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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. 34, No. 23
July 29, 2021
$1.00 PHOTO FROM FILMRISE
Using yoga to relieve pain St. James resident opens yoga studio in Setauket geared toward helping those in chronic pain
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Engeman Theater presents Disney’s The Little Mermaid Jr.
Also: M. Night Shyamalan’s Old reviewed, Photo of the Week, Chicken Hill BBQ
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Goodbye to a local legend Former St. James resident Harry de Leyer, beloved equestrian, horse trainer, dies at 93 — A5 TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA Presents...
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PAGE A2 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • JULY 29, 2021
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As the temperature soared to 90 degrees at the intersection of St. Catherine of Siena Hospital and St. Catherine Nursing and Rehab in Smithtown Tuesday, July 27, ice cream was given out to the health care workers, essential workers and blood drive participants as a “sweet treat” thank you. The sponsors for the event were Futterman, Lanza & Pasculli, an elder law and estate planning law firm in Smithtown, The Bristal Assisted Living and Right at Home in Home Care & Assistance. According to a press release from Futterman, Lanza & Pasculli, the sponsors have all seen up close how much all the hospital employees, nursing and rehab workers have done to help our community through the COVID-19 pandemic. “Our clients continue to be in many hospitals and rehabilitation centers, and we are appreciative of these workers keeping our client’s safe and help them to be healthy,” the press release read. The ice cream treats were meant to be a small token of appreciation for all the workers have done and continue to do to support the community. “The workers today kept thanking us for the ice cream, and we kept telling them it was a thank you to them for all their hard work and dedication,” the press release said.
Almost 300 ice creams were served in two hours. According to the press release, an employee “from the operating room said they go to work before 6 a.m. and never normally go out once their shift starts, and they were so appreciative of this gesture … and happy it brought them out in the daylight.”
The TIMES OF Smithtown (USPS 004-808) is published Thursdays by TBR News Media, 185 Route 25A, Setauket, NY 11733. Periodicals postage paid at Setauket, NY and additional mailing offices. Subscription price $59 annually. Leah S. Dunaief, Publisher. POSTMASTER: Send change of address to P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733.
JULY 29, 2021 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A3
Town
St. James resident aims to help those in chronic pain
BY RITA J. EGAN RITA@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Tara Salay is a big believer in the natural healing aspects of yoga. The former physical therapist turned yoga instructor specializes in teaching yoga to those with chronic pain and pelvic health issues. Recently, she opened a business in Setauket. The St. James resident said working as a physical therapist for five years she regularly advised patients with chronic pain and pelvic issues to take yoga classes. Unfortunately, many patients couldn’t find a class that helped them. Before the pandemic, she began to think about opening a yoga studio that would cater to these individuals, but as businesses had to shut their doors due to state mandates, Salay took to the virtual classroom to introduce her business. “It was the push that I needed in a way because I had all the plans before, and then I was, like, I have the time now let me just do it,” she said. With COVID-19 restrictions being lifted, Salay eventually was able to rent a space part-time and then a month ago began renting full-time and opened up her studio in the Port Jefferson Chiropractic building on Route 25A near Washington Street. Right now, she doesn’t have a name for the studio and operates under her name. Her goal is “to bring awareness of how yoga can help people who are dealing with chronic conditions.” Chronic pain and pelvic issues are common. Salay said issues in the pelvic area range from problems for both women and men with
the bladder, actual pain in the pelvis, sexual dysfunction or even bowel issues. She added some people will go to physical therapy with pelvic pain and will feel better, but then will face a stressful situation and the issues will return. “That’s why yoga is really great for it, because it works on the mind-body connection and teaches them how to relax those muscles so they’re not tensing up every time that they’re stressed out,” she said. The instructor said yoga is more than different poses but also about breathwork and meditation, and many are hesitant because they think they can’t handle the poses, which sometimes look difficult. “We can make it work for your body,” Salay said. “There’s more to yoga that I think people aren’t aware of, and they think that you have to have a certain body type or be flexible or be able to get into these crazy positions to do yoga, and that’s definitely not true at all.” With her physical therapy experience, she said she has a deep understanding of the body, and she can guide her clients to help keep them safe. Salay has been practicing yoga for more than 10 years, and when she decided she wanted to open a yoga studio took the classes to become a teacher. Originally, she thought she would incorporate her yoga training into her physical therapy, but the reverse happened. “My teacher training was just so transformational for me personally that I just wanted to transition,” Salay said. “I just want to dedicate myself to doing yoga. I’ll use my knowledge as a PT but this is what I’m doing now.”
