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PAGE A2 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • FEBRUARY 3, 2022
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After being vacant since September, the spot formerly occupied by Pentimento will be home to a new restaurant. In a statement Jan. 31, Eagle Realty Holdings Inc. announced David Tunney, who owns and operates several restaurants on Long Island from Port Jefferson to Roslyn, will open a new restaurant at 93 Main St. in Stony Brook Village Center. “After many interviews with at least a halfdozen local and more distant restaurateurs, Eagle Realty Holdings trustees are pleased with our choice of David,” said chairman Richard Rugen in the press release. According to Eagle Realty, Tunney is expected to open the new restaurant in the spring. He has not announced the name of the business or what will be offered. “This will be a new concept, different cuisine and a whole new look,” Tunney said in the press release. The business owner has been in the restaurant industry for 35 years and is a familiar face in the Three Village area. He grew up in Setauket and graduated from Ward Melville High School. In 2019, he bought the former Raga Indian Restaurant on Old Town Road and turned it into Old Fields Barbecue. “This is where I grew up, this is where my roots are, and it’s amazing to come back to it,” Tunney said in a 2019 TBR News Media interview. In addition to the Setauket spot, he owns Old Fields restaurants in Port Jefferson and Greenlawn and Old Fields Barbecue in Huntington. He is also one of the founders of the Besito Restaurant Group along with his brother John and part-owner of Besito Mexican restaurants in Huntington and Roslyn. In the 2019 interview, Tunney said he had
David Tunney is ready to open a new restaurant in Stony Brook Village Center. Photo from Eagle Realty Holdings
good memories of growing up in the Three Village area. His mother, Marilyn, worked in the TBR News Media offices for 25 years, and one of his first jobs was at the Arby’s that once was located where the Setauket Main Street firehouse is today. Tunney said his first job was with the former Dining Car 1890 that was located on Route 25A and Nicolls Road, where he started as a dishwasher. In the interview, Tunney said he leaves the cooking to the chefs and enjoys the hospitality side of the business, which he learned from his brother John. “The part I really love about it is making people have a great experience and that they just love all the food, the service, the ambiance, how they are taken care of,” he said in the interview.
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FEBRUARY 3, 2022 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A3
Nature
Foxes don’t pose a danger to humans BY RITA J. EGAN RITA@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM When foxes are spotted in a neighborhood, residents may wonder if the animal poses any danger to them or their dogs and cats or if they have rabies because they’re out in the daytime. However, experts say seeing foxes out during the day doesn’t necessarily indicate rabies. “Generally, foxes are most active at night or during twilight, however they can be active at other times of day when food demands are higher such as needing to conduct additional foraging to feed young,” according to New York State Department of Environmental Conservation officials. “During the winter months, foxes may be more inclined to hunt during the day, so a sighting in daylight hours is often not an indication of a sick animal.” The DEC added that foxes should be viewed at a distance while they are searching for their necessities. “If foxes are being sighted near residential homes it is probably because some resource need is being met, i.e., shelter, such as under decks or sheds, access to food, where rodents or other natural forage are located.” Janine Bendicksen, curator and director of wildlife rehabilitation for Sweetbriar Nature Center in Smithtown, said sometimes a person may see a fox circling. This is a result of people who feed them, which is not a good idea as they begin to depend on humans for food. Because of this dependency, when a fox sees a person, they begin circling in anticipation of being fed.
“The fox is definitely more afraid of you than you are of it,” she said. “Foxes have what they love to eat. They love to eat mice. They love moles, rats, and won’t necessarily go after your cat or dog. Could they? Absolutely. But chances are they’re going to be more afraid of the dog than it is of them.” While people don’t have to worry about their dogs and cats if foxes are spotted, they do have to keep an eye on their chickens. Bendicksen said people who find that foxes get into their chicken cages need to house the birds in an enclosure that is completely fox proof because the animal can get to the chicken easily if there are any substantially sized holes.
