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TIMES of SMITHTOWN
F O R T S A LO N G A • K I N G S PA R K • S M I T H TO W N • N E S C O N S E T • S T J A M E S • H E A D O F T H E H A R B O R • N I S S E Q U O G U E • H A U P PA U G E • C O M M A C K Vol. 35, No. 9
April 21, 2022
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PAGE A2 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • APRIL 21, 2022
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Town of Smithtown Supervisor Ed Wehrheim, center, received the Suffolk County Village Officials Association’s Outstanding Leadership Award on April 13. Also pictured are Village of Lloyd Harbor Police Chief Thomas Krumpter, left, and Errol Kitt from GEI Consultants. Photo from SCVOA
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The Suffolk County Village Officials Association honored Smithtown Supervisor Edward Wehrheim (R) with its Outstanding Leadership Award at the annual SCVOA Legislative Dinner & Awards Night April 13. Wehrheim joined the ranks of distinguished leaders throughout Suffolk County including his predecessor, Patrick Vecchio, county Sheriff Errol D. Toulon, Jr., state Sen. Phil Boyle (R-East Islip), Suffolk County Legislator Kevin McCaffrey (R-Lindenhurst), and Town of Brookhaven Supervisor Ed Romaine (R). “This is a great honor, one I am deeply humbled by,” Wehrheim said in a press release last month. “I have to acknowledge and thank our town’s
administration and incredible workforce for the remarkable support and dedication we produce together on a daily basis. Our incorporated villages are made up of our friends, family and neighbors, with visionary leaders, many of whom have led incredibly inspiring revitalization and environmental efforts. To be recognized by the Suffolk County Village Officials Association in this fashion gives me great pride in the work we’ve done together, and all that we will accomplish in the future.” The Suffolk County Village Officials Association is a not-for-profit advocacy organization and information resource consisting of 32 incorporated villages representing approximately 10% of the population.
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APRIL 21, 2022 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A3
Hadassah Suffolk celebrates member’s 100th birthday with fundraiser BY RITA J. EGAN RITA@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM There are many ways to celebrate a milestone birthday. When it comes to Three Village resident Claire Baer’s 100th birthday in June, Hadassah Suffolk based in Commack has decided to mark the special occasion in a unique way. JoAnne Shapiro, president of Hadassah Suffolk, said the organization is raising funds in Baer’s honor to buy three Bear Hugging Patient Warming Systems for a hospital in Israel. Shapiro said Hadassah Suffolk has more than 3,000 members, and it has been spreading the word via postcards and social media. “We kicked the fundraiser off last November because we wanted people to have an opportunity,” she said, adding enough money has been raised to buy one warmer so far. Hadassah Suffolk has raised more than half of the $6,600 goal as of April 20. The warming system helps patients maintain their temperature before, during and after surgery, and Shapiro said they picked the piece of medical equipment due to Baer’s last name. The two hospitals in Jerusalem which will benefit from the fundraiser were built by Hadassah Medical Organization. Shapiro described Baer as “a monumental woman in Hadassah.” The soon-to-be centenarian was president of Hadassah Suffolk from 1979 to 1982. She served on the national board from 1982 to 2003 and then went on to become president of Hadassah Suffolk’s SeaPort chapter. Baer’s daughter Ivy thought the fundraiser was a lovely gesture to celebrate her mother’s 100th birthday on June 18. She said her mother, who grew up in the
Claire Baer, above, will turn 100 on June 18. Right, Baer, sitting, celebrated her 99th birthday with her daughter Ivy, center standing, and granddaughters Sara Short and Leslie Rothenberg. Photos from Ivy Baer
Bronx, became a Baer when she married her husband, Paul, in 1950. They celebrated 62 years of marriage before his passing at the age of 91. According to their daughter, the Baers became Three Village residents when they moved to Stony Brook in 1972. Paul Baer’s job brought them to the area when he accepted a position at Stony Brook University’s dental school. Ivy Baer said the family lived in Maryland, and her father worked at the National Institutes of Health. After her dad retired from NIH, he accepted a job at SBU’s dental school, excited about the opportunity to teach at the new school. He would go on to be the founding chair
of the Department of Periodontology. “My parents really enjoyed being part of the university community,” she said. “There was just this whole group of really interesting people who came there around that time.” She said her parents would attend the Brahms festival that SBU’s Department of Music would organize, and the couple would host musicians who performed there from time to time. Always one to keep herself busy, Claire Baer had finished her college education when she lived in Maryland, and when she moved to the Three Village area, she looked for things to do, according to her daughter.
Claire Baer joined Temple Isaiah in Stony Brook, a house of worship where she remains a member and, in turn, became involved with Hadassah. She started the local SeaPort chapter of the organization, eventually becoming chapter president. When she joined the national board, Ivy Baer said her mother would travel to Manhattan to the main headquarters of Hadassah regularly. “She’d go down to the train station at the crack of dawn several days a week, and she would take the train into the city,” Ivy Baer said. During the 20 years she was on the national board, Claire Baer made nearly 30 trips to Israel, according to her daughter. One of the programs she worked on involved planning month-long trips to Israel for women and children. “Sometimes people would ask her what she did, and she would say, ‘I’m a professional volunteer,’” Ivy Baer said. The daughter said her mother enjoyed helping the organization and Israel because it was something she believed in, and she felt she was making a difference. Shapiro said the members of Hadassah Suffolk wished they could plan a large celebration for Baer’s 100th birthday, but they will keep it low-key due to COVID-19 by having just a few members present her with a certificate to mark her 100th birthday. “If it was quote-unquote, ‘our old normal,’ I’m sure we would have had a very large fundraising luncheon and just showered her with all sorts of accolades,” Shapiro said. To donate visit tinyurl.com/clairebaerbday online or mail donation to Hadassah Metro, 300 Pleasant Valley Way, West Orange, NJ 07052. “Claire Baer’s 100th birthday” should be written in the check’s memo line.
