUFFOLK AND STATE OF NEW YORK Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index # 610021/2015. Enza M. Brandi, Esq. - Referee. RAS Boriskin, LLC 900 Merchants Concourse, Suite 310, Westbury, New York 11590, Attorneys for Plaintiff. 825 8/22 4x ptr
SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF SUFFOLK
NOTICE OF SALE
WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A.,
SUPREME COURT COUNTY
Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly dated August 30, 2018 I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville, NY 11738, on September 20, 2019 at 10:30AM, premises known as 10 PAUL STREET, PORT JEFFERSON STATION, NY 11776. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk and State of New York, DISTRICT 0200, SECTION 180.00, BLOCK 02.00, LOT 007.000. Approximate amount of judgment $318,760.28 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment for Index# 612242/2015. RICHARD J. KAUFMAN, ESQ., Referee Gross Polowy, LLC Attorney for Plaintiff 1775 Wehrle Drive, Suite 100 Williamsville, NY 14221 841 8/22 4x ptr
Defendant(s). Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale, duly entered 1/18/2019, I, the undersigned Referee, will sell at public auction at Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville, NY 11738, on 9/18/2019 at 2:30 pm, premises known as 147 Eagle Hill Court, Middle Island, NY 11953, and described as follows: ALL that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk and State of New York, and designated on the tax maps of the Suffolk County Treasurer as District 0200, Section 323.00, Block 02.00 and Lot 037.000. The approximate amount of the current Judgment lien is $268,750.94 plus interest and costs. The premises will be sold subject to provisions of the aforesaid Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale; Index # 007310-2013. For sale information, please visit Auction.com at www.Auction.com or call (800) 280-2832. Terry R. Woodard, Esq., Referee. SHELDON MAY & ASSOCIATES Attorneys at Law, 255 Merrick Road, Rockville Centre, NY 11570 Dated: 7/10/2019 File Number: 34340 MNB 848 8/15 4x ptr
NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF SUFFOLK U.S. BANK, N.A., NOT IN ITS INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY, BUT SOLELY AS TRUSTEE OF THE NRZ PASS-THROUGH TRUST IX, Against
HOUSES HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION A/K/A COVENTRY MANOR HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION (HOA);
Plaintiff,
MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. AS NOMINEE FOR GMAC MORTGAGE CORPORATION D/B/A DITECH. COM; COVENTRY MANOR TOWNHOUSES HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION (HOA); BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF COVENTRY MANOR TOWN-
NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF SUFFOLK U.S. Bank National Association, as Trustee, successor in interest to Wilmington Trust Company, as Trustee, successor in interest to Bank of America, National Association, as Trustee, successor by merger to LaSalle Bank National Association, as Trustee for Structured Asset Investment Loan Trust Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates Series 2005-1, Plaintiff AGAINST Salvatore Russo; Chantal Russo; et al., Defendant(s) Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly
dated December 11, 2018 I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville, New York, 11738 on September 23, 2019 at 9:30AM, premises known as 38 Chanel Drive East, Shirley, NY 11967. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Shirley, County of Suffolk, State of NY, District 0200 Section 978.80 Block 01.00 Lot 031.000. Approximate amount of judgment $274,424.57 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index# 070079/2014. Tarsha Smith, Esq., Referee Shapiro, DiCaro & Barak, LLC Attorney(s) for the Plaintiff 175 Mile Crossing Boulevard Rochester, New York 14624 (877) 430-4792 868 8/22 4x ptr NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT- COUNTY OF SUFFOLK U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE FOR STRUCTURED ASSET SECURITIES CORPORATION MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2006-BC4, Plaintiff, AGAINST SALMA ASHRAF, KASHIF ASHRAF, et al. Defendant(s) Pursuant to a judgment of foreclosure and sale duly granted on August 22, 2016. I, the undersigned Referee, will sell at public auction at the Brookhaven Town Hall and Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville, NY 11738 and Independence Hill Farmingville, NY 11738 on September 20, 2019 at 9:15 AM premises known as 2 Bucks Hill St, Medford, NY 11763. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situLEGALS con’t on pg. 8
PAGE A8 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • AUGUST 29, 2019
LEGALS LEGALS con’t from pg. 7 ate, lying and being in the Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk and State of New York. District 0200 Section 608.00, Block 01.00 and Lot 015.000. Approximate amount of judgment $927,178.00 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment. Index #13930/09. Christopher Hahn, Esq., Referee, Aldridge Pite, LLP - Attorneys for Plaintiff - 40 Marcus Drive, Suite 200, Melville, NY 11747 870 8/22 4x ptr ACCESSORY APARTMENT REVIEW BOARD TOWN OF BROOKHAVEN Pursuant to the provisions of section §85-258 of the Building Ordinance of the Town of Brookhaven, notice is hereby given that the Accessory Apartment Review Board of the Town of Brookhaven will hold a public hearing at Town Hall, One Independence Hill, Farmingville, NY, at 6:00 p.m. on 09/05/2019 AA018787 JACK DAVID & SUZANNE 214 PINE RD CORAM NY 11727 AA019254 JUSTE KERVIN & KREGEL TARA 5 HARFORD DR CORAM NY 11727 AA019292 GENTILE VIOLA & OBRIEN SEAN D 54 BALATON AVE RONKONKOMA NY 11779 AA019305 LODATO LUCIAN R & PATRICIA J 17 LAUREL LN SHIRLEY NY 11967 AA019327 KLINGEL JAMES & DONNA 8 WYANDANCH TRL CORAM NY 11727 AA019401 CARUSO DORIS 51 WYANDOTTE ST SELDEN NY 11784 AA019405
To Place A Legal Notice
Email: legals@tbrnewsmedia.com NEEDLES KATHRYN A 17 GARLAND RD ROCKY POINT NY 11778 AA019408 FOGLIA EDWARD & FOGLIA MELISSA DONOVAN 129 OVERLOOK DR MASTIC NY 11950 AA019409 JAWA RANDEEP & WIN TIN 18 BLINKER LIGHT RD STONY BROOK NY 11790 AA019411 ROONEY LAURA V 50 WILMARTH AVE PATCHOGUE NY 11772 AA019417 YEE LAI L & LEON Y 140 COATES AVE HOLBROOK NY 11741 AA019418 FRANCO MARIA THERESA & FRANCO NICK FRANCO VINCENT 1376 STONY BROOK RD STONY BROOK NY 11790 AA019446 LEWIS GEORGE & LAURIE M 200 NEWBURGH AVE MEDFORD NY 11763 AA019449 PETERSON THOR LIFE ESTATE & T J PETERSON &R J GERRIG 5 MEDIA LANE STONY BROOK NY 11790 AA019453 ALEXANDER STEPHEN P & NICOLE 209 OSWEGO AVE MEDFORD NY 11763 AA019455 VANDENBERG GLORIA & CHRISTOPHER 210 HOLBROOK AVE RONKONKOMA NY 11779 AA019458 JESSUP CHRISTOPHER & JESSUP KRISTINA 3 HENRY PL PATCHOGUE NY 11772 AA019467 LI XIA 257 HALLOCK ROAD STONY BROOK NY 11790 AA019468 DECHANCE ROBERT 14 CHERRY RD ROCKY POINT NY 11778 AA019469 ZOLLO GERARDO & FRANCESCA 179 WADING RIVER RD MANORVILLE NY 11949
AA019471 COSTELLO JOMARIE 12 WOOD RIDGE LN CORAM NY 11727 AA019473 KENNELLY MICHELE 29 VINE RD ROCKY POINT NY 11778 AA019474 GUERRIERA CATHY 40 MIDDLE LINE AVE MEDFORD NY 11763 AA019475 CANILLAS EDWARD 50 APPEL DR SHIRLEY NY 11967 AA019476 LYNCH ELIZABETH & REGINA COLANERO 14 BOWEN PL STONY BROOK NY 11790 AA019481 GIORDANO ANTHONY & PATRICIA 672 HAWKINS RD E CORAM NY 11727 AA15220 YEE LEONG & JENNIFER LIU 140 COATES AVE HOLBROOK NY 11741 AA16211 ZARAHN BARBARA A 97 JOLINE RD PORT JEFF STA NY 11776 AA16474 PEREZ ELAINE & PEREZ FREDDY 204 HARRISON AVE MILLER PLACE NY 11764 AA16705 GIORDANO ANTHONY & PATRICIA 672 HAWKINS RD E CORAM NY 11727 AA16878 KOVOROS IRENE 116 PATCHOGUE RD LAKE RONKONKOMA NY 11779 Irene D’Abramo Accessory Apartment Review Board Town of Brookhaven 877 8/29 1x ptr NOTICE OF RESOLUTION ADOPTED 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 on August 14, 2019, duly adopted the following resolution: BE IT RESOLVED that pursuant to the Town Law of the State of New York, the Board of Fire Commissioners of the Port Jefferson Fire District, 115 Maple Place, Port Jefferson, N.Y. expend from the Capital Apparatus Reserve Fund for the purchase of a 2019 15 Passenger van, a sum not to exceed $52,000 and be it further RESOLVED that the cost of said purchase, together with any incidental costs, including publishing, contracts, etc. be paid out of the Capital reserve Apparatus Fund presently existing, in no event to exceed the total sum of $52,000 and be it further RESOLVED that this resolution be 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 shall, within ten (10) days of the adoption of this resolution, publish a notice within the Record setting forth the date of the adoption of this resolution and an abstract of the resolution concisely stating the purpose and effect thereof and that the resolution was adopted subject to permissive referendum. Dated August 20, 2019 BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF FIRE COMMISSIONERS OF THE PORT JEFFERSON FIRE DISTRICT Barbara Cassidy Secretary 878 8/29 1x ptr NOTICE The resolution, a summary of which is published herewith, has been adopted on August 19, 2019 and the validity of the obligations authorized by such resolution may be hereafter contested only if such obligations were authorized for an object or purpose for which the Village of Port Jefferson, in the County of Suffolk, New York, is not authorized to expend money or if the provisions of law which
