Award Winning Contact your Sales Representative TODAY! TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA 185 Route 25A • PO Box 707 • Setauket, NY 11733 631.751.7744 tbrnewsmedia.com In Sp ng Our House ©135790 Vol. 36, No. 5 March 23, 2023 $1.00 The TIMES of SMITHTOWN FORT SALONGA • KINGS PARK • SMITHTOWN • NESCONSET • ST JAMES • HEAD OF THE HARBOR • NISSEQUOGUE • HAUPPAUGE • COMMACK tbrnewsmedia.com SPACE RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBER ADDRESS Hauppauge High School hosts more than 200 girls for ag football drills ahead of season — A7 PHOTO BY STEVEN ZAITZ Ready for some football Residents remain vigilant As town eases one concern for St. James and Head of the Harbor homeowners another is at the forefront of their minds A3 Inside PROUDLY SPONSORED BY: A SUPPLEMENT TO TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA • MARCH 23, 2023 Time to spring clean your life! Focus Health on
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PAGE A2 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • MARCH 23, 2023
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Residents aim to protect historic Route 25A corridor
BY RITA J. EGAN RITA@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
Many St. James residents as well as those in surrounding communities are breathing a sigh of relief after a recent update from the Town of Smithtown regarding a proposed assisted living facility. However, homeowners living near Route 25A in Head of the Harbor and St. James are growing concerned and impatient about a proposed church on the corridor.
Bull Run Farm
Town Supervisor Ed Wehrheim (R) said in a statement that the Town Board would not move forward with a special exception for a proposed assisted living facility on the former Bull Run Farm parcel on Mills Pond Road.
“We as a board demanded community outreach by the applicant, prior to bringing this application to the board for a public hearing,” he said. “This is something we insist on when large development is proposed in an area that abuts up to residential zoning, and to provide total transparency to the community. In the end, there was insufficient support from the Town Board to proceed with a special exception.”
Earlier this month residents crowded the second floor of the St. James Firehouse on North Country Road to air their concerns about the possible development of former farmland. An informational meeting was headed up by attorneys for Frank Amicizia. The Fort Salonga developer had proposed a two-story, 97-bed facility on 9.02 acres of property on Mills Pond Road that is zoned residential. The facility would have needed a special exception from the Town of Smithtown.
Residents’ concerns included the proximity to the Gyrodyne property on Route 25A which also faces potential development; 24-hour lighting on the property; increased traffic; and the building not fitting the community aesthetics. Others were concerned about a sewage treatment plant that is proposed for the property, ranging from how it would affect local waterways due to the disposal of pharmaceuticals in the facility to the noise it would make.
Judy Ogden, a Head of the Harbor trustee and spokesperson for the Saint James-Head of the Harbor Neighborhood Preservation Coalition, said, “This is exactly the kind of leadership that residents hope for in their elected officials.” The coalition along with the Facebook group Save Bull Run Farm headed up the opposition against the proposed development citing the plans were not in line with the town’s Draft Comprehensive Plan.
“The supervisor’s comments about the need to protect the bucolic nature of this portion of Mills Pond Road is especially encouraging,” Ogden said.
Timothy House
Less than 2 miles down the road, residents of Head of the Harbor and those surrounding the historic Timothy House on Route 25A were prepared to attend a public hearing Wednesday, March 15, to air their concerns about a proposed house of worship to be built on the property. The day before the meeting, Village of Head of the Harbor officials posted on its website that it was canceled.
According to an email from Head of the Harbor Mayor Douglas Dahlgard, the monastery monks originally submitted an application to the village’s Planning Board in 2021. The application, which included constructing a
house of worship and school, was delayed when the monastery decided to change counsel and amend the plan.
Dahlgard said the amended plan will require a special use permit and will also involve a timeconsuming process.
“Prior to last week’s scheduled trustees meeting, we decided to delay to give us more time to prepare to properly represent our village,” Dahlgard said.
The mayor added they will be checking with the monastery’s counsel to see what date works for him for a public meeting.
The Russian Orthodox Monastery of the Glorious Ascension, also known as the Monastery of Saint Dionysios the Areopagite, purchased Timothy House in 2018.
The amendments to the proposed 3,341-square-foot building include being situated farther from Route 25A than originally presented and moving planned
parking spots from the front of the building to the back.
Head of the Harbor historian Leighton Coleman III said in an email that local residents have concerns about multiple issues regarding the proposed house of worship and school, including the parking lot for 35 cars being situated close to neighbors’ properties.
Among the residents’ concerns are also the impact the construction will have on the historic property, lighting from the parking lot and increased traffic on Route 25A. Many have had issues before the application, including a huge metal storage container on the property that has become an eyesore.
Timothy House, constructed in the 1800s, was once the home of former Head of the Harbor historian and architectural preservationist Barbara Van Liew, who died in 2005. The house was built by a descendant of Smithtown founder Richard Smith.
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In addition to concerns over a proposal to build a house of worship and school on the grounds of Timothy House, village residents have had other issues with the monastery that owns the property, including a storage container that has been outside the historic house for months. Photo by Rita J. Egan
Sunrise Wind Project takes another step toward becoming a reality
BY DANIEL DUNAIEF DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
economic benefits.
SUFFOLK COUNTY
On the first day of spring, with cool breezes and a propeller plane flying overhead at Smith Point County Park, Suffolk County officials celebrated a Host Community Agreement with Sunrise Wind, an energy project that will use windmills to provide power to about 600,000 homes.
The offshore wind project, which will be developed 30 miles east of Montauk, marks the second such effort to use renewable energy as a power source. South Fork Wind is currently under construction and will provide energy by the end of the year.
The Sunrise Wind farm, which Denmarkbased Ørsted and east-coast-based Eversource is leading, will make landfall at Smith Point County Park on the South Shore. The lines would feed under the Smith Point Bridge and under William Floyd Parkway.
The effort is a part of New York State’s goal of increasing the use of renewable energy to 70% by 2030 and to 100% by 2040, lowering the state’s carbon footprint and slowing the effect of greenhouse gases on global warming.
In addition to celebrating the environmental benefits of the agreement, officials stood with labor leaders to recognize the job and
“We know that this clean energy future is also about job creation and creating new industries that will put people to work,” County Executive Steve Bellone (D) said at a press conference announcing the agreement. “We are going to have not just jobs; we are going to have careers for people here on Long Island for years and decades to come.”
The effort will include 100 jobs in an operations and maintenance hub in East Setauket.
Sunrise Wind agreed to pay $170 million over 25 years. Brookhaven will get over $5 million from the project each year, starting in 2025 for the next quarter of a century.
The announcement of the agreement came on the same day that the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change warned that the world would likely pass a dangerous temperature increase within the next decade, driving global warming to deadly levels unless countries cut back on fossil fuels.
Such an unchecked temperature increase could lead to famine, disease, an increase in violent storms, and a reduction in farmable or habitable land.
The UN report urged nations to cut the use of coal, oil and gas, which contribute to the majority of the emission of greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide.