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PAGE A4 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • APRIL 21, 2022
One-on-one with Suffolk County Sheriff Errol Toulon
BY RAYMOND JANIS EDITOR1@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
Recently, TBR News Media had an exclusive interview with Suffolk County Sheriff Errol Toulon Jr. (D). During our conversation with the sheriff, he addressed his battles with cancer, the challenges of steering the sheriff’s department through a pandemic and his surprising place in the history of the New York Yankees.
How has your battle with cancer impacted both your outlook on life and the work that you do for Suffolk County?
One of the things that I realized as a two-time cancer survivor is that you never know what the person next to you — whether you’re on the ball field watching kids play or you’re in the movie theater or the supermarket — you don’t know if someone has health issues, financial issues, relationship issues. I think I have become a lot more sympathetic and also empathetic to the plights that people are going through.
Earlier in your career, you worked at Rikers Island. How has that experience shaped your later approach as county sheriff?
My father was a warden on Rikers Island for 36 years, starting off as a correction officer. I remember during one of the early conversations I had with him, I asked him about his employment. He said, ‘We rehabilitate men and women who are in jail.’ That kind of resonated with me throughout my career.
Also, we really want to engage our youth because they are the ones that we want to make sure are on the right path, that they look at law enforcement as a positive role model, and that they maybe even want to come join our forces and work at the Suffolk County Sheriff’s Office.
There are three things that I’m working on. Mental health and substance abuse seem to be the primary traits for the majority of the men and women not only in our custody but throughout the nation’s prisons and jails. We’re working very hard to understand those two components because we want to be able to help those men and women, and even those that are not in jail — maybe there’s no criminal activity in their lifestyles, but they’re still suffering. We want to see what we can do, working with various community partners and service providers to look more holistically and see what’s going on. We do understand, even with some of our youth, who we are learning may have adverse childhood experiences, not only are they experiencing mental health and substance abuse in the home, but there are also traumatic issues, domestic violence issues and socioeconomic challenges. Those are the things we intend to focus on. We’re also looking to create the first network of information sharing for jails and prisons throughout the United States. We think this will be very beneficial. We know that most police departments are sharing information with each other, but jails and prisons throughout the country are not. We want to tap into that resource because if we learn of different trends that are occurring, we can also alert our law enforcement partners to these things that are occurring, specifically in the jails and prisons throughout our region and our country.
been said to me a lot, my first goal is to be the best sheriff possible, regardless of my race. I do realize that being the first African American not only as sheriff, but the first African American elected to a nonjudicial county-wide position on Long Island, Nassau or Suffolk, it’s something that I’m very cognizant of wherever and whenever I go somewhere. I know there are a lot of people looking at me, some favorably and some unfavorably. I think I need to be who I am and not necessarily who people perceive due to the color of my skin.
You are the first African American You were recently sworn in for a second elected as Suffolk County sheriff. What term as sheriff. What is your vision for does that distinction mean to you? To me, and I know that’s something that has the next four years at the department?
Sheriff, what is your professional background and how did you land in the Suffolk County Sheriff’s Office?
I started my career in 1982 as a New York City correction officer and I worked with the New York City Department of Corrections for 22 years on the uniform side. From 1982 until 2004, I worked on various assignments in numerous jails throughout the department. We had almost 25,000 inmates in our city system back then. I worked in our emergency services unit for almost 10 years. I was a captain there and also a captain in our detectives unit for almost three years before I retired. I also worked in the compliance division toward the end of my career. I had to leave because I had some health issues. I’m a two-time cancer survivor. Uniquely, after I was able to recover from my illnesses, I went back to school to finish my bachelor’s, master’s and I received a doctorate in education. I worked with County Executive [Steve] Bellone [D] as his assistant deputy county executive for public safety for almost two years, where I tell people that I truly got an understanding of the landscape of Suffolk County. Then, I returned back to New York City as the deputy commissioner of operations, overseeing almost all of the operational aspects of the department from 2014 until 2017. I then decided to run for sheriff in September of 2017.
What we also did was that every newly admitted inmate had to go into a quarantine for 14 days while our medical staff checked up on them three or four times a day. We wanted to make sure that our new admission inmates weren’t exposing any inmates that had been in our custody with any potential virus.
Sheriff Errol Toulon Jr. Photo from Toulon’s office
When I became sheriff, I noticed that almost 85% of the men and women that are in our custody are returning back to our communities. In order to help them and to have less victims in our communities, while we have them within our custody why not try to provide them with the resources so that they can be successful when they return back to our communities?
What are some of the struggles that your department had encountered due to the COVID-19 pandemic and how did you attempt to overcome them?
When I was the deputy commissioner, we had to deal with the H1N1 and Ebola viruses. When we learned about COVID-19 in Washington state in 2020, we started preparing for the possibility of there being an outbreak. By the end of February, we had our plans set. We implemented them around the second week of March because the first [confirmed] case of COVID in New York state was March 1 and the first case in Suffolk County was March 8. By that second week of March, we started implementing measures of social distancing; we had masks that were mandated to be worn; we started doing temperature checks; and we told our staff that if they were not feeling well or had any of the signs of identified symptoms for COVID-19, that they should seek out their health care professionals. With the jails, we cleaned our facilities three to four times per day. Inmates were required to wear masks. We were able to “cell skip’’ our inmates, so instead of inmates being in cells 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5, they were in cells 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9. We did stop visits because, if you remember, [former] Governor [Andrew] Cuomo [D] had said that if we shut down visits for two weeks, we’d be OK. We did shut down our visits for any individuals coming in and for any service providers entering our jails. It proved to be somewhat successful, but we had to do it for longer than we anticipated. From March, when we first implemented those measures, until the beginning of December, we only had five inmates that had tested positive — and I should say, three tested positive in the jails, two came into the jail positive. I think we were very successful.
Your office has donated bulletproof vests to the people of Ukraine. What are some of the other philanthropic initiatives that your office has been part of to benefit both Suffolk County and the greater global community?
That was a start by donating those decommissioned vests, but one of the things we are embarking on is that the Suffolk County Sheriff’s Office is now an advisory component to a sheriff’s foundation. This is not run by the Sheriff’s Office, but by a group of individuals. They’re a 501(c)(3) and their goal is to have fundraising events. We do so much in the community that they want to assist us in really helping these kids that are having certain issues. Whether it is donating school supplies or the various community events that we want to do, we want to strengthen the bond between the community and the Suffolk County Sheriff’s Office.
