The Times of Huntington-Northport - November 4, 2021

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

Vol. 18, No. 32

November 4, 2021

$1.00 PHOTO BY JULIANNE MOSHER

Champion Tigers

Northport Tigers field hockey team punches their ticket to the Long Island Championship round

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On the Edge exhibit opens in St. James Also: Highlights of WMHO’s Halloween Festival, Last Night in Soho reviewed, Photo of the Week

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Riding the wave Tierney beats Sini in DA race; election coverage inside — A3 TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA

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PAGE A2 • TIMES HUNTINGTON & NORTHPORTS • NOVEMBER 4, 2021

Health

Local doctors welcome imminent COVID-19 vaccination for younger children ‘We definitely saw more cases [of COVID-19] in children after school started this year.’

BY DANIEL DUNAIEF DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Local health care providers were eager to start administering doses of COVID-19 vaccines to children who are 5 to 11 years old, which they can now do after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention approved the shots for children late Tuesday night. “We definitely saw more cases [of COVID-19] in children after school started this year,” said Dr. Sharon Nachman, chief of the Division of Pediatric Infectious Diseases at Stony Brook Children’s Hospital. “We’d like to prevent that.” Health care providers would also like to stop household transmission, in which a member of a home spreads the virus to everyone else with whom that person lives. “Children usually get milder forms of COVID, but they can transmit disease to people around them,” Dr. Adrian Popp, chair of Infection Control at Huntington Hospital, explained in an email. “It is not unusual for children to bring COVID in the home and then household members to be exposed and get COVID, especially if they are unvaccinated

—Dr. Sharon Nachman

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention approved the COVID-19 vaccine for children 5 to 11 years old. Stock photo

and immunocompromised.” In considering whether parents should get shots for their children, doctors urged parents

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to speak with their family pediatricians. “They are the experts in your child’s care,” Nachman said. “They’ll have the most insight into who your kid is.” Pfizer BioNTech said the vaccines, which were a third of the dose of an adult shot, were over 90% effective against symptomatic COVID-19. The Food and Drug Administration issued emergency use authorization for vaccines for this age group. “Authorization of the vaccine for younger children is an important step in keeping them healthy and providing their families with peace of mind,” Dr. Lee Savio Beers, president of the group, said in a statement. “The vaccine will make it safe for children to visit friends and family members, celebrate holiday gatherings, and to resume the normal childhood activities that they’ve missed during the —Dr. pandemic.” Doctors urged parents with children who have underlying cardiac or respiratory issues to give serious consideration to vaccinations that could prevent the spread of a virus that could be especially problematic for their children. “Someone with underlying cardiac issues, if they were to get COVID-19, would have increased risk of poor outcomes,” Nachman said. “They should be prioritized. Waiting to get COVID is not a good idea.” The same holds true for children with

asthma, who could develop more problematic symptoms from contracting the virus, Nachman said. While the doses for children will be lower, the immune system of younger people is more reactive than that for adults, which is why pharmaceutical companies tested a lower dose in their clinical trials. Even with the smaller volume of the vaccine, “children will still not have waning immunity,” Nachman said. “It will be just as effective” as the higher dose for adults. Besides having more reactive and resilient immune systems, healthy children also will likely have milder side effects from the vaccine because of the lower dosage. To be sure, every child who is in this age range and becomes eligible for the shot shouldn’t immediately receive the vaccination. The clinical trials didn’t include children with cancer or with other immunological difficulties. “We did not enroll [children with those conditions] in clinical trials,” so it would be difficult to know how effective the vaccine would be for them, Nachman said. Down the road, vaccinating a classroom of children in this age Adrian Popp category could lead to a reduction in the current restrictions designed to protect the health of students and their educators. “It’s too soon to say the next steps,” Nachman said, which could include learning without masks. Further information about the spread of the virus after vaccinations would inform future guidelines. Popp added that booster needs for children in the future is also unknown. “Data will be gathered and [officials] will see if this will become necessary,” Popp said.


NOVEMBER 4, 2021 • TIMES HUNTINGTON & NORTHPORT • PAGE A3

Election 2021

Election night ends in disappointment for many Dems Suffolk County sheriff

BY RITA J. EGAN AND JULIANNE MOSHER RITA@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM, JULIANNE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Election night, Nov. 2, found many Democratic candidates gathering at the IBEW Local 25 union hall in Hauppauge, while Republicans attended a get together at Stereo Garden in Patchogue. The Hauppauge event was a more somber one as some Democrats in the county lost their seats, while other races were close ones. Rich Schaffer, who heads up the Suffolk County Democratic Committee, said Tuesday night’s results spoke more about what was happening on the national level than about the candidates. “This was just, as you see, a big wave that took out some really good elected officials, and if you were a challenger, you had even a steeper row to hoe as opposed to an easy time, like we’ve normally been able to do,” he said. While candidates and supporters eagerly awaited the results of in-person votes, the final tallies may not be known in some races for a few weeks due to the Suffolk County Board of Elections still needing to count absentee ballots. Results are as of the morning of Nov. 3.