Fox population
Bendicksen said there hasn’t been an uptick in the fox population necessarily, but with more people at home during the pandemic, she believes more residents have noticed them than they did in the past. Even the number of calls they have received about injured wildlife, in general, have increased over the last couple of years, she said, as people are spending more time outdoors. The fox population is a cyclical one. When it’s a good summer and they can get more than adequate amounts of food, she said, in turn, the animals have many pups. However, this can result in overpopulation and the foxes get mites, which cause the contagious disease known as mange. The foxes can die from the disease. When another good
summer comes along, the population can grow again. “The population does go up and down based on food and based on the disease that keeps them in check,” Bendicksen said. Recently, the nature center saved a fox with mange when a resident found him curled up outside their front door. “He would not have survived the winter,” the wildlife director said. “We literally got him just in the nick of time. His hair just started to fall out. His eyes were just starting to shut. He would have died Tod the fox is currently recuperating from mange at Sweetbriar of secondary infections Nature Center in Smithtown. Photo from Sweetbriar and starvation had he not come in.” The fox, named Tod by the staff, will now ‘The fox is definitely more afraid spend the winter with the nature center and be of you than you are of it.’ released in the spring when he is “older and —JANINE BENDICKSEN wiser,” according to Bendicksen. to catch them. She pointed out that people Injured foxes If a person sees an injured fox, they should rarely see foxes hit along the road because of contact an animal rescue such as Sweetbriar their speed and other skills. “The foxes are truly super intelligent, super (631-979-6344, www.sweetbriarnc.org). Bendicksen said foxes are difficult to catch, shy, super careful, and so to catch a sick fox, and they have to be extremely sick for a person they have to be in pretty bad shape,” she said.
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Town/County
Huntington officials weigh the future of Indian Hills
BY RAYMOND JANIS DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM The Preserve at Indian Hills, a planned retirement community along the Indian Hills golf course in Fort Salonga, is seeking approvals from two Town of Huntington boards. The Preserve is being spearheaded by Jim Tsunis, managing member of Hauppaugebased development firm The Northwind Group. Applications with the Zoning Board of Appeals and Planning Board must be approved before construction can begin. “We’re building an extraordinary community on over 150 acres of property,” Tsunis said in a phone interview. “In addition, we’re preserving over 120 acres of the golf course. This is a win-win situation for the residents of Fort Salonga.” According to Tsunis, 74 townhouse units will be built along with renovation of the clubhouse and construction of a fitness center. Under Huntington code, a golf course cannot be operated within a residential area without a special use permit from the ZBA. With this approval, The Preserve at Indian Hills can legally function as a golf community.
“Because they are changing the location and the size of the clubhouse in their plans, they are required to come before the zoning board to request a continuation of their use permit to have a golf course on the premises,” ZBA chair Jerry Asher said in a phone interview. The application has sparked opposition from some Fort Salonga property owners. The Fort Salonga Property Owners Association is a civic group that formed to resist redevelopment at Indian Hills under the current plan. “We want to make it clear we are not against development on the golf course,” said FSPOA president John Hayes in a phone interview. “But this plan with 74 homes, plus the expanded golf club, will have a detrimental effect on the community for the short and long terms.” FSPOA’s objections to the project include its size and scope, proximity to surrounding neighborhoods, the potential for environmental harm and diminishing property values of neighboring homeowners. “A number of the neighbors got their appraisals and [the existing homes] may, in
effect, lose 10% of their values,” Hayes said. “The neighborhood is extremely concerned. We do not understand how they are planning to go ahead with this.” By keeping the existing golf course intact, Tsunis believes that the project will preserve, rather than disrupt, the natural and historical character of the land and its surrounding area. “Everyone that lives in the area references Indian Hills Country Club for their location,” he said. “There would be single-family homes twice or three times the size of my townhouses built all over the area if I didn’t preserve the golf course.” Detractors demand greater initiative by the ZBA in a last-ditch effort to impose greater restrictions on development while the project remains in the planning phase. However, Asher indicates that the ZBA has a narrow purview over this matter. “The only [jurisdiction] the zoning board has is whether or not we will grant them a use permit to run a golf course,” Asher said. “We don’t have jurisdiction over anything else. The Planning Board has jurisdiction over all of the other things.” The Planning Board will hold its own
public hearing on Feb. 16 without a vote, contrary to recent misreporting that a vote of final approval will be held on that date. “I’ve read those reports and that’s inaccurate,” said Planning Board chair Paul Ehrlich. “We won’t be making decisions on the 16th. It really is just for the board to hear the comments.” Andy Rapiejko, a Fort Salonga resident opposing the project, denounces the Planning Board’s decision to hold this hearing without the ZBA first granting the special use permit. “In many steps, the process isn’t logical,” Rapiejko said. “Why would they have a hearing without a vote? Wouldn’t you want the community to have the information on what the ZBA determines?” Aware of the importance of its upcoming decision, the ZBA has brought in outside help. “We are hiring [a consulting firm] called H2M to give us some advice on how we ought to resolve the application before us,” Asher said. The ZBA is not expected to hold a final vote on the special use application until early April.