Baseball season is now underway and I have learned that you also occupy a place in the history of the New York Yankees. Could you elaborate on this?
Yes. I was fortunate enough in 1979 and 1980 to be a bat boy with the New York Yankees. They had just come off of back-to-back World Series championships in 1977 and 1978. Tragically, in 1979 our captain, Thurman Munson, was killed in a plane crash and we fell short of making the playoffs that year. Subsequently, in 1980 we did make the playoffs, but we lost three straight to the Kansas City Royals. In the third game, I was the ball boy down the right field line watching George Brett hit a three-run homer off of Goose Gossage, which went into the upper deck. I realized then that my career as a bat boy had quickly come to an end.
What are your thoughts on Aaron Judge’s contract fiasco?
I hope they do sign him. I think he’s proven to be not only a great ballplayer when he’s not injured, but more importantly a great role model. Mr. [Joe] DiMaggio and Mr. [George] Steinbrenner — both of whom I was fortunate enough to meet and speak with — would say that he is the type of person they would want to be a Yankee for his entire career, very similar to Derek Jeter.
Sheriff, thank you for taking this interview. Is there anything else that you would like to say to our local readers?
Yes. I firmly believe that the Suffolk County Sheriff’s Office is changing the paradigm of criminal justice, not just in Suffolk County but throughout New York state. We’re continuing to look for partners, both from the governmental side but also the community side, to make sure that we are not only able to engage but also help those that need us. That’s why we’re here. We’re really here to help our community.
APRIL 21, 2022 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A5
Realty company founded in Huntington celebrates centennial birthday BY RITA J. EGAN RITA@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Not many companies make it to 100 years in business, but Daniel Gale Sotheby’s International Realty did just that this year. Daniel Gale founded the company on Feb. 9, 1922, and chose Main Street in Huntington for his real estate and insurance agency. When he picked the spot, the founder was encouraged by the fact that the town was a stop on one of the Long Island Rail Road lines. A century later, the company remains family owned. Through the decades the founder’s son Kent, until his passing in 2014, grandson Stan, and Kent Gale’s protégé current chairperson and president Patricia Petersen have continued to head up the company.
County
History
In a recent phone interview, Petersen and CEO Deirdre O’Connell discussed the company’s history. Over the hundred years, Daniel Gale has grown from a business with one office to 30 locations not only on Suffolk County’s North Shore but across the Island. In 2014, the brokerage company opened offices in Queens and this year Brooklyn. Petersen said she believes one of the company’s assets is that it has been family owned. She learned the benefits of this early on when she started in real estate in 1975 in the Cold Spring Harbor location, which was the company’s second office. Petersen said as a mother, she was hoping to work part-time but quickly found out it was difficult to become a successful real estate agent with limited hours. She said Jean Gale, the wife of the founder’s son Kent, would help get her children off the nursery school bus, give them lunch and then get them to day care. “Somehow we cobbled it together and made it work,” Petersen said. “It’s kind of how we run the company. Whatever the agents need, Deidre and I figure out a way to provide it.” Petersen went from agent to office sales manager, company general manager and relocation director through the years. She credits Kent Gale with recognizing she had potential. In the early ’90s, she began buying the company with Kent’s son Stan Gale and became president and CEO. In turn, one of the talents Petersen recognized was O’Connell. The latter said her career in real estate began with another company in 1991. She opened her own office in Manhasset and her second one in Cutchogue. Daniel Gale then bought her offices, and she became part of the company in 2007. O’Connell helped the brokerage expand to the North Fork. She went on to become a regional manager then general manager of the company, and became CEO four years ago. Both said they appreciate the history of Daniel Gale. As the centennial celebrations began, Petersen said, it was a reminder of everything the company had been through
since its founding. The ups and downs of the current pandemic, she added, can be likened to founder Daniel Gale’s early days. “Daniel Gale went through the Depression and went through the [second] World War,” she said. “In fact, he started the company right after the first World War, and then he had to go through the second World War. We have had our own challenging times over the years, but certainly that’s not new to us. We’ve always been able to not just survive but thrive in really any kind of market.” O’Connell said she believes the company thriving goes back to its foundation. “Certainly, in times of crisis we use that as an opportunity to assess the crisis and to utilize that and to come out of it as a growth opportunity, because after every crisis comes opportunity,” she said. “We’ve always been able to seize those moments.” As for the pandemic, O’Connell said the company realized the importance of pivoting early on during the shutdowns by going virtual. Within a month, she said, Daniel Gale had an open house with 150 homes virtually showcased. “Yes, everyone could do it eventually, but we seized the moment to once again help our agents help their customers and clients in providing them the service and marketing of the moment,” O’Connell said. Petersen and O’Connell also recognize the importance of marketing in the real estate field. An early marketing tactic of founder Daniel Gale in the 1920s, Petersen said, was buying a tract of land along with two investors. One lot had a miniature model house buried in the ground. Petersen said whoever bought the plot would win a house built for them. She added that the person turned out to be a builder, so he was given two more lots instead of having a house built for him and the win spearheaded his own business in the area.
Sotheby’s International
Another milestone in Daniel Gale’s history was when the company became affiliated with Sotheby’s in the 1970s. The auction house needed an outlet for its clientele. After Sotheby’s International Realty was created, Daniel Gale became affiliated with it on Long Island and went on to become its No. 1 affiliate in the world. O’Connell called the move a game-changer which allows Daniel Gale agents to bring their properties around the world but still have representation on Long Island. “Larger firms that are represented, even here on Long Island, their decisions during hard times aren’t made here locally,” she said. “They’re made maybe in New York City or across the country somewhere. We live and we work, we do everything with our people first in mind.” She gave the example that during the Great Recession of the 2000s, while big corporations laid off people, “Pat Petersen put personal money into the company to make sure that we didn’t have to cut our people.” Keeping employees in place is something
Founder Daniel Gale, above, and his assistant Miss Jean Wallice — the future Mrs. Kent Gale — in front of the Daniel Gale Huntington office, circa 1940. Below, Daniel Gale Sotheby’s International Realty’s President and CEO Patricia Petersen poses in front of the Cold Spring office around 1990. Photos from Daniel Gale Sotheby’s International Realty
the company was able to do during the pandemic, too. “We kept everyone on the payroll because we could make that decision,” O’Connell said.