Tara Salay in her Setauket studio. Photo by Rita J. Egan
In addition to opening a yoga business, the 30-year-old is planning her wedding to her fiancé, Scott, later this year. She said to balance everything she has some help with planning the wedding that she is keeping on the small side, and she meditates every morning to center herself for the day and stay positive. For those trying to open a new business while juggling life’s responsibilities, she has advice. “Take one step at a time and have a set schedule and try your best not to overwhelm yourself,” she said. “I was trying to do two blogs a week. I had to do one a week. It was
setting my priorities on where I really needed to spend my time and making that clear.” Currently, Salay offers private lessons or classes for small groups by appointment only. She said, as her clientele grows, she would like to offer set classes targeted toward certain conditions such as pelvic pain or osteoporosis. The studio is located at 416 Main St., Setauket. Classes are still available online for those who may not be comfortable practicing in public just yet or may not live nearby. For more information, visit her website: drtarasalay.com.
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PAGE A4 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • JULY 29, 2021
Town
Kings Park residents attend the main event
BY RITA J. EGAN
After a threat of storms postponed the Kings Park Chamber of Commerce’s Monday on Main on July 19, the event was rescheduled for July 26. This time around, Monday night went on without
a drop of rain in sight. The event included live bands along Main Street, dance performances, face painting, a classic car show, local photographers and authors displaying their works and more. — Lower left photo by Joseph Cali, all others by Rita J. Egan
JULY 29, 2021 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A5
Obituary
Harry de Leyer well-known St. James horse trainer, equestrian dies at 93
BY RITA J. EGAN RITA@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
A former St. James resident, who is remembered for saving an 8-year-old plow horse from a slaughterhouse and turning him into a champion, died June 25 in Stanardsville, Virginia, at the age of 93. Harry de Leyer’s work and the bond with the horse named Snowman was documented in the 2011 book “The Eighty-Dollar Champion” by Elizabeth Letts and the 2016 film “Harry & Snowman” where the skill and heart of both were celebrated. The well-known tale of him and Snowman, who was also known as “The Cinderella Horse,” began in 1956 when he saved the animal from a slaughterhouse in Pennsylvania for $80. De Leyer was late for a horse auction, but when he saw one of the last horses he knew the animal had potential to train young riders at The Knox School in Nissequogue where he worked. The equestrian and horse trainer would go on to turn the worn-out workhorse into the winner of the United States Equestrian Federation Horse of the Year in 1958 and land the “triple crown” of show jumping in the same year. Snowman also made history in 1959 as the first horse to win the Open Jumper Championship two years in a row. In 1983, de Leyer went on to represent the United States at the World Championships. “I came to this country with nothing in my pocket,” de Leyer said in the 2016 documentary film. “Then I met Snowman and he made my name in this country.” In the documentary, de Leyer talks about the time he attempted to sell Snowman to a doctor who lived a few miles away. A couple of days later, Snowman showed up at de Leyer’s property. The horse trainer thought the doctor may have left a gate open, but the new owner said that Snowman had jumped the gate. A few days later, after the doctor heightened the gate, Snowman once again came back to de Leyer. It was then the trainer realized the horse’s jumping potential and bought him back. De Leyer was born in 1927 in SintOedenrode, Netherlands, according to his obituary from Moloney Funeral Home. He was the oldest of 13 children, and his family was part of the underground during World War II and helped many Jews escape the Nazis through the Netherlands. De Leyer and his first wife, Johanna, came to America after de Leyer’s family sent the dog tags of a deceased soldier that they never met home to his parents. He and Johanna were sponsored by the soldier’s family when they arrived the United States. His first job in the country was working on his sponsor’s farm in North Carolina where