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PAGE A6 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • FEBRUARY 3, 2022
Holtsville Hal predicts an early spring Photo from Town of Brookhaven
Following the blizzard that battered Brookhaven Town this past weekend, Holtsville Hal’s 2022 prognostication was welcome news for many. After awaking from his slumber, Hal brushed the snow aside to emerge from his burrow and did not see his shadow, predicting an early spring for the Town of Brookhaven. The virtual event was livestreamed on the Holtsville Ecology Site’s Facebook page on Groundhog Day, Feb. 2. According to tradition, if a groundhog sees its shadow on Groundhog Day, there will be six more weeks of winter weather; if not, spring should arrive early.
“After this weekend’s blizzard, I’m sure we are all looking forward to spring arriving on time and keeping our fingers crossed that our resident weatherman maintains his accuracy,” said Superintendent of Highways Daniel Losquadro. “Regardless, the Brookhaven Highway Department remains ready to handle whatever else Mother Nature sends our way during these remaining few weeks of winter.” Above, Town of Brookhaven Highway Superintendent Dan Losquadro with Holtsville Hal’s handler, Greg Drossel, revealing Hal’s 2022 prognostication.
The following incidents have been reported by the Suffolk County Police. Commack Wanted for questioning ■ A shoplifter at Home Depot on Jericho Turnpike in Commack was arrested on Jan. 24 for allegedly trying to steal 9 packages of electrical wire valued at approximately $1400.
■ A resident on Fairfield Way in Commack reported that someone stole their vehicle, a 2006 Hyundai Sonata, from the parking lot on Jan. 27. The keys had been left inside the car which was valued at $5000. ■ RX Express Pharmacy on Jericho Turnpike in Commack reported a burglary on Jan. 27. Two men allegedly broke a window, took assorted prescription drugs and fled the scene. ■ Walmart on Veterans Memorial Highway in Commack reported that a man allegedly stole a Hart chainsaw, Goodyear air compressor, clothing and more on Jan. 23. The value of the stolen items was $315.
Hauppauge
TBR NEWS MEDIA
■ A man called police on Jan. 27 to report his car had been stolen from the parking lot of QuickChek on Motor Parkway in Hauppauge. The man stated he left his 2000 Toyota Solara running while he went in to the store. When he came back out the car, valued at $1500, was gone.
Lake Grove
■ Sephora at the Smith Haven Mall in Lake Grove reported that a woman allegedly put three Daisy by Marc Jacobs fragrances in her purse and walked out of the store on Jan. 28. The items were valued at $340. ■ A woman shopping at Trader Joe’s in Lake Grove on Jan. 27 left her pocketbook unattended in her shopping cart. When she returned her wallet containing credit cards and cash was missing. ■ H&M at the Smith Haven Mall in Lake Grove reported a petit larceny on Jan. 28. A woman allegedly stole assorted clothing valued at about $200. ■ A catalytic converter was reported stolen from a 2002 Ford F250 parked on Olive Street in Lake Grove on Jan. 22. The stolen item was valued at approximately $650. — COMPILED BY HEIDI SUTTON
Do you recognize this man? Photo from SCPD
Suffolk County Crime Stoppers and Suffolk County Police Fourth Precinct Crime Section officers are seeking the public’s help to identify and locate a man who allegedly stole items, including wrestling toys from Walmart, located at 85 Crooked Hill Road on Dec. 12, 2021 at approximately 7:30 p.m.
St. James
■ A petit larceny was reported at K&T Foot Spa on Lake Avenue in St. James on Jan. 24. A person entered the store, picked up the cash register containing cash and fled on foot.
Smithtown
■ A resident on Fulton Avenue in Smithtown reported that someone drove up to their mailbox and stole their mail on Jan. 25. ■ A resident on Alpine Court in Smithtown called police on Jan. 24 to report that someone stole his credit card and made $2600 worth of purchases at Brothers Wine, Walmart and two different Target Stores.
Stony Brook
A resident on William Penn Drive in Stony Brook reported that a purse, credit cards and money were stolen from a vehicle parked on their driveway on Jan. 22. A front window was broken to gain entry.
