The Times of Huntington-Northport - October 15, 2020

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T H E T I M E S Hu n tingt o n, Nor t h por t & East Nor thp or t

HUNTINGTON • HUNTINGTON BAY • GREENLAWN • HALESITE • LLOYD HARBOR • COLD SPRING HARBOR • NORTHPORT • FORT SALONGA • EAST NORTHPORT • ASHAROKEN • EATON’S NECK • CENTERPORT

Vol. 17, No. 28

October 15, 2020

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Residents in Commack and East Northport were treated to a rolling car show Oct. 11. The show was the eighth one that took place this year and the last for 2020. Smithtown resident Patty Mancuso organized the events and started the Facebook page Smithtown Rolling Car show. “I started this because there were no car shows this spring, something me and my husband Phil really look forward to,” she said. “As I watched one SUV birthday parade after another pass my house while working from home, I dreamed of something better to watch.” Mancuso said after choosing what neighborhood to drive through, she would map out the route and contact residents through the Nextdoor app. During the last few months, the rolling car show has been spotted in Smithtown, Hauppauge, Dix Hills, Commack, East Northport and Kings Park. Photos by Jennifer Castillo

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OCTOBER 15, 2020 • TIMES HUNTINGTON & NORTHPORTS • PAGE A3

County

Suffolk Unveils Part of 2021 Operating Budget, Showing Significant Reductions BY KYLE BARR KYLE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM After weeks of warnings and missives about an upcoming budget shortfall, Suffolk officials finally published this upcoming year’s budget, one that has to take into consideration an apparent $437 million deficit over the next two years. Cuts won’t be instituted until the middle of 2021. Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone (D) revealed a 2021 recommended operating budget of $3.197 billion, representing $33 million less than the current year’s budget. It is a reaction to a total revenue shortfall of $325 million in 2020. In a proposed budget released Oct. 9, the county would be letting go 500 full-time employees. The county exec said it would also mean a reduction in health care and mental health services, the loss of two full classes of trainees at the police academy and the elimination of 19 bus routes. Most cuts will be implemented July 1, 2021. County officials said this gives time in case some federal aid is received in the future. “We have submitted a COVID-19 budget with cuts that would have been unimaginable just a short time ago,” Bellone said on a call with reporters Oct. 13. “These cuts should not happen, these are cuts that are devastating in many ways and would in effect undermine our recovery.” The budget accounts for a sales tax loss from 2019 to 2020 of an estimated $131.7 million. The anticipated sales tax for 2021 is

still $102.5 million less than 2019’s figures. Among other losses across the board, the one increase seems to be property taxes from a real estate boom on Long Island. Suffolk County received $4 million more than last year, and anticipates $18.6 million more in 2021 than this current year. In expenditures, contractual expenses and employee benefits are also set to marginally increase. The county expects a negative fund balance for 2021 of about $176.98 million. Overall, Bellone said Suffolk could be looking at a cumulative $460 million deficit within the next year. This year’s budget was originally set to roll in back in September, but it has since been delayed until the start of this month. The projected budget also may be another general cry for help to the federal government. Suffolk officials also decry the withholding of state aid to the tune of $1.9 billion to local municipalities. Cutting employees would save about $25 million next year. The bus route cuts, along with reductions to the Suffolk County Accessible Transportation bus service affecting a total of 2,500 riders of both systems, will save $18 million. The police class cuts will save approximately $20 million, while a 50% cut across the board for contract agencies, which include substance abuse clinics, mental health providers, domestic violence shelters and gang prevention programs, would save another $8 million in 2021 and annualized savings of $16 million.

Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone at a recent conference said county-funded health services would be impacted by this year’s budget. Photo by Julianne Mosher

The budget also shows an overall 1.9% increase in taxes for the police district, though that remains under the New York State tax cap. Bellone has constantly reiterated Suffolk’s need for federal funds over the past few months, holding press conference after press conference to reiterate loss of services because of COVID-19-induced budget shortfalls. Republicans in the Legislature, however, have consistently attacked the executive for what they have called fiscal mismanagement over the past few years, citing Suffolk’s bond downgrades and a report from Tom DiNapoli (D), the New York State comptroller, saying

Suffolk was the most fiscally stressed county in the state in 2019. Bellone, on the other hand, claimed he inherited in 2012 a $500 million deficit but that the County finished 2019 with a surplus. He added the county would have been on track for $50 million surplus in 2020 that would have wiped out the accumulated deficit prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. Suffolk did receive $257 million in CARES Act funding in April, as well as an additional $26.6 million for public transportation. Officials have said most or all that funding has been spent or earmarked, and it does not help cover overall losses.