Suffolk County district attorney

The race between county District Attorney Tim Sini (D) and prosecutor Ray Tierney, who ran on the Republican and Conservative lines, was a contentious one. At the forefront, Tierney questioned whether Sini has been as tough on crime as the DA himself has said, especially regarding the MS-13 gang.

Errol Toulon Jr. (D) has been county sheriff since 2017 and was seeking his second term this election season. His opponent, William Amato, who ran on the Republican ticket, was not actively campaigning. Toulon, who has been county sheriff since 2017, was declared winner with 141,931 votes (54.30%). Amato came close with 119,357 (45.67%). Toulon Tuesday night was overwhelmed as he thanked those in attendance at the union hall. “I do want to thank all of you for your constant support, not just your support now, but over the last four years of talking to me and encouraging me during some difficult circumstances in taking over the sheriff’s office, and I hope to do a better job over the next four years than I did over the last four years,” Toulon said.

Suffolk County legislators

Suffolk County Sheriff Errol Toulon Jr., above, talks to a supporter in Hauppauge after his win Tuesday night. Photo by Rita J. Egan

At the end of the night, Tierney emerged the winner with 154,569 votes (57.34%). Sini garnered 114,943 (42.64%). Sini was first elected to the position in 2017. “I am proud and humbled to stand before you here today,” Tierney said during his victory speech. “Despite being running against an incumbent, despite not having a lot of money in

the beginning, despite not having the support of a lot of institutions — not for one day did I feel like an underdog, because of you guys.” Tierney added his goal is to “fight every day to keep the citizens of Suffolk County safe.” “I will reach out into the community to develop relationships so we can all have faith in our district attorney’s office,” he said.

The race in the county’s 5th District, which includes the Three Village Area and Port Jefferson, is a tight one. County Legislator Kara Hahn (D-Setauket) was in the lead with 7,582 votes (50.25%). Salvatore Isabella, who ran on the Republican ticket and did not actively campaign, had 7,508 votes (49.75%). The night was a nail-biter for Hahn, who is up for her sixth term. “I am cautiously optimistic that once all the votes are counted, voters will return ELECTION NIGHT CONTINUED ON A5

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PAGE A4 • TIMES HUNTINGTON & NORTHPORTS • NOVEMBER 4, 2021

Mover and Shaker

Book Revue employee ready to start next chapter

BY RITA J. EGAN RITA@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM A couple of months after the Book Revue in Huntington village closed its doors for the last time, a former store manager is ready to start a new chapter. Mallory Braun, of Stony Brook, launched a Kickstarter campaign Nov. 1 to raise funds for a new bookstore in the village in the spirit of Book Revue. Her goal is to raise $250,000 in 45 days on the crowdfunding platform, and she plans to call the business The Next Chapter. Opening her own business is something that the 28-year-old started thinking about seriously after the Book Revue’s owner, Richard Klein, announced the store was closing this summer. “It was never something that was on the front burner, but it’s been something that I have had interest in for quite some time,” she said. Braun said she enjoyed working at the Book Revue and learned a lot when she was employed there. For less than a year she was a bookseller, before going on to be manager, a position she held for more than five years. After a while, Braun said she specialized in used and rare books She said the plan is to open a store within walking distance of the former Book Revue storefront. Right now she has a store in mind and if her fundraising attempts are successful, she believes she’ll have the funds necessary to open the store in that location. If not, she has two other locations she has considered as a backup. Klein has been helping her through the process. “He’s advising me on all business matters,” Braun said. “He’s using his connections from 44 years in the business to help me, and he’s generally being there in a support role.” The Book Revue, like many businesses in the state, had to close temporarily during the height of the pandemic. It was closed to customers for about three months, but the business tried to be innovative, she said, in order to survive. “We still sold books every day that we were shut down,” Braun said. “We were selling books on Instagram, on social media, and we were selling books by cracking the door open.” She added that customers would call and pay by credit card and then would pick up orders curbside. “You have to be flexible, and you have to be able to change with the times,” Braun said. “And that was what I was thinking then and that’s what I’m thinking now.” Right now, she is juggling a few jobs. In

Above, Mallory Braun, right, plans to open a new bookstore in Huntington Village, and is being mentored by former Book Revue owner Richard Klein, left. Braun was a manager at Book Revue, above, before it closed. She has already began acquiring books, below, for the new store. Photo of Braun and Klein by E. Beth Thomas; photo below from Braun

addition to preparing to open a new business, she babysits for a family in Roslyn and also works for an online business called J & J Lubrano Music Antiquarians, a rare book online business in Syosset. Through the years Braun, who holds degrees in journalism and Italian studies, has learned about the importance of juggling responsibilities, which she says require discipline and good time management. “I have to be pretty disciplined, but I’m lucky because I have a lot of people who are really looking out for me and are willing to be flexible,” she said. Braun said she learned a lot from Klein and her experience has taught her “to find people whose opinions you trust and also to keep your own counsel.” Klein said he told Braun that opening a business is something one has to really want, and he feels she does, adding he wouldn’t be providing moral support if he didn’t think so. He said it’s important for a person to have tenacity and determination when opening a business. “You don’t let anything stop you, and you don’t let obstacles bother you,” he said. “You just keep going. And you will face all kinds of difficulties and defeats along the way, but if you just keep getting up and keep working at it, that’s more than half the battle. First, you decide to act, and then the rest is tenacity.”