should have been complied with as of the date of publication of this Notice were not substantially complied with, and an action, suit or proceeding contesting such validity is commenced within twenty days after the publication of this Notice, or such obligations were authorized in violation of the provisions of the constitution. BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE VILLAGE OF PORT JEFFERSON DATED: August 19, 2019 Port Jefferson, New York BARBARA SAKOVICH Interim Village Clerk REFUNDING BOND RESOLUTION OF THE VILLAGE OF PORT JEFFERSON, NEW YORK, ADOPTED AUGUST 19, 2019, AUTHORIZING THE REFUNDING OF CERTAIN OUTSTANDING BONDS OF SAID VILLAGE, STATING THE PLAN OF REFUNDING, APPROPRIATING AN AMOUNT NOT TO EXCEED $4,500,000 FOR SUCH PURPOSE, AUTHORIZING THE ISSUANCE OF REFUNDING BONDS IN THE PRINCIPAL AMOUNT OF NOT TO EXCEED $4,500,000 TO FINANCE SAID APPROPRIATION, AND MAKING CERTAIN OTHER DETERMINATIONS RELATIVE THERETO The object or purpose for which the bonds are authorized is the refunding of all or a portion of certain outstanding bonds of the Village, consisting of (i) bonds issued in 2010 for the construction of a various road improvements and (ii) bonds issued in 2013 for the construction of improvements to the Village golf course. The period of probable usefulness is fifteen (15) years, commencing on October 12, 2011 for the 2011 bonds. The period of probable usefulness is fifteen (15) years, commencing on December 18, 2013 for the 2013 bonds. The maximum amount of obligations authorized to be issued is $4,500,000. A complete copy of the Bond Resolution summarized above shall be available for public inspection during normal business hours at the
office of the Village Clerk, Village Hall, 121 West Broadway, Port Jefferson, New York. ESTOPPEL CERTIFICATE I, Barbara Sakovich, Interim Village Clerk of the Village of Port Jefferson, in the County of Suffolk, New York (the “Village”), HEREBY CERTIFY as follows: That a resolution of the Board of Trustees of said Village entitled: “REFUNDING BOND RESOLUTION OF THE VILLAGE OF PORT JEFFERSON, NEW YORK, ADOPTED AUGUST 19, 2019, AUTHORIZING THE REFUNDING OF CERTAIN OUTSTANDING BONDS OF SAID VILLAGE, STATING THE PLAN OF REFUNDING, APPROPRIATING AN AMOUNT NOT TO EXCEED $4,500,000 FOR SUCH PURPOSE, AUTHORIZING THE ISSUANCE OF REFUNDING BONDS IN THE PRINCIPAL AMOUNT OF NOT TO EXCEED $4,500,000 TO FINANCE SAID APPROPRIATION, AND MAKING CERTAIN OTHER DETERMINATIONS RELATIVE THERETO,” was adopted on August 19, 2019, and such resolution contained an estoppel clause as permitted by Section 80.00 of the Local Finance Law and a notice setting forth substantially the statements referred to in Section 81.00 of the Local Finance Law, together with a summary of such resolution, was duly published as referred to in said Section 81.00 of the Local Finance Law. That to the best of my knowledge, no action, suit or proceeding contesting the validity of the obligations authorized by such resolution was commenced within twenty days from the date of publication of such notice. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the corporate seal of said Village this 19th day of August , 2019. Barbara Sakovich, Interim Village Clerk Village of Port Jefferson 879 8/29 1x ptr LEGALS con’t on pg. 9
AUGUST 29, 2019 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A9
LEGALS LEGALS con’t from pg. 8 REFEREE’S NOTICE OF SALE IN FORECLOSURE SUPREME COURT – COUNTY OF SUFFOLK QUICKEN LOANS INC., Plaintiff – against – THEODORE GORDIN A/K/A TEDDY GORDIN, et al Defendant(s). Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered on May 30, 2019. I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville, NY 11738, Suffolk County, New York on the 26th Day of September, 2019 at 9:15 a.m. 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.
To Place A Legal Notice
Email: legals@tbrnewsmedia.com MELLON FKA THE BANK OF NEW YORK, AS TRUSTEE FOR THE CERTIFICATEHOLDERS OF THE CWABS INC., ASSET-BACKED CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2007-6, Plaintiff - against - MARY FISHER A/K/A MARY J. FISHER A/K/A MARY JANE FISHER, et al Defendant(s). Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered on June 26, 2019. I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the Brookhaven Town Hall, Farmingville, Suffolk County, New York on the 2nd day of October, 2019 at 9:45 a.m. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the Village of Jefferson, Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk and State of New York. Premises known as 309 Glenwood Lane, Port Jefferson, (Town of Brookhaven) NY 11777.
Premises known as 38 Millard Avenue, Miller Place, (Town of Brookhaven) NY 11764.
(District: 0206, Section: 011.00, Block: 04.00, Lot: 020.000)
(District: 0200, Section: 070.00, Block: 02.00, Lot: 012.002)
Approximate amount of lien $889,387.19 plus interest and costs.
Approximate amount of lien $207,966.36 plus interest and costs.
Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed judgment and terms of sale.
Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed judgment and terms of sale.
Index No. 608453/2016. Christopher M. Hahn, Esq., Referee.
Index No. 623066/2017. Brian Egan, Esq., Referee.
Davidson Fink LLP Attorney(s) for Plaintiff 28 East Main Street, Suite 1700 Rochester, NY 14614-1990 Tel. 585/760-8218
Davidson Fink LLP Attorney(s) for Plaintiff 28 East Main Street, Suite 1700 Rochester, NY 14614-1990 Tel. 585/760-8218 For sale information, please visit Auction.com at www.Auction.com or call (800) 280-2832
For sale information, please visit Auction.com at www. Auction.com or call (800) 280-2832 Dated: August 9, 2019 883 8/29 4x ptr
Dated: June 24, 2019 880 8/29 4x ptr REFEREE’S NOTICE OF SALE IN FORECLOSURE SUPREME COURT - COUNTY OF SUFFOLK THE BANK OF NEW YORK
Request for Proposals Advertisement RFP No: R2000001 RFP Description: Online Employee Workplace Training Services Advertisement Date: August 29, 2019
Conference Date: N/A Technical Questions Due Date: September 10, 2019 Proposals Due Date and Time: September 19, 2019, no later than 12:00 PM Suffolk Community College (the “College”) solicits proposals from qualified companies for the above referenced services. Proposals must be returned to the Suffolk County Community College Procurement Office located on the Ammerman Campus, 533 College Road, NFL Building Room L16, Selden, NY 11784 by the date and time indicated above. Late proposals will not be accepted. Specifications for this RFP and other associated attachments are available through the College’s Office of Business and Financial Affairs. They can be obtained by emailing menons@sunysuf folk.edu; or on the College’s website at: ht tps://w w w3.sunysuf folk. edu/About/809.asp Proposals must be made upon and in accordance with the forms and documents provided by the College, which will contain accompanying instructions to proposers. All questions and inquiries regarding this RFP should be submitted in writing to Seema Menon, Associate Administrative Director of Business Operations at menons@sunysuffolk.edu. To assist us in communicating quickly, all prospective proposers are requested to complete and return the “RFP Vendor Registration Form” via email to menons@ sunysuffolk.edu as soon as possible. This will assist in providing the Procurement Office with proposers’ contact information so that if RFP addenda are issued, the College is able to notify proposers in a timely manner. The College will not be responsible for addenda notification if the referenced form is not submitted prior to the RFP due date.