his talents for training and jumping horses were recognized. Soon after they arrived in America, the couple headed for Long Island and raised eight children in St. James. In the 1970s de Leyer and Johanna divorced. Later in life, he had a farm in East Hampton and then moved to Virginia. He also married again to his second wife, Joan. While living in St. James, in addition to being the riding instructor at The Knox School, he also gave lessons at his St. James home, Hollandia Farms. After his passing, The Knox School posted on its Facebook page. “Mr. de Leyer came to Knox in 1954 and was a beloved trainer and member of the school community,” the post read. “His legacy lives on in the hearts of those who remember how Mr. de Leyer saved Snowman from slaughter and turned a gentle giant of a plow horse into a champion jumper.” The post announced that a stall in the school’s historic equestrian center will be dedicated to the memory of Harry and Snowman in the future. Jackie Bittner, owner of Hidden Lake Farm Riding School in Southold, attended The Knox School for four years and took riding lessons from de Leyer. She said she was fortunate to keep in touch with him through the years and considered him a best friend. As a trainer, Bittner said, de Leyer was strict. “Rightfully so,” she said. “He really wanted you to do the right thing and to be a good rider. He tried to make everyone a good rider.” She said sometimes she would doubt if she was able to do a trick on a horse. “He asked you to do all kinds of things, and I say, ‘Oh, I don’t know,’ but you would do whatever he asked with the horse, because he was just the type of person that you wanted to please.” Janis Lando remembers taking lessons from him at Hollandia Farm when she lived in Smithtown. “I rode as an early teen and remembered flying over fences without hands on the reins,” she said. “He believed in the softmouth approach and more control with one’s legs. I also recall him slipping a quarter under the knee, and he expected you to hold it there as you rode.” When Laurette Berry was 13 years old and her family first moved from Manhattan to Stony Brook, she said her father signed up her and her siblings for lessons with de Leyer after a neighbor recommended him. “The very first lesson we were jumping,” she said. “We had never been on a horse before in our lives. With Harry, you either were a daredevil or he wasn’t interested.” After a few lessons, their father decided
Harry de Leyer, above, teaching Jackie Bittner and a fellow schoolmate how to ride horses at The Knox School in Nissequogue. Below, de Leyer during filming of “Harry & Snowman.” Photo above from Jackie Bittner; photo below from FilmRise
to go to another trainer as he was afraid his children would get hurt, but Berry remembers how in control de Leyer was of his horses during the short time she trained with him. “He was like the ringleader in a circus where the animals just went,” she said. “You were sitting on the horse’s back, but he was in full control of them. He was such a good trainer, and the horses just did whatever he wanted them to do.” A few years later, Berry became involved in the Smithtown Hunt Club where she encountered de Leyer once again. The club would conduct hunts all over Suffolk County from St. James, Old Field and even in the Hamptons. She remembered one time during a hunt being in the water in Head of the Harbor and seeing pieces of ice. She said de Leyer forged ahead as he did in other hunts as he wasn’t afraid of anything. Barbara Clarke, of Bridgehampton, also was involved in the foxhunts with de Leyer in the ’70s. “He was always enthusiastic and brought a lot of riders with him,” she said. “He loved it. He loved nothing better than following a pack of hounds through the woods.” Clarke remembered de Leyer from when her sister-in-law Janice attended The Knox School, and Clarke would go to some of the horse shows to see the students compete, including at Madison Square Garden. She said
he always made sure the girls were safe on the horses and described him as the “Pied Piper.” De Leyer is predeceased by Johanna and Joan and his sons Joseph, Harry Jr. and William de Leyer. He is survived by his children Harriet de Leyer, Martin and Debbie de Leyer, Andre and Christine de Leyer, John and Maria de Leyer and AnnMarie de Leyer as well as his grandchildren Charissa, Cassandra, Johnathon, Kyle, Jason, Travis, Dylan, Michaela, Andre, Johanna, Emma, Philip, Heather, Jeffery and Shane; greatgrandchildren Brayden and Addison and great-great-grandchild William Harry.