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OCTOBER 15, 2020 • TIMES HUNTINGTON & NORTHPORTS • PAGE A5

People with Cancer Remains Focus of Don Monti Memorial Foundation BY DANIEL DUNAIEF DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Even amid the COVID-19 pandemic, The Don Monti Memorial Research Foundation continues to raise money to support cancer care and research on Long Island. The foundation, named for Don Monti, who died at 16 in 1972 from acute myeloblastic leukemia, has changed some of the events this year, but not the mission. Instead of the annual ball at the Woodburybased Crest Hollow Country Club, which the Montis own, the foundation started its Capital Giving Campaign and hopes to raise $1 million this year. All of the proceeds support the mission, since the foundation’s senior staff, including Caroline Monti Saladino, president, work for free. “Today with COVID, nothing has changed with the journey,” she said. The foundation has mailed out a capital campaign brochure that includes letters from Michael Dowling, president and CEO of Northwell Health; Richard Barakat, director of Northwell Health Cancer Institute; and Bruce Stillman, president of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. “Your investment in cancer clinical care, research, wellness and survivorship enhances our ability to provide comprehensive, multidisciplinary care for our patients and enables us to provide support services for their families and loved ones,” Barakat wrote in his letter. Monti Saladino, who has helped cancer patients for close to five decades, said the needs of cancer patients haven’t changed. The Monti foundation has become a multigenerational family cause, which Tita and Joseph started months after their son died. The foundation has raised more than $47 million to support research, education and patient care in oncology and hematology. It has donated money to Northwell Health, Huntington Hospital, Long Island Jewish and Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory for everything from patient care and treatment to genetic counseling to basic research. The foundation recently donated $50,000 to Huntington Hospital to help fund its developing cancer center. Numerous members of the Monti and Saladino families have dedicated time and effort to improving the lives of people with cancer and to offering support to the families of patients. Monti Saladino said her children are involved, as are some of her 12 grandchildren, who have continued the family tradition by raising money to support the foundation. The foundation has an office at CSHL, where Stillman said he often sees “family members working there, helping to raise

The Monti and Saladino families, above, continue the work of The Don Monti Memorial Research Foundation. Caroline Monti Saladino, below, speaks at last year’s Cancer Survivors Day. Above photo from Jim Kennedy; photo below from Mel Saladino

support — it’s an amazing dedication.” In addition to the visible connection through laboratories at CSHL, the foundation has supported four Don Monti cancer centers in Nassau and Suffolk, at North Shore University Hospital, also Huntington, Glen Cove and Plainview hospitals. The members of the Monti and Saladino families have also played instrumental roles by visiting patients, hosting Don Monti Cancer Survivors Day events and forging new relationships with recipients of their support. When Northwell and CSHL were looking for a link between the basic research at the Lab where new ideas and methods are developed, and the clinic where medical teams worked to provide personalized care, the Monti foundation helped facilitate a partnership. “We were very familiar with what was going on” at Northwell partly “through the Monti foundation,” Stillman said. “They were helpful. It was good that people on both sides knew each other.”

Cold Spring Harbor Lab Connection

CSHL has received between $300,000 to $500,000 each year for over a decade from the foundation, which supports innovative research and supplements the funds the scientists receive from government agencies like the National Cancer Institute. Receiving national grants is difficult and competitive, which increases the value of philanthropic funding that is the “driver of

innovation and one of the reasons the United States is so prominent in research,” Stillman said. He appreciates how the foundation offers a direct connection between the scientists working to cure a disease and the patients and their families who are, and have been, battling cancer. Principal investigators, postdoctoral researchers and graduate students attend Cancer Survivors Day, during which they see people who might benefit from their research efforts. “When you see patients, it does change the way you think about how you do the research,” Stillman said. The funds from the foundation have supported numerous research initiatives at CSHL, including the work of Nicholas Tonks and Christopher Vakoc. Working with chemists, Tonks developed molecules that inhibit enzymes called protein tyrosine phosphatases, which could be used to treat breast cancer. Vakoc, meanwhile, has found subtypes of cancer that require critical proteins to grow. He is working on a program to identify how to target what Stillman described as the “Achilles heel” of some cancers.

Northwell Health Connection

The Monti foundation works closely with Dr. Ruthee-Lu Bayer, who is the chief of stem cell transplantation at Northwell Health. “She and her team are amazing,” Monti Saladino said. She recalled that Bayer was doing clerical

work she didn’t have time to do in the midst of her life-saving and life-extending efforts. The foundation’s president suggested that the hospital should hire an administrator so Bayer’s team could see more patients. Monti Saladino spoke to the hospital administrator and said she would contribute $100,000 a year for five years, if the hospital contributed the remaining cost. The hospital agreed, providing some relief for Bayer’s efforts. MONTI CONTINUED ON A6


PAGE A6 • TIMES HUNTINGTON & NORTHPORTS • OCTOBER 15, 2020

LEGALS Notice of formation of JSM ENTERPRISES LLC. Arts of Org. filed with Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on May 13,2020. Office location: Suffolk County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of the process to the LLC: 32 Ryder Ave Dix Hills NY 11746. Purpose: Medical device sales. 821 9/10 6x thn Formation of Blue Boat Suite Management #5511 LLC filed with the Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 9/10/2020. Office loc.: Suffolk County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. The address SSNY shall mail process to Brian Muellers, 12 Adams Place, Huntington Station, NY 11746. Purpose: Any lawful activity. 857 10/1 6x thn LEGAL NOTICE BOARD OF EDUCATION NORTHPORT EAST NORTHPORT UNION FREE SCHOOL DISTRICT 158 LAUREL AVENUE NORTHPORT, NEW YORK 11768 The Board of Education of the Northport-East Northport Union Free School District, Town of Huntington, County of Suffolk, New York, in accordance with Section 103 of Article 5-A of the General Municipal Law, hereby invite the submission of sealed bids from reputable and qualified companies for: BID #21-105 HARDWARE, PLUMBING & AUTOMOTIVE PARTS AND SERVICE Bids will be received until 2:00 p.m., prevailing time, Thursday, November 12, 2020, at the Administrative Offices, Purchasing Department, 158 Laurel Avenue, Room 215, Northport, New York 11768, at which time and place all bids will be publicly opened and read aloud. If the Northport-East Northport UFSD is closed on