Klein said Braun is energetic, smart and determined, and “she has a lot of good ideas.” He also feels The Next Chapter will continue the legacy of Book Revue. “When she gets this off the ground, I think it’s going to be a place that people are going to enjoy coming to,” Klein said. Braun said the new bookstore will deal in used, remaindered, rare and collectible books as well as vinyl records. Slowly but surely, she has been acquiring books and records that people have been donating or selling to her. The number of new books will be limited, at first but her plan is to increase the selection over time. The budding entrepreneur said she also plans to have workshops, classes, author readings and book signings “to reincarnate the spirit of Book Revue.” She said she believes the new store will add some character to the village. “I think people will be pleasantly surprised when they come to a new space and look around,” she said. To donate, visit www.kickstarter.com/ projects/bookrevue/book-revue-the-nextchapter. As of Nov. 3, more than $50,000 has been donated from over 420 backers. If the goal of raising $250,000 is not met in 45 days, all funds will be returned to donors.


NOVEMBER 4, 2021 • TIMES HUNTINGTON & NORTHPORT • PAGE A5

ELECTION NIGHT Continued from A3

me to office and I’ll be honored to continue to serve my community,” Hahn said in a statement Wednesday morning. “I look forward to continuing my work to protect our Long Island way of life and make a difference for our working families.” County Legislator Sarah Anker (D-Mount Sinai) was seeking her sixth term in office. The incumbent trailed with 7,141 votes (42.10%). Town of Brookhaven employee Brendan Sweeney won the race with 8,329 votes (49.11%). The newcomer ran on the Republican ticket. Conservative candidate Anthony DeSimone garnered 1,488 votes (8.77%). Sweeney declared victory during Tuesday night’s event. “It feels so good,” he said. “The voters spoke. They want change for this county and now with me and the rest of the newly elected legislators, we can do what’s best for the people.” Anker said she was hoping to continue as she has many projects she would like to complete. “I’ll continue to do something to stay in the area of helping people, that’s my goal, my priority, and I appreciate all those people that came out to vote,” she said. “But this was, I think, a national tsunami.” The legislator added her 6th District is a Republican area, and it has always been an uphill battle for her. “I’m just very fortunate to have served as long as I have, over 10 years, and do all the projects and initiatives that I have,” she said. In the 12th District which includes parts of the Town of Smithtown, Lake Grove, Lake Ronkonkoma and Centereach, county Legislator Leslie Kennedy (R-Nesconset) won her fourth term in office with 12,629 votes (74.57%). Her opponent Mike Siderakis, who ran unsuccessfully for state senator against Mario Mattera (R-St. James) last year, stopped actively campaigning this summer. Siderakis obtained 4,301 votes (25.40%). Kennedy said during her victory speech at Stereo Garden that the win proves how well the party works together. “We work hard, we have good values and we stand together as a team,” she said. County Legislator Rob Trotta (R-Fort Salonga) garnered 10,896 votes (53.09%) and won his fifth term in office. Also on the ballot were Democrat Kevin Mulholland, who didn’t actively campaign, and won 4,693 votes (22.87%), and Michael Simonelli on the Conservative ticket, who campaigned but didn’t debate Trotta this election season. Simonelli had 4,932 votes (24.03%). The district includes parts of Smithtown as well as Fort Salonga and portions of Commack and East Northport. Trotta in an email statement said, “I am thrilled and honored that the people of the 13th Legislative District did not pay attention to the outright lies made by the police unions, of which my Conservative opponent

was the treasurer, and [the people] voted for me based upon my record of fighting for the taxpayers, working for fiscal stability and helping my constituents.” The 18th District, which sits in the Town of Huntington, included candidates Mark Cuthbertson (D), currently serving as Huntington Town councilman, and Stephanie Bontempi, a newcomer to the political field. The two decided to vie for the seat after county Legislator William “Doc” Spencer (D-Centerport) decided not to run this year. He is currently facing charges for allegedly trading oxycodone for sex. Bontempi emerged the winner with 11,419 votes (53.89%), while Cuthbertson 9,765 votes (46.08%). “Today is a new day for Suffolk County,” she said. “With this victory, we readily flipped the balance of power in the Legislature. We changed the list of priorities. Our neighbors and the community have chosen accountability, transparency and integrity. They’ve chosen a peer over an insider. I cannot wait to get started in working with my new colleagues.” Cuthbertson said he never says never, but he doesn’t see himself going back to town politics after he leaves office in January. He said he was glad he ran for county legislator. “We laid it all out there, and I’m at peace with how much we did,” he said.