Recognizing the overlap between the UN
report and the announcement about the Host Community Agreement in the county, Adrienne Esposito, executive director of Citizens Campaign for the Environment, suggested that the county was doing its part.
The UN “declared that we need to make sustainable, meaningful changes in this decade,” Esposito said during the press conference. “That’s exactly what Suffolk County and the state of New
York are doing. We have the low carbon tools to live in a world with lower emissions and now we must use them.”
Changing the way the county produces energy “changes the world” and the “future for the better,” Esposito added.
Julie Tighe, president of the New York League of Conservation Voters, applauded the practical and forward-looking element of a concrete plan that includes the start of construction later in 2023.
“Unless we turn these commitments into projects on the ground, it’s just a piece of paper,” Tighe said. This agreement is “one step closer to reality.”
Tighe congratulated political leaders from both parties, including Bellone and Brookhaven Town Supervisor Ed Romaine (R) for coming together on this environmentally, ecologically and economically favorable project.
“Clean air and clean water are non-partisan issues,” Tighe said. “This is a promise we need to keep for our communities.”
The wind farm plan will also include courses at Stony Brook University and SUNY Farmingdale, as well as a National Offshore Wind Training Center in Brentwood. The center will expand access to job opportunities and educational advancement, particularly for high school and college-age New Yorkers entering the job market.
The training center includes a 22-year license agreement with Suffolk County.
PAGE A4 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • MARCH 23, 2023 COME JOIN US WHERE NORTHERN & SOUTHERN SEAFOOD MEET 7 DAYS A WEEK ! ! D.J.’S CLAM SHACK 1972 JERICHO TURNPIKE EAST NORTHPORT, NY 11731 631 486 9474 DJSCLAMSHACKEASTNORTHPORT.COM FOLLOW US ON INSTAGRAM AND FACEBOOK @DJSCLAMSHACKEASTNORTHPORT 132370 DINE IN OR TAKE IT TO GO! Diners,SeenAsOn:Drive-in’s & Dives Paper Sold Out on the New tand? Subscribe TODAY and never miss an issue. Delivered to your mailbox every week. Subscribe at tbrnewsmedia.com or call 631-751-7744 ©135550
Brookhaven Town Supervisor Ed Romaine and County Executive Steve Bellone announced a Community Host Agreement with Sunrise Wind. Photo from Suffolk County
Couple from Pakistan improve daughter’s life by uprooting their own
BY MALLIE KIM DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
When baby Insha didn’t support her neck or roll over on time, new parents Sarah Sajjad and Muhammad Qasim Akhtar were concerned.
AMERICAN DREAM
Labor in their Lahore, Pakistan, hospital had been long and exhausting, with forceps and a vacuum, Sajjad said, and Insha hadn’t cried at birth. As a new mom, she didn’t know that could be a bad sign, but they were discharged with no suggestion anything was amiss. Checkups provided no new insight.
“Doctors were not sure what was going on with her,” Akhtar said. “They were saying, ‘Oh, maybe she’s too little or too weak, let’s wait.’”
Tired of waiting, Sajjad and Akhtar took their daughter to a specialist and got the diagnosis — cerebral palsy, a neurological condition affecting physical development and motor skills. The disorder can be caused by abnormal brain development or damage to the brain from, for example, a lack of oxygen during a difficult labor. Insha would never speak or walk on her own.
Uninterested in bitterness or blame, Sajjad and Akhtar took this new challenge as a mission to help Insha, who is now 14, live her best life — a 7,000-mile journey that would inspire Sajjad to become a voice for parents of children with special needs in her North Shore community — the family resides in South Setauket — and on the Mrs. Pakistan USA pageant stage near Washington, D.C.
In their Lahore home, baby Insha was surrounded by love, acceptance and family. Insha’s grandmother assured the new parents that whatever had happened was Allah’s, or God’s, will. “‘He must have [a reason] he chose you as her parents,’” Sajjad remembered her mother-in-law telling them. With the benefit of
hindsight, Sajjad said, “We cannot see why we are the chosen ones, but definitely it’s for the betterment of all of us. With time, we both feel that that’s true.”
But in Pakistan, services for children with disabilities were not easy to find. So, they resigned from their jobs at a telecom company in Lahore, sold their assets and settled in Suffolk County, where Akhtar began job hunting in earnest. They’d left behind their entire social support structure, but Sajjad said they weren’t worried since they faced settling into a new country and finding services for Insha with faith.
“We came with the belief that if we’re going for our daughter, the motive in us is quite clear, we have Allah’s blessings, and he’ll make things easy for us — and he did,” she said.
Those first few years were still a struggle. American companies discounted Akhtar’s IT experience, he said, requiring a degree incountry, so he took any job he could to support his family — first at a gas station, then a used car dealership, then a pharmacy. Eventually he landed as a Port Jefferson Department of Motor Vehicles security guard, where he’s worked the past several years.
Meanwhile, Sajjad strove to figure out services and medical care for Insha, and their family quickly grew. Twins Ibrahim and Mikayeel were born in 2012, and daughter AzmehJehan about a year after that. Sajjad trekked around Long Island for errands and appointments with four children in diapers while Akhtar worked. Despite the lack of social support structure, she said, she didn’t feel isolated or bitter.
“We didn’t have any time to think about, ‘Oh, we don’t have [an extended] family,’” she said. “I wanted to be with my kids, and that was actually the world we had — all six of us.”
Life for Insha did improve. She now has a wheelchair, a customized standing and walking aid, and an electronic communication device that
allows her to respond to basic questions. And she attends a school that accommodates her needs.
“She knows every day that, ‘I’m going to the same group of people,’ and she’s very comfortable there,” Sajjad said, adding that in Pakistan, Insha would’ve likely spent all her days homebound.
From the North Shore to Mrs.
Pakistan USA
Once the children were all in school, Sajjad turned her attention outward. Her first Long Island job was at the Developmental Disabilities Institute in Medford, assisting children with special needs, and currently she works in the Three Village Central School District as a special education aide. Outside of work, Sajjad said she has set her sights on supporting parents of kids with special needs, including those who do not speak English as their first language.
Even speaking English fluently as Sajjad and Akhtar did when they arrived, disability support systems in the United States had been like a maze — they said it took them four or five years to learn about the handicap parking placard, for example — and she strives to help families navigating the system as she once did.
“We forget the fact that parents need some services and support too,” Sajjad said, explaining her efforts to share what she’s learned with other parents and to provide
practical support when she can — something she said would have made her early years in the United States easier.
“I really want to give it back to this community, to this country, what they have given my daughter.”
And when Sajjad learned about Miss and Mrs. Pakistan USA, a pageant to recognize women who want to improve their communities while representing Pakistani heritage, she applied just for fun. As she progressed in the process, her children would ask her to rehearse her walk and practice her talent, which was with a poem on female empowerment and resilience, in front of them to make sure she was ready.
When her kids heard she won the Mrs. Pakistan USA 2022 title, they were thrilled. “I kind of jumped around the whole house,” her son Mikayeel said. And after Sajjad arrived home, she greeted the children sporting her crown and sash. “At that point I was like, ‘Thank God I got it,’” she said. “I wanted to see those lit faces.”