Suffolk County Crime Stoppers offers a cash reward for information that leads to an arrest. Anyone with information about these incidents can contact Suffolk County Crime Stoppers to submit an anonymous tip by calling 1-800-220-TIPS.
FEBRUARY 3, 2022 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A7
Sports
tbrnewsmedia.com Goforto more sports photos
West East
Smithtown East girls basketball falls to West BY BILL LANDON DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Smithtown West sitting in second place in the League III standings — one game behind Half Hollow Hills East —hosted their crosstown neighbor Smithtown East who briefly led in the opening quarter. However, West was too much for their visitors closing out the game with a 63-32 victory Jan. 27. Senior Nikki Mennella led the way for West with a three-pointer, seven field goals and two from the free throw line to top the scoring charts with 19 points. Laura Luikart followed with 15 points along with a dozen rebounds, and Karsyn Kondracki netted 12. Smithtown East’s Angie Camarda banked 10 points, and teammate Jordan Townes scored nine. The loss drops Smithtown East to 3-10 while the win lifts Smithtown West to 11-1 in League, 15-1 overall, with four games remaining before post season play begins.
Photos by Bill Landon
63 32
Pictured clockwise from above, Smithtown West’s Karsyn Kondracki drives on Melanie Pappas; Smithtown East’s Nicole Caputo with the rebound; Smithtown West junior Laura Luikart shoots; Smithtown West forward Emily Guglielmo and Becky Hannwacker look for the rebound.
PAGE A8 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • FEBRUARY 3, 2022
County
Kids go tubing in St. James. Photo by Trish Busby
Nick Bilotti, of East Setauket, tackles the snow with the snowblower. Photo by Cameron Bilotti
Blizzard hits Suffolk County BY AMANDA POMERANTZ DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM The expected nor’easter over the weekend dumped more than 2 feet of snow in some areas of Suffolk County, but a big challenge was the blizzard conditions. Snowfall started Friday night, and continued into Saturday evening. The wind kept blowing
and drifting snow, and areas that had been plowed kept needing to be plowed again. The National Weather Service reported that in the Town of Brookhaven winds reached as high as 66 mph in Stony Brook, according to the Citizen Weather Observer Program known as CWOP, and snow totals reached as high as 23.5 inches in Medford, according to a trained spotter. Nicholas Bilotti, above left, checks out the snow in East Setauket, while Ava Dicpinigaitis, of Stony Brook, enjoys the weather. Below, a snow plower takes on the snow in St. James. Left photo by Cameron Bilotti ; right photo by Kristen Dicpinigaitis; below photo by Joseph Cali
Kids go tubing in St. James, while Liv Falzone and Jimmy Burns stop to take a winter photo in Nesconset. Left photo by Trish Busby; right photo by Claudia Reed
FEBRUARY 3, 2022 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A9
University
SBU weather professors, students launch balloons during nor’easter
BY DANIEL DUNAIEF DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM The hours a few meteorology professors and some of their students spent in driving snow and whipping wind this past weekend amid the nor’easter may improve the accuracy of future weather forecasts. Even as other Long Island residents were hunkered indoors, Stony Brook University Professors Brian Colle and Pavlos Kollias were teaming up with scientists from several institutions as a part of a threeyear NASA-led study called IMPACTS, for The Investigation of Microphysics and Precipitation for Atlantic Coast-Threatening Snowstorms. The researchers and a group of their students launched weather balloons and gathered radar data from last Friday evening through Saturday night, as the nor’easter named Kenan dumped well over two feet of snow through parts of Long Island. Stony Brook students helped launch weather balloons every few hours, while NASA sent an ER-2 high altitude airborne plane and a Lockheed P-3 Orion plane into the storm. “Everyone brings their tools to the sandbox with respect to looking at these storms,” said Colle, who collected data and managed students for over 24 hours. At 4 a.m., Colle was driving on a road where the lanes and other traffic had disappeared. “I kind of enjoyed it,” Colle admitted, as he maneuvered along the snow-covered roadway where the lanes completely disappeared. Colle is in the second year of an IMPACT operation that started in 2020 and was put on pause last year amid the pandemic. The purpose of the study is to improve forecasting in a one-to-two-day time horizon. An improvement in the accuracy of localized forecasts over a shorter time can
help municipal authorities determine when to send out plows. “The models can hone in on those features and provide what we refer to as ‘nowcasting’ or short term forecasting,” Colle said. “There’s a big emphasis within the National Weather Service of providing decision support to emergency managers.” Part of what makes forecasting these storms so challenging is the difficulty in predicting the timing and location of snow bands, which drop large amounts of snow in short periods of time. In addition to information from the weather balloons, scientists throughout the area gathered temperature, wind and moisture data in places like Brookhaven and Albany. Researchers ran a few different radar systems probing into the clouds to get more details about how these precipitation bands formed. During the storm, Colle said the wind shear or the change in wind speed at different altitudes was dramatic, with 10- to 20-knot winds near the ground and 50-knot winds only 500 meters above. “I was surprised by how strong those winds were, right above our heads,” Colle said. Colle suggested that the students who participated in gathering data amid a driving snowstorm had the opportunity to apply their textbook learning to a real-world situation. “The students learn about these measurement approaches in class” but they truly understand it differently when they gather the data themselves, he said.