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Two councilmen and a newcomer were on the ballots for Town of Huntington supervisor after current town Supervisor Chad Lupinacci (R) decided not to seek reelection. Councilmen Ed Smyth (R) and Eugene Cook, who ran as a third-party Independent candidate, gained 25,409 (56.34%) and 1,746 (3.87%) votes, respectively. Democratic candidate Rebecca Sanin, president and CEO of nonprofit Health & Welfare Council of Long Island, had 17,940 votes (39.78%). With councilmen Cuthbertson running for county legislator and Smyth running for town supervisor, two seats were up for grabs on the Town Board. Candidates David Bennardo and Sal Ferro ran on the Republican and Conservative party lines, while Joseph Schramm and Jennifer Hebert ran on the Democratic ticket. Bennardo and Ferro emerged the winners with 26,669 (30.46%) and 25,206 (28.79%), respectively. Hebert had 18,335 votes (20.94%) and Schramm 17,328 (19.79%). Andre Sorrentino beat out incumbent Kevin Orelli for superintendent of highways with 25,565 votes (56.69%). Orelli garnered 19,524 (43.29%). In our Oct. 28 endorsement for Rebecca Sanin for Town of Huntington supervisor, we mistakenly wrote that she would be the first female supervisor in Huntington. This was incorrect as Toni Tepe was the town’s first female supervisor. We regret the error. 55090


PAGE A6 • TIMES HUNTINGTON & NORTHPORTS • NOVEMBER 4, 2021

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Health Mood disorders added to list of underlying medical conditions that affect COVID BY DANIEL DUNAIEF DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Mood disorders, such as depression, can exacerbate COVID-19 and vice versa. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention last month added mental health conditions like mood disorders to the list of preexisting conditions that could put people at higher risk for the worst symptoms of COVID-19. People with mood disorders join those with physical conditions, such as coronary artery disease, chronic lung disease and diabetes for populations especially vulnerable to the virus. “Individuals with mood disorders may be at greater risk for COVID-19 because of a confluence of factors known to increase the risk in the general population,” Dr. Gregson Pigott, commissioner of the Suffolk County Department of Health Services, wrote in an email. “Persons with mood disorders are differentially affected by non-communicable diseases such as obesity and cardiovascular disease, which are known to increase the risk of COVID.” Pigott added that social determinants of risk are also more prevalent in people with mood disorders, which could include economic insecurity, insufficient access to primary preventive health care, and lower health literacy. Some people with mood disorders live in community settings, such as psychiatric inpatient units and homeless shelters, where the risks of the spread of COVID-19 is higher because of the difficulty in socially distancing in quarantining, Pigott added. While the initial list of underlying conditions that might make COVID-19 worse dealt with physical health problems, more recent studies have addressed the link between mental health and COVID-19 symptoms and outcomes. “JAMA Psychiatry published a systematic review article and meta-analysis that found an association between preexisting mood disorders and COVID-19 outcomes” that suggest a higher risk of hospitalization and death for this group, Dr. Adrian Popp, chair of Infection Control at Huntington Hospital, explained in an email. Pigott added that the group of people with mood disorders has likely increased during the pandemic, as concerns about health, economic viability, childcare and education can create an overwhelming combination of stressors. “Research suggests that chronic stress can

lead to or exacerbate mood disorders such as depression and anxiety, bipolar disorder, cognitive (thinking) problems, personality changes, and problem behaviors,” Pigott said. Prolonged exposure to illnesses, changes in financial status, socialization patterns and the grieving process are “recognized antecedents to symptoms attributed to mood disorder onset.”

Brain inflammation

The brain reacts to COVID-19 and to some types of mood disorders similarly, making the combination of the two potentially more problematic. “There’s a lot of evidence that suggests that one type of depression may arise because of inflammation in the brain,” Dr. Christine DeLorenzo, professor of Psychiatry and Biomedical Engineering, at Stony Brook University. “It turns out that COVID-19 may also induce brain inflammation, which may exacerbate current depression or even bring about new depression onset.” DeLorenzo also cited several studies that showed that people infected with COVID-19 have demonstrated higher levels of depression. “There have been four or five studies that have looked at [inflammation and depression] and in all of the studies, on average, inflammation was higher in people with a major depressive disorder,” DeLorenzo said. The guidelines for underlying medical conditions that might make COVID-19 worse started with physical conditions and, only recently, added mental health challenges. While people discuss mental health issues more than they did a decade ago, “we still have a ways to go” in recognizing the importance of diagnosing and treating mental health disorders as actively as physical struggles, DeLorenzo said. In her research, DeLorenzo has explored whether an anti-inflammatory treatment may be helpful in certain people with depression. This treatment might also help manage the symptoms of COVID-19. In terms of receiving vaccinations or boosters for COVID-19, health care professionals and officials suggested that residents only need to indicate that they have a defined underlying condition to receive a shot. “People with underlying conditions have not needed to validate this to get the vaccine,” DeLorenzo explained. “Depression is a significant and devastating illness and should be treated the same way” as physical preconditions.