PAGE A6 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • JULY 29, 2021
County
Suffolk unveils new website dedicated to addiction and mental health resources BY JULIANNE MOSHER JULIANNE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM A new website dedicated to addiction and mental health resources has been unveiled to provide residents with easy-to-access services for those who are struggling. On Thursday, July 22, Suffolk County legislator and chairwoman of the county Legislature Health Committee, Sarah Anker (D-Mount Sinai), joined county Department of Health Services Commissioner Gregson Pigott, county Division of Community Mental Hygiene Services Director Cari Faith Besserman, together with members of the county Department of Information Technology and the county Addiction Prevention and Support Advisory Panel outside the William H. Rogers Building in Hauppauge to announce the launch of the website suffolkstopaddiction.org. The webpage was created by Resolution No. 34-2021, introduced by Anker and unanimously passed earlier this year. The legislation directed the county Department of Information Technology and the Department of Health to collaborate to create a comprehensive webpage dedicated to addiction, mental health, substance use disorder prevention and rehabilitation services. The webpage features sections that include important emergency numbers, substance use disorder and mental health information and resources, and a list of treatment providers compiled by the county Division of Community Mental Hygiene Services. “I want to thank the Suffolk County Department of Health Services, the Division of Community Mental Hygiene Services and the Department of Information Technology for their tireless work they put into creating this webpage,” Anker said. “With the concerning rise in addiction and mental health issues after a challenging year, our hope is that this webpage will help increase the accessibility of the possibly life-saving resources that are available through the Suffolk County Health Department and improve our ability to reach those who are in need of help in our county.” Anker sponsored the resolution in response to the growing opioid and substance abuse epidemic in the county and across the U.S. During an October public hearing, Victoria Sunseri, a Suffolk County constituent in the medical field, noted that it was difficult for providers to locate mental health and/or addiction resources for their patients. The panel members echoed the importance of providers being able to connect a person to treatment options and for residents to find important information in a user-friendly way. In response, Anker facilitated the creation of the webpage singularly dedicated to addiction and mental health resources and services.
Suffolk County Legislator Sarah Anker joined local officals on July 22 to talk about Suffolk’s new webpage dedicated to helping people with addiction. Photo by Julianne Mosher
“Throughout the pandemic, we have received a surge in calls from individuals seeking mental health resources from crisis intervention to addiction rehabilitation,” Sunseri said. “This mental health hub will serve to empower individuals by reducing the time and frustration they might experience while seeking help appropriate to their needs and by streamlining reception of services through increasing the salience of who does what, where and how.” This comes just days after the county Legislature convened July 12 to consider and vote on certificates of necessity concerning settlements with several defendants in the county’s pending opioid litigation. These certificates were approved promptly after legislators met in executive session to discuss details related to the litigation. On Feb. 3, 2015, county legislator and current presiding officer, Rob Calarco (D-Patchogue), introduced legislation to establish a six-member committee to determine the viability of legal action against drug manufacturers and ascertain Suffolk’s costs due to the over-prescription of opioids. Following this study, Calarco spearheaded the resolution that authorized the special counsel to commence legal action(s) against all responsible parties. The law firm of Simmons Hanly Conroy LLC was retained, on
a contingency basis, to represent the County of Suffolk in this complex litigation. Suffolk County was one of the first three counties in the United States to act against opioid manufacturers in 2015. The counties of Orange and Santa Clara in California and the city of Chicago took similar action in that same period. These settlement dollars will be used in accordance with any requirements outlined in relation to such settlement and, in all likelihood, will be put toward educational programming, treatment and other related efforts to remedy the impacts of this crisis. According to a Calarco press release following the July 12 special meeting, settlements were approved with Rite Aid of New York $1.5 million; CVS $3.5 million plus the additional amount of $500,000 if certain settlements are reached with other defendants; Walmart $3,062,500; Walgreens $5 million; Johnson & Johnson a sum between $8.4 million and $19.8 million over 10 years “to be used for restitution and abatement and agreeing not to manufacture, sell or promote opioids going forward”; and between approximately $10.4 million and $19.6 million over nine years from the Purdue/Sackler family. “When we began to experience this crisis, it quickly became apparent that our constituents were being overprescribed opioids, and this negligence is what led to the widespread addiction in our community,” Calarco said. “Pharmacies
had a responsibility to track the distribution of these medications carefully. Their failure to do so furthered the impact of this crisis by allowing individuals to pharmacy shop to obtain more of these powerful drugs. The pharmaceutical companies and their affiliates knew that they were pushing a highly addictive drug that was unsafe for long-term use. Yet, they proceeded anyway, all in the name of turning a profit.” He added that while these settlements cannot repair the damage done or bring back those who we lost to the grips of this epidemic, it has already made a substantial impact. Doctors are now prescribing medication differently, and two of the major manufacturers of these dangerous medications will cease production for good. “With this settlement, we are going to have substantial resources that we’re going to be able to put into this epidemic that’s been plaguing our county for so long, and to be able to make sure that our residents had the ability to get connected to treatment services to prevention services,” Calarco said at last Thursday’s press conference. “There are windows of time, where you have clarity, and you recognize that you need help. … We need to make sure that we have the resources there for you at those windows, so you can take advantage of that help. That’s what this resource guide is about — it’s about making sure that you know where to go.”