More than a title and a crown, Sajjad felt she had shown her children the driving force behind her and Akhtar’s choice to change their lives with a leap of faith. “When you have your will in it and you work hard for it, just do your best and then leave it on God,” Sajjad said. “And he’ll make the best decision for you.”
MARCH 23, 2023 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A5
Sarah Sajjad, right, of South Setauket, with her husband and four children. Below, Sajjad reenacts the moment she told her children she won Mrs. Pakistan USA. Photos by Mallie Kim
State legislators call for crackdown on deceptive packaging for THC products
This past week in Albany, New York State Sen. Dean Murray (R-Patchogue) and state Assemblywoman Jodi Giglio (R-Riverhead) joined with Republican colleagues from the state Senate and Assembly at a press conference calling for the crackdown on improper and deceptive packaging practices for edible products with THC infusions. Among the representatives on hand were state Sen. Mario Mattera (R-St. James)
The following incidents have been reported by Suffolk County Police: Motorcyclist killed in Islandia crash
Suffolk County Police Fourth Squad detectives are investigating a motor vehicle crash that killed a motorcyclist in Islandia on March 17.
Michael Laskaris was driving a 2019 Hino box truck westbound on Veterans Memorial Highway at 7:35 a.m. when he attempted to make a U-turn at the intersection of East Suffolk Avenue in front of an eastbound 2005 Suzuki motorcycle operated by Joshua Taylor. Taylor hit the brakes and the motorcycle skidded on the pavement causing the motorcyclist to be ejected.
NOTICEISHEREBYGIVEN
THATtheannualinspection
firehazardswhichmight CentralSchoolDistrictfor buildings,oftheSmithtown includingancillary ofeachschoolbuilding, forthecurrentschoolyear
and Assemblyman Keith Brown (R-Northport).
The lawmakers said there has been a dramatic increase in cases of children mistaking these products for regular candies and snack foods, with dangerous and sometimes deadly results.
Murray and Giglio have introduced legislation that would target this practice, mandating that THC-infused edibles on the market are marked and packaged plainly and increasing penalties for violators.
To Place A Legal Notice
Email: legals@tbrnewsmedia.com
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Taylor, 20, of Islandia, was pronounced dead at the scene. Laskaris, 66, of Selden, was not injured. The vehicles were impounded for safety checks.
Anyone with information is asked to call the Fourth Squad at 631-854-8452.
Farmingville man charged with DWAI by drugs after fatal car crash
Suffolk County Police arrested a Farmingville man for allegedly driving while ability impaired by drugs after he was involved in a motor vehicle crash that killed a man in Centereach on March 19.
Christopher Guzman was driving a 2022 Chevrolet pickup truck westbound on Middle Country Road, near Wood Road, when his vehicle struck the side of an eastbound 2011 Toyota Camry, driven by Virginia Molkentin at approximately 5 p.m. Guzman continued driving westbound and, a short distance away, the Chevrolet struck a westbound 2012 Ford Escape, driven by Stacy Carpenter.
Guzman, 39, of Farmingville, and Molkentin, 66, of Coram, were transported to Stony Brook University Hospital for treatment of non-life-threatening injuries. Carpenter, 55, was transported to Stony Brook University Hospital for treatment of serious injuries. Carpenter’s passenger, his nephew, Timothy Carpenter, 21, was transported to Stony Brook University Hospital where he was pronounced dead.
Guzman was charged with allegedly Driving While Ability Impaired by Drugs. The vehicles were impounded for safety checks.
Detectives are asking anyone with information on the crash to contact the Major Case Unit at 631-852-6555.
— COMPILED BY HEIDI SUTTON
Do you recognize this man?
Wanted for criminal mischief
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 damaged a vehicle in a Lake Grove parking lot on March 4.
A man exited a white Mercedes Benz SUV in a parking lot on Alexander Avenue at 8:10 p.m. and allegedly scratched the side of a 2023 Rivian R1S parked in the lot. The man got back in the Mercedes and left the scene.
Do you recognize this woman?
Wanted for petit larceny
Suffolk County Crime Stoppers and Suffolk County Police Fourth Precinct Crime Section officers are seeking the public’s help to identify and locate the woman who allegedly stole a pair of shoes from Famous Footwear, located at 1770 Veterans Memorial Highway in Islandia, on March 2 at approximately 2:45 p.m.
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.
PAGE A6 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • MARCH 23, 2023
CAUGHT ON CAMERA
Photo from SCPD
Photo from SCPD
STATE
Pictured above, New York State Sen. Dean Murray (R-East Patchogue), left of poster, and state Assemblywoman Jodi Giglio (R-Riverhead), right of poster, along with Republican state legislators. Photo by New York State Senate Photography
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Girls football teams prepare for season
BY STEVEN ZAITZ DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
Hauppauge High School was the scene this past Saturday for over 200 girls who will participate in flag football this year. Suffolk County footballers from as far away as East Hampton and Eastport-South Manor were put through their paces at eight different drill stations as they steam ahead toward opening day.
A little closer to home, Northport, Huntington, Sachem East, Amityville, Patchogue Medford, and of course, host Hauppauge all threw, ran, stretched and caught passes from coaches. Eagles Head Coach Steve Mileti ran the running back and flag-grabbing drill and Northport Head Coach Pat Campbell and Assistant Coach Perry Marinelli taught receivers how to catch the ball and run routes.
There was spirit of team building as the groups, comprised of a mash-up of girls from the participating schools, rotated around in 10-minute shifts, laughing and getting to know each other along the way.
The girls flag football season starts locally on March 29 when Hauppauge travels to Harborfields. Northport’s first game is on April 3 on the road against Half Hollow Hills.
Pictured clockwise from above, Meghan Barry of the Lady Eagle flag football team; Hauppauge’s Melissa O’Connor tries to
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sneak past teammate Frankie Gatien; and Hauppauge’s Taylor Mileti.
Go to tbrnewsmedia.com for more sports photos
— Photos by Steven Zaitz
SPORTS
Putin’s folly
One year of war, no path to victory
BY RICH ACRITELLI DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
The Russo-Ukrainian War has become the largest European conflict since World War II, which ended in 1945.
A year after the Russian invasion, and with his nation fighting for its survival, Ukraine’s leader President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has told the world his forces would continue their efforts.
The year of bloodshed
At first, the international community believed the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv had no chance of holding out against a wellcoordinated Russian assault. Yet the capital city remains in Ukrainian hands.
Some cities in Ukraine now resemble the World War II-ruined cities of Berlin, Dresden and Warsaw, buried in rubble.
At some points in the war, Zelenskyy has warned against the potential collapse of his lines as Russian assaults have been levied against his army. The president of Russia, Vladimir Putin, has relied on the costly strategy of attrition against the Ukrainians, even as his army has endured as many as 200,000 casualties.
During this year of fighting, Ukraine, with a smaller army, has relied on Cold War-era planes, helicopters, guns and tanks yet has thwarted Russian movement.
With European allies like Germany deploying Leopard tanks, the key to Ukrainian survival has rested in the constant supply of weapons from the coalition that the United States has created.