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Email: legals@tbrnewsmedia.com the date of the scheduled bid opening due to inclement weather or other conditions, the bid opening will be held at the same time the next business day that the Northport-East Northport UFSD is open. General Instructions for Bidders, Specifications and Bid Forms may be obtained at the same office, Monday – Friday, 9:00 a.m.- 3:00 p.m. beginning October 15, 2020 excluding weekends and holidays. Bid proposals must be presented on the standard bid form in the manner designated therein and as required by the specifications. All bids must be submitted in a sealed envelope, clearly marked: BID #21-105 – HARDWARE, PLUMBING & AUTOMOTIVE PARTS AND SERVICE. The Board of Education of the Northport-East Northport Union Free School District reserves the right to waive any informalities or to reject any or all bids or to accept that bid which, in the Board of Education’s judgment, is in the best interest of the School District. Dated: 10/15/20 Beth Nystrom District Clerk 878 10/15 1x thn LEGAL NOTICE BOARD OF EDUCATION NORTHPORT EAST NORTHPORT UNION FREE SCHOOL DISTRICT 158 LAUREL AVENUE NORTHPORT, NEW YORK 11768 The Board of Education of the Northport-East Northport Union Free School District, Town of Huntington, County of Suffolk, New York, in accordance with Section 103 of Article 5-A of the General Municipal Law, hereby invite the submission of sealed bids from reputable and qualified companies for: BID #21-103 HARDCOVER/PAPERBACK BOOKS

Bids will be received until 2:00 p.m., prevailing time, Thursday, November 12, 2020 at the Administrative Offices, Purchasing Department, 158 Laurel Avenue, Room 215, Northport, New York 11768, at which time and place all bids will be publicly opened and read aloud. If the Northport-East Northport UFSD is closed on the date of the scheduled bid opening due to inclement weather or other conditions, the bid opening will be held at the same time the next business day that the Northport-East Northport UFSD is open. General Instructions for Bidders, Specifications and Bid Forms may be obtained at the same office, Monday – Friday, 9:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m. beginning October 15, 2020, excluding weekends and holidays. Bid proposals must be presented on the standard bid form in the manner designated therein and as required by the specifications. All bids must be submitted in a sealed envelope, clearly marked: BID #21-103 – HARDCOVER/PAPERBACK BOOKS. The Board of Education of the Northport-East Northport Union Free School District reserves the right to waive any informalities or to reject any or all bids or to accept that bid which, in the Board of Education’s judgment, is in the best interest of the School District. Dated: 10/15/20 Beth Nystrom District Clerk 879 10/15 1x thn

MONTI

Continued from A5 Monti Saladino said contributors appreciate the history of the Monti foundation and its ongoing focus. “Our reputation through the years as a patient-oriented organization and a researchoriented organization has really sustained us,” she said. “A lot of the people we have healed through our organization are very generous.” Stuart Hayim, who is a dealer of Ferraris and Maseratis on Long Island, recovered from lymphoma in 1979 while receiving medical treatment and personalized attention from Tita Monti, at the Don Monti Division of Oncology at North Shore University Hospital in Manhasset. Since then, he has won boat races and raised money each year for the foundation. Monti Saladino said the foundation helps patients wherever and however it can. When her young brother Don was diagnosed with leukemia in 1972, oncology and chemotherapy were “primitive,” she said. In terms of patient care, the medical experience “didn’t make people very comfortable.”

The Foundation’s Goal

Through the money the Don Monti foundation raised, the goal was to make the challenging experience of dealing with treating cancer more bearable for people and the families who go through it, she said.

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The foundation built the first bone-marrow transplant unit in the 1990s, added a patient lounge and funded Cancer Survivors Day. Monti Saladino said she “lives and breathes” her brother every day. Don died in June 1972, and her parents, Tita and Joseph Monti, had their first fundraiser that December. Tita Monti, who died in 2006, said she didn’t want what happened to Don to happen to other people. “We need to make a purpose out of his short 16 years of life, from the joy he gave us,” Monti Saladino recalled her mother saying. Her brother’s story is a credit to his determination and to his mother’s perseverance, Monti Saladino said. Doctors had given him six weeks to live. His mother combined beetroot powder with natural and other healthy treatments that extended his life by 16 months. Stillman said the legacy of the Monti family is evident throughout Long Island. “It’s quite impressive, all of the number of people they’ve touched,” he said. “They’ve improved the treatment environment, the cancer environment, the clinicians and researchers.” Monti Saladino said she and the family are far from perfect. “We’ve got our issues,” she said. “They don’t affect this. This is a real focus that never changes.” For more information, visit www. donmontifoundation.org.

KINDERGARTEN THROUGH TWELFTH GRADE SUPPLIES Bids will be received until 2:00 p.m., prevailing time, Thursday, November 12, 2020 at the Administrative Offices, Purchasing Department, 158 Laurel Avenue, Room 215, Northport, New York 11768, at which time and place all bids will be publicly opened and read aloud. If the Northport-East

Northport UFSD is closed on the date of the scheduled bid opening due to inclement weather or other conditions, the bid opening will be held at the same time the next business day that the Northport-East Northport UFSD is open. General Instructions for Bidders, Specifications and Bid Forms may be obtained at the same office, Monday – Friday, 9:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m. beginning October 15, 2020, excluding weekends and holidays. Bid proposals must be presented on the standard bid form in the manner designated therein and as required by the specifications. All bids must be submitted

in a sealed envelope, clearly marked: BID #21-104 – KINDERGARTEN THROUGH TWELFTH GRADE SUPPLIES. The Board of Education of the Northport-East Northport Union Free School District reserves the right to waive any informalities or to reject any or all bids or to accept that bid which, in the Board of Education’s judgment, is in the best interest of the School District. Dated: 10/15/20 Beth Nystrom District Clerk 880 10/15 1x thn


OCTOBER 15, 2020 • TIMES HUNTINGTON & NORTHPORTS • PAGE A7

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Transportation

Officials Say New Diesel Engines on PJ Line Will Set Back Electrification MTA: All Projects on Standby, All Contracts in Jeopardy Without Federal Aid