Student experience
A second-year student in the PhD program at Stony Brook, Erin Leghart, who lives in Farmingdale, worked from 6 p.m. to 2 a.m., which included launching six balloons in about six to eight hours. Leghart said this was the first time she experienced winds like this in a winter storm. She was well-dressed for the weather, as
Samantha Lankowicz, above, a sophomore at SBU, takes a photo of the multi-angle snowflake camera, which is the equipment mounted on the black tripod. It captures photos of the snowflakes as they fall from three angles in real time. Below, weather balloons were launched to gather radar data. Photos by Brian Colle, Stony Brook University
she invested in an ankle-length winter coat, snow boots, thermal long johns, Patagonia under armor and ski goggles. Leghart said the excitement about the storm built about five days before it arrived, as it presented an opportunity to “do a live experiment.” A sophomore at Stony Brook, Samantha Lankowicz, meanwhile, was excited to join her shift from 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. “I got to do hands-on science with other students,” she said. Lankowicz, who loves snow and was hoping for a chance to study a nor’easter this year, was pleased that one of the balloons made it all the way to the stratosphere. Lankowicz has been to other balloon launches where a snow band turned into rain,
which was “not as fun, standing in pouring rain when it’s 34 degrees.” The only time she felt cold was when she had to take off her ski gloves and put on thinner gloves to handle the balloons. Also a sophomore, John Tafe, who is from Salem, New York, was fascinated by weather early in life. When he was four years old, he saw clouds on the horizon and predicted a thunderstorm, which not only came later that day, but also knocked out power. Tafe, whose hands also got cold from handling the balloons, was excited to contribute to the effort. “To be in such a major storm that hopefully will provide valuable data is exciting,” Tafe said. “I hope that the data we collected will help advance the science.”
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PAGE A18 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • FEBRUARY 3, 2022
Editorial
Shoveling safe
With nearly 2 feet of snow covering the North Shore of Long Island, it’s important to remember that shoveling it can be a strenuous task for both the young and old. While freshly fallen snow looks pretty, it gets ugly fast when it piles up preventing us from getting to work, school or the supermarket. In order to get back to our daily tasks, the bottom line is we have to shovel. But shoveling can lead to not only minor aches and pains, but unfortunate situations such as heart attacks or death. This week alone with the most recent nor’easter, there were three blizzard-related deaths on Long Island — two in Syosset and one in Cutchogue. According to data analyzed in a 2019 Washington Post story, shoveling during snowstorms is responsible for about 11,500 injuries — 100 of which on average are fatal. However, Catholic Health Physician Partners cardiologist, Dr. Chong Park, gave his insight on how to prevent heading to the hospital while cleaning up your property. Park suggested doing a 10-minute warm-up before going outside. “Light exercise and stretching allow your muscles and joints to loosen,” he said. “Also, avoid eating a heavy meal and consuming alcohol prior to clearing snow.” Park added, “Should symptoms such as chest pain, chest heaviness, palpitations or shortness of breath occur as you shovel snow, stop immediately and seek medical attention.” Other tips from Park include: Dress properly: To stay warm when you’re outside, wear several loose layers of clothing. Additionally, don a waterresistant coat and boots along with a knit hat, scarf and gloves. It’s important to keep your gloves as dry as possible while shoveling. Wet gloves won’t keep your hands warm. Set your pace: You may want to clear the snow as fast as possible, but that’s when injuries occur. Go slow and do it step-by-step. As much as possible, push snow along the ground. Use a smaller snow shovel to avoid lifting a load that is too heavy. Be sure to take frequent breaks, return inside to warm up and consume plenty of water. It’s also important to clear snow as quickly as possible before it begins to melt and gets too heavy. Good form: When lifting snow, it’s important to use your legs. Bending at the waist can lead to an injury. Keep your back straight and squat with your knees wide. Avoid tossing snow. Instead, walk it to where you want to dump it. Avoid falls: Wear boots with slip-resistant soles. Once you have cleared your driveway and walkway, throw down salt or sand to eliminate any remaining ice or snow and enhance traction. So, please follow our motto, “Snow: Handle with care.”