NOVEMBER 4, 2021 • TIMES HUNTINGTON & NORTHPORT • PAGE A7

Sports

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Northport 2 Ward Melville 0

Northport Tigers tame Patriots BY BILL LANDON DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM It was Northport senior forward Shannon Smith’s stick that broke the ice in the final minute of the first quarter Nov. 2 when her shot rocked the box off an assist from Olivia McKenna. McKenna scored next to put the Tigers up by two goals early in the second quarter. From there Ward Melville had no answer as the Tigers held on to the 2-0 victory and with it, punched their ticket to the Long Island Championship round.

Northport, the Suffolk Class A champions, retake the field Sunday, Nov. 7 at Centereach High School where they’ll face either Massapequa or Port Washington. Game time is 3 p.m. Pictured clockwise from above, the Northport Tigers field hockey team; Tigers junior Olivia McKenna looks upfield with Esther Loring in pursuit; Northport senior midfielder Sophia Bica settles the ball for the Tigers; and Northport senior co-captain Angelina Longo presses upfield in the Suffolk Class A final against Ward Melville Nov 2. — Photos by Bill Landon


PAGE A8 • TIMES HUNTINGTON & NORTHPORTS • NOVEMBER 4, 2021

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PAGE A10 • TIMES HUNTINGTON & NORTHPORTS • NOVEMBER 4, 2021

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The Classifieds Section is published by TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA every Thursday. Leah S. Dunaief, Publisher, Sheila Murray, Classifieds Director. We welcome your comments and ads. TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA will not be responsible for errors after the first week’s insertion. Please check your ad carefully. • Statewide or Regional Classifieds also available - Reach more than 7 million readers in New York’s community newspapers. Line ads 25 words : Long Island region $69 - $129 – New York City region $289 - $499 – Central region $29 - $59 – Western region $59 - $99 - Capital region $59 - $99 – all regions $389 - $689 words. $10 each additional word. Call for display ad rates.

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6 Newspapers/Internet Site ~ Huntington to Wading River ~ Deadline: Tuesday at noon. Call 631–331–1154 or 631–751–7663 • TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA • tbrnewsmedia.com


NOVEMBER 4, 2021 • TIMES HUNTINGTON & NORTHPORT • PAGE A11

Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154

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

CLASSIFIED DEADLINE ©105747

is Tuesday at noon. If you want to advertise, do it soon! 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154

LYNEER STAFFING SOLUTIONS Hiring Mail Sorters, Data Entry $15.00, Forklifts $17.50, Mystery Shoppers Ages 21-25 $20.00. 860 Long Island Ave., D e e r P a r k N Y 11 7 2 9 631-586-4699 MOUNT SINAI SCHOOL DISTRICT School District Aides and Custodial Substitutes, positions available throughout the district, please email resume to: Maureen Poerio at mpoerio@mtsinai.k12.ny.us. P/T SALES/CUSTOMER SERVICE Inside position selling advertising for an award-winning community news media group, Fax resume to 631-751-4165 or email resume to Class@tbrnewspapers.com. See our display ad for more information.

SHOREHAM-WADING RIVER CSD Part-Time Monitors needed, substitutes needed, cooks, substitute Food service workers, substitute nurses, substitute teaching assistants, substitute special education aides submit letter of interest/resume to: Brian Heyward, Assistant Superintendent for Human Resources 250B Route 25A Shoreham, NY 11786 bheyward@swr.k12.ny.us

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Shoreham-Wading River CSD $15.50/hr.   $19.50/hr.  $17.50/hr.  $175/day  $18.00/hr.   $15.50/hr.

School District Aides & Custodial Substitute Positions available throughout the District

Please email resume to : Maureen Poerio @ mpoerio@mtsinai.k12.ny.us

   

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PUBLISHER’S EMPLOYMENT NOTICE: All employment advertising in this newspaper is subject to section 296 of the human rights law which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, creed, national origin, disability, marital status, sex, age or arrest conviction record or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination. Title 29, U.S. Code Chap 630, excludes the Federal Gov’t. from the age discrimination provisions. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for employment which is in violation of the law. Our readers are informed that employment offerings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.

Help Wanted

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TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA The TIMES of Huntington, Northport & E. Northport • Huntington • Greenlawn • Halesite • Lloyd Harbor • Cold Spring Harbor

• Miller Place • Sound Beach • Rocky Point • Shoreham • Wading River • Baiting Hollow • Mt. Sinai

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The Port TIMES RECORD

• Stony Brook • Strong’s Neck • Setauket • Old Field • Poquott

• Port Jefferson • Port Jefferson Sta. • Harbor Hills • Belle Terre

The TIMES of Smithtown • Smithtown • Hauppauge • Commack • E. Fort Salonga • San Remo

• Kings Park • St. James • Nissequogue • Head of the Harbor

The TIMES of Middle Country • Selden • Centereach • Lake Grove

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• Northport • E. Northport • Eatons Neck • Asharoken • Centerport • W. Fort Salonga

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PAGE A12 • TIMES HUNTINGTON & NORTHPORTS • NOVEMBER 4, 2021

Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154

SERV ICES Cable/Telephone

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Did You Know You Can See TBR News Media’s Ads on the Internet?