The war has demonstrated the might of American weaponry, which has stymied the Russians. Through the proximity of American bases in Poland and Germany, American forces have also trained Ukrainian noncommissioned officers to lead their soldiers better.
This expertise has also aided Ukrainian military officials, who have learned to mobilize Patriot air defense systems, Abrams tanks and artillery guns. Although the Biden administration has continually downplayed the deployment of fighter planes for the Ukrainians, reports indicate that training has already commenced for some of their pilots.
A disconnected dictator
Putin, meanwhile, continually targets civilian populations of Ukraine’s major cities and towns, causing death and destruction with hypersonic missiles that are almost impossible to shoot down.
On the world stage, the Russian army
has no clear path to victory. Some of Putin’s soldiers have even sent videos to their families and the press, revealing how poorly equipped
and trained they are to meet the Ukrainians on the battlefield.
Some Russians have openly criticized
the government for mishandling the invasion effort. Putin’s government has lost much credibility along the way.
During the early days of the war, the Russian dictator said his goal was to rid Ukraine of its “Nazi” elements that influenced the government in Kyiv. During a recent G20 Summit in New Delhi, Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov was met with laughter when he said, “The war, which we are trying to stop, which was launched against us using Ukrainian people.”
These confused comments suggest an increasingly disconnected Putin regime, a Kremlin that has lost the global public relations battle to justify the war.
Resentment against the regime
Domestic instability has been a primary concern when looking at the Russian regime under Putin. The dictator is in constant fear over his own security, increasingly suspicious that he will be deposed.
The Wagner Group, a Russian paramilitary organization that has spearheaded much of the fighting, has had several public differences in how this war was being carried out under Putin’s directives. Some believe that Putin views the Wagner Group as a threat to his own rule.
It is estimated that the Wagner Group has lost over 30,000 mercenaries, with about 9,000 fighters killed in action, U.S. officials said last month. Putin’s forces quickly surpassed the 15,000 Russians killed during the Soviet War in Afghanistan from 1979-89.
There is rising distress within the Russian population over the many soldiers who will not return alive. It has not helped Putin’s cause that his armies receive little training before being shipped off to the Ukrainian front against a battle-hardened foe.
Through the startling number of casualties, deficiencies in Russian hardware and a total lack of leadership, Putin has repeatedly stated that nuclear weapons remain on the table.
All signs point to a defeated and embarrassed former world power. At every turn, Putin has refused to believe the Ukrainians could mount a capable resistance. One year later, Ukraine continues to push for victory.
PAGE A8 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • MARCH 23, 2023
Rich Acritelli is a history teacher at Rocky Point High School and adjunct professor at Suffolk County Community College. Written in conjunction with members of the high school’s History Honor Society.
A year ago, Vladimir Putin waged an unprovoked war against Ukraine. Today, he leads an army that is poorly trained, ill-equipped and increasingly resentful of his command. Pixabay photo
Incumbents reelected in Head of the Harbor
BY RITA J. EGAN RITA@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
In this year’s Village of Head of the Harbor March 21 election, trustees Jeffrey Fischer and Daniel White were challenged by Lisa Davidson.
Davidson decided to run after joining with fellow residents to oppose a proposed dock that would have been constructed by Cordwood Park.
Fischer and White retained their seats
with 186 and 164 votes, respectively. Davidson garnered 141 votes.
In her concession statement, Davidson said she will continue to be involved in the village.
“I will remain a vigilant observer and citizen doing everything I can to protect Head of the Harbor from the looming onslaught of development and a board of trustees and mayor who too often misconstrue the easy way out with the right way forward.”
MARCH 23, 2023 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A9 CARPET • RUGS • HARDWOOD andersontuftex.com ZZ055 DRIFT 00754 PASMINA ©131740 133590 One time use only. Cannot be used in conjunction with any other coupon or offer. Coupon offer good until December 31, 2022. Valid for any new service except subscription fees. Must mention coupon at time of sale. 133610 Go online at tbrnewsmedia.com to see the Best Businesses on Suffolk’s North Shore voted by our readers and your customers. Need a copy of the issue? Call 631-751-7744 2022 WI N NERS Did you miss our TBR Readers’ Choice Awards? ©135560
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Jeffrey Fischer and Daniel White retained their trustee seats in the March 21 Head of the Harbor election. Photos from candidates
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Garage Sales
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Merchandise
CRAFTSMAN30INCH 13:50CCSNOWBLOWER $1100Call631-332-8287.
Miscellaneous
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Musical Instruments
BLUESMANPIANOTUNING Certifiedpianotechnician, 631-681-9723, bluesmanpianotuning@gmail. com, www.bluesmanpianotuning.com
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MUSICLESSONS
HOME/VIRTUAL
Guitar,Piano,Stringsandmore IntroductoryRatesfornewstudents,AlsoPianoTuningand Repairs. Stringsoundstudios.com O631-476-8946, C631-223-6899
Schools/Instruction/ Tutoring
PIANO-GUITAR-BASS Allages-levels-styles. Manylocalreferences. Recommendedbyallarea schools.TonyMann, 631-473-3443,631-332-6005
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MARCH 23, 2023 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A11 4 wks/$44/20 words $.40 ea. additional word 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 ©101636 SELL YOUR USED MERCHANDISE & MAKE DOLLARS AND ROOM Take advantage of the new 30% Solar Investment Tax Credit (ITC) with PWRcell, Generac’s fully-integrated solar + battery storage system. PWRcell will help you save money on your electric bill and be prepared for utility power outages. Plus it’s compatible with most existing solar arrays. Now’s the Right Time SAVE 30% WITH THE SOLAR TAX CREDIT Call to request a free quote! (888) 871-0194 Purchase a PWRcell and Receive a Free Ecobee Smart Thermostat Enhanced – valued at over $189!* *Scan the QR code for promo terms and conditions. ^Consult your tax or legal professional for information regarding eligibility requirements for tax credits. Solar panels sold separately. 133540 Come laugh with us ! MIKE E. WINFIELD MAR 30 @8PM STALLER CENTER FOR THE ARTS 20% OFF YOUR ORDER Enter NYPA20 at checkout @stallercenter I (631) 632-2787 I stallercenter.com 134700 FREE FREE FREE Merchandise under $50 15 words 1 item only. Fax•Mail•E-mail Drop Off Include Name, Address, Phone # 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. INDEX • Garage Sales • Announcements • Antiques & Collectibles • Automobiles/Trucks etc. • Finds under $50 • Health/Fitness/Beauty
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Wellestablishedsign,exhibit& displaycompanylookingfora fulltimesignfabricatorandinstaller.Wouldberesponsiblefor production&signanddisplay fabricationandinstallation. Constructionplanningand orderingmaterials,Workclosely withourdesignerstomanage projectsfromfabricationto delivery/installation,Workwith shoptoolsandequipment, Estimatingleadtimesand projectcosts,Graphicdesign skillsareaplus,Backgroundin thesign/displayindustryaplus“ MillerMohr&KellyDesign GroupinSetauket. 631-941-2769
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Well established sign, exhibit & display company looking for a FULL TIME SIGN FABRICATOR AND INSTALLER. Would be responsible for sign and display fabrication and installation.