JULY 29, 2021 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A7
SBCH celebrates 10th anniversary BY KIMBERLY BROWN KIMBERLY@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Stony Brook Children’s Hospital gathered doctors, nurses, physicians and staff to celebrate their 10th anniversary of pediatric care this Tuesday, both in person and virtually. Throughout the years, SBCH has provided innovative research, clinical trials and breakthrough techniques to benefit pediatric patients. The hospital has more than 180 skilled pediatric specialists who cover more than 30 specialties. “We have a long history of caring for children, and it was with the generational knowledge and passion that we made the commitment to create an institution that would better meet the needs of nearly half-a-million children in Suffolk County,” said Maurie McInnis, president of Stony Brook University. Even during the pandemic, SBCH had pediatric investigators on duty, researching the effectiveness the COVID-19 vaccine has on children. Holbrook high schooler Reese Tiller attended the event and shared his experience with the children’s hospital that helped treat him when he had a cancer diagnosis. After a soccer accident left Tiller with a concussion, it was SBCH who found out through testing that he had a large mass on his chest which was discovered to be leukemia.
“I was extremely confident that Reese was in the best place and was only going to get the best care possible,” said his mother Jaimi Tiller. The Tiller family expressed their gratitude for SBCH and the effort it put into curing Reese’s illness. The hospital kept the family, including Reese, informed on every update possible. “The second I got there, I felt loved and cared for,” Reese said. The transition to the children’s hospital was easy for the Tiller family and despite being there for treatment, the overall feeling of the hospital was welcoming for all. SBCH has become a vital part of the academic and clinical mission of SBU and Stony Brook Medicine, which aim to provide the highest quality of education and training. With the dedication and passion of Stony Brook’s health care workers, SBCH has become a regional and national leader in children’s health care, and the first children’s hospital in the nation that created a center for the treatment of pediatric multiple sclerosis. “You should all be proud of the outstanding clinical quality and breadth of services Stony Brook Children’s provides,” said Dr. Margaret McGovern, vice president for Clinical Programs and Strategy for SBM. “For me personally, it has been an honor to work with all of you and see your dedication and passion for improving children’s lives has been a daily inspiration.”
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ST. JUDE NOVENA May the Sacred Heart of Jesus be adored, glorified, loved and preserved throughout the world, now and forever. May the Sacred Heart of Jesus thy kingdom come. St. Jude, helper of the hopeless, Pray For Us. St. Jude, worker of miracles, Pray For Us. This prayer is never known to fail if repeated 9 times daily for 9 consecutive days. Publication should be promised. J.B.ST. JUDE NOVENA May the Sacred Heart of Jesus be adored, glorified, loved and preserved throughout the world, now and forever. May the Sacred Heart of Jesus thy kingdom come. St. Jude, helper of the hopeless, Pray For Us. St. Jude, worker of miracles, Pray For Us. This prayer is never known to fail if repeated 9 times daily for 9 consecutive days. Publication should be promised. J.B.