889 8/29 1x ptr CPAC236 EAST LLC Art. of Org. filed with the SSNY on 08/05/2019. Office location in Suffolk County. SSNY has been designated for service of process. SSNY shall mail a copy of any process against the LLC to the LLC, 18 Mt. Sinai Avenue South, Port Jefferson Station, NY 11776. Purpose: any legal activity. 887 8/29 6x ptr NOSTRUM ONE CONSULTING LLC Art. of Org. filed with the SSNY on 07/01/2019. Office location in Queens County. SSNY has been designated for service of process. SSNY shall mail a copy of any process against the LLC to the LLC, 82-44 218th Street, Queens Village, NY 11427. Purpose: any legal activity. 886 8/29 6x ptr NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING PLEASE TAKE NOTICE, that a public hearing shall be held on September 17, 2019 at 8:00 p.m. in the Village Meeting Room at the Belle Terre Community Center, located at 55 Cliff Road, Belle Terre, New York 11777, to hear any and all persons either for or against a proposed local law entitled “A LOCAL LAW amending Chapter 99 (Land Clearing, Tree Preservation and Grading) of the Village Code of Belle Terre to clarify what is and is not permitted when clearing, excavating or grading land in any manner within the village”. Copies of the proposed law, sponsored by Mayor Robert Sandak, are on file in the Village Clerk’s Office, Monday through Friday from 10:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES VILLAGE OF BELLE TERRE JOANNE RASO, VILLAGE CLERK 892 8/29 1x ptr NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING PLEASE TAKE NOTICE, that
a public hearing shall be held on September 17, 2019 at 8:00 p.m. in the Village Meeting Room at the Belle Terre Community Center, located at 55 Cliff Road, Belle Terre, New York 11777, to hear any and all persons either for or against a proposed local law entitled “A LOCAL LAW amending Chapter 103 (Noise) of the Village Code of Belle Terre, by imposing a decibel limit for noise and addressing house alarms.
at 8:00 p.m. in the Village Meeting Room at the Belle Terre Community Center, located at 55 Cliff Road, Belle Terre, New York 11777, to hear any and all persons either for or against a proposed local law entitled “A LOCAL LAW amending Chapter 125 (Site Plan Review) of the Village Code of Belle Terre, by clarifying the application requirements and adjusting the expiration date for permits issued under this chapter.
Copies of the proposed law, sponsored by Mayor Robert Sandak, are on file in the Village Clerk’s Office, Monday through Friday from 10:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Copies of the proposed law, sponsored by Mayor Robert Sandal, are on file in the Village Clerk’s Office, Monday through Friday from 10:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES VILLAGE OF BELLE TERRE JOANNE RASO, VILLAGE CLERK
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES VILLAGE OF BELLE TERRE JOANNE RASO, VILLAGE CLERK
893 8/29 1x ptr
895 8/29 1x ptr
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE, that a public hearing shall be held on September 17, 2019 at 8:00 p.m. in the Village Meeting Room at the Belle Terre Community Center, located at 55 Cliff Road, Belle Terre, New York 11777, to hear any and all persons either for or against a proposed local law entitled “A LOCAL LAW amending Chapter 116 of the Village Code of Belle Terre, by adding additional maintenance requirements and adjusting the fines associated with violations of the chapter.
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE, that a public hearing shall be held on September 17, 2019 at 8:00 p.m. in the Village Meeting Room at the Belle Terre Community Center, located at 55 Cliff Road, Belle Terre, New York 11777, to hear any and all persons either for or against a proposed local law entitled “A LOCAL LAW amending Chapter 91 (Hawking, Peddling and Soliciting) of the Village Code of Belle Terre, by regulating the distribution of certain materials, peddling, soliciting and related activities within the Village.
Copies of the proposed law, sponsored by Mayor Robert Sandak, are on file in the Village Clerk’s Office, Monday through Friday from 10:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES VILLAGE OF BELLE TERRE JOANNE RASO, VILLAGE CLERK 894 8/29 1x ptr NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING PLEASE TAKE NOTICE, that a public hearing shall be held on September 17, 2019
Copies of the proposed law, sponsored by Mayor Robert Sandak, are on file in the Village Clerk’s Office, Monday through Friday from 10:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES VILLAGE OF BELLE TERRE JOANNE RASO, VILLAGE CLERK 896 8/29 1x ptr
PAGE A10 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • AUGUST 29, 2019
Village of Port Jefferson
Town
Village to install 4K cameras at country club BY KYLE BARR KYLE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
Town Councilwoman Valerie Cartright, center, honors Black Women’s Equity Day Aug. 21 with local young women and officials. Photo from Town of Brookhaven
Cartright commemorates Black Women’s Equity Day In honor of Black Women’s Equity Day Aug. 22, local women gathered together to raise awareness about the enduring problem of pay inequality and its effect on women of color. Brookhaven town Councilwoman Valerie Cartright (D-Port Jefferson Station), along with Assemblywoman Kimberly Jean-Pierre (D-Wheatley Heights), Babylon town Councilwoman Jackie Gordon (D-Copiague) and Victoria Gumbs Moore, Esq., spoke with children in the Keep Your Change program in North Amityville and other young women at Bethel AME Church in Setauket Aug. 21. The women led activities with the youth to illustrate pay disparities and discussed the effects on families and community. “Unequal pay and discrimination impact a woman of color as an individual, it impacts her family and the larger society,” Cartright said. “As the mother of a young Haitian-American girl, I want my daughter to know that her mother fought for equal rights and equal pay for women of color when I had the opportunity.” Speaking at the meeting, the women spoke to the young people about the
continuing culture surrounding issues of pay equity. “I am proud to say that this experience has given me faith that these issues will not be allowed to endure another generation,” she said. Moore, a past president of Amistad Long Island Black Bar Association and past president of Suffolk County Women’s Bar Association, said young black women need to know their inherent value. “It’s important that young women know their value and learn that being paid anything less than their full value is unacceptable,” she said. Jean-Pierre said the issue needs to be addressed in every instance. “We won’t achieve real economic justice unless we confront this issue head-on, and I was pleased to join some of my colleagues to help start and continue this much-needed conversation,” she said. The Black Women’s Equity Day is Aug. 22 this year. It was commemorated by the National Bar Association, which asked its membership to participate nationwide.
— Compiled by Kyle Barr
Port Jefferson village officials hope $12,000 is enough to cover the Port Jefferson Country Club parking lot and area around the golf pro shop with camera surveillance. At its Aug. 19 meeting, village officials agreed to put together $12,000 from various budgets to replace seven cameras around the country club parking lot. These cameras will be at 4K resolution to better enable reading license plates in case that data needs to be forwarded to village constables or Suffolk County Police. The money will also go toward adding a new system to use the upgraded cameras at the country club. “The system we got there is five years old — the cameras have always been cloudy there,” said Kevin Wood, the Port Jefferson parking and mobility administrator. At the meeting, the village officials went back and forth on the cameras’ price tag, but Wood argued 4K is the way of the future. “The 4K costs have gone down tremendously, even since we did Texaco a year ago,” he said. “We’re at the point where we don’t consid-
Vilage officials have been paying attention to the Port Jefferson Country Club lower parking lot. Photo by Kyle Barr
er anything but 4K, it’s that close to the cost.” The board unanimously voted to install the new cameras, and Mayor Margot Garant said she is looking to take some money out of the country club, the parking and main budgets. In previous meetings, trustee Stan Loucks made a point of trying to stop people from parking in the country club’s lower parking lot and walking down to the beach to fish. “We believe that a lack of cameras at the lower lot creates additional problems down at the east beach,” he said at the Aug. 19 meeting. In May, the village announced it had hooked up its camera system to Suffolk County Police Department’s real-time crime center. The system is used by police to tap into local cameras and use that data in conjunction with databases to catch criminal activity. Wood said they expect the cameras to be installed by mid-September.