The present and future
Later this year, Daniel Gale plans to open a new office in Huntington located cata-cornered where the original 1922 building was on Main Street. The company also recently launched the Daniel Gale Foundation to enable the company, which has donated tens of thousands in the past, to make a bigger impact. O’Connell said Daniel Gale offices have always been involved with their communities “through a wide range of community service initiatives and donations.” With the new foundation, offices will choose a few events each year to work on with the whole company. “The Daniel Gale Foundation will enable us to make an even greater impact with our giving by consolidating our giving efforts across the Island from Brooklyn to Shelter Island and make them even more impactful,” O’Connell said. “The foundation is about more than giving dollars, it is having the Daniel Gale family roll up their sleeves, put on their sneakers or pick up their shovels to work in our communities as a team.” The two said it’s important to be proud of the past but it’s also essential to keep an eye on the future. Currently, like other realty companies, Daniel Gale is keeping up with the current seller’s market. O’Connell said while inventory is low, sales are high. “We get 10 houses on the market, or an office has five houses on the market in a weekend, and they’re all gone by Monday,” O’Connell said, adding she believes the market will normalize in the near future.
Petersen added the importance of pricing correctly in any market. “Part of our job is to be good counselors,” she said. As they look toward the future, Petersen and O’Connell said the ways of communicating continue to change with social media platforms, but the key is to maintain high quality just like they do in ads and online. “You have to be true to yourself, and I’m very proud of what we’ve done in the last 100 years,” Petersen said. “Not that I had much to do with the first 50, but I am very proud of what we’ve accomplished and what is still yet to accomplish.”
PAGE A6 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • APRIL 21, 2022
Be sure to enter to win in our Long Island #BankonLIArts Coloring Book Contest!
The following incidents have been reported by the Suffolk County Police.
Let’s have some fun and celebrate the world of art with the Times Beacon Record News Media’s Third Edition Coloring Book coloring contest for the young and young at heart.
Categories:
Children - ages 5 -12 Teens - ages 13-19 Adults- ages 20+ HOW TO ENTER: 3 WAYS
Simply color in a page of your choice, scan or take a photo, then submit your drawing by one of the following methods: Please include your name, age, town and email/phone number. 1) Post on Twitter, Facebook or Instagram using the hashtags #BankonLIArts. Be sure to tag @BankofAmerica and @tbrnewsmedia in your post. 2) Email your drawing to loveourphotos@ tbrnewsmedia.com with “Artist Coloring Book” in the subject line. 3) Mail in your drawing to TBR News Media, P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733, Attn: Artist Coloring Book.
The deadline to enter is April 28, 2022.
Wanted for questioning
Centereach reported a shoplifter on April 16. A man allegedly stole 22 computer hard drives valued at approximately $900.
Commack ■ A resident on Hayrick Lane in Commack
reported that two men allegedly stole his 2018 Audi from his driveway on April 15. The key fob had been left inside. The vehicle was valued at $25,000.
■ Target on Veterans Memorial Highway in Commack reported a shoplifter on April 11. A woman allegedly stole LEGO sets and toys valued at approximately $525. ■ Bolla Car Wash on Jericho Turnpike in Commack reported a burglary on April 15. A cash register was stolen between 3 p.m. and midnight.
HOW TO VOTE:
Starting on April 30, 2022 – Head over to www.facebook.com/ TBRNewsMedia to check out the galleries and vote for your favorite photo in each age category! The photo with the most likes in each category will be declared the winner, discretion of the judges and social media scores.
■ Walmart on Crooked Hill Road in
Commack called the police on April 16 to report a shoplifter. A woman allegedly stole $700 worth of clothing and food items.
East Setauket ■ Kohl’s on Nesconset Highway in East
Setauket reported a shoplifter on April 14. A man allegedly stole 13 items of men’s assorted apparel valued at approximately $520.
Deadline to vote is May 19, 2022. Winners will be officially announced the week of May 30, 2022.
■ A shoplifter was reported at Kohl’s on Nesconset Highway in East Setauket on April 14. A man allegedly stole assorted merchandise valued at $2450.
Winners will be featured in the Times Beacon Record and in local Bank of America financial centers.
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 from a Lake Grove store in April. A man entered Macy’s, located inside the Smith Haven Mall, at 5:10 p.m. on April 9 and allegedly stole assorted merchandise. Smart TV valued at $170.
■ Home Depot on Middle Country Road in Selden reported a petit larceny on April 12.
Two men allegedly stole three XC 6.0 battery Hauppauge ■ Aqua Vitae Wines & Liquors on packs totaling $507.
Smithtown Bypass in Hauppauge reported a shoplifter on April 16. A person allegedly stole two champagne bottles valued at $150.
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY TO ENTER OR WIN. A purchase will not increase your odds of winning. Contest begins March 10, 2022 at 12:01AM EST and ends May 19, 2022, at 11:59 PM EST Limit one (1) entry per person. All entries must be original and entirely created by the entrant. There are no restrictions on what an entrant can use to color the image. Entries will be judged based on creativity, coloring skill and overall artistic ability according to that age category. One winner from each age group (5-12, 13-19, 20 and older) will be determined by the judges in their sole discretion. The decisions of the judges will be final. All entries become the property of TBR News Media and Bank of America and may be used or reproduced in any manner and for any purpose by TBR NewsMedia and Bank of America without additional consent or compensation, and will not be acknowledged or returned. Winners will have their art work displayed in a local branch of Bank of America. By participating, Contest entrants: (1) represent that they have complied with these Official Contest Rules; (2) have received parental consent and grant TBR news Media and Bank of America the right to use his or her name, city, state, and likeness, (3) release TBR News Media and Bank of America from all and all liability in connection with this Contest. TBR News Media is not responsible for lost, late or misdirected entries, or incomplete/incorrect entries.