NOVEMBER 4, 2021 • TIMES HUNTINGTON & NORTHPORT • PAGE A13

TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA ADVERTISERS GET RESULTS!

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JOS. M TROFFA MATERIALS “We have had the privilege of advertising in The Village Times since the newspaper was first published in 1976! After all those years, 45 to be exact, we have had amazing results thanks to their dedication and professionalism. Minnie and Joann are wonderful and are sure to come up with valuable ideas for your individual advertising needs. Every week, Leah Dunaief & The Village Times staff provide an outstanding paper with factual and relevant information for the communities we all cherish. It is only natural to choose to advertise in their papers! We love you Times Beacon Record!”

SQUEAKY CLEAN “I am a lifetime resident of Saint James who has been advertising in the Times Beacon Record Newspaper for the last 5 years. Through advertising with this local publication, I have been able to extend my exterior cleaning services to many local Long Island homes. It has been a pleasure working with such a professional advertising team, helping to keep our neighborhood houses looking Squeaky Clean!”

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“For decades, the Village Times has been our paper to attract people who would appreciate our lifestyles in Port Jefferson and local towns. Efficient, affordable and reliable is the trademark of the Village Times. Thank You!”

“Times Beacon Record is a great paper in every way, especially if you are a community oriented individual. Fun facts are here, as well as information on hiring business people that take pride in their workmanship. A great success story!”

To Join Our Family of Advertisers, Call: 631.751.7744

“It is a pleasure working with Times Beacon News Media. Sheila always keeps me informed of deadlines and is aware of what I am looking for pertaining to advertisement locations. With our hectic schedule it is nice to know she is my safety net . I am happy to advertise in the publication. I know my message is getting to my audience.“

TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA 185 Route 25A, Setauket NY 11733 • tbrnewsmedia.com

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PAGE A18 • TIMES HUNTINGTON & NORTHPORTS • NOVEMBER 4, 2021

Editorial

Rich Schaffer, head of the Suffolk County Democratic Committee, congratulates Errol Toulon Jr. on his win. Photo by Rita J. Egan

Congrats and concerns

Tuesday was a busy night where candidates across Long Island came together to wait for the 2021 election results. TBR News Media spent the last month interviewing local officials and their opponents on the ballots, listening and reporting on what they can bring to the table if reelected or elected. We congratulate the winners of this year’s races, and we are looking forward to working alongside them. But there is one thing that concerned us as our reporters waited to hear the announcements of both parties late Tuesday night. Several candidates did not actively campaign this time around, including for example William Amato who ran on the Republican ticket against Errol Toulon Jr. (D) for his seat as the Suffolk County sheriff. Toulon, who has been county sheriff since 2017, was declared winner with 141,931 votes (54.30%). Amato somehow came close with 119,357 (45.67%). Interesting for someone who never showed his face at any debate or public outing. It seems as though voters just went down the row for whatever party they chose. Did anyone take the time out to research which candidate would actually be there for their constituents? We know that this speaks more of what’s going on in the nation than about the candidates themselves. We understand the political divide and we don’t blame anyone for their beliefs. But it’s disappointing to think that someone who had no intention of actively being there throughout the campaign could have won such an important position. Would Amato have been ready to serve if he had won those extra few thousand votes? We encourage voters to do their part — submitting a ballot is just part of it. Read your local news, listen to debates and educate yourselves on what is going on in your community. Instead of voting for someone who may not actually be qualified, it’s important to understand who’s behind the name and what they can bring to the table. Remember, if you don’t like your choices in a race, you don’t have to vote for anyone in that column on your ballot. Send a message to local political committees that asks for strong candidates who are ready to serve, instead of rubber stamping someone who just happens to belong to the same party as you. Elected officials have difficult work to do, and if someone isn’t showing up when it comes time to campaign, that’s not a good sign.

Suffolk County Legislator-elect Stephanie Bontempi celebrates her win in Patchogue Nov. 2. Photo by Julianne Mosher

Letters to the Editor The planet’s turning point

The arc of our human story has reached a turning point. Conflict/ complication has risen to a place in time where we have to make a decision. How do we — as a species — feed, clothe, house, educate and supply a path to joy for every person on the planet? By working together collectively — not as cities, states, nations, religions, races or ethnicities. By using the governmental tools we have of democracy, communism, socialism, oligarchy, aristocracy, monarchy, theocracy, colonialism, totalitarianism or military dictatorship. Or do we design a new one for the future? If this were fiction, this point in the story would be called “The Dark Night of the Soul,” where the hero or heroine has to decide to take some action or not. However, this is not fiction but a real drama playing out daily. We are faced with problems beyond the scope and capabilities of any nation. Allied in an angry world with unhealthy people, we stare into the abyss and stumble toward the turning point. Our decision may very well decide whether we survive or become extinct. Nature will clean up the mess and start over. Perhaps one of our space probes will reach a planet somewhere in 40,000 years or so and become a source of great curiosity. Jerry Reynolds Coram