Mather receives emergency department accreditation Mather Hospital’s Emergency Department has received a Geriatric Emergency Department Accreditation from the American College of Emergency Physicians. “Mather Hospital has taken the appropriate steps to meet the needs of seniors in our community,” said Emergency Department Medical Director Dr. Adam Wos. “This holistic approach includes fall prevention, medication reconciliation, and discussions about goals of care. Our plan is to ensure that our doctors and nurses have the latest knowledge and equipment to care for the fastest growing population in our nation — people over age 65.” The voluntary geriatric accreditation provides specific criteria and goals for emergency clinicians and administrators. The accreditation recommends more than two dozen best
practices for geriatric care. Northwell Health EDs were awarded a level 3 accreditation, which requires many of these best practices and geriatric education for emergency medicine staff, as well as screenings and programs focused on older adults. Those include: geriatric-friendly equipment availability and policies regarding routine assessments for delirium, dementia or fall risk. The accreditation is for three years. Mather was one of 17 Northwell Health emergency departments across Long Island, New York City and Westchester to receive the accreditation. “This was an initiative that we wanted to get behind to help the department ensure the best patient outcomes,” said Mather ED nurse manager Julie Tegay, who spearheaded the accreditation project for the hospital.
AUGUST 29, 2019 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A11
Village of Port Jefferson
Racers try to stay afloat at annual Quick & Dirty boat race
BY JULIANNE MOSHER DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM The 9th annual Sikaflex Quick & Dirty Boat Build competition went off without a hitch Sunday, Aug. 25, as a week of hot and humid air turned into a clear, warm day for racing hand-built boats. Seven teams built their boats out of plywood sealed with caulk over Saturday and early Sunday before taking them into the water to race a short circuit around Port Jefferson Harbor in front of Harborfront Park. Peter Charalambous and Sunny Drescher won the day with their boat The Winner, while Chris Voorhis and Doug Santo finished second with a boat called No. 1. Kayla Kraker and Alex Serina took third place in their craft Avalon 1.25. Dominic Ware and Kelsey Pagan won best design award for their boat Sunny Days. Photos clockwise from top center: the second finalists and their boat, No. 1; third-placed Avalon 1.25 crossing the finish line; the winning pair, Drescher and Charalambous, embrace after their win; the boats are off!; and the Santo and Voorhis families want a ride after the race.
All photos by Julianne Mosher
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PAGE A12 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • AUGUST 29, 2019
County
Legislators deride red-light camera report Public Works Committee to vote on extending the program Aug. 29
BY DAVID LUCES DLUCES@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM The future of red-light cameras in Suffolk County remains up in the air. Legislators took issue with a report on the county’s red-light camera program in a meeting Aug. 26. It left some with more questions than answers regarding the divisive program as they prepare for a vote that could extend the program’s lifespan this Thursday, Aug. 29. The countywide report carried out by Brookhaven-based L.K. McLean Associates found that the number of total crashes at 100 intersections with red-light cameras increased by nearly 60 percent from 2015 through 2017, compared to the time period (2007-09) before the cameras were installed beginning in 2010. The study found that at red-light intersections the number of crashes exceeded projections by 42 percent in total. Also, it found that a total of 17 fatal crashes occurred at red-light intersections for the duration of the report. Crashes that resulted in injuries decreased by nearly 11 percent, while the number of rear-end crashes increased by 46 percent. Officials from the consulting firm presented the report, which cost the county $250,000, to the county Legislature’s Public Works Committee Aug. 26 and disclosed they estimated the redlight program had generated more than $5 million in savings by reducing serious accidents. Despite those findings, legislators on the committee took issue with the results and said it left them with more questions than answers. One criticism levied was the way the Revenue Revenue Name Code 2643 Red Light Camera Fines 2644
Red Light Camera Late Fees
2646
Red Light Camera Admin Fee Total for all Red Light Camera Revenue
*001-R136 Transfer Fr Traffic Violations Bureau **115-R136 Transfer Fr Traffic Violations Bureau
Suffolk County Legislature’s Public Works Committee will vote on extending the red-light camera program for another five years. If that passes it will move on for a vote by the full Legislature. File photo
consultants collected their data and how they determined if an accident was linked to an intersection with a red-light camera. Raymond DiBiase, president and chief executive of L.K. McLean Associates, said they based their parameters from the New York State Department of Transportation. “The DOT in their crash data analysis and summaries identify an intersection crash as one that occurs within 10 meters or 33 feet from the center of the intersection,” he said. The consultants for the report expanded the crash area to within 200 feet of the center of the intersection, but some legislators questioned that decision and argued it could
have captured crashes that fall in line with the definition of an intersection crash. Legislator Sarah Anker (D-Mount Sinai) said she was deeply disappointed in the report’s findings and criticized the firm with not looking at the link between distracted driving and crashes at red-light intersections. “What has not been mentioned at all during your report is distracted driving,” she said. “I have a traffic safety issue in my district; I have two of the most dangerous roads on Long Island —[routes] 25 and 25A.” DiBiase responded by saying it is difficult to prove what exactly caused a crash from the data. Their goal was to make the study objective
as possible and said distracted driving falls in a gray area as it is difficult to prove due to factors like lack of witnesses or evidence. “Distracted driving is why a lot of these accidents are happening,” Anker said. “We are here to try and understand how to make this program better. We know it’s saving lives, but we also know it’s also creating problems.” The red-light program has generated more than $20 million in revenue annually for the county. Legislator Robert Trotta (R-Fort Salonga), who has long been a severe critic of red-light cameras, said the program is a money grab and a tax on the taxpayers. He also criticized the consultants for only mentioning that fatal accidents at red-light camera intersections were lower than projected, and not also including data on fatal crashes that occurred at intersections without red-light cameras. “You can take these reports and throw them in the garbage can, it’s a joke — literally embarrassing,” Trotta said. “Everything here is jaded to make this program look good, it is a $32 million sham on the people of this county.” Despite the lukewarm response to its report, the firm recommended continuing the red-light program, pointing to a decrease in crashes resulting in injuries and fatalities as well as a reduction in left-turn crashes. The Public Works Committee is expected to vote Thursday, Aug. 29, on whether it will extend the countywide red-light camera program for another five years. If it were to pass it will go to the Legislature for a vote that could take place as soon as next Wednesday, Sept. 4.
2010 Actual
2011 Actual
2012 Actual
2013 Actual
2014 Actual
2015 Actual
2016 Actual
2017 Actual
$1,490,284
$11,701,925
$8,910,522
$12,184,725
$18,430,492
$18,271,470
$17,466,600
$15,989,343
2018 Exec Estimated $15,896,338
$98,065
$858,935
$696,751
$1,197,545
$2,035,835
$2,365,623
$2,075,014
$2,088,511
$2,058,471
$1,976,132
$5,766,295
$10,836,220
$10,847,700
$10,399,618
$9,561,938
$9,505,168
$9,124,961
$19,148,565
$31,302,547
$31,484,793
$29,941,232
$27,639,792
$27,459,977
$26,163,577
$1,588,349
$12,560,860 $9,607,273
2019 Adopted $15,062,484
$0
$0
$0
$23,204,883
$37,162,941
$212,779
$0
$0
$0
$0
$0
$0
$0
$0
$0
$35,031,937
$39,808,862
$38,260,254
$38,056,918
$41,333,894
*County General Fund
**County’s Police District (funds include fees from other traffic violations per Robert Lipp.)
Since 2010, Suffolk County has been authorized by New York State to install red-light cameras at intersections. Today, 215 cameras operate at 100 intersections. The program is intended to reduce the number of cars running red traffic lights and by extension reduce the number of crashes and the severity of the crashes. The county has as its vendor for the red-light camera program Conduent, a divestiture from Xerox. Conduent receives from Suffolk County 42 percent of all fines as per contract terms, and its contract expires December 2019. Graphic by TBR News Media
Village of Port Jefferson BY KYLE BARR KYLE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM The bouncing Greek folk music coming from the Greek Orthodox Church of the Assumption invited hundreds of locals to join in the 58th annual Port Jefferson Greek Festival. From Aug. 22 to 25, local residents got to share in the history and culture of Greece. Along with many of the classic carnival rides and games, participants could shop for Greek memorabilia and stand on line for the chance to eat some classic Greek food including gyros, moussaka, pastitsio and tiropita. The annual event fundraises for the Greek church’s activities.