BY KYLE BARR KYLE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM As the MTA prepares its budget for the next few years, potentially reducing a massive amount of service due to the pandemic, local officials are saying some of that money earmarked for the Port Jefferson Branch line can get put to better use. Though the Metropolitan Transportation Authority has a $12 billion cash shortfall in its 2021 budget, its 2020-24 capital plan still includes plans to purchase new dual-mode (electric/diesel) trains for $150 million to replace older locomotives on several Long Island Rail Road lines, including Port Jeff. A representative of the MTA could not give any fresh updates on these new trains or other initiatives as all of them are on hold due to economic uncertainty, but whether or not the $16.7 billion annual-expenditure entity gets the aid it needs in time, officials are still against any new diesel trains without electrification first. For years, area officials from all levels of government have been promoting electrifying

the Port Jeff rail line, transforming it into a system like that of Ronkonkoma for faster, greener public transport. That initiative has been ongoing for years. In March this year, the environmental advocacy group Sierra Club Long Island held a kickoff event for its green transportation initiative, holding one of its events at the Stony Brook train station. Village, town and county officials have stood behind them at this and past events. Sierra Club Green Issues chair, Mayer Horn, is also a Dix Hills-based transportation consultant and has worked with Port Jefferson Village before. He said purchasing new diesel trains was “a very foolish thing to do.” Back in December of 2018, Horn published a report on behalf of Port Jefferson about the North Shore rail line which described a general lack of full-time direct service between Port Jeff and Penn Station, and how current dual-mode could be used to provide such service now. Village trustee Bruce Miller, who has also long advocated for electrifying the Port Jeff line, said replacing the diesel engines was “anathema” to

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what has long been proposed. It would effectively make it that much harder to argue for modern technology if the old line suddenly had new trains. Miller has often used the refrain that people all across the North Shore, even as far east as Calverton and as west as Greenlawn, take the longer drive to places like Ronkonkoma rather than catch the closer train, only because it is both less reliable and efficient. “Basically, you’re not entirely eliminating vehicles or cars when you have these two diesel lines on the North Shore and South Shore,” Miller said. “People aren’t factoring in pollution.” On Sept. 17, the MTA put out a press release saying all its contracts are in jeopardy if it does not receive the $12 billion stimulus from the federal government. Some of these multibillion-dollar contracts are for companies that create and sell train and rail parts. The September 2019 presentation of the LIRR’s capital improvement plan had included 160 new electric cars, nearly 20 coach cars and over 10 new locomotives. Plans have changed due to the pandemic, as the MTA looks to close a $5.8 billion budget gap for 2021. Rail lines like Port Jefferson to Huntington will still run hourly at peak periods, but others with lower ridership will not likely be so lucky. Fares are also expected to increase beyond the anticipated 4% for 2021 through 2024, and riders who are taking trips to the city will feel it in their wallets the most. Yet the new diesel engines remain on the docket, making local advocates and officials severely question if they are still coming when so much service is getting cut. In the MTA’s July preliminary budget presentation, it stated that a reduction or delay in the 2020-24 capital program will have a limited impact on the operating budget because, for one, the MTA’s portion is back ended, having already been funded from several tax sources. Using those sources to fund the operating budget instead would “consume cash and reduce liquidity.” Still, there has been talk of removing some parts of the capital plan. Newsday has reported the MTA has plans to put the $230 million north/ south link between the Ronkonkoma and Babylon branches on pause. There is no money in that capital plan for Port Jeff electrification either. The 2018 Port Jeff report by Horn notes that the Ronkonkoma line, once the LIRR expanded electrification from Hicksville to Ronkonkoma in 1987, jumped daily trips from 6,200 to 16,000 by 2007, a result of people no longer taking the Port Jeff or Montauk branches to both north and south. Less local traffic also meant a decline in the economic vitality of Upper Port.

The MTA has planned for additional diesel trains on the LIRR, including the Port Jeff line, but because of COVID, nothing is certain. File photo

These new diesel trains are just another factor of what Horn calls “a real lack of planning.” He lamented why the MTA, or America in general, doesn’t try to learn from countries with much better, faster and more efficient train systems like South Korea or Japan. The greatest need, however, has been the addition of a third rail for the Port Jeff line, something that has been trumpeted and sometimes praised to be coming soon. State Assemblyman Steve Englebright (D-Setauket) has long been a proponent of electrification. As the chair of the Assembly environmental conservation committee, he said he, along with his state Senate counterpart Todd Kaminsky (D-Rockville Centre), met with Phil Eng, the head of the LIRR, late last year to talk about these new trains. “Quite frankly, he was not able to give us any assurance he was going to do anything but plow ahead,” Englebright said. “That was a couple months before COVID crisis basically created a whole new set of distractions.” New York State, in the 2019 Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act, has set the lofty goal to limit statewide greenhouse gases to 40% of 1990 levels by 2030, and 85% by 2050. “It looks to me like LIRR is basically telling us that they are going to proceed as if exempt from CLCPA, which is outrageous,” the local assemblyman said. He added these trains could have a lifespan of 50 years. In a letter sent to Englebright in March 2019, MTA president, Patrick Foye, said that the LIRR had been reviewing proposals for a $4 million study on Port Jeff electrification and other projects, and that it could be awarding a contract for the electrification study in early summer 2019. That study has not yet materialized and, with the MTA saying it has no updates, it’s likely it won’t any time soon.