South Setauket ■ Target on Pond Path in South Setauket
Lake Grove ■ A woman shopping at Trader Joe’s on
reported a shoplifter on April 15. A man allegedly stole $320 worth of assorted LEGO toys from the store.
Selden ■ Target on Middle Country Road in Selden
Stony Brook Marina on Shore Road in Stony Brook on April 9. Two subjects were captured on video surveillance taking the cart out of the boat yard. The vehicle was valued at $1500.
Nesconset Highway in Lake Grove called the police on April 14 to report that her wallet containing credit cards and cash had been stolen from her purse.
called the police on April 16 to report a shoplifter. A man allegedly stole a Vizio ©80270
TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA • 185 ROUTE 25A, SETAUKET, NY 11733 631.751.7744 • tbrnewsmedia.com
Centereach ■ Walmart on Middle Country Road in
Stony Brook ■ A golf cart was reported stolen from the
— COMPILED BY HEIDI SUTTON
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.
APRIL 21, 2022 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A7
NOW IS THE TIME TO JOIN THE FIGHT! YOU CAN HELP PRESERVE FLOWERFIELD FAIRGROUNDS!
Support is growing for the Gyrodyne Compromise Plan WE ARE MAKING PROGRESS, BUT THE BATTLE IS NOT OVER
YOUR HELP IS NEEDED!
“Unfortunately, a lawsuit is necessary because the environmental review of Gyrodyne’s plan did not comply with the law. The legal action will be expensive, so donations are needed to make sure the Fairgrounds are preserved.” - Joseph A. Bollhofer, Esq. Chairman, Village of Head of the Harbor Board of Zoning Appeals
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DONATE NOW! facebook.com/saveflowerfield
@save.flowerfieldfairground
Go to: stjameshohnpc.org or scan here:
PAGE A8 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • APRIL 21, 2022
Friends of Caleb Smith Preserve honor co-founder Michael D’Agostino
BY CAROLE PAQUETTE
On April 2, the Friends of Caleb Smith Preserve honored the late Michael D’Agostino, a co-founder of the group. The board members also announced the return of its annual junior fishing tournament for children, which had been canceled for two years due to the pandemic. The 17th annual event is set for June 11. The Friends of Caleb Smith Preserve decided a memorial bench placed in the spot he loved to fish would be ideal to honor D’Agostino.
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“My father was an avid fisherman, and he was determined children should know about the park. The fishing tournament was his baby,” said D’Agostino’s daughter Carol Tokosh, whose husband Tom runs the junior fishing tournament. D’Agostino passed away on March 21, 2021. Twenty-two years ago, he and his wife, Joanne, and Smithtown residents Louise and Gordon Hall, founded the Friends group. The park is minutes away from the D’Agostino home in Head of the River. The bench, in D’Agostino’s honor, overlooks Willow Pond, a 300-acre manmade watershed that was brought into being in the 18th century for the purpose of running local mills. The dedicated bench sits on a newlybricked site built by park personnel. It is flanked by two pots of bright yellow pansies. “Mike would have loved this, he loved to fish from here,” said Joanne D’Agostino. “He wanted to leave a legacy of educating youngsters.” About 20 people attended the dedication ceremony, including members of his family as well as some members of the Friends group. Chris Duffner, president of the FCSP, said, “Mike was a man of vision and action. On his own, he got a grant from the Robert David Lion Gardner Foundation.” That grant fully funded the interactive exhibit in the entry room of the park’s historic house and museum. Former president Mary Ann Spencer said,
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“Mike was the heart and soul of the Friends organization.” Just prior to the dedication, the Friends group held its first board meeting since 2019 and decided to hold its 17th annual Junior Angler Fishing Tournament on Saturday, June 11. As usual, there will be two groups fishing in the catch-
and-release event, which also includes prizes and goody bags. Children ages 5 to 8 will fish in the morning and ages 9 -12 in the afternoon. For an application, contact the park at 631265-1054. Caleb Smith State Park Preserve is located on Jericho Turnpike, Route 25, west of downtown Smithtown.
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Michael D’Agostino’s family, above, sits on the bench as Friends of Caleb Smith Preserve President Chris Duffner and Vice President Mary Ann Spencer look on. Below, D’Agostino’s wife, Joanne, stands behind the bench. Above photo by Carole Paquette; below photo by Rita J. Egan
On the night the board of education honored Mary Grace Lynch and other retirees, her successor also was appointed. Adam Javidi, who graduated from Smithtown schools 22 years ago, will assume the role as principal at St. James Elementary School on July 1. Javidi has served as assistant principal at Locust Valley Intermediate School since August of 2019. In that role, he has been the lead administrator responsible for overseeing the safety and daily operations of the third through fifth grades. Javidi previously served for five years as an assistant principal at P.S. 452 in Manhattan. He began his career as an elementary school teacher in the New York City’s public schools. Javidi earned a bachelor of arts degree in sociology from Franklin and Marshall College and a master’s of science in education degree from Hunter College. He formally was approved by the Board of Education on April 12. “I’m very excited about this opportunity to come back home to the district I grew up in,” Javidi said. “Everyone speaks so highly of Mary Grace Lynch. She’s been there for 20
Adam Javidi. Photo from Smithtown Central School District
years. I want to build on everything that she’s developed and continue to make St. James an amazing place to learn and grow.”
APRIL 21, 2022 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A9
Smithtown makes resident parking permit request available online The Town of Smithtown is saving residents a trip to Town Hall. The resident parking permit is now available online. To request a 2022-2024 parking permit, review the requirements below, then create an account on the town’s portal. The resident parking permit allows Smithtown residents access to all the parks and beaches within the township. The permit is a sticker that adheres to the outside of the passenger window on the driver’s side. A current New York State vehicle registration is required. If the vehicle registration you are uploading does not have a Town of Smithtown address on it or it has a P.O. Box listed, you will also need to provide a current tax or utility bill as proof of residency. We do not accept a photo of the window sticker, as it does not provide name and address information on it. If, at the time you are registering, you have a temporary vehicle registration, you will also need to upload a copy of your insurance card referencing the same VIN# and your name and address. Follow the steps below to set up an account and request a permit. Visit www.tocite.net/ smithtownny/portal. 1. Create an account. Click “Login” located at the upper right-hand corner of the screen. The sign-in page will open. Click “Create Account.” Fill in the required fields (name, email and password).