All photos by Kyle Barr
AUGUST 29, 2019 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A13
Port Jeff Greeks out
PAGE A14 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • AUGUST 29, 2019
School News
Village of Port Jefferson
The Como Brothers play a set at the Port Bistro Pub in Port Jefferson. Photo from Kevin Wood
Music video showcases why people return to Port Jeff Left, new HS Principal Eric Haruthunian; right, new pre-K-8 Assistant Principal Amy Laverty. Photo from PJSD Facebook
Port Jefferson School District names new HS principal and pre-K-8 assistant principal The Port Jefferson School District announced new faces will be standing by the doors of school buildings come September as other district personnel move up through the ranks. Eric Haruthunian was named principal at Earl L. Vandermeulen High School, while Amy Laverty has been named pre-K-8 assistant principal. Before joining the Port Jefferson School District, Haruthunian most recently served as the assistant principal at John F. Kennedy High School in the Plainview-Old Bethpage School District, where he served since 2015. Prior to that position, he served as supervisor of discipline at Wantagh High School. His professional background also includes eight years of teaching experience in mathematics at the middle and high school level in the Freeport School District. The new high school principal earned a master’s of science degree in educational leadership from the College of New Rochelle and a master’s of science in elementary education from LIU Post. He holds a bachelor’s of arts in secondary math education, also from LIU Post, and permanent certification as a school administrator/supervisor, school district administrator and in 7-12 mathematics. Haruthunian comes in to replace now Assistant Superintendent for Curriculum and Instruction Christine Austen, the previous principal, after a several-month search for a replacement.
Laverty joins Port Jeff from the Northport-East Northport School District, where she served a dual role as the summer reading program principal and the instructional curriculum coordinator. Before that, she was a classroom teacher at various elementary levels in the district’s Ocean Avenue Elementary School. She earned a master’s of arts in liberal studies from Stony Brook University and a bachelor’s of arts in child study and students with disabilities from St. Joseph’s College. She holds initial certification in school building leadership and professional certifications in early childhood/childhood and students with disabilities. She also received an educational leadership advanced certificate from LIU Post. In her new role, Laverty will work with Port Jefferson Middle School Principal Robert Neidig and Edna Louise Spear Elementary School Principal Thomas Meehan. “The educational experiences of both Mr. Haruthunian and Ms. Laverty will help us continue to guide our students in the stimulating learning environment of our schools,” said incoming Superintendent Jessica Schmettan on a post to the district’s Facebook page. She will be replacing current Superintendent Paul Casciano come the end of October. “We look forward to their professional commitment to our students, staff and entire school community,” she added.
BY LEAH CHIAPPINO LCHIAPPINO@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COPM A small crowd gathered at the Port Bistro Pub to see The Como Brothers, a Long Island-based singer-songwriter duo, and see a new music video all about Port Jeff. The band has toured the country playing its music, recorded with Grammy-nominated engineer Kenta Yonesaka, and even has had its songs featured on “Keeping Up With the Kardashians.” The two brothers were in Port Jefferson Aug. 27 to perform a set and release their new music video “Take Me Home,” which is centered around the Village of Port Jefferson. The video was produced by Kevin Wood, the village’s parking and mobility administrator who doubles as the owner of his own production company Kevin Wood Media and the Port Jeff Pulse. Wood petitioned the singing duo, whom he had known from them performing at Rocketship Park, to make a song “that was centered
HEATHERWOOD Continued from A4
Mones argued that the project would forever affect the surrounding communities. “It adds to the over development, we lose open space and a golf course,” he said. “... We are happy the IDA turned them down.” Mones along with Pitti wasn’t buying that the project would be abandoned if Heatherwood didn’t receive the tax benefits package.
around the beauty and majesty of Port Jefferson.” Wood said despite the fact he may have “many friends that write music, few can write the catchiness of The Como Brothers.” Wood said that he immediately loved the song once he heard the music duo recorded it and decided to try and make the music video. It centers around a character, Lily, who returns home to Port Jefferson after traveling around. It maintains simple shots of the band playing music on the streets of the village, as well as on the dock. Shots of the village are further showcased by video of Lily wandering around in contentment at being back “where she belongs.” This was perfect for the actress who plays her, Kiley Holmes, as she is a Navy wife and has traveled around the world. “I knew Kevin had a game plan and I trusted him,” she said. “It fits perfectly because I’m so used to moving. It talks about traveling and then wanting to come back home. This is the fifth state that I’ve been in and I’ve even lived abroad for a while, so I totally got that feeling.” “There is no possibility that they will not develop that land after they got the zone change, they are going ahead with the project,” Mones said. “It will yield a gold mine for the corporation. We believe this will bring no benefits to the community.” Despite, the IDA rejecting the package, Pitti said he wouldn’t be surprised if Heatherwood broke ground on the project in the next few months. A representative from Heatherwood did not return messages requesting a phone interview by press time.
AUGUST 29, 2019 â&#x20AC;˘ THE PORT TIMES RECORD â&#x20AC;˘ PAGE A15
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TBR NEWSMEDIA
PAGE A18 â&#x20AC;˘ THE PORT TIMES RECORD â&#x20AC;˘ AUGUST 29, 2019
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Successful State Farm Agent is seeking a qualified professional to join their winning team for the role of Staff Assistant - State Farm Agent Team Member (Base Salary + Commission). We seek an energetic professional interested in helping our business grow through value-based conversations and remarkable customer experience. If you are a motivated self-starter who thrives in a fast-paced environment, then this is your opportunity for a rewarding career with excellent income and growth potential. Salary plus commission/bonus, Growth potential/Opportunity for advancement within my office. Excellent communication skills - written, verbal and listening, Proactive in problem solving, Ability to work in a team environment, Dedicated to customer service, Property and Casualty license (must be able to obtain). Will train. Half days and Full days available. Please call 631 751-6800
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FREELANCE
EVENTS, PRINT & DIGITAL REPRESENTATIVE For Our Award-Winning News Media Groupâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s North Shore Market and Beyond
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
SUPPLEMENTS EDITOR Knowing InDesign a help but not a must.
Looking for an energetic and persuasive person who is organized, detailed oriented and creative. Must have good planning, communication and people skills. Knowledge of the area and relationship with businesses is a plus. Responsible for getting sponsors, advertising, and developing partnerships for events.
Š104331
TBR NEWSMEDIA
Email resume to: kjm@tbrnewsmedia.com
Email resume to: desk@tbrnewsmedia.com or call 631.751.7744 Š104441
Looking for that perfect career? or that perfect employee? Search our employment section each week! TIMES BEACON RECORD CLASSIFIED ADS â&#x20AC;˘ 631.331.1154 or 631.751.7663 Â?
AUGUST 29, 2019 â&#x20AC;˘ THE PORT TIMES RECORD â&#x20AC;˘ PAGE A19
SERV ICES Cespool 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 ALLYâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S HOME ORGANIZING SERVICE. Help relieve the stress of clutter, records management, housecleaning and errand running. Former Librarian over five years. Helping homeowners weeklybiweekly-monthly. $30.00/hr. References. 631-740-6997 COME HOME TO A CLEAN HOUSE! Attention to detail is OUR PRIORITY. Excellent References. Serving the Three Village Area. Call Jacquie at 347-840-0890
Clean-Ups
Decks
Fences
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
Gardening/Design Architecture
SMITHPOINT FENCE. VINYL FENCE SALE! Wood, PVC, Chain Link, Stockade. Free estimates. Now offering 12 month interest free financing. Commercial/Residential. 70 Jayne Blvd., PJS. Lic.37690-H/Ins. 631-743-9797 www.smithpointfence.com.
DOWN THE GARDEN PATH *Garden Rooms *Focal Point Gardens. Designed and Maintained JUST FOR YOU. Create a â&#x20AC;&#x153;splashâ&#x20AC;? of color w/perennials or Patio Pots. Marsha, 631-689-8140 or cell# 516-314-1489
Floor Services/Sales
Electricians ANTHEM ELECTRIC MASTER ELECTRICIAN Quality Light & Power since 2004. Commercial, Industrial, Residential. Port Jefferson. Please call 631-291-8754 Andrew@Anthem-Electric.net SOUNDVIEW ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING Prompt* Reliable* Professional. Residential/Commercial, Free Estimates. Ins/Lic#57478-ME. Owner Operator, 631-828-4675 See our Display Ad in the Home Services Directory
Exterminating HOMESTEAD WILDLIFE SOLUTIONS Humane Trapping & Rodent Prevention. Sealing all acess points. Daniel Wafer: call or text 631-295-6186. NYS#2852 homesteadwildlifesolutions.com hmstdwildlife@optonline.net
Handyman Services
FINE SANDING & REFINISHING Wood Floor Installations Craig Aliperti, Wood Floors LLC. All work done by owner. 27 years experience. Lic.#47595-H/Insured. 631-875-5856
Furniture/Restoration/ Repairs REFINISHING & RESTORATION Antiques restored, repairing recane, reupholstery, touch-ups kitchen, front doors, 40 yrs exp, SAVE$$$, free estimates. Vincent Alfano 631-707-1228
YOUR AD HERE! Call 631.751.7663
Š102893
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.