A thank you to Dr. Schwartz

Dr. Irwin Schwartz, our sons’ longserving pediatrician, is retiring this week after practicing for over 30 years in the Three Village area. I will always recall one incident that attests to Dr. Schwartz’s dedication, care and concern for his patients. Years ago, one of my children was admitted to the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit at Stony Brook Children’s Hospital. We had talked with Dr. Schwartz throughout the day, and he said he would stop by at 11 that night to check in on our son. At 10:45 I stepped outside my child’s hospital room and looked down the hall expectantly toward the elevators. As I did this, the onduty nurse walked past, stopped, turned back and asked me, “Who are you looking for?” I replied, “My son’s pediatrician.” She gave me a kind of pitying look and said, “Look, you’re not going to see your child’s pediatrician tonight.” But then she caught herself and asked, “Who’s your pediatrician?” I answered, “Dr. Schwartz.” Without hesitating, she replied, “He’ll be here,” and turned and walked away. Ten minutes later, Dr. Schwartz came in to check on us all. Thank you, Dr. Schwartz, for that moment and the many more just like it. Best wishes in your well-deserved retirement. With our deepest gratitude and respect, The Seyfert family Stony Brook

Candidates can now do their part

Election Day has come and gone. This reminds me of “The Outer Limits,” a 1960s television series. With the end of round-the-clock commercials by politicians, political parties, political action groups and pay-for-play special interest groups, we now return control of the television back to you until the next election cycle. No more candidates campaign mailings clogging mailboxes and weighing down our hardworking postal employees. Finally, some peace and quiet. Candidates who claimed they cared about the environment can now do their part. Winners and losers should have their paid campaign staff and volunteers pick up all the thousands of campaign signs that litter our roads and highways. They could also use leftover campaign funds to hire homeless or unemployed people to collect this litter. Let some people with community service be assigned this task. If candidates refuse to clean up after themselves, the local department of highways or public works should do the job and send candidates the bill. Larry Penner Great Neck

WRITE TO US … 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 rita@tbrnewsmedia.com or mail them to The Times of Huntington, P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733.

The opinions of columnists and letter writers are their own. They do not speak for the newspaper.


NOVEMBER 4, 2021 • TIMES HUNTINGTON & NORTHPORT • PAGE A19

Opinion

Nine years later, NY isn’t ready for another Sandy

N

ine years ago, Superstorm Sandy came roaring through the area, causing flooding, knocking out power and disrupting work and school. All these years later, New York is not prepared for other significant storms, despite studies suggesting that future, slow moving hurricanes with heavy rain could overwhelm infrastructure in and around Long Island. “While we have dithered, New Orleans, Houston and other U.S. cities have gained D. None federal support for regional protection of the above strategies — which BY DANIEL DUNAIEF will be funded with our tax dollars,” according to an information packet created by the New York New Jersey Storm Surge Working Group. “We can’t waste another decade

pursuing local responses to regional threats.” In a ninth anniversary boat tour designed to address the challenges from a future Sandy or even a Hurricane Ida, the working group, which is chaired by School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences Distinguished Professor at Stony Brook University Malcolm Bowman, outlined four messages. First, the group suggested that coastal flooding presented a significant danger. Storm surge, sea level rise and storm water from extreme rain present an “existential threat” to the area. Second, the group concluded that coastal flooding is a regional challenge that requires a regional solution. These scientists urge the two middle Atlantic states to consider creating a layered defense system, which they argue would be cost effective to protect property and the environment. Third, and perhaps most damaging, the group concludes that the area is as vulnerable now as it was nine years ago in the days before Hurricane Sandy arrived. The group wrote that

“no regional costal resilience plan” is in place to protect over 1,000 miles of the New York and New Jersey metropolitan coastline. Fourth, the changing political climate presents an opportunity to do something. The group highlighted how a new governor of New York, the start of a new term or releected governor in New Jersey, a new mayor of New York City and the restarting of the $20 million New York and New Jersey Harbor and Tributaries Focus Area Feasibility Study, or HATS, presents a “once in a lifetime opportunity to act now to address the existential threat of costal flooding with a regional coastline resilience system that meets our social justice, environmental justice, quality of life and economic development goals.” Bowman urged New York and New Jersey residents to consider the progress other states and countries have made. “Houston is going ahead,” Bowman said, even while New York hasn’t taken any significant steps. Bowman said part of the challenge in creating any change that protects the area comes from

the lack of any enduring focus on a vulnerability that isn’t evident to residents on a daily basis. “People have short memories,” Bowman said. “It’s not on their minds” even if they endured the disruption and devastation from storms like Sandy and Ida. Necessity and the lack of deep pockets in other countries is the mother of invention. “A lot of countries can’t afford” to rebuild the way New York and New Jersey did after Hurricane Sandy,” Bowman said. “They are forced to be more careful.” Bowman said any major project to protect the area needs a hero who can tackle the details, navigate through the politics and execute on viable ideas. The late Daniel Patrick Moynihan had “that kind of charisma,” Bowman said. “We need somebody who everybody sees as the hero. I don’t see that person” at this point. For New York and New Jersey, the longer time passes without any protective measures, “the more the danger will increase,” Bowman cautioned.