OCTOBER 15, 2020 • TIMES HUNTINGTON & NORTHPORTS • PAGE A9

From Cold Spring Harbor to Wading River – TBR NEWS MEDIA • Six Papers...Plus Our Website...One Price

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PAGE A10 • TIMES HUNTINGTON & NORTHPORTS • OCTOBER 15, 2020

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PAGE A12 • TIMES HUNTINGTON & NORTHPORTS • OCTOBER 15, 2020

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J. BRENZINSKI INC. Landscape Material Delivery Service. MULCH, SOIL, STONE. Delivery 7 days a week. Prompt and courteous service. Call with your Material Needs. 631-566-1826 SCREENED TOP SOIL Mulch, compost, decorative and driveway stone, concrete pavers, sand/block/portland. Fertilizer and seed. JOS. M. TROFFA MATERIALS CORP. 631-928-4665, www.troffa.com

Masonry CARL BONGIORNO LANDSCAPE/MASON CONTRACTOR All phases Masonry Work:Stone Walls, Patios, Poolscapes. All phases of Landscaping Design. Theme Gardens. Residential & Commercial. Lic/Ins. 631-928-2110

Miscellaneous DISH TV $59.99 For 190 Channels + $14.95 High Speed Internet. Free Installation, Smart HD DVR Included, Free Voice Remote. Some restrictions apply. 1-888-609-9405 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

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BOB’S PAINTING SERVICE 25 Years Experience. Interior/Exterior Painting, Spackling, Staining, Wallpaper Removal, Staining and Deck Restoration Power Washing. Free Estimates. Lic/Ins. #17981. 631-744-8859 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 ED’S PAINTING INTERIOR/EXTERIOR Wallpaper removal, spackling, sheetrock repair. Over 25 years experience. Commercial/Residential. Reasonable rates. Call Ed Bernstein 631-704-7547 JAY A. SPILLMANN PAINTING CO. Over 35 years in business. Spackling/Taping, Wallpaper removal. Quality prep work. Interior/Exterior. Lic. #17856-H/Ins. 631-331-3712, 631-525-2206 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 THE PAINT PROFESSIONALS Three Generations of Excellence. Interior and exterior services, residential and commercial. A+ rating with BBB. 631-682-9506. See Display Ad for more information. WORTH PAINTING “PAINTING WITH PRIDE” Interiors/exteriors. Staining & deck restoration, power-washing, wallpaper removal, sheetrocktape/spackling, carpentry/trimwork. Lead paint certified. References. Free estimates. Lic./Ins. SINCE 1989 Ryan Southworth. See Display Ad. 631-331-5556

Place your ad in the

Professional & Business Services Directory

Power Washing

Painting/Spackling/ Wallpaper

EXTERIOR CLEANING SPECIALISTS Roof cleaning, pressure washing/softwashing, deck restorations, gutter maintenance. Squeaky Clean Property Solutions 631-387-2156 www.SqueakyCleanli.com POWERWASHING PETE Sanitize your home professionally- house, deck, fence, roof, driveway, pavers and outdoor furniture. $50 off any job! Free Estimates. Call 631-240-3313. Powerwashpete.com. See Display Ad for more Info. WORKING & LIVING IN THE THREE VILLAGES FOR 30 YEARS. Owner does the work, guarantees satisfaction. COUNTY-WIDE, Lic/Ins. 37153-H, 631-751-8280

Tree Work ARBOR-VISTA TREE CARE A COMPLETE TREE CARE SERVICE devoted to the care of trees. Maintenance pruning, water-view work, sun-trimming, elevating, pool areas, storm thinning, large tree removal, stump grinding. Wood chips. Lic#18902HI. Free estimates. 631-246-5377 CLOVIS OUTDOOR SERVICES LTD. Expert Tree Removal AND Pruning. Landscape Design and maintenance, Edible Gardens, Plant Healthcare, Exterior Lighting. 631-751-4880 clovisoutdoors@gmail.com RANDALL BROTHERS TREE SERVICE Planting, pruning, removals, stump grinding. Free Estimates. Fully insured. LIC# 50701-H. 631-862-9291 SUNBURST TREE EXPERTS Since 1974, our history of customer satisfaction is second to none. Pruning/removals/planting, plant health care. Insect/ Disease Management. ASK ABOUT GYPSY MOTH AND TICK SPRAYS Bonded employees. Lic/Ins. #8864HI 631-744-1577

Single size $228/4 weeks

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Double size $296/4 weeks

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FREE


OCTOBER 15, 2020 • TIMES HUNTINGTON & NORTHPORTS • PAGE A13

PROF E S SION A L & B U SI N E S S Place Your Ad in the

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Professional Services Directory

ALWAYS BUYING

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FREE

Single size • $228/4 weeks Double size • $296/4 weeks Ask about our 13 & 26 week special rates

(631) 751.7663 or (631) 331.1154

Brad Merila Certified Piano Technician 6 Barnwell Lane, Stony Brook

631.681.9723

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LICENSED & BONDED

Call 631-633-9108

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JUNK CARS BOUGHT

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Blues Man Piano Tuning

• Glassware • Military Items • China • Anything Old or Unusual

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PAGE A14 • TIMES HUNTINGTON & NORTHPORTS • OCTOBER 15, 2020

HOME SERV ICES ALL PRO PAINTING

Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154 PAGE B

INTERIOR • EXTERIOR

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Faux Finishes

Jay A. Spillman Painting Co.

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C U S TO M F I N I S H E D C A R P E N T R Y & M O L D I N G

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CALLS PROMPTLY RETURNED

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for 13 or 26 weeks.

FREE BONUS WEEKS! & a free 13 or 26 week subscription to our newspaper.