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6 Newspapers/Internet Site ~ Huntington to Wading River ~ Deadline: Tuesday at noon. Call 631–331–1154 or 631–751–7663 • TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA • tbrnewsmedia.com
JULY 29, 2021 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A11
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
E M PL OY M E N T / C A R E E R S $18.50 NYC, $17 L.I. UP TO $13.50 UPSTATE NY! If you need care from your relative, friend/ neighbor and you have Medicaid, they may be eligible to start taking care of you as personal assistant under NYS Medi c a i d C D PA P r o g r a m . N o Certificates needed. 347-713-3553
Call 631-283-2266
Employment RIVERHEAD SCHOOL DISTRICT has the following positions available, school lunch monitors, special education aides, school bus drivers, substitute custodial workers, substitute special education aides & computer aides, substitute office assistants SEE THEIR DISPLAY AD FOR MORE INFORMATION. YOUR AD COULD BE HERE! CALL 631.331.1154
FRONT DESK/DENTAL ASSISTANTPART-TIME FOR LOW-KEY PORT JEFFERSON DENTAL SLEEP MEDICINE AND TMJ PRACTICE
SOME EXPERIENCE NECESSARY BUT WILL TRAIN GREAT CANDIDATE COMPUTER KNOWLEDGE A MUSTHOURS: THURSDAY/SATURDAY 10:00AM – 3:00 PM PLEASE FAX RESUME TO 631-743-9091
Email resume to scarpo57@gmail.com
OFFICE ASSISTANT Part-time position. 20 hours per week. Experience Preferred Please email resume to: Elizabeth Hine ehine@ mtsinai.k12.ny.us
SEEKING HOUSEKEEPER – GREENLAWN, NY About the Job: Family of three and three small dogs looking to employ a housekeeper immediately. Responsibilities are as follows: kitchen cleaning, dishes, sweeping/mopping floors, laundry etc.; assisting wife and daughter with physical disabilities in and out of the house. Prior housekeeping experience a plus. Must be dog friendly and willing to take care of three small dogs; all under 11 pounds. 4 days a week, 6-7 hours/day. TEXT 631-978-6435 and 646-385-4403 ©34820
RIVERHEAD CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT Employment Opportunities
Business Development
• Lunch Monitors; supervise elementary students during lunch and recess $15.25/hour • Special Education Aides; assist students in various settings, $15.31/hour benefits available
TBR News Media, a North Shore multimedia community news organization, is seeking a
• Bus Driver, permanent $25.00/hour and substitute $20.25/hour; valid and clean NYS Driver’s License, CDL Class B preferred will train, benefits available for permanent employees
Full-Time Sales Professional.
• Substitute Custodial Workers; clean school buildings, able to lift up to 50 pounds $17.50/hour
The right candidate is enthusiastic, outgoing, and a self-starter. Creative and good communication skills, works well with others. Experience is desirable, but not necessary.
• Substitute Special Education Aides & Computer Lab Aides; assist students in various settings $15.00/hour • Substitute Office Assistants; answer phones and perform clerical duties $17.50/hour Requirements: High School Diploma, NYSED Fingerprint Clearance, Spanish Speaking Preferred.
Send letters of interest to Arlene Durkalski, Director of Personnel, 700 Osborn Avenue, Riverhead, NY 11901, e-mail: arlene.durkalski@riverhead.net, 631.369.7157 Equal Opportunity Employer
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All inquiries with a resume email to addirector@tbrnewsmedia.com or call ad director at 631-751-7744
for busy retail store. Retail experience a must, be willing to learn, motivated self starter and organized.
MOUNT SINAI SCHOOL DISTRICT
©35170
LONG TERM CARPENTER Wanted. Building & Remodeling Company seeking someone with long term framing/finish carpentry/tile installation experience. SEE DISPLAY AD FOR MORE INFORMATION.
SEEKING HOUSEKEEPERGREENLAWN, NY Family of 3 and 3 small dogs. 4 days/wk, 6-7 hours/day. SEE DISPLAY FOR MORE INFORMATION.
• Kitchens/Bathrooms • Doors/Windows • Siding • Deck Building • Basement Renovations • Finished Carpentry/Moulding/Cabinet Making Qualifications: Excellent work ethic, ability to read plans, organized; ability to monitor time spent on jobs, work well with other or independently’ 5+ years’ experience; DRIVERS LICENSE NECESSARY; SS# required; fluent in English Schedule: Full-Time + O/T Available; Hourly rate to be discussed
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FRONT DESK/DENTAL ASSISTANT Part-time for low key Port Jefferson Dental Sleep Medicine and TMJ practice. Please fax resume to 631-743-9091SEE DISPLAY AD FOR MORE INFORMATION
Responsibilities and Duties Residential Remodeling: • Historical Restorations • Extensions/Dormers
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BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT TBR News Media, a north shore multi media community news organization is seeking a full time sales professional. Call Ad Director at 631-751-7744. SEE DISPLAY AD FOR MORE INFORMATION
Building & Remodeling Company seeking someone with long term framing/finish carpentry/tile installation experience.