2. Activate your account by confirming the email. Once you’ve created an account, you must check your inbox for an “Email Confirmation.” Click the link in the email to activate your account. 3. Add vehicle and address information. After your account is activated and you’re logged in to Citizen Connect, click “View Permits” and then click the “Register” button. Fill in the information under the field “Address 1.” Then click “Add Vehicle to Permit” and fill in your vehicle’s information listed on its registration. 4. Upload your vehicle registration. Take a photo of your vehicle registration and upload it to the website for proof of residency. 5. Register for permit. Once all of the required information has been submitted, at the bottom, read the disclaimer and click the box next to it. Click “Register for Permit.” 6. Check the mail. After you have successfully registered and the Town Clerk’s office approves your request, your resident parking permit will be sent to you via mail. The new resident parking permit became effective April 1. The Town Clerk’s Office is located at 99 W Main St., Smithtown, and is open to the public Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
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Editorial
Much needed makeover on 347
Work will begin once again on New York State Route 347, and North Shore residents couldn’t be happier. Drivers navigating the roadway from Gibbs Pond Road in Nesconset to Hallock Road in Stony Brook have noticed construction cones beginning to appear. The upcoming work is part of a $71 million state Department of Transportation project, which continues the roadway improvements made to Route 347 years ago in the Smithtown area. Future plans include changes on the state road as far east as Port Jefferson Station. Through the years, it has become more and more apparent that the road built decades ago is over capacity. Called the Smithtown Bypass in its western portion, the roadway initially served as a way to avoid the heavy traffic of downtown Smithtown. Today, drivers use side roads in the town to avoid Route 347. Rerouting presents various problems. As drivers speed through residential neighborhoods, congestion appears in spots previously unanticipated. Residents who once lived on quiet streets now have trouble just backing out of their driveways or are hesitant to let their children play anywhere near the roadway. Adding new travel lanes, traffic signals, raised planted medians and crosswalks to 347 will help ease congestion and keep cars on the main thoroughfare instead of traveling through residential areas. According to NYSDOT, the road work between Gibbs Pond and Hallock roads will be completed by 2024. While that is a two-year span, the benefits will be well worth the wait. Suffolk County residents are reminded regularly of the importance of building affordable housing and independent living units to keep our young people and retired residents here on the Island. Accelerated by the pandemic, which prompted rapid urban flight from New York City, we are also facing an increase in population with more people attracted to the North Shore. As our area experiences population growth, our infrastructure needs to be modernized and expanded. While there is some hesitancy to widen roads, add overpasses and traffic circles — since these changes might attract more development in the area — traffic is here now. With smart planning, our elected officials on town, county and state levels can work together to determine which roadways in our towns and villages could benefit from widening and other improvements. Continuing the roadwork on Route 347 is a step in the right direction. There is also the prospect of federal infrastructure bill monies. While many don’t want Long Island to become life in the fast lane, it’s time to accept that it’s no longer country roads taking us home. A proper balance needs to be found to make life a little easier for those who live here as they navigate their day on North Shore roadways.
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Letters to the Editor
Vote in school elections May 17 for our children’s sake
As an educator and parent, I believe that our schools are our greatest resource and a public good. Our schools should be a place where our young people learn to think critically and become civically engaged. This is an investment in our society and our democracy. Because of my deep commitment to public education, I have been watching the disruptions to school board meetings this past year with both horror and interest. Let me be clear: This is not a movement founded by parental concern. It is an attempt to undermine educators and the labor unions that advocate for their working conditions, to censor curriculum, to cause division and confusion by arguing about health and safety measures during a global pandemic, and finally, by running candidates for school board who seek to implement this worldview. This is a national right-wing movement, and it is intended to undermine our public institutions and democracy itself. Every resident should attend meetthe-candidate nights and listen to the board of education candidates in their school district. If they are advocating for “parent choice,” “curriculum transparency” or “medical freedom,” recognize that this is the language of right-wing extremist groups. The truth is that the curriculum is quite transparent and guided by the New York State Education Department. It is not the purview of the board to determine curriculum — that is the work of our teachers, who are rigorously trained in their subject matters and grade levels they work with. Our safety protocols are determined by the state and county health departments — the board does not create policy, it implements it and risks losing state funding if it does not comply with regulations. Any board of education candidate saying otherwise does not understand the nature of the position and is not fit to hold the job. It is crucial that taxpayers recognize what is happening in their home districts, and vote in their school budget and board of education elections May 17. We need well-funded public schools that educate and nurture all of our children. Coming out of the COVID-19 pandemic, there are academic, social and emotional needs that the educators in our schools provide for our children. We need to work collaboratively with the educators
and districts that teach our children rather than as adversaries, as the rightwing extremists have done this past year. Public education is a community investment, and we must not allow those who seek to defund, undermine and censor it to have the final say. Shoshana Hershkowitz South Setauket
Celebrate Long Island Spring Restaurant Week
In these difficult economic times, it is especially important to patronize your local neighborhood restaurant not only during Long Island Spring Restaurant Week April 24-May 1, but all year round. As most people are vaccinated from COVID-19, it is safer now to dine out. There are so many great restaurants in Huntington, Northport, Port Jefferson, Smithtown, Stony Brook and other communities in Suffolk, also Nassau counties. My wife and I don’t mind occasionally paying a little more to help our local restaurants survive. Don’t forget your cook and server. We try to tip 20% to 25% against the total bill including taxes. If it is an odd amount, we round up to the next dollar. If we can afford to eat out, we can afford an extra dollar tip. When ordering takeout, we always leave a dollar or two for the waiter or cook. It is appreciated. Remember these people are our neighbors. Our local entrepreneurs work long hours, pay taxes and provide employment. If we don’t patronize our local restaurants to shop and eat, they don’t eat either. Larry Penner Great Neck
NYS bill to help birds and bees