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
JOHNâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S A-1 HANDYMAN SERVICE *Crown moldings* Wainscoting/raised panels. Kitchen/ Bathroom Specialist. Painting, windows, finished basements, ceramic tile. All types repairs. Dependable craftsmanship. Reasonable rates. Lic/Ins. #19136-H. 631-744-0976 c.631 697-3518
Interior Decorating/ Design TRISTATE CUSTOM WINDOW TREATMENTS. Blinds, Shades, Draperies, Shutters, Motorization, Measure and Installation. FREE SHOP AT HOME SERVICE 165 Middle Country Rd, Middle Island, NY 11953 Office: 631-448-8497 Mobile: 631-978-8158 Lic. #58820-H/Insured
Housesitting Services TRAVELING? Need someone to check on your home? Contact Tender Loving Pet Care, LLC. Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re more than just pets. Insured/Bonded. 631-675-1938
Home Improvement ALL PHASES OF HOME IMPROVEMENT From attic to your basement, no job too big or too small, RCJ Construction www.rcjconstruction.com commercial/residential, lic/ins 631-580-4518. BATHROOM RENOVATIONS EASY ONE DAY updates! We specialize in safe bathing. Grab bars, no slip flooring & seated showers. Call for a free in-home consultation. 888-657-9488. *BluStar Construction* The North Shoreâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Most Trusted Renovation Experts. 631-751-0751 Suffolk Lic. #48714-H, Ins. See Our Display Ad ISLAND HARBOR HOME REMODELING All phases of remodeling. Specializing in Kitchens & Bathrooms. Over 40 years of experience. Owner always on the job. Lic/Ins. 631-972-7082, please leave message LAMPS FIXED, $65. In Home Service!! Handy Howard. My cell 646-996-7628
Home Improvement LONG HILL CARPENTRY 40 years experience All phases of home improvement. Old & Historic Restorations. Lic.#H22336/Ins. 631-751-1764 longhill7511764@aol.com THREE VILLAGE HOME IMPROVEMENT Kitchens & Baths, Ceramic Tile, Hardwood floors, Windows/ Doors, Interior Finish trim, Interior/Exterior Painting, Composite Decking, Wood Shingles. Serving the community for 30 years. Rich Beresford, 631-689-3169
Lawn & Landscaping CAUTION! www.GotPoisonIvy.com 631-286-4600 Poison Ivy and Invasive Vines. Trained Horticulturist Summer Special $50 off code - BETTER SAFE PRIVACY HEDGES FALL BLOWOUT SALE 6ft Arborvitae Reg $149 Now $75 Beautiful, Nursery Grown. FREE Installation/FREE delivery, Limited Supply! ORDER NOW: 518-536-1367 www.lowcosttreefarm.com SWAN COVE LANDSCAPING Lawn Maintenance, Clean-ups, Shrub/Tree Pruning, Removals. Landscape Design/Installation, Ponds/Waterfalls, Stone Walls. Firewood. Free estimates. Lic/Ins.631-689-8089
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PAGE A20 â&#x20AC;˘ THE PORT TIMES RECORD â&#x20AC;˘ AUGUST 29, 2019
SERV ICES
WILDFLOWER LANDSCAPING All Phases of Masonry; driveways, paver patios, retaining walls, poolscapes, porches. plantings, sod, excavating, landscaping, irrigation, ponds, architectural plans. 35 years experience. Tom 631-704-5796
Landscape Materials SCREENED TOP SOIL Mulch, compost, decorative and driveway stone, concrete pavers, sand/block/portland. Fertilizer and seed. JOS. M. TROFFA MATERIALS CORP. 631-928-4665, www.troffa.com
Legal Services Lung Cancer? And Age 60+? You And Your Family May Be Entitled To Significant Cash Award. No Risk. No Money Out Of Pocket. For Information Call 877-225-4813
CARL BONGIORNO LANDSCAPE/MASON CONTRACTOR All phases Masonry Work:Stone Walls, Patios, Poolscapes. All phases of Landscaping Design. Theme Gardens. Residential & Commercial. Lic/Ins. 631-928-2110
Miscellaneous GET DIRECTV! ONLY $35/month! 155 Channels & 1000s of Shows/Movies on Demand. (w/SELECT All Included Package). PLUS Stream on Up to FIVE Screens Simultaneously at No Additional Cost. Call DIRECTV, 1-888-534-6918
Painting/Spackling/ Wallpaper ALL PRO PAINTING INTERIOR/EXTERIOR Power Washing, Staining, Wallpaper Removal. Free estimates. Lic/Ins #19604HI 631-696-8150. Nick BOBâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S PAINTING SERVICE 25 Years Experience. Interior/Exterior Painting, Spackling, Staining, Wallpaper Removal, Staining and Deck Restoration Power Washing. Free Estimates. Lic/Ins. #17981. 631-744-8859
Painting/Spackling/ Wallpaper COUNTY-WIDE PAINTING INTERIOR/EXTERIOR Painting/Staining. Quality workmanship. Living and Serving Three Village Area for over 30 years. Lic#37153-H. 631-751-8280 EDâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S PAINTING INTERIOR/EXTERIOR Wallpaper removal, spackling, sheetrock repair. Over 25 years experience. Commercial/Residential. Reasonable rates. 631-704-7547 GREG TRINKLE PAINTING & GUTTER CLEANING Powerwashing, window washing, staining. Neat, reliable, 25 years experience. Free Estimates. Lic/Ins.#31398-H. 631-331-0976 LaROTONDA PAINTING & DESIGN Interior/exterior, sheetrock repairs, taping/spackling, wallpaper removal, Faux, decorative finishings. Free estimates. Lic.#53278-H/Ins. Ross LaRotonda 631-689-5998 WORTH PAINTING â&#x20AC;&#x153;PAINTING WITH PRIDEâ&#x20AC;? Interiors/exteriors. Faux finishes, power-washing, wallpaper removal, sheetrocktape/spackling, carpentry/trimwork. Lead paint certified. References. Free estimates. Lic./Ins. SINCE 1989 Ryan Southworth, 631-331-5556
Power Washing
Tree Work
EXTERIOR CLEANING SPECIALISTS Roof cleaning, pressure washing/softwashing, deck restorations, gutter maintenance. Squeaky Clean Property Solutions 631-387-2156 www.SqueakyCleanli.com
ARBOR-VISTA TREE CARE 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
WORKING & LIVING IN THE THREE VILLAGES FOR 30 YEARS. Owner does the work, guarantees satisfaction. COUNTY-WIDE, Lic/Ins. 37153-H, 631-751-8280
CLOVIS OUTDOOR SERVICES LTD. Expert Tree Removal AND Pruning. Landscape Design and maintenance, Edible Gardens, Plant Healthcare, Exterior Lighting. 631-751-4880 clovisoutdoors@gmail.com EASTWOOD TREE & LANDSCAPE, INC. Experts in tree care and landscaping. Serving Suffolk County for 25 years. Lic.#35866H/Ins. 631-928-4070 eastwoodtree.com
Roofing/Siding JOSEPH BONVENTRE CONSTRUCTION Roofing, siding, windows, decks, repairs. Quality work, guaranteed. Owner operated. Over 25 years experience. Lic/Ins. #55301-H. Call or Text 631-428-6791
RANDALL BROTHERS TREE SERVICE Planting, pruning, removals, stump grinding. Free Estimates. Fully insured. LIC# 50701-H. 631-862-9291
Senior Services A PLACE FOR MOM has helped over a million families find senior living. Our trusted, local advisors help find solutions to your unique needs at no cost to you. Call: 1-855-977-3677
TO SUBSCRIBE CALL 751-7744
SUNBURST TREE EXPERTS Since 1974, our history of customer satisfaction is second to none. Pruning/removals/planting, plant health care. Insect/ Disease Management. ASK ABOUT GYPSY MOTH AND TICK SPRAYS Bonded employees. Lic/Ins. #8864HI 631-744-1577
Tree Work TREE AND LANDSCAPE CARE Serving all of Suffolk County, Fast emergency services, tree trimming, removal and maintenance, landscape design, plant and shrub design and installation. TREETASTIC 631-619-7222. See display ad for more information
TV Services/Sales DISH TV $59.99 For 190 Channels + $14.95 High Speed Internet. Free Installation, Smart HD DVR Included, Free Voice Remote. Some restrictions apply. 1-888-609-9405 SPECTRUM TRIPLE PLAY! TV, Internet & Voice for $99.97/mo. Fastest Internet. 100 MB per second speed. Free Primetime on Demand. Unlimited Voice. NO CONTRACTS. Call 1-855-977-7198 or visit: http://tripleplaytoday.com/press
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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
Masonry
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Lawn & Landscaping
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
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AUGUST 29, 2019 â&#x20AC;˘ THE PORT TIMES RECORD â&#x20AC;˘ PAGE A21
PROF E S SION A L & B U SI N E S S Professional Services Directory
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Service Provided By World Class Transportation
HOME SERV ICES Š103119
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OWNER OPERATED
Lic/Ins #55301-H
Š102164
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FREE ESTIMATES
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
~ GARDEN ROOMS, FOCAL POINT GARDENS DESIGNED AND MAINTAINED JUST FOR YOU ~ ~ CREATE A â&#x20AC;&#x153;SPLASHâ&#x20AC;? OF COLOR WITH PERENNIALS ~ ~ PATIO POTS ~
MARSHA BURGER 631.689.8140 â&#x20AC;˘ Cell 516.314.1489 marshaburger31@yahoo.com
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Eastwood Tree & Landscaping, Inc. É°É&#x2030;Č?É&#x2018;É&#x153;É&#x2022; $Č˝ PÉ&#x2018;Č?Č? ǸÉ&#x2018;Č? ŃĽ 0ǸȽČ&#x2021;É&#x2022;Č&#x192;ǸÉ&#x2030;ȨȽČ?