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Insidepositionsellingadvertisingforanaward-winning communitynewsmediagroup, Faxresumeto631-751-4165or emailresumeto Class@tbrnewspapers.com. Seeourdisplayadformore information.
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©130430
PAGE A12 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • MARCH 23, 2023 ©107173 Times Beacon Record tbrnewsmedia.com at Classifieds Online ©101552 R��� E����� P���. S������� H��� S������� H��� W����� G����� S���� Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154 PROFESSIONAL & BUSINESS TO SUBSCRIBE, CALL 631-751-7744 ©105749
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All Trucks, Cars & Vans Toyota, Honda, Nissan, Domestic/Foreign Highest prices paid for fixable vehicles. Also buy motorcycles and muscle cars.
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Carpentry
LONGHILLCARPENTRY
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SERVICEAlltypesofcesspoolservicing,allworkguaranteed,familyownedandoperatedsince1985, 631-924-7502. LicensedandInsured.
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Electricians
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Fences
SMITHPOINTFENCE. DEERPROBLEM?WECAN HELP!Wood,PVC,ChainLink, Stockade.Freeestimates. Nowoffering12monthinterest freefinancing. Commercial/Residential. 70JayneBlvd.,PJS.Lic.37690H/Ins.631-743-9797 www.smithpointfence.com.
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WoodFloorInstallations
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Satellite TV
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Tree Work
ARBOR-VISTATREECARE ACOMPLETETREECARE SERVICEdevotedtothecare oftrees.Maintenancepruning, water-viewwork,sun-trimming, elevating,poolareas,storm thinning,largetreeremoval, stumpgrinding.Woodchips. Lic#18902HI.Freeestimates. 631-246-5377
RANDALLBROTHERS TREESERVICE
Planting,pruning,removals, stumpgrinding.FreeEstimates. Fullyinsured. LIC#50701-H.631-862-9291
MARCH 23, 2023 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A13 TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM • TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM • TBRNEWSMEDIA. COM • TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM • TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM • TBRNEWS MEDIA.COM TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM • TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM • TBRNEWSMEDIA. COM • TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM • TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM • TBRNEWS MEDIA.COM TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM • TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM • TBRNEWSMEDIA. COM • TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM • TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM • TBRNEWS MEDIA.COM TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM • TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM • TBRNEWSMEDIA. COM • TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM • TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM • TBRNEWS MEDIA.COM TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM • TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM • TBRNEWSMEDIA. COM • TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM • TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM • TBRNEWS MEDIA.COM TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM • TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM • TBRNEWSMEDIA. COM • TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM • TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM • TBRNEWS MEDIA.COM ©101949
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PAGE A14 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • MARCH 23, 2023 INTERIOR • EXTERIOR 631–689–5998 Taping Spackling Decorative Finishes Faux Finishes Power Washing Wallpaper Removal ©134200 Lic. # 53278-H/Ins. PAINTING & DESIGN RCJ CONSTRUCTION From Your Attic To Your Basement All Phases of Home Improvement KITCHENS • BATHROOMS • DOORS • WINDOWS • TILE • FLOORING CUSTOM FINISHED CARPENTRY & MOLDING www.rcjconstruction.com (631) 580-4518 COMMERCIAL/RESIDENTIAL • LIC. #H-32198/INS | OWNER OPERATED ©134270 SPECIALIZING IN FINISHED BASEMENTS ALL PRO PAINTING ALL WORK GUARANTEED FREE ESTIMATES INTERIOR • EXTERIOR • POWERWASHING CUSTOM WORK • STAINING • WALLPAPER REMOVAL EXPERIENCED AND RELIABLE Nick Cordovano 631–696–8150 LICENSED #19604-H & INSURED ©134320 joe’s general contracting 631–744–0752 • All Forms of Masonry • Driveways/Sidewalks • Pavers/ Brick/Block Work • Culture Stone • Home Improvements • New Construction • Revitalization Projects • Residential/Commercial OVER 45 YEARS EXPERIENCE Lic. 3637H Ins. ©135110 UPDATE YOUR HOME HOME SERVICES ©105020 Brick & Stone Veneer Concrete Pavers & Walls Bluestone Portland/Mortar Sand/Block/Gravel Railroad Ties & Tree Stakes Screened Topsoil Compost & Mulch Seed & Lawn Control Products Black/Brown/Red Mulch Cobblestone-New & Used Drainage Supplies & Castings Boulders & Dive Rocks Wall Stone Cedar Mulch Playground Woodchips Super Peat Tools & Equipment 70COMSEWOGUERD.| SUITE 9|EASTSETAUKETNY11733 MULCH & TOPSOIL www.troffa.com 631-928-4665 PROMPT DELIVERY ALWAYS AVAILABLE 136520 Your Ad Could be Here 631.331.1154 e Want to GrowYour Business? ©96840 Prompt • Reliable • Professional • Licensed/Insured Free Estimates • Owner Operated 631.828.4675 soundviewelectric@hotmail.com Residential/Commercial • Service Upgrades • New Construction • Renovations • Troubleshooting • Ceiling Fans Highhats • Generators • A/C Wiring • Pool/Hot Tub Wiring • Landscape Lighting ©133010 Lic. #57478-ME 631-331-5556 Licensed/Insured Since 1989 ©124600 #37074-H; RI 18499-10-34230 Ryan Southworth CERTIFIED LEAD PAINT REMOVAL FREE ESTIMATES • Interiors • Exteriors • Cabinet Refinishing, Staining & Painting • Faux Finishes • Power Washing • Finishing Carpentry • Tape & Spackling • Staining & Deck Restoration BBB A1 Rating #1 Recommendation on BBB website “We take pride in our work” 2021 Interi HEAVYWEIGHT PLUMBING Licensed & Insured #54076-MP @135250 Call Teli Cell: 631-986-9516 All of Suffolk A roll of toilet paper stuffed in the drain and pleading for HEAVYWEIGHT PLUMBING to come and rescue it. Drain Cleaning. 2022 WI N NER
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REAL ESTATE
GARVIES POINT APARTMENTS
46 NEWLY CONSTRUCTED Studio, 1, 2 and 3 BEDROOM AFFORDABLE APARTMENTS located at 500700 Dickson Street, Glen Cove, NY. Rents ranging from $1,375 - $3,289. Tenant pays electricity, electric heat, and electric cooking. Trash removal and sewer included in rent. INCOME LIMITS & ELIGIBILITY REQUIREMENTS APPLY. Maximum income limits ranging from $61,080 - $168,600 *minimum income limits also apply. Income limits subject to unit size, household size & set-aside requirements; please visit www. cgmrcompliance.com for details. To request an application by mail, write to GARVIES POINT, PO Box 440, Wading River, NY 11792, call (631) 910-6200, or email garviespoint@cgmrcompliance.com. Visit www.NYHousingSearch.gov for postmarked no later than April 17, 2023. Late applications will not be considered. A Public Lottery to be held at Hilton Garden Inn, 3 Harbor Park Drive, Port Washington on May 1st, 2023 starting at 12pm.