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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 TBR News Media, P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733
Letters to the Editor Reckless Government Spending and Over Regulation will Only Worsen the Inflation Crisis
Gov. Kathy Hochul. Photo from Hochul’s office
Spirits lifted
What do you do when you see a large shore bird walking down Main Street in Port Jefferson Village? You call Port Jeff Code enforcement. I expressed my concern that the bird would wander into traffic and cause an a crash or worse be hit by a car. Not sure of their response to such a strange call, I was pleased and grateful to see a patrol car in five minutes. When I arrived on the scene, outside CVS, code officers and another concerned resident had captured the bird and placed it in a box inside the patrol car and were awaiting the DEC. The concern and compassion showed this helpless creature was certainly a bright spot in these dark days. Arlene Caselli Port Jefferson
Hitch a ride on mass transit
The apple, Gov. Kathy Hochul [D], didn’t fall far from the tree of former Gov. Andrew Cuomo [D]. Both enjoy the perks of office at “taxpayers’’ expense. Is it really necessary for Hochul to travel from Albany via helicopter or airplane to events in New York City and Long Island? Upon arriving at Penn Station, the governor can transfer to either a NYC Transit Subway or Long Island Rail Road train to reach her final destination. Just like ordinary New Yorkers who travel with a laptop or other communication devices, she can still be working and staying in touch with her office will riding Amtrak, the NYC Transit subway or LIRR. When he was U.S. senator, President Joe Biden [D] was known as Amtrak Joe. He commuted from his Delaware home to the capital via Amtrak on a regular basis for decades. Why can’t Hochul emulate Biden? Forget the helicopter and private airplane trips between Albany and NYC. Set an example for others. Show your support for transit just like Biden and become Amtrak Kathy. Larry Penner Great Neck
A op-ed by Congressman Lee Zeldin Throughout 2021, Long Islanders and Americans all across the United States experienced historic levels of inflation that drove up the costs of everyday items, such as groceries and gasoline, to long-term purchases like houses and cars. In fact, the December 2021 Consumer Price Index (CPI) report showed that inflation had grown at 7 percent over the past 12 months. That is the largest inflation spike in four decades. Inflation affects everyone. It can cause families trying to make ends meet to skip going out for pizza or to the movies because of the cost of filling up their car with gas or buying a week’s worth of groceries. Inflation makes it difficult for young people who want to upgrade from renting to purchase their first home. It certainly places even more of a burden on small businesses still struggling from the effects of overly restrictive COVID lockdown policies and mandates because now the prices of everything they need to operate on a day-to-day basis are on the rise. The numbers bear this out. It is estimated that in 2021 inflation had the effect of wiping out two biweekly paychecks for the average American worker and added $3,500 to the expenses of the average family. The same study showed low income families were hit the hardest and needed to increase their spending in 2021 by a minimum of 7 percent to achieve the same purchasing power as the previous year. Several months ago, I asked my constituents to describe the impact inflation and increased prices of everyday goods were having on their lives. Their specific answers varied, but there was a shared theme of frustration with the Biden Administration’s approach to this crisis. Lynne from Mattituck expressed concern about the rising costs of groceries, home heating oil and gasoline. She expects that she will pay as much as $1,250 more for home heating oil than she did last winter and already pays about $75 to fill up her car with gas. Lynne was understandably fed up with President Biden’s nonsensical approach to domestic oil production
and American energy independence. She asked, “How the heck do you shut down oil production in the country based on fear of pollution and then beg OPEC for oil? Their oil doesn’t pollute?” The price of gas has forced Steven from Port Jefferson Station to take steps to monitor the number of miles he’s driving so he can make less frequent trips to fill up at the gas station. He also shared his frustrations with the Biden Administration’s lack of attention to an issue that is making Americans’ lives so much harder. “To be honest, I never dreamed it would get like this. There is no attention to Americans coming from the White House. There’s a certain selfishness and self-absorbedness I have never seen before,” he said. It is easy to see why Steven and many other Americans feel this way when they see White House Chief of Staff Ron Klain publicly endorsing the idea that inflation is a “high class” problem. From the time President Biden took office and brought one-party rule to Washington, Democrats’ agenda has been focused on jamming through massive spending increases, job killing regulations, suffocating mandates, and crippling tax hikes on businesses and individuals. These reckless policies will do nothing to slow down inflation or tackle the supply chain crisis our nation is also facing. Throughout the President’s first year in office, his Administration has turned a blind eye to this reality and made this crisis far worse with the out of touch policies it has pursued. The best way to tackle this inflation crisis and ease the burden of skyrocketing costs of everyday goods for hardworking Americans is to remove unnecessary regulations on small businesses, confront the supply chain crisis head on, encourage and incentivize people to rejoin the workforce, and ease the tax and cost of living burdens on American families. I will continue to promote the policies that will help ease the inflation burden that is bringing unwanted challenges to the ability for families to provide for themselves, and I will keep pushing back on the proposals for more out-of-control spending that our nation cannot afford and that will only fan the flames of inflation. Congressman Lee Zeldin represents New York’s First Congressional District in the U.S. House of Representatives.