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Serving Suffolk County for 25 Years Specializing in:
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631.235.0897 â&#x20AC;˘ 631.928.4070 eastwoodli.com
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Ornamental Pruning Storm Damage Prevention Deadwood Removal Crown Thinning Organic Tree/Shrub Spraying/Fertilizing Natural Stone Walls & Walkways Waterfall/Garden Designs Sod Installations
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Call Today (631) 751-7663 or (631) 331-1154 â&#x20AC;˘ FAX (631) 751-8592
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PAGE A22 â&#x20AC;˘ THE PORT TIMES RECORD â&#x20AC;˘ AUGUST 29, 2019
HOME SERV ICES TREE & LANDSCAPE CARE 10% OFF
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FAST EMERGENCY SERVICES 4.7Â?
Residential & Commercial Jobs Welcome â&#x20AC;˘ Licensed & Overly Insured
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TREE TRIMMING â&#x20AC;˘ TREE REMOVAL â&#x20AC;˘ TREE MAINTENANCE â&#x20AC;˘ LANDSCAPE DESIGN & SOD
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BBB Rating A+
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From Your Attic To Your Basement
All Phases of Home Remodeling
All Phases of Home Improvement K I TC H E N S â&#x20AC;˘ B AT H R O O M S â&#x20AC;˘ D O O R S â&#x20AC;˘ W I N D O W S â&#x20AC;˘ T I L E â&#x20AC;˘ F LO O R I N G
Additions & renovations, decks, windows, doors, siding, kitchens, baths, roofs & custom carpentry. We love small jobs too!
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OWNER ALWAYS ON THE JOB
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www.rcjconstruction.com COMMERCIAL/RESIDENTIAL â&#x20AC;˘ LIC./INS | OWNER OPERATED
Lic. #48714-H & Insured
631.972.7082
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www.BluStarBuilders.com
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Lic./Ins.
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REFERENCES AVAILABLE
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AUGUST 29, 2019 â&#x20AC;˘ THE PORT TIMES RECORD â&#x20AC;˘ PAGE A23
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AUGUST 29, 2019 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A25
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PAGE A26 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • AUGUST 29, 2019
Opinion
Letters to the Editor
Parents across the North Shore are hoping their teenagers will soon get to sleep in — even during the school year. Many studies now point to the benefits of teenagers starting high school later in the day, and some residents are delving into the research and discussing the issue with other parents. It may take work, but we think the idea is important and we hope district officials will keep their minds open. Studies have shown that teenagers do better when their first class starts after 8:30 a.m. Start times in our coverage area can vary with East Setauket’s Ward Melville High School’s first class bell ringing at 7:05 a.m. Many other high schools start well before 8 a.m. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends 8 to 10 hours of sleep per day for teens “to promote optimal health.” The reason why many teenagers don’t get the recommended hours of sleep each night may have nothing to do with tons of homework, juggling activities and spending time on electronic devices. It may just be that children tend to fall asleep a few hours later when they become teenagers due to biological changes. The outcome when you add early school start times to late nights? Many teenagers walk around like zombies, constantly sleep deprived. Insufficient sleep, which can cause drowsiness and impaired memory, can affect an adolescent’s academic and athletic success, as well as health and safety. Scientists have found that over the long haul, sleep deprivation in one’s younger years can lead to more severe problems in the future, including obesity and engaging in risky behaviors such as drinking and drug use. It’s an invalid excuse to say kids need to get used to waking up early to prepare for the workforce. It’s equally detrimental to call out young people for spending too much time up late. The science says these rhythms are to be expected. In the past, it was considered beneficial for high schoolers to come home after school earlier, so they could babysit their younger siblings. Today, most high school students are involved in sports and clubs, and aren’t available to help out with this task. And with the existence of after-school programs, there are many opportunities to make life easier for working parents. An earlier morning for elementary students could also prove beneficial to working parents, who need to get kids on the bus before work. Furthermore, teenagers are able to get to the bus stop without the supervision of their mothers or fathers. While it may be true that a change in start times can create issues when it comes to scheduling sports games, schools start at different time all across the leagues. Some student-athletes are already waiting around for games to start after the last bell rings. The most important thing, beyond both sports and academics, is a kid’s mental health and well-being. While it may not be possible for all high schools to start at the same time to create the perfect scenario for sporting events, it is feasible for each district to listen to parents and, more importantly, find a start time that will help their students reach the fullest potential. The ways of the past don’t always pave the way to future success.
I regularly depend on The Village Times Herald for my local news and information. I hope my letter about an important federal concern is read and acted on by as many of your readers as possible. Our democracy is in deep trouble. The founders, and the Constitution they produced, gave us a guide, but it could guarantee nothing. They depended on our citizenry to implement and protect one of the greatest experiment in government organization ever attempted — The United States of America. The main and most essential underpinning of our democracy is our
Let teenagers sleep Voting is the underpinning of democracy
Letters … We welcome your letters. They should be no longer than 400 words and may be edited for length, libel, style and good taste. We do not publish anonymous letters. Please include a phone number and address for confirmation. Email letters to kyle@tbrnewsmedia.com or mail them to The Port Times Record, P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733.
vote. We must work against suppression of the vote, gerrymandering, fake news and election machine tampering. The House of Representatives has just passed a bill to appropriate $600 million to aid the states in guaranteeing the correct count of our vote in 2020. It is meant to be spent on upgrading local election machines and election board procedures so that no one, no other country, can contaminate our legitimate ballot counts, as Russia attempted in 2016. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) has refused to bring the bill up for a vote in the Senate.
We can do something to protect our democracy right now. I suggest that each of you who read this, call Chuck Schumer (D-NY) or Kristen Gillibrand (D-NY) or both. Tell them to bring the House bill up for a vote, to make our voting machines secure, to verify the vote in 2020. Call 833-413-5906 and Common Cause will connect you. There will be an event all over the country Sept. 17 to support this. You can follow it online at SecureOurVote. US/take-action. Letters to the editor are important too. Rita Edwards South Setauket
The evolution of news Introduced in 1949, regulated by the Federal Communications Commission, the Fairness Doctrine required holders of a radio or television broadcast license to suspend entertainment and host independent, nonprofit programs reporting local, national and international news, sports and weather, for periods of no less than 10 minutes at least twice a day. This policy was dismantled, through a series of court battles in 1986, in favor of the
present policy of free market journalism. Justices of the high court of appeals in Washington, D.C., concluded that news was a form of entertainment and corporations holding licenses had a right to profit from it. Bias, right or left, is profitable entertainment. The news (story) will use tools, of conflict/resolution, from the fiction writer’s tool kit to get us to keep watching past the commercial or to read on. In today’s market “who, what, where
and when” is the only unbiased news you will get. TBR News Media is comprised of six community newspapers that focus on local news, and I applaud them for it. The editorial published Aug. 22 regarding local civic groups needing our participation is a case in point. I had not thought of that. I thank them for a good piece of unbiased writing. Jerry Reynolds Coram
Child Victims Act doing a world of good On Aug. 14, the pursuit of justice finally began for thousands of child abuse victims. The Child Victims Act, a bill I proudly co-sponsored, is responsible for extending the statute of limitations that previously prevented childhood victims from seeking their day in court as adults by amending the age requirements. Now, it allows victims up to 28 years old to pursue criminal charges against their abusers, and up to 55 years old to pursue civil lawsuits. It also initiated the opening of a one-time, one-year look-back window for the filing of cases against perpetrators, irrespective of the age of victims or the time elapsed. This law empowers them to demand their right to due process for the atrocities committed against them.