APARTAMENTOS PUNTO GARVIES
46 APARTAMENTOS RECIENTEMENTE CONSTRUIDOS DE 1, 2 Y 3 HABITACIONES A UN PRECIO ASEQUIBLE ubicados en 500-700 Dickson Street, Glen Cove, NY. Rentas que van desde $1,375 - $3,289. El inquilino paga la electricidad, la calefacción eléctrica y la cocina eléctrica. Recolección de basura y alcantarillado incluidos en el alquiler. APLICAN LÍMITES DE INGRESOS Y REQUISITOS DE ELEGIBILIDAD. Límites de ingresos máximos que van desde $61,080 - $168,600 *también se aplican límites de ingresos mínimos. Límites de ingresos sujetos al tamaño de la unidad, tamaño del hogar y requisitos de reserva; visite www.cgmrcompliance.com para obtener más detalles. Para solicitar una solicitud por correo, escriba a GARVIES POINT, PO Box 440, Wading River, NY 11792, llame al (631) 910-6200 o envíe un correo electrónico a garviespoint@cgmrcompliance.com. Visite www.NYHousingSearch.gov para obtener información adicional. matasellos a más tardar el 17 de abril de 2023. No se considerarán las solicitudes tardías. Una lotería pública que se llevará a cabo en Hilton Garden Inn, 3 Harbor Park Drive, Port Washington el 1 de mayo de 2023 a partir de las 12:00 p. m.
GARVIES POINT
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SETAUKETHighVisibility,25A, cornerofficesuitewithlarge plateglasswindow,privatebath, ownthermostat,nicelydecorated,offstreetparking,Village TimesBuilding,Call 631-751-7744.
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GARVIES POINT
APATMAN GARVIES POINT
46 Studio, 1, 2 ak 3 CHAMB KI FÈK KONSTRI APATMAN AbòDAB ki chita nan 500-700 Dickson Street, Glen Cove, NY. Pri lwaye ki soti nan $1,375 - $3,289. Lokatè peye elektrisite, chalè elektrik, ak kwit manje elektrik. Retire fatra ak egou enkli nan lwaye a. LIMIT REVNI AK KONDISYON ELLIJIBILITE APLIKE. Limit revni maksimòm ki soti nan $61,080 - $168,600 *limit revni minimòm aplike tou. Limit revni yo depann de gwosè inite w la, gwosè kay la ak kondisyon pou mete sou kote; tanpri vizite www.cgmrcompliance.com pou plis detay. Pou mande yon aplikasyon pa lapòs, ekri GARVIES POINT, PO Box 440, Wading River, NY 11792, rele (631) 910-6200, oswa imèl garviespoint@cgmrcompliance.com. Vizite www.NYHousingSearch.gov pou plis enfòmasyon. Aplikan ki soumèt plis pase yon aplikasyon ka diskalifye. Aplikasyon yo dwe gen yon kach postal pa pita pase 17 avril 2023. Yo p ap konsidere aplikasyon an reta. Yon lotri piblik ki pral fèt nan Hilton Garden Inn, 3 Harbour Park Drive, Port Washington le 1ye me 2023 apati 12pm.
GARVIES PPOINT APARTMENTS
46 BAGONG TINUNONG Studio, 1, 2 at 3 KWARTO AFFORDABLE APARTMENTS na matatagpuan sa 500700 Dickson Street, Glen Cove, NY. Mga upa mula $1,375 - $3,289. Nagbabayad ng kuryente, electric heat, at electric cooking ang nangungupahan. Pagtanggal ng basura at imburnal na kasama sa upa. LUMAPAT ANG MGA LIMITASYON SA KITA AT MGA KINAKAILANGAN SA KARAPATAY. Pinakamataas na limitasyon sa kita mula sa $61,080 - $168,600 *nalalapat din ang pinakamababang limitasyon sa kita. Ang mga limitasyon sa kita ay napapailalim sa laki ng unit, laki ng sambahayan at mga kinakailangan sa set-aside; mangyaring bisitahin ang www.cgmrcompliance.com para sa mga detalye. Upang humiling ng aplikasyon sa pamamagitan ng koreo, sumulat sa GARVIES POINT, PO Box 440, Wading River, NY 11792, tumawag sa (631) 910-6200, o mag-email sa garviespoint@cgmrcompliance.com. Bisitahin ang www.NYHousingSearch.gov para sa karagdagang impormasyon. Ang mga aplikante na nagsumite ng higit sa isang aplikasyon ay maaaring madiskwalipika. Ang mga aplikasyon ay dapat na naka-postmark nang hindi lalampas sa Abril 17, 2023. Ang mga huling aplikasyon ay hindi isasaalang-alang. Isang Pampublikong Lottery na gaganapin sa Hilton Garden Inn, 3 Harbour Park Drive, Port Washington sa ika-1 ng Mayo, 2023 simula 12pm.
tionbecauseofrace,color,religion,sex,handicap,familial status,ornationalorigin,orintentiontomakeanysuchpreference,limitation,ordiscrimination.”
Wewillnotknowinglyaccept anyadvertisingforrealestate whichisinviolationofthelaw. Allpersonsareherebyinformedthatalldwellingsadvertisedareavailableonan equalopportunitybasis.
MARCH 23, 2023 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A17
136060 Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
855.281.6439 I Free Quotes UP TO Could your kitchen use a little magic? ON YOUR FULL KITCHEN REMODEL* SAVE10% *Discount applies to purchase of new cabinets or cabinet refacing with a countertop. Does not apply to countertop only projects. May not combine with other offers or prior purchases. Exp.3/31/23. NP-263. NY: Nassau: H1759490000 Suffolk: 16183-H NY/Rockland: 5642 133620 STRONG AS STEEL WITH THE ATTRACTIVE LOOK OF VARIOUS ROOF STYLES Upgrade Your Home witha NEW METAL ROOF Guaranteed to Last a Lifetime! From Dimensional Shingles to classic styles reminiscent of Cedar Shake and Spanish Tile, an architectural roofing system by Erie Metal Roofs can enhance the beauty of your home while protecting your family and property for a lifetime. Call today to schedule your FREE ESTIMATE 1-855-492-6084 Made in the USA New orders only. Does not include material costs. Cannot be combined with any other offer. Minimum purchase required. Other restrictions may apply. This is an advertisement placed on behalf of Erie Construction Mid-West, Inc (“Erie”). Offer terms and conditions may apply and the offer may not be available in your area. Offer expires March 31, 2023. If you call the number provided, you consent to being contacted by telephone, SMS text message, email, pre-recorded messages by Erie or its affiliates and service providers using automated technologies notwithstanding if you are on a DO NOT CALL list or register. Please review our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use on homeservicescompliance.com. All rights reserved. GA License Number: RBCO006004 LIMITED TIME OFFER 60% off TAKE AN ADDITIONAL 10 % off YOUR INSTALLATION Install for Military, Health Workers and First Responders + Transferable to 1 subsequent owner from original purchaser. Terms and conditions apply. of the surface coating beyond normal wear and tear. Expires 3.31.23 133550 Renting OR Selling Your House? TRY TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWSPAPERS Our track record is the best of any local newspaper. Call us for special rates. 631-331-1154 OR 631-751-7663 ©101301 Buy 4 weeks ... Get 2 weeks free! PUBLISHERS’NOTICE AllrealestateadvertisedhereinissubjecttotheFederalFair HousingAct,whichmakesit illegaltoadvertise“anypreference,limitation,ordiscrimina-
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Real Estate Services
Democratize parking
Port Jefferson has a parking problem. This problem is not the fault of any one administration but the natural consequence of maintaining a bustling downtown with limited parking capacity.