631.331.1154 or 631.751.7663

• Interiors • Exteriors • Cabinet Refinishing, Staining & Painting • Faux Finishes • Power Washing • Wallpaper Removal • Tape & Spackling • Staining & Deck Restoration BBB A1 Rating #1 Recommendation on BBB website

“We take pride in our work�

FREE ESTIMATES

Ryan Southworth 631-331-5556

Licensed/Insured

#37074-H; RI 18499-10-34230

CERTIFIED LEAD PAINT REMOVAL

Since 1989

Š106304

Š98213

www.BluStarBuilders.com

HOME SERVICES DIRECTORY

Š101630

Please call our Stony Brook office today for a FREE in home consultation

DELIVERY 7 DAYS A WEEK!

REFERENCES GLADLY GIVEN

Place your ad in our

Additions & renovations, decks, windows, doors, siding, kitchens, baths, roofs & custom carpentry. We love small jobs too!

• MULCH • • SOIL • • STONE •

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Call Ed Bernstein 631.704.7547

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• Wallpaper Removal • Spackling/Sheetrock Repair • Commercial/Residential • Reasonable Rates • Over 25 Years Experience

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Nick Cordovano 631–696–8150


OCTOBER 15, 2020 • TIMES HUNTINGTON & NORTHPORTS • PAGE A15

HOME SERV ICES

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Frank Bologna

A+ RATING

631.682.9506

LICENSED #48084-H

ThePaintProfessionals@yahoo.com thepaintprofessionals.net

INSURED

V i l l a g e

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Lic. # H-27572/Insured

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We Represent a Green Approach For the Discerning Property Owner or Management Firm

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Outdoor Furniture • Sand Blasting • Powder Coating

631.707.1228

343 So. Country Rd., Brookhaven

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PAGE A16 • TIMES HUNTINGTON & NORTHPORTS • OCTOBER 15, 2020

HOME SERV ICES Since 1995 Family Owned & Operated

DECKS ONLYÂŽ

BUILDERS & DESIGNERS OF OUTDOOR LIVING BY NORTHERN CONSTRUCTION OF LI INC.

Licensed/Insured

105 Broadway Greenlawn 631.651.8478 www.DecksOnly.com

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Special Thanks to All Our Essential Workers STAY SAFE!

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Bonilla Construction Inc.

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OCTOBER 15, 2020 • TIMES HUNTINGTON & NORTHPORTS • PAGE A17

R E A L ESTAT E Houses For Sale

Commercial Property/ Yard Space

Rentals

Rentals Wanted FURNISHED STUDIO/1 BEDROOM apartment needed. Near Northport Harbor. Call 917-597-5453.

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small space

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RESULTS

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OFFICE MATEEAST SETAUKET Pyschotheraphy office, bathroom and waiting room to share, great location, highly desirable. 631-767-5153, JanninePergolla11@gmail.com

107930

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TO SUBSCRIBE CALL 751-7744

Rentals to Share

Sunshine Golf Luxury security Highlands of Innisbrook Gated Community Entire family can enjoy mini-estates w/9 beds & 5.3 baths 1146 Skye Ln Palm Harbor, FL. 30 min from TPA Airport Barb Battaglia 727-998-1996

PUBLISHERS’ NOTICE All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination.� We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.

Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154

Our track record is the best of any local newspaper. Call us for special rates.

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class@tbrnewsmedia.com

to reserve space

Time to Think Garage Sale! Your ad will appear in all 6 editions of TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWSPAPERS reaching from Huntington to Wading River 2900 for 20 Words

add $.40 for each additional word

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Backed by American Standard’s 140 years of experience Ultra low entry for easy entering & exiting Patented Quick DrainŽ Technology Lifetime Warranty on the bath AND installation, INCLUDING labor backed by American Standard 44 Hydrotherapy jets for an invigorating massage

$

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Š107864

High visibility office for rent on 25A in charming stand alone professional office building. Excellent road signage. 650 sq. ft. Private entrance, 2 private bathrooms, private A/C and heating controls. Light and bright. Ample parking. Previous tenants included an atty, an accountant & a software developer.

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Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154


PAGE A18 • TIMES HUNTINGTON & NORTHPORTS • OCTOBER 15, 2020

Editorial

Far Beyond COVID

In 2016, Stony Brook University rebranded itself to a new campaign called Far Beyond. The idea behind the campaign was to highlight the wide range of programs and activities the school offered, since everyone normally acknowledges the university for its medicine, science and technology specialties. But this year in 2020, the institution proved that it indeed has gone “far beyond” with protecting public health. Dr. Deborah Birx, head of the White House’s coronavirus task force, visited SBU last week, a stop in a several-month-long tour of different colleges and universities across the United States. But her visit to the local university was different, and she made that clear. During her press conference, she spoke highly of how Stony Brook has handled the COVID-19 crisis. She said from the start, it was going, well, “far beyond” what other schools, and even hospitals, were doing. She said that back in March when the university shut down and patients with the virus were filling the rooms, Stony Brook did something different from other institutions — it actually collected data, while continuing to take care of the patients. “I was listening to the research activities that they started from day one,” she said during the press conference. “And it thrilled my heart to hear from them that their number one thing was collecting data and collecting information in real time.” It’s right to give credit where its due, and Stony Brook, both on the medical and campus side, has done good work in keeping the number of cases down. The university’s COVID dashboard reports just two students, one university employee and four Stony Brook Medicine employees have currently tested positive as of Oct. 11. Better yet, the school has been upfront in where those cases are located and how it is handling them. This is compared to places like SUNY Oneonta, which had to close back in August after hundreds of students tested positive after a large super-spreader party. The Oneonta dashboard reports 712 confirmed cases among students since the start of the fall semester. It’s also not to say that SBU has not made stumbles, especially in communicating with students. Right off the bat during the start of the pandemic, students were rightfully upset at how the university handled the virus. In March, dorming students were shocked when each received an email saying they needed to move out, go home or find shelter elsewhere because the campus was officially closed. Students said they felt rushed, and felt the university wasn’t being truthful or transparent with everything being so abrupt. Some international students couldn’t even go home since their countries were in lockdown. But the students are back, and cases remain low. Is it because of the incentives the university has taken with social distancing guidelines, removing of sports and recreational activities, hybrid learning and sanitizing stations? Or is it just because Stony Brook is not a “party school” and the students there really don’t congregate as at some of the schools upstate, like Oneonta. It’s also important to note the number of students living on campus has fallen from 39% in 2019 to 17% this fall. With a new president installed at SBU, Maurie McInnis, we think that communication with students has improved. Every person, every institution has been impacted by the pandemic. The students, who feel they are paying a lot for what at times must feel like a mostly online education, need that person-on-person interaction to let their voices be heard, even if it’s behind a clear plastic barrier. Nonetheless, Stony Brook gets high praise from both us and those involved in the national response to COVID-19, as well as Birx, for going “far beyond.” We kindly ask that the university keeps it up, for the sake of both your students and the wider community.