Trauma cannot be regulated by arbitrary dates and ages. According to a study conducted by Child USA, the average age of victims who report their abuse is 52 years old. The former statute required victims to come forward by age 23, making thousands of incidents ineligible for prosecution. It is an indisputable fact that children carry their trauma well into their adulthood, a conclusion that took our state too long to accept. In the final push to pass this crucial bill, several of my colleagues courageously stepped forward with their personal stories of sexual abuse as children. These legislators, the definition of strength and grace, dared to show the wounds they will continue to carry for the sake of all New Yorkers who
deserve better. It was a proud day for New York State when we voted this act into law. The impact is already staggering. On the first day to file a lawsuit last week, 439 survivors did so by noon, with many more pouring in over the course of the week. Once comfortably protected behind the darkness of archaic statutes, these perpetrators are being forced into the light under this transformative law. The Child Victims Act gave victims back their voices and they must now be heard. I hope to see all victims seize this moment and get their day of justice. Jim Gaughran New York State Sen. District 5 D-Northport
The opinions of columnists and letter writers are their own. They do not speak for the newspaper.
AUGUST 29, 2019 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A27
Opinion
A modern update to Murphy’s law
Y
ou know Murphy’s law, right? Whatever can go wrong will go wrong. Well, it seems that we need to update Murphy’s law. To that end, please find a few of my experiential and observational corollaries. • Your kids know more about electronics than you do. Yes, I know there are information technology people who are keeping up with the latest apps, some of whom may acD. None tually write the of the above apps. But most BY DANIEL DUNAIEF of those people stop using their phones or looking
at their work when they go home. Your kids are using them all the time. They are professional app users, while you likely know one app extremely well. • You will receive a message from your airline when it doesn’t help. I appreciate how airlines, and even Expedia, offer to send you updates on your flights. Most of the time, however, the text that the plane is delayed two hours will arrive just after the car that’s brought you to the airport pulls away from the curb. • Following the rules at the doctor’s office, the DMV or anywhere else you might be a captive audience rarely works. I recently went to a doctor’s office half an hour early because the email requested that I arrive then for my first appointment. I waited more than an hour for a consultation that lasted a few minutes. • You’re likely to leave out a critical word at a critical time in a critical email. Let’s say someone proposes an idea at work that you find wholly objectionable and unworkable.
You respond: “I can agree with this idea.” Forgetting the word “not” then means that your boss, who proposed the idea in the first place, now gives you ownership of a process that is even worse than it seemed when you first read the email through your sleep-deprived eyes. • The cute baby that made you smile in the airport or the bus station will be sitting behind you for hours. In the few moments when he’s not screaming, he’s kicking your chair right behind your head, rendering the noise cancellation headphones you bought utterly useless. • In the world of TMI (too much information), you’re likely to hear something that makes you wish you had a plastic bubble. Someone near you on a subway will be talking to his friend on the phone about a strange rash that’s spreading everywhere while coughing violently into the air. • The cable or appliance repair person who gave you a four-hour window when he might arrive at your house will come at the beginning
of the window, the end of the window or in those three minutes you stepped out to get a cup of coffee just down the street. When you return to find the note indicating how sorry he was that he missed you, you have an adult tantrum which terrifies the neighbors and their kids, who will no longer come to your house during Halloween. • Complaining about the performance of an athlete who never seems to live up to his or her potential means that athlete will do something incredible within moments of your most vocal complaint. That will be the case unless you’re complaining because you secretly believe that will lead to a winning effort. In that case, the athlete will meet your low expectations. • The year you move to a place where you’re assured there are no hurricanes, you watch the familiar sight of wind tearing through your backyard, as a hurricane fells trees you have owned for all of two weeks. Ah, cypress tree, we hardly knew you.
it’s a cliché, but one with significance. To be fully aware at any given point of where we are and what is happening around us is to enjoy a full existence. Feeling the sand give way underfoot during a walk on the beach, hearing the calls of seagulls over the water as they search for dinner, feeling the soft wind coming up from the southwest as it blows against one’s cheek, smelling the salt in the air as the waves break against the shore — all of those experiences enhance the present moment. “Let it go,” offers another. Now we are getting into deeper discussion. We carry guilt to some degree, all humans do. We also carry anger, or fear, perhaps. We may struggle with resentment, envy, an affront, disappointment, hurt, traumatic memories and any number of other negative emotions. Have we learned after all this time to let them go? Or at least have we learned how to work through them so they lessen in our hearts and minds? “I have learned how much it pleases me to make connections,” was another response. “If I am somewhere and meet a stranger who is striving for a goal, and I know something
or someone else who could perhaps help that person to realize his or her ambition, I enjoy connecting them.” That comment made me think of one of my favorite analogies, that of comparing life to a game of billiards. We glance off each other as we move along, perhaps exchanging a few words in just a few moments that have meaning. I remember one day waiting for the light at Ninth Avenue in Manhattan on my way to the Lincoln Tunnel and New Jersey. How many times I had made that trip, and always the same way. But this one time I noticed that the pickup truck waiting next to me was turning in the opposite direction despite having New Jersey plates. So I rolled down my window and called out to the driver, asking where to turn. He yelled back his answer, the light changed and we both drove away. But his way shortened my trip by several minutes. In that brief exchange, he changed my life positively. How meaningful even the briefest connection can be. As you might tell, we had a good time at our mini-reunion.
An insightful reunion This week there was a mini-reunion at my house of college classmates who happened to be in the area. One actually came in from Arizona, but she was making her annual New York visit anyway and included a trip to my house from the city. It was great fun to see the nine women who arrived for lunch and chatter. As classmates we do share a lifetime bond and, as contemporaries, we share a lot of history and culture. We don’t have to stop mid-sentence Between and explain our obscure references you and me to younger listeners BY LEAH S. DUNAIEF because everyone gets the point. Each of us is curious to see how the others have aged. We mentally compare wrinkles,
double chins, weight gains. We talk about our children, our grandchildren, our husbands and, in a couple of cases, ex-husbands. We tell each other about good plays we have seen, worthwhile books we have read, interesting trips we have taken. But these are superficialities. What we really want from each other is to share wisdom. After all, we have been around the block a few times by now and hopefully have learned a few things in the process. So we ask the question of the group: At this stage of life, what is a most important insight you have had? One answers, “To be appreciative.” I can certainly relate to that. To wake up in the morning and know you have the gift of a new day, and if you are lucky, to do with that time as you wish. Some who came still work, others are retired. Most people who come to reunions, I think, are basically happy with their lives. So since the miserable ones don’t come, those who do make it find common currency in appreciation. “I have had a good life so far, I’ve been very lucky,” is a frequent refrain. “To be in the moment,” posits another. Yes,
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 kyle@tbrnewsmedia.com. Times Beacon Record Newspapers are published every Thursday. Subscription $49/year • 631-751-7744 www.tbrnewsmedia.com • Contents copyright 2018
EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Leah S. Dunaief GENERAL MANAGER Johness Kuisel MANAGING EDITOR Kyle Barr EDITOR Kyle Barr
LEISURE EDITOR Heidi Sutton ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Kathryn Mandracchia ART AND PRODUCTION DIRECTOR Beth Heller Mason
INTERNET STRATEGY DIRECTOR Rob Alfano CLASSIFIEDS DIRECTOR Ellen Segal BUSINESS MANAGER Sandi Gross
CREDIT MANAGER Diane Wattecamps CIRCULATION MANAGER Courtney Biondo
PAGE A28 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • AUGUST 29, 2019 HOURS: MONDAY - THURSDAY 9AM - 8PM FRIDAY 9AM - 6PM SATURDAY 9AM - 5PM SUNDAY 11AM - 4PM
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