It is a problem that has been with Port Jeff for decades and may soon affect various other municipalities throughout the area. As the towns of Brookhaven, Smithtown and Huntington look to expand sewer capacity and revitalize downtowns, local leaders should learn from Port Jeff’s parking struggles.
In Port Jeff, as in other communities, parking decisions matter. Parking administration is an expression of a community’s values and priorities. Managing parking requires a delicate balancing act between the various stakeholders seeking access to the community — residents, visitors, shoppers, employees and business owners, among others.
At root, parking decisions are about equitable land use. For other land-use decisions, we have planning departments and zoning boards whose members negotiate and compromise before rendering judgment. We also have committees for various other areas of local governance, such as parks and recreation, communications, conservation and architectural review.
However, municipalities often lack committees for an issue as central as parking. Without a parking committee, parking management seems estranged from the political process, the community stakeholders lacking the forum necessary to translate their interests into sound policy.
Moreover, the existing dynamic is inequitable to those who make parking decisions. Without a committee to channel the community’s wants and needs, the burden of policy falls upon a select few. In Port Jeff’s case, the parking administrator unfairly bears the responsibility of making representative decisions for the entire community, suffering alone the slings and arrows from all competing parties. We regard this arrangement as increasingly untenable and ineffective.
History informs us that uniformity of opinion is not possible. For this reason, a functioning democratic system works to channel the many interests of the people into the political process. Only through that process can a representative policy outcome arise. Parking is no different.
We are committed to the premise that fair policies emerge from an open, deliberative process. It is, therefore, necessary for municipalities throughout our coverage area to form parking committees, opening the decision-making process to all concerned parties. Let us democratize parking here on Long Island. It’s vitally needed.
Please see revised letters policy below.
Letters to the editor
New York State’s bail reform is a success
Under the law, everyone is innocent until proven guilty. Under the law, every person is guaranteed the right to a speedy and fair trial by jury. These tenets are the bedrock of our justice system.
Unfortunately, our system has too often failed to live up to these premises. In New York, almost three out of every four people incarcerated are people of color, which is disproportionate to the population. Many of these people are poor, and until the 2019 bail reform law, too many sat in jail awaiting trial because they could not afford bail.
The most tragic example is that of Kalief Browder, who as a teenager was incarcerated at Rikers Island for three years, two of those years spent in solitary confinement, for allegedly stealing a backpack. His family could not afford to bail him out. He committed suicide after his release. The young man’s story, and the families who are impacted by the overlap of incarceration and poverty, are why the 2019 bail law was enacted. The criminal justice system failed Browder and countless others.
As soon as the 2019 bail reform law was enacted, before there was even any data on the impact of the law, the Republican Party began a campaign of fearmongering. Former U.S. Congressman Lee Zeldin [R-NY1] made this the theme of his failed 2022 gubernatorial campaign, and other candidates like freshman Assemblyman Ed Flood [R-Port Jefferson] followed suit. It was a campaign that was deeply racist in rhetoric, never addressing the root causes of crime and how to correct these causes.
A recent study refutes the lies of the Republican Party. The results of the two-year study show the opposite of the Republican talking points to be true, with recidivism and re-arrest rates dropping. “Fundamentally, we found that eliminating bail for most misdemeanors and nonviolent felonies reduced recidivism in New York City, while there was no clear effect in either direction for cases remaining bail eligible,” said Michael Rempel, director of John Jay College’s Data Collaborative for Justice, in a statement.
The data is clear: Bail reform is a success. The tragedy is that too many elected Democrats refused to push back against the Republican lies and fearmongering. In that vacuum of leadership, misinformation has taken hold.
We must demand leaders and candidates who will stand up for justice. We must also call out politicians like Zeldin and Flood who built their campaigns on lies and ensure they never hold elected office again. We deserve a system of true justice with moral leaders, and Republicans have utterly failed the electorate on the issue of public safety.
Shoshana Hershkowitz South Setauket
Waiting for Rinaldi to be made permanent LIRR president
Just over 12 months ago, Long Island Rail Road President Phillip Eng retired effective Feb. 25, 2022. Metropolitan Transportation Authority Chairman Janno Lieber immediately appointed Metro-North President Catherine
Rinaldi as interim LIRR president.
After 12 months on the job, she has developed a good working knowledge of the agency organization, staff, operations, facilities and customer needs. She is familiar with ongoing capital projects in the LIRR portion of the $51.5 billion 2020-24 Five Year Capital Plan.
If Lieber is happy with Rinaldi’s performance to date, why hasn’t he made her the next permanent LIRR president? Is there something we don’t know?
Remember that Lieber, just like his predecessors, will need the blessing of the governor. Just like past history, Gov. Kathy Hochul [D] will play a behind-the-scenes role in the selection of a permanent LIRR president.
Larry Penner Great Neck
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rita@tbrnewsmedia.com or mail them to TBR News Media, P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733
PAGE A18 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • MARCH 23, 2023
Editorial
The opinions of columnists and letter writers are their own. They do not speak for the newspaper.
Photo by Raymond Janis
Cartoon by Kyle Horne @kylehorneart kylehorneart.com
No time to literally die and other attempts to awkwardly split infinitives
Infinitives appear to be like peanut butter and jelly for me. I don’t want to add bananas, nuts or anything else between the two spreads, because peanut butter and jelly represent a taste combination that agrees with me and my digestive tract.
a reader to add a verbal hiccup. Maybe some English — or language arts in modern educational parlance — teacher back in my days at Ward Melville High School shared his or her dislike for split infinitives that makes me want to cringe when reading an otherwise effective sentence.
Let’s pause to consider Harper Lee’s “To Kill a Mockingbird.” Perhaps an infinitive splitter might want to add an adverb, such as “To Treacherously Kill a Mockingbird” or “To Slanderously Kill a Mockingbird.” Both options struggle to add an unnecessary word.
got to do with it?” If we split the infinitive, she might sing, “what’s love go to accurately do with it?” Turner doesn’t want to encourage love when she’s enjoying the physical connection. Would “accurately” threaten to trample on the song’s meaning?
BY DANIEL DUNAIEF
The combination of the word “to” and a verb belong together, without adverbs, adjectives, nouns or other parts of speech jammed between them. I want to love, to live, to eat, to sleep, to play and to laugh without any additional words attempting to clog up the ideas or to interfere with the narrative flow.