Connecting the dots from shots in Dallas, Vietnam and into our arms

E

lections have ended and the newly elected and reelected officials are going to have to cope with a disturbing fact: people don’t trust government. This change in attitude has been a long time coming. It didn’t just happen suddenly. I know, I have lived through the change. Trust started to fall apart with the Vietnam War. Maybe it even started earlier than that, with the assassination of President Kennedy. I was in my early 20s then, just graduated from college, newly married, in my dream Between you and me job, looking forward to an unbounded BY LEAH S. DUNAIEF future filled with joyful events. The nation was at peace, there was a young and vigorous president talking about making life better with civil rights legislation, women were speaking up for themselves, it was a hopeful time.

Friday afternoon, a sunny day, business lunch in a midtown Manhattan restaurant with a television on over the bar in the distance, a movie playing about a president who had been shot in the head. But wait. Wait! It wasn’t a movie, it was a news broadcast from Dallas interrupting the regular programming, it was our president, everyone standing up, crying, paying their checks, rushing back to their offices, trying to deal with the unthinkable. How could this happen? How could Secret Service let this happen? In our country! A president, the President of the United States, could not be protected! Our bubble of safety was bursting, slowly, excruciatingly. Lee Harvey Oswald shot on television while under arrest. In what could you trust? Who killed Kennedy? All kinds of conspiracy theories, the Warren Commission, an end but never a certainty. Was the government lying to us? Was there a cover-up? Next came the Vietnam War. First only “advisors,” then military, then body counts, always more Viet Cong than Americans lay on the battlefields. Promises of progress and victory by the government, as casualties and

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 $59/year • 631-751-7744 www.tbrnewsmedia.com • Contents copyright 2021

EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Leah S. Dunaief GENERAL MANAGER Johness Kuisel MANAGING EDITOR Rita J. Egan EDITOR Rita J. Egan LEISURE EDITOR Heidi Sutton

numbers drafted rose. This even as Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara privately expressed doubts of victory as early as 1966. But President Johnson was afraid of losing the 1968 election should the United States withdraw. Instead we lost thousands of young men, all of which eventually was revealed to the public. Protests were the order of the day, and more violence, including the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr., Robert Kennedy and the chaos at the 1968 Democratic Convention in Chicago. What’s happening to the nation’s authority figures? We rolled right into Watergate and Nixon’s resignation. Our President accused of being a liar and a crook. What’s left to believe in? President Jimmy Carter held hostage by the Iranians, the Iran-Contra deception of Ronald Reagan’s second term, Bill Clinton making Monica Lewinsky a household name around the globe. Then the Weapons of Mass Destruction lies by the senior administration officials manipulating us into the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars. Whom to believe? Whom to trust? Each lie, each governmental deception blew away more trust, leading to the climax: the disbelief in the COVID-19 vaccine.

COPY EDITOR John Broven ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Kathleen Gobos ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES Elizabeth Bongiorno Robin Lemkin Larry Stahl Minnie Yancey SPECIAL PROJECTS MANAGER Kathryn Mandracchia

ART AND PRODUCTION DIRECTOR Beth Heller Mason PRODUCTION Janet Fortuna Sharon Nicholson CLASSIFIEDS DIRECTOR & SUBSCRIPTIONS MANAGER Sheila Murray

Even when ex-President Donald Trump urged his audience to get vaccinated on Aug. 21, in Cullman, Alabama, one of the areas struggling to cope with COVID cases and hospitalization, he was booed. “But I recommend take the vaccines,” Trump said. “I did it. It’s good. Take the vaccines.” After that experience, he hasn’t again mentioned vaccination at a rally. But the reaction wasn’t partisan. They were, like Trump, all Republicans who had come to hear him, It was symptomatic of the larger distrust in government. I was in my early teens when I received the polio vaccination. Polio was a dreaded disease by parents the world over, more so as I remember, than COVID-19. Like today, we were discouraged from assembling in groups or joining crowds. The virus attacks the brain and spinal cord, leaving paralysis and even causing death. When Jonas Salk and his colleagues created the vaccine, we all lined up to take the shot. It was the Eisenhower years. We believed our president. Those vaccines have eliminated polio from most of the world. That’s what approved vaccinations can do.

CLASSIFIEDS Joann Brady BUSINESS MANAGER Sandi Gross CIRCULATION MANAGER Courtney Biondo INTERNET STRATEGY DIRECTOR Rob Alfano

AwardWinning Newspapers 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020

Year After Year


PAGE A20 • TIMES HUNTINGTON & NORTHPORTS • NOVEMBER 4, 2021

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