Honeybees are vital pollinators of more than one-third of our nation’s crops. However, our pollinators are in trouble. Field surveys and accounts from beekeepers reveal that in the past few years, the population of honeybees in hives have been reduced by more than 40%. This population lost has been called colony collapse disorder. The rapid loss of honeybees threatens agriculture production nationwide. Scientists now are examining the impact of a powerful class of insecticide called neonicotinoids. Neonics are used to kill leaf, fruit and root chewing pests but are extremely toxic to bees and other pollinators. There is mounting evidence linking the honeybee die-off to systematic
insecticides like neonicotinoids. These chemicals, even in low doses, can damage bees’ ability to navigate back to the hive. Without worker bees bringing needed food back to the hive, the entire colony suffers. Fortunately, New York State Assemblyman Steve Englebright [D-Setauket] and state Sen. Brad Hoylman [D-Manhattan] have introduced the Birds and Bees Protection Act, which would ban neonic-tested corn, wheat and soybean seeds. It would also ban the use of turf and ornamental neonic uses. Finally, it would require the state Department of Environmental Conservation and the state Department of Agriculture and Markets to identify alternatives to neonic products. Assemblyman Englebright and his former long-time aide and beekeeper Maria Hoffman are to be commended for their efforts to protect the birds and the bees. Now we need his bill to pass and to be enforced. Edward P. Romaine Brookhaven Town Supervisor
Skip mowing for nature’s sake
If you could fight climate change and help bee and bird populations survive, would you do it? A small town in Wisconsin is doing just that. How? The No Mow May initiative described in The New York Times. The residents of Appleton were asked to put away their lawn mowers for the month of May, which allows plants typically identified as weeds to flower. These include violets, clover and dandelions, which can provide food for bees emerging from hibernation. Why is this important? Honeybees are crucial for the pollination of our food sources, and U.S. beekeepers lost 40% of their colonies in one year April 201819. North America has also lost nearly 3 billion birds in 50 years — 29% of them from the U.S. and Canada. Many are literally starving to death because of the decrease in the insect population. As a planet, Earth is facing catastrophic declines through the loss of habitats and food supplies. In Appleton, yards that were not mowed had five times the number of bees and three times the number of bee species than did mown parks, according to the Times. So instead of having your spring lawn look like a putting green, think wildflowers, birds and bees. It’s a winwin for the planet and for us. Kerri Glynn Setauket
The opinions of columnists and letter writers are their own. They do not speak for the newspaper.
APRIL 21, 2022 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A19
Opinion The carving knives emerge after the gatherings end
W
e all try, more or less, to say the right thing in the moment. “Wow, so nice to see you again. You look wonderful.” “How are your children?” “How’s work? How many days a week are you back in person?” But after cutting up turkeys, ham and other food, the real carving occurs in the hours and days after gatherings, when we D. None separate into smaller groups and snicker, of the above judge and let loose the BY DANIEL DUNAIEF parts of our sinister souls for which we seek atonement during religious and other holidays. Now that family gatherings have restarted in
earnest, despite the COVID clouds still hovering over us, we have a chance to turn moments of discomfort into a collage of complaints. While I’m sure there might be a few people who don’t practice the fine art of conducting post-gathering analysis about friends, family members and loved ones, I have yet to meet them. We ought to break the process, lighthearted ideally though it may, into various categories. Clothing: Wardrobe choices are often the subject of discussion. We sometimes marvel at how revealing or tight an outfit was or how casually someone dressed for a larger gathering. Defensive guests: Sometimes, what people say, or hear, has nothing to do with a question they were asked or even a conversation in which they participated. While I was recently cleaning dishes, another guest walked in and told me everything he had contributed to the confab. His need to share his contribution, or to allay any guilt he might have felt, was revealing.
Conversation interrupters: While many families have long-winded storytellers, some gatherings include a conversation interrupter. They are the people for whom any dialog that doesn’t revolve around them or their opinions is unwelcome and unworthy. They interrupt other people’s stories to interject their views on a topic or, perhaps, on something completely unrelated to the discussion. Exacerbaters: These are the people for whom conflict is nearly as delicious as the homemade apple pie or fruit cobbler that awaits after dinner. Sensing conflict in a marriage or between siblings, they will figure out how to help build any tension in the moment. When challenged for their role as instigators, they will frequently play the victim card, claiming that making people angry at each other or at them wasn’t their intention and that everyone doesn’t understand how they were really only trying to help and to resolve the conflict. Welcome to Narnia guests: No party is
complete without at least one person who needs to bring everyone into their perspective or their world. These people often see everything through one perspective, whether it’s about saving stray dogs, the challenges of having difficult neighbors, or the difficulty of finding good Thai food in their neighborhood. The discussion could be about the challenges educators faced during the pandemic and, they will say, “Oh yeah? Well, that reminds me of the challenges of finding good Thai food.” The revisionist historians: Often, some, or even many, of the people in a room spent considerable time with each other. Stories have a way of evolving over time, either because they sound better one way or because the storyteller’s memory has altered some of the facts to suit a better narrative. No, you didn’t invent the yo-yo, no, you didn’t predict the year the Cubs would finally win the World Series, and, no, you didn’t always use the phrase “just do it” before Nike added it to their ad campaign.
Overheard in a deli: “I’ll have what she is having”
O
ne of the first things we noticed when we moved from the Bronx to Wichita Falls Texas, where my husband reported for duty on the Air Force base in July 1967, was that the city had no delis. Really, no delis. “Where can we find a deli?” we asked people. “What’s a deli?” was the response. It was then that we learned that a deli, short for delicatessen, was indigenous to large urban settings generally found on the coasts, that made Between fresh sandwiches and you and me sold side salads from BY LEAH S. DUNAIEF their display cases and bottled sodas from their glass-front, vertical refrigerators. We explained that they were mighty convenient for a quick take-out lunch. Sometimes a few people ate at the handful of tables, but mostly it was an in-and-out
experience and one hoped the line would not be too long. “We have diners,” they offered helpfully. “You could probably take out an order from one of them.” How to describe the difference between a diner and a deli? I had never thought about delis before. I just knew there was one every couple of blocks in New York. Some of them were quite elegant, with imported products, cured meats and cheeses, and even exotic foods, while others, in the neighborhoods, just sold the usual turkey, bologna or ham and Swiss on a roll or white bread. Ah, but then there were the kosher delis, the ones with overstuffed pastrami on rye and spicy mustard, with a pickle and a soda, maybe even a potato knish on the side. That’s the classic New York deli sandwich. They were the best, and there were fewer of those but enough to feed the discriminating in all five boroughs. Often kosher delis were part of a restaurant in which diners could sit at tables and be served by wise-cracking waiters. Patrons might slurp up chicken soup before they attacked their fulsome sandwiches.