The opinions of columnists and letter writers are their own. They do not speak for the newspaper.
Opinion Headlines we’re unlikely to see any time soon
W
e are stuck in a headline and news cycle rut. Please find below some fantasy headlines, and the sources or unlikeliest of sources, for those news flashes. — “Kardashian women decide not to show any more skin” - People Magazine. In the interests of encouraging people to dress appropriately for winter weather and to draw attention to their ideas rather than their bodies, the Kardashians decide that revealing less of their overD. None exposed bodies will aid of the above society. BY DANIEL DUNAIEF — “President Biden had a great day” - The New York Post. Granted, President Biden hasn’t exactly created a stellar track record in his first year in office - the withdrawal from Afghanistan
clearly could have gone better - but the The New York Post seems intent on providing a steady stream of stories excoriating him for everything. — “Former President Trump tells the whole truth and nothing but the truth” - The Washington Post. Fond of fact checking the former president, the Washington Post would certainly attract attention with a fact check that suggests the former leader of the free world was being honest. — “Senator McConnell itching to approve Biden’s Supreme Court pick” - The New York Times. Using unnamed sources, of course, the Times could break one of the biggest stories of the decade if McConnell somehow signaled that he was eager to give a liberal Supreme Court nominee the benefit of the doubt and his full support. — “Giants and Jets get A’s for effort” - New York Daily News. It seems obvious and easy to pick on losing sports teams, particularly those that haven’t delivered for rabid fans for years. Hometown papers could recognize the effort, even if the results aren’t there.
FEBRUARY 3, 2022 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A19
— “We don’t really know, but look out your window” - the Weather Channel. I give weather.com credit for calling last weekend’s nor’easter well. About five days before a single flake fell, they knew that a big storm had the potential to form and dump tons of snow in the area. They were right. Then again, all of that technology doesn’t always play out scenarios accurately. It’d be funny and fitting if they said on the air, “big storm could be coming our way. Or not.” — “Inflation totally under control” CNBC. Despite evidence to the contrary at the gas pump, in the supermarket and just about anywhere people have to pay for goods or services, wouldn’t it be great if inflation somehow, magically, came under control, giving the Fed the chance to stay on the sidelines for an economy still recovering from the pandemic? — “Fauci appreciates the respect and support of Senator Rand Paul” — Reuters. Okay, so, this may be among the least likely of the headlines, but, wouldn’t it be nice/
shocking if the two doctors somehow were on the same page? — “Spirit of bipartisanship sweeps through Washington” - Politico. Yeah, sure, we can dream. Dems and Repubs aren’t seeing eye to eye on anything. In fact, they seem to be energizing their bases by attacking the other side. Still, the day such a report came out would indeed be a chance to celebrate. — “Children rediscover books” Apple News Spotlight. Disenchanted with electronics, children around the world left social media for a day and enjoyed interacting with characters like Horton, Mr. Tumnus, Meg Murry, Alec Ramsey and Emma Woodhouse. — “Hero scientists behind life saving vaccines” - Fox News. Despite some members of conservative media taking vaccines to protect themselves and their families, they and their guests sometimes praise those who resist vaccines and question the legitimacy of the vaccines for others.