And yet, in modern prose, people increasingly chose to split infinitives, jamming words in between “to” and a verb. For me, that’s like forcing
To make my point, I’d like to consider (yes, this is a column about infinitives so prepare to be amazed) how several important quotes, phrases, book and movie titles might read with a split infinitive. To begin, let’s explore Thomas Jefferson’s words from the Declaration of Independence: “We hold these truths to be self evident.” Those words would falter if he had chosen to write: “We hold these truths to fundamentally be self evident.”
Would you like to consider Shakespeare?
Hamlet’s soliloquy in which he ponders whether “to be or not to be” would fall flat if he said, “to kind of be or not to comfortably be.” That not only sounds wrong, but it loses the power of a pithy line about the nature of existence and his willingness to continue to live (yup, two in a row) in a world of treachery.
How about James Bond’s “License to Kill?” Would a split infinitive change that to “License to violently kill?” It’s already a Bond film, so you’re prepared to witness violence. Would you prefer to imagine “License to vengefully kill?” Would that have affected its ability to win at the box office? I tend to doubt that.
Another Bond movie with an infinitive is “No time to die.” An adverb addict might want to convert the title to “No time to literally die.” Well, yeah, Bond films force the titular character to confront death. These days, people are inclined to overuse the word “literally” anyway, as in, “I literally ate all the food on my plate.” I suspect few people would interrupt to ask if you’d figuratively or literally eaten everything.
How about Tina Turner’s song “What’s love
The book by Ernest Hemingway, who preferred to use simple prose, would lose some of its resonance if we added anything to the title, “To have and have not.” Borrowing from a vastly overused word that could become “To fully have and have not.”
So, to sum up the idea, to get to the point, to address the important issue, and to make myself clear, I still believe, no matter how acceptable it might be, that splitting infinitives jams an unnecessary word where it doesn’t belong, threatening to dilute its meaning, to alter its trajectory and to cause unnecessary misdirection. Let’s agree to keep infinitives together, giving them room to be, to love and to bask in their original meaning. Now, to return to where I began, I’d like to find some peanut butter and jelly.
Was that Dear John letter you received from your heartthrob written by a bot?
To see how it worked, when I got the link for ChatGPT, the Artificial Intelligence or OpenAI software sent from my grandson, I asked it to write 650 words about Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Why FDR? I had just finished reading a book about FDR’s “Splendid Deception,” the ways the president hid his polio infirmity from the American public, and he was on my mind.
So, I am going to let you see what was written immediately, on command, in less than five minutes before my disbelieving eyes. Remember, this was authored by a robot.
beginning a career in politics. He served as a New York state senator from 1910 to 1913, and later as Assistant Secretary of the Navy under President Woodrow Wilson.
In 1921, at the age of 39, FDR was struck by polio, which left him paralyzed from the waist down. Despite this setback, he remained active in politics and was elected Governor of New York in 1928.
It was during the Great Depression, however, that FDR’s leadership would truly shine. When he took office in 1933, the country was in the midst of the worst economic crisis in its history. Millions of Americans were out of work, banks were failing, and confidence in the government was at an alltime low.
which established codes of fair competition for businesses.
FDR’s New Deal was not without its critics, who argued that it represented an unwarranted expansion of federal power and an infringement on individual liberties. But for many Americans, especially those who were struggling to make ends meet during the Depression, FDR’s bold leadership and willingness to take decisive action were a source of hope and inspiration.
bold action in the face of crisis.
FDR’s famous quote, “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself,” has become a rallying cry for leaders in times of crisis. It reflects his belief that the American people had the strength and resilience to overcome even the most daunting challenges, and that with the right leadership and the right policies, anything was possible.
BY LEAH S. DUNAIEF
President Franklin D. Roosevelt, commonly known as FDR, is remembered as one of the most influential and transformative leaders in American history. During his 12-year tenure as President, he led the United States through some of its most challenging times, including the Great Depression and World War II.
FDR was born into a wealthy family in Hyde Park, New York, in 1882. He attended Harvard University and Columbia Law School before
FDR responded to the crisis with a bold and ambitious plan to revitalize the economy, which he called the New Deal. The New Deal included a range of programs and policies designed to provide relief to the unemployed, stimulate economic growth, and reform the financial system.
One of the most famous New Deal programs was the Civilian Conservation Corps, which provided jobs to young men in conservation and reforestation projects. Other programs included the Agricultural Adjustment Act, which sought to stabilize crop prices and support farmers, and the National Industrial Recovery Act,
FDR was also a key figure in American foreign policy during World War II. When the war broke out in Europe in 1939, he declared that the United States would remain neutral. But after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, he led the country into the war with a resolve and determination that would help turn the tide against the Axis powers.
FDR was instrumental in building the alliance with the Soviet Union and the United Kingdom, which would eventually lead to victory in Europe. He also played a key role in the development of the atomic bomb, which would be used to end the war in the Pacific.
Despite his many accomplishments, FDR was not without his flaws. Critics have accused him of overreaching in his use of executive power, and of turning a blind eye to human rights abuses committed by the Soviet Union during the war. But his legacy remains one of visionary leadership and
Today, as the United States faces new challenges, from economic inequality to political polarization to climate change, FDR’s legacy remains a source of inspiration and guidance. His commitment to bold action in the face of crisis, his belief in the power of government to make a positive difference in people’s lives, and his unwavering faith in the American people, continue to resonate with us today.
How do teachers distinguish what was written by a student or by the bot? By the same token, having a bot help in other contexts, such as planning a schedule or working up a travel itinerary can be a huge help. ChatGPT, launched this past November, can analyze content from a wide range of information on the internet and then create original content. But is it always correct information? Will the bot take jobs from humans? Or will it merely offer a baseline of information upon which humans can then add more nuanced input?
Stay tuned.
MARCH 23, 2023 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A19
Between you and me
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 2023 EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Leah S. Dunaief GENERAL MANAGER Johness Kuisel MANAGING EDITOR Rita J. Egan EDITOR Rita J. Egan LEISURE EDITOR Heidi Sutton COPY EDITOR John Broven ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Kathleen Gobos ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES Elizabeth Bongiorno Robin Lemkin Larry Stahl Katherine Yamaguchi Minnie Yancey ART AND PRODUCTION DIRECTOR Beth Heller Mason PRODUCTION Janet Fortuna Sharon
CLASSIFIEDS DIRECTOR & SUBSCRIPTIONS MANAGER Sheila Murray BUSINESS MANAGER Sandi Gross CIRCULATION & LEGALS MANAGER Courtney
INTERNET STRATEGY DIRECTOR Rob
SPECIAL PROJECTS MANAGER Kathryn Mandracchia 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 2021 Year After Year Award-
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Opinion
Nicholson
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Alfano
Winning
D. None of the above
A BEST PLACE TO LIVE. A BEST HOSPITAL TO MATCH.
At Huntington Hospital, we deliver the advanced care you need, right in the town you love. That’s what it takes to be rated one of the best hospitals in the New York metro area by U.S. News & World Report.
From leading-edge robotic surgery to expert cancer care, we’re raising health every day. Because we don’t just want to be the best — we want what’s best for our community, too.
Northwell.edu/RegionsBest
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