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MOUNT SINAI SCHOOL DISTRICT OFFICE ASSISTANT Part-time position 20 hours per week Experience Preferred Please email resume to: Elizabeth Hine @ehine@mtsinai.k12.ny.us
©34970
PUBLISHER’S EMPLOYMENT NOTICE: All employment advertising in this newspaper is subject to section 296 of the human rights law which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, creed, national origin, disability, marital status, sex, age or arrest conviction record or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination. Title 29, U.S. Code Chap 630, excludes the Federal Gov’t. from the age discrimination provisions. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for employment which is in violation of the law. Our readers are informed that employment offerings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
Help Wanted
©105748
Help Wanted
PAGE A12 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • JULY 29, 2021
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
SERV ICES Cable/Telephone WIREMAN CABLEMAN Professional wiring services. Free estimates. All work guaranteed. Call 516-433-WIRE, 631-667-WIRE or text 516-353-1118. SEE DISPLAY AD FOR MORE INFORMATION.
Carpentry
Cesspool Services MR SEWERMAN CESSPOOL SERVICE All types of cesspool servicing, all work guaranteed, family owned and operated since 1985, 631-924-7502. Licensed and Insured.
Cleaning COME HOME TO A CLEAN HOUSE! Attention to detail is MY PRIORITY. Serving the Three Village Area. Call Jacquie 347-840-0890
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JULY 29, 2021 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A17
R E A L ESTAT E PUBLISHERS’ NOTICE All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination.” We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.
Open Houses SATURDAY, 7/31 AND SUNDAY 8/1, 1-3pm ROCKY POINT 14 Rosewood Rd. 5bdrm, 3ba, close to beach. $479,900 Strathmore East 631-698-3400
Rentals SETAUKET House with waterviews. Tranquil setting. 2 BR, 2 bath, LR/DR, EIK, office, sunroom, W/D. some furnishings available, No smoking. Background check. $3000 +utilities. 203-595-9410.
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PAGE A18 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • JULY 29, 2021
Editorial
Long Islanders need to be mindful
We thought that the end was near with the coronavirus, but unfortunately the new Delta variant has people across the country concerned. While many people — 68% of New Yorkers ages 18 and older — have been fully vaccinated, Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) said this week that 21 Long Island zip codes have low vaccination rates. The state will spend $15 million to target these communities in an effort to get more people vaccinated. During his press conference on Monday, Cuomo said that new daily cases have been jumping due to the highly contagious Delta variant of the virus. Cuomo added that about 75% of adults in the state have received at least one dose of the vaccine, but 25% have not — which is a total of 3.5 million people. Only 0.15% of people in the state who are vaccinated have become infected with the virus. While things have opened up again, and life seems to be back to normal, the Delta variant can change that quickly. In areas that Cuomo named, which included parts of Rocky Point, Miller Place, Selden, Port Jefferson Station and Lake Grove, the $15 million funding from the state budget will be used to strengthen communication, expand public education and enhance ongoing outreach efforts throughout diverse communities. But that isn’t enough. The fact that so many people are choosing not to get vaccinated, and who are not being careful in doing so, is concerning. We understand that there are people who have extreme health issues that prevent them from getting the jab, and we respect that. We understand that everyone has the right to choose to be vaccinated, but when there is a public health crisis that has taken the lives of so many innocent people, how could one not choose to get the shot? There is a lot of false information out there, and it’s sad to see that no one trusts science anymore. What happened to March 2020 when everyone was in this together? Why did something like a shot to prevent getting sick become so polarizing? Why are people fighting in supermarkets if they choose to wear a mask for protection, and someone who is anti-mask disagrees? Of all the new and recent COVID-19 cases statewide, 72% come from the Delta variant. Don’t we want to get back to normal? Weddings are finally allowed to include more than 50 people. Meetings are in-person again. We have a lot to look forward to, and it would be so disappointing to fall back to where we were last year because of fear or misinformation. Protect yourself. Protect your friends and family. This can be prevented.