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In fact, there were 1500 kosher delicatessens in New York City in the 1930s, brought here primarily by German-Jewish immigrants in the late 19th century. There were fewer than 15 as of 2015, and I’ll bet there are only a handful today. This is how they started, or so the story goes. A Lithuanian named Sussman Volk, who arrived in New York in 1880, owned a butcher shop on the lower East Side. He befriended another immigrant, from Romania, and allowed the fellow to store his meat in the shop’s large icebox. To thank him, the friend gave Volk a recipe for pastrami, which then proved so popular with Volk’s customers that he opened a restaurant at 88 Delancey Street and served the meat on rye. The creation was soon repeated in delis and became the city’s iconic sandwich. Delicatessens originated in Germany during the 18th century, started by a German food company called Dellmayr in 1700 that still exists, and spread to the United States in mid-19th century. They catered to the German immigrants, offering smoked meats, sausages, pickled vegetables, dips, breads and olives. Just in case you are on “Jeopardy!”, the root
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of the word comes from the Latin, “delicatus,” meaning giving pleasure, delightful, pleasing. After WWII, from about 1948 on, they were simply referred to as “delis.” Today, even supermarkets have deli sections. There are two delis within walking distance in my village and more up and down the neighboring villages. And they exist in many countries with slight variations on the theme. Australia, Canada, Europe (Milan, Paris, Vienna, London, Munich, Zurich), Ireland, they all have delis. They are different from Subway or Jersey Mike’s, or Wawa, which, too, make sandwiches to order. They are also different from McDonald’s or Wendy’s, who specialize in fast food. Some of them have hot prepared foods as well, and all of them require interaction with a clerk behind the counter as opposed to a more digital ordering process. Those clerks may whip up an egg on a roll with bacon and cheese if you ask. Some delis even have small groceries attached to them. Delis are generally unpretentious eateries that welcome you. For my lunch tastes, you can’t spell delicious without “deli.”
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PAGE A20 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • APRIL 21, 2022
Synthetic turf sports fields at Gaynor and Moriches parks
The Town of Smithtown Parks Department is scheduled to complete the main Little League field at Gaynor Park in the coming week for local, young athletes and their families to enjoy in time for the season. In addition to this renovation, construction of the new synthetic field at the largest softball field at Moriches Park is expected to be completed in a month’s time. These improvements are the result of a partnership with the St James Smithtown Little League for field improvements to both increase the amount of field time, as well as enhance the safety and overall experience for local youth. “There is really nothing like building a park that our young residents get to enjoy and build lifelong memories on,” said Town of Smithtown Supervisor Ed Wehrheim (R). “I want to express my gratitude to the St. James Smithtown Little League for this collaboration between parents, coaches and our team here. Secondly, I need to really shed light on our parks team for an outstanding job well done. Every member of the Parks Department genuinely comes to work, loving what they do each day for our community. Like me, they live for the smiles on the faces of our kids enjoying the game,
Town
the camaraderie and soon, the new fields.” The ball field at Moriches Park and the little league field at Gaynor Park have been resurfaced with a 90-foot synthetic turf infield. Both synthetic fields feature new upgrades for safety, including raising the fencing to upwards of 10 feet, to protect spectators and vehicles from fly balls. At Gaynor Park, brick walkways surround a tinted concrete sidewalk. The darker concrete will extend the appeal and overall aesthetics of the areas frequented by spectators. This addition to the facility at Gaynor will complement the previous renovation work, which included new Basketball, and Tennis courts in addition to a new state-of-the-art playground. At Moriches Park, the Parks Department will be rebuilding a new dugout, backstop and added fencing as part of the field restoration. The synthetic field replacement compliments previous park renovations including the artificial turf field replacement at the Moriches Park Soccer Complex, which was completed last April. Additional renovations completed at Moriches Park include the new soft splash pad at the waterpark, state-of-the-art playground, interactive playhouse, new fencing surrounding the play areas, concrete sidewalks, LED userfriendly crosswalk and landscaping.
Drone footage of Gaynor Park in St. James. Drone footage from Town of Smithtown, Planning Department
Smithtown High School West Girls Soccer earns national ranking The Smithtown High School West varsity girls soccer team’s success this past fall has led to national recognition. United Soccer Coaches ranked the team 24th nationally in its recently released year-end poll. In the first county final matchup in any sport between the district’s two high schools, West topped East to earn the county title. In the Long Island final, West then fell to Massapequa, which finished with a No. 11 national ranking. The Bulls had several individual honorees, with senior Hannah Maracina earning All-State, and Maracina, junior Stephanie Schubert, senior Nicole Mennella and senior Julia Tylar earning All-County. Additionally, seniors Emma Wilkinson and Kaitlyn Scheuchenko were All-League. Tylar also was the county championship MVP and Newsday All-Long Island second team. Emily Fey was named Coach of the Year while working alongside assistant coach Michael Forman. The team went 12-2-1 in the league and 16-3-1 overall. “This season was truly one that could have been taken straight from a storybook,” Fey said. “These girls worked unbelievably hard each day, and we firmly believe we still did not reach our peak. We had more to give and further to go. But each ending sparks a new beginning. And we are optimistic for
Smithtown High School West student-athletes celebrated after topping East in the county championship match in November. Photo from Smithtown Central School District
what next season will bring.” She continued, “The loss of our seniors
will leave tough spots to fill. But with the leadership and passion for the game that
they have instilled in the underclassmen, we know that many will rise to the occasion.”