Antiquing we will go!

The Huntington Historical Society hosts a fall outdoor Antiques Sale on the grounds of the Dr. Daniel W. Kissam House, 434 Park Ave., Huntington on Oct. 17 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Dealers from across Long Island will be selling everything from antique jewelry, small furniture, silver coins, badges, vintage advertising and more! The barn and the Antiques and Collectibles shop will also be open for fabulous finds. Free admission. Photo by Heidi Sutton

Letters to the Editor

LIRR Service Cuts Would Conflict with Commitments MTA Chairman Pat Foye and Long Island Rail Road President Phil Eng have a serious problem when it comes to keeping promises for new Long Island Rail Road service. The MTA threated a 50% reduction in LIRR service if they don’t receive a second $12 billion federal CARE COVID-19 bailout. These proposed service cuts conflict with previous commitments of new service on the Hempstead branch for the Elmont

LIRR Station (the first new station to open in 50 years) to serve the Islanders Belmont Arena in October 2022; 40% increase in rush hour service upon completion of the $2.6 billion Main Line Third Track (which runs between Hicksville and Floral Park serving the Huntington, Port Jefferson, Oyster Bay and Ronkonkoma branches) and 24 trains hourly (anticipated to serve all nine branches) during am and pm peak supporting the $11.2 billion East Side

Access to Grand Central Terminal, both in December 2022 There is also reverse peak service increases on all LIRR branches in December 2022. They are all 12 to 24 months away from promised first day of service dates. Commuters, taxpayers, transit advocates, Islander fans and elected officials are all waiting for some answers today, not next year. Larry Penner Great Neck

A Lifelong Republican’s Hard Decision I have just become aware that the prestigious New England Journal of Medicine has, for the first time in its 104 year history, came out for the removal of a president. The gist of their opinion article is that, with regard to COVID-19, President Donald Trump (R) is a danger to the American people.

I agree. I believe it isn’t that President Trump doesn’t know what is going on but, like a petulant child, he doesn’t really care. For this reason I, a lifelong Republican, am having to decide whether to abstain from voting for president or to vote against the re-election of Donald J. Trump.

It is my hope that my friends and neighbors can, as I have done, separate the antics of our president from the dedication of most others who are running for office. As usual, that is just one man’s opinion. What is yours? Francis G. Gibbons Sr. Terryville

Editor’s note … As a rule, next’s week issue of The Times of Huntington & Northport will be the last edition before the election that we will publish letters supporting a candidate. The opinions of columnists and letter writers are their own. They do not speak for the newspaper.


OCTOBER 15, 2020 • TIMES HUNTINGTON & NORTHPORTS • PAGE A19

Opinion My Lunch at CSHL With a Future Nobel Prize Winner

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hree years and a different world ago, I attended a scientific conference at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory on a gene editing technique called CRISPR, or more technically CRISPR-cas9. I rubbed elbows with some of the many talented scientists at an internationally renowned institution. In a casual atmosphere filled with high-powered talks from people who speak the language of science with accents from all over the world, the grounds at CSHL, with its D. None winding roads and of the above personalized parking BY DANIEL DUNAIEF spaces, offers a treelined backdrop for new collaborations and discoveries. Back then, I invited one of the conference

organizers, Jennifer Doudna (pronounced Dowd nuh), who is a Professor of Chemistry and Molecular and Cell Biology at the University of California, to lunch. After a talk she gave to a packed Grace Auditorium, she and I strolled to the cafeteria to discuss a gene editing tool that has the potential to change the world. Indeed, even today, labs around the world are using a technique based on the way bacteria recognize and fight off viruses to combat the effect of SARS-CoV-2, or the virus that causes COVID-19. During that sunny July day in 2017, however, we were blissfully unaware of the challenges to come in 2020. We sat down at a central table outside, with people passing, nodding and acknowledging my tall and talented lunch guest. While she responded to an appreciative crowd of casually dressed researchers, she was present and focused on the many questions I’d prepared for an upcoming Power of 3 column (see page B9 for another look at that column). Like many revolutionary technologies and inventions such as splitting the atom, CRISPR is

neither all good nor all bad. Editing genes creates opportunities to cure or prevent diseases and to disarm a range of miniature invaders. At the same time, gene editing puts the power of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein into the hands of scientists or doctors, offering the kind of tool that requires careful ethical considerations. Indeed, just last year, a Chinese court sentenced a researcher to three years in prison for using gene editing in unborn babies. Doudna, who moved to Hawaii when she was seven and is a passionate gardener, is in the third year of a four-year $65 million grant from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, which monitors security concerns for the intentional or accidental misuse of the technology. Eating with Doudna on a breezy, bright summer day, I appreciated how ready she was to tailor the conversation to my level of understanding of this technology, offering details about gene editing and making sure I understood her. While she was impressive and articulate, she certainly didn’t seem as if she were speaking to me from on high. She shared a deliberate and