Russia – in and out and back in our daily lives
H
ere comes Russia again. I am of the generation of children that took refuge from an imaginary atomic bomb attack from Russia by pulling our coats over our heads and crouching under our desks. We grew up with the Cold War always threatening Soviet aggression on both foreign and domestic soils. Were there Communist cells, funded by Russia, hidden among us that could erupt at any time? McCarthy whipped the nation to a fever pitch. Between you and me The United States and the Soviet Union raced BY LEAH S. DUNAIEF each other to influence governments and people, ideologically and financially, all over the globe. I still remember the relief I felt, going to the old Metropolitan Opera House in 1959, to view a performance by members of the Bolshoi
Ballet, who came to America bringing not only the most breathtaking dancers but also tangible evidence of detente. And then the Berlin Wall came down. I was there. At least I was there in 1989, six weeks before they broke through to West Berlin. I walked No Man’s Land, the barren stretch between East and West Berlin, with cameras trained on anyone who would start the crossing between those two universes, seeking permission from the guards to go behind the Iron Curtain. I was in the Russian Embassy in Washington D.C. in 1991 with a small group of journalists, being feted with caviar and blinis, when word came that the Soviet Union had crumbled, and then the embassy personnel cried. “The end of a dream,” they sobbed. The end of a nightmare, I thought, as they led us to the exits and fell upon the sumptuous food we left behind. Mikhail Gorbachev won the Nobel Prize, the Russian people were real, not just the Evil Empire, and co-existence was finally possible. In a couple of years our attention turned to jihadists. Now Russia is dramatically back in our lives. The Russia that for centuries had sought
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 2022
EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Leah S. Dunaief GENERAL MANAGER Johness Kuisel MANAGING EDITOR Rita J. Egan EDITOR Rita J. Egan LEISURE EDITOR Heidi Sutton
warm water ports and had ruled Crimea for 134 years until 1917. The Russia that again annexed Crimea, a part of Ukraine since 1954 and of an independent Ukraine since 1991, with armed intervention in 2014. The Russia that has now lined up reputedly over 100,000 troops on three sides of the Ukraine border, and with aggressive leadership is making demands. Russian President Vladimir Putin is insisting that Ukraine not be allowed to join NATO, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization initially formed after WWII as a protection against potential Soviet aggression, that has grown as more Eastern European countries have joined. Putin insists it is a security issue to have bordering Ukraine a NATO member. He also wants military exercises in nearby NATO states to cease and for offensive weapons to be removed from those NATO countries. So where do we come into the picture? “It seems to me that the United States does not care that much about Ukrainian security— maybe they think about it somewhere in the background,” Putin said in his news conference. “But their main task is to restrict
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the development of Russia.” By “development,” the concern is that Putin wishes to restore the former Soviet empire and that, after Crimea, Ukraine would be the next step. Students of history will remember the lessons of the Sudetenland of Czechoslovakia and the “spheres of influence” imposed by the Yalta Conference (in ironically Crimea). Meanwhile, Putin, with his soldiers and weapons at the ready, is accusing the U.S. of threatening Russia. White House press secretary, Jen Psaki, likened Putin’s comments to “when the fox is screaming from the top of the henhouse that he’s scared of the chickens.” Now, as of yesterday, the decision has been made to send several thousand troops to Poland, Germany and Romania. Presumably they are meant to show support for NATO and for the principle that countries may decide which alliances they will enter. Meanwhile everyone concerned, including Putin, has embraced the idea of diplomacy as a path to a Ukrainian solution. For the moment, at least, the spotlight has moved away from constant COVID.
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AwardWinning Newspapers 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020
Year After Year
PAGE A20 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • FEBRUARY 3, 2022
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HELOC
• No Closing Cost Option Available3
*APR=Annual Percentage Rate. Rate accurate as of 02-01-2022; subject to change. 1Rate featured is the lowest for the product. 2After introductory rate, APR varies based on prime rate plus a margin; margin disclosed at account opening. Current prime rate 3.25%.Variable rate; maximum rate of 16%. May be offered credit at a higher rate and other terms; subject to credit approval. Hazard insurance required on all loans. 3No closing costs option only available for limits up to $500,000 for a primary residence located in Nassau or Suffolk County, excluding cost of appraisal. Must maintain minimum balance requirements for first 12 months for introductory rate and 36 months to avoid payment of closing costs. Other terms and conditions apply. Membership eligibility applies.
67700
• Fixed First 12 Months2