A Benefit Amid Pandemic Problems: Binging

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lame it all on the pandemic, but in an effort to practice social distancing from my refrigerator, I have seriously begun to binge. On what am I binging? I plead guilty to the following definition of binging from my cell phone browser: “watching multiple episodes of a television program over a short period of time.” Now I am not exactly an innocent when it comes to watching a serialized story all at once. Given the opportunity, I did just that with the last year of Between “Downton Abbey.” you and me I got all the coming BY LEAH S. DUNAIEF installments at once in return for a donation to PBS, and I stayed up past three o’clock in the morning, too hypnotized to

turn off the TV until the series had ended. I guess that was the tip off to my plot-addicted personality. The reveal is that I love stories, and like the monarch lover of Scheherazade, Persian King Shahryar, in “One Thousand and One Nights,” I cannot leave a tale in the middle when I have the opportunity to see how it ends, regardless of my fatigue. So on a recommendation, I started watching “The Crown,” and you guessed it. This marvelous series, a historical drama about Elizabeth II, the Windsors, and some of the events that have marked her reign, captivated me. The first season starts with the marriage of Elizabeth and Philip, Duke of Edinburgh in 1947, to the end of her sister Margaret’s involvement with Group Captain Peter Townsend in 1955. After dinner each night, I turned on the television and watched all the stories filmed to this point until I fell asleep in my chair. I eagerly await the start of the fourth season, which I believe will happen Nov. 15 and include Margaret Thatcher’s premiership and more on Lady Diana Spencer. The fifth and sixth seasons are to cover the years in the 21st

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 rita@tbrnewsmedia.com. Times Beacon Record Newspapers are published every Thursday. Subscription $49/year • 631-751-7744 www.tbrnewsmedia.com • Contents copyright 2020

century. Sadly, though, I will be limited only to one episode at a time because I am caught up. The problem with a series is that sooner or later, they end. I guess they just run out of juice or the talented people involved want to move on to something else. Having gone as far as permitted with “The Crown,” I started casting around for another compelling show and stumbled upon “Grace and Frankie,” with an incredible cast: Lily Tomlin, Jane Fonda, Sam Waterston, Martin Sheen and a seemingly endless list of talented actors. Far from being an historical drama, this series could only run in today’s world. Begun in 2015 and scheduled to finish in 2021, after filming resumes, the story begins when the lawyer husbands of Grace and Frankie announce that they are not only business partners for the past 40 years but also have been lovers for the last 20. They are “coming out” and wish to be married. The two couples, their relationships redrawn, now have to deal with their revised circumstances, and as they move forward in this comedy-drama, their lives touch on so many current themes with sympathy and occasional belly-laughter results.

EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Leah S. Dunaief GENERAL MANAGER Johness Kuisel MANAGING EDITOR Kyle Barr EDITOR Rita J. Egan

LEISURE EDITOR Heidi Sutton EDITORIAL Julianne Mosher ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Kathleen Gobos

directed intelligence, blending a combination of an explanation of what she’d done and thoughts on the next scientific steps. Doudna, who lives with her husband Jamie Cate, who is also a Berkeley scientist, and their high school senior son Andrew, shared an appreciation for the history of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, where she’d visited at different points in her career. Back in 1987, she spotted a woman walking towards her. Nobel prize winner Barbara McClintock, whose name still comes up regularly in conversations with scientists at the site, strolled by in a tee shirt, giving Doudna a thrill. The next time someone spots or interacts with the Berkeley Professor at CSHL, they will likely feel the same excitement, as Doudna was recently named a recipient of the Nobel Prize. Then again, it was clear from the way the attendees at the conference reacted to Doudna three years ago that, Nobel prize or not, she was already a rock star in the scientific community whose foundational work may, one day, lead to the kind of breakthroughs that extend and improve life.

Both couples, forced to recognize their advanced years, deal with physical limitations, retirement issues, health insurance frustrations, bigoted elderly parents, interracial relationships, sexual needs and computer challenges. Both couples have adult children, who bring into the plots some of the pain and satisfactions of the twenty-somethings: raising young children, not wanting children, addiction, being able to afford buying a home, and worrying how to take care of older parents who don’t want to acknowledge aging. It is primarily the story, though, of two women, Grace and Frankie, who could not be more different. They cannot stand to be in the same room with each other at the start, yet we see how they slowly come together in trying to deal with their mutually altered circumstances. The characters are well drawn by the authors and actors, and they ultimately reveal much about the value of supportive friendships between women. Can Grace and Frankie, two women in their 70s, survive being outcasts? The answer is a resounding YES! Be assured, there are already 78 episodes with more on the way, enough for a great binge.

ART AND PRODUCTION DIRECTOR Beth Heller Mason INTERNET STRATEGY DIRECTOR Rob Alfano CLASSIFIEDS DIRECTOR Sheila Murray

BUSINESS MANAGER Sandi Gross CREDIT MANAGER Diane Wattecamps CIRCULATION MANAGER Courtney Biondo SUBSCRIPTION MANAGER Sheila Murray


PAGE A20 • TIMES HUNTINGTON & NORTHPORTS • OCTOBER 15, 2020

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