WRITE TO US … We welcome your letters. They should be
no longer than 400 words and may be edited for length, libel, style and good taste. We do not publish anonymous letters. Please include a phone number and address for confirmation. Email letters to rita@tbrnewsmedia.com or mail them to The Times of Smithtown, P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733.
Letters to the Editor Port Jefferson Station – a great place
Martin Buchman’s recent letter in the July 22 edition highlighting the special value of the Greenway Trail [“Fears regarding Greenway Trail unfounded”] was an important reminder to all of us of this unique North Shore amenity. I’d like to add my voice to his and emphasize that the eastern trailhead of the Greenway — the Port Jefferson Station and Terryville area — is a great place to live! A hardworking, middle-class community, it has wonderful schools, terrific shopping and is just a stone’s throw away from two major hospitals. Port Jefferson Station and Terryville residents have easy access to major highways, their own rail station and, of course, the Greenway Trail. At a July “quality of life” meeting sponsored by the local PJS/T civic association, many residents voiced dismay at a perceived rising tide of problems: homelessness, trash, noise, vacant stores and governmental inaction. While the police assured community residents at this meeting that crime was down in almost every category, a “tipping point” for many residents was a nighttime stabbing at the entrance to the Greenway Trail, resulting in the death of a young man. Unfortunately, no arrest has been made at the time of this writing. No one should talk badly about the Port Jefferson Station area. It is and will remain a wonderful place — defined by its residents working together to make it even better. In fact, it was the foresight of so many area residents working cooperatively for many, many years, along with a host of elected officials, that led to the New York State Department of Transportation abandoning plans to build a bypass for cars and trucks, and, instead, make the 3.2-mile corridor a multiuse path for pedestrians and bicyclists. Today, the Greenway Trail is arguably the most used year-around recreational facility in the Port Jefferson Station-Three Village area. Each week, thousands of local residents walk, bicycle, jog and run on the trail. Some travel a small section, others go the entire length. The Greenway Trail is, and will, remain an integral part of a better, stronger and vibrant Port Jefferson Station! Herb Mones Stony Brook Herb Mones is active in Friends of the Greenway, Three Village Community Trust and Three Village Civic Association. He co-chaired, for 10 years, the Greenway Task Force that helped plan and design the Greenway.
Matters of scientific fact, observation
The letter by Desmond O’Sullivan in the July 15 edition [“Cherry-picking does a disservice”] accusing Shoshana Hershkowitz and Adam Fisher of “cherrypicking whatever fits one’s own narratives” made me laugh. That’s because it seems Mr. O’Sullivan has been picking a few very ripe cherries of his own. He writes that medical opinion supporting vaccination is “disputed by extremely competent medical professionals.” Who exactly are these “extremely competent medical professionals?” Are they specialists in the field of epidemiology, immunology or public health? Or are they heart specialists, oncologists or chiropodists? Looks like Mr. O’Sullivan has picked a somewhat rotten cherry here, since the overwhelming consensus among all medical professionals is that vaccination, particularly against COVID-19, is essential if we are to have any realistic hope of emerging from this pandemic without the virus evolving into yet more contagious, deadly and possibly vaccine-proof variants first. One doesn’t even have to be an extremely competent medical professional to be aware of some basic facts. Up until the 19th century, smallpox was one of the most common and deadly diseases afflicting humanity. What enabled humanity to end this scourge? The very first vaccine developed! Polio was a major scourge within living memory. What enabled us to eliminate it except for a few areas in the world where resistance to vaccination is encouraged? A vaccine. In 2000 measles was declared eliminated from the U.S. However, 14 years later an outbreak occurred centered on Disneyland, California. What allowed measles to regain a foothold in the U.S.? Failure to vaccinate against it. You don’t have to be Sherlock Holmes to reach the obvious conclusion about vaccination and deadly contagious diseases. These are not cherry-picked facts; they’re matters of observation and scientific fact. As for U.S. Rep. Lee Zeldin [R-NY1], it’s not cherry-picking facts to point out he’s far more interested in advancing his political career than in doing what’s best for his constituents. As part of the Republican majority when the tax bill of 2017 was passed cutting the SALT deduction to the detriment of many of his constituents, what did Zeldin do? He had bargaining power then. Did he use it? No, he was afraid of angering the leaders of his party including former President Donald Trump [R]. Why does Zeldin vote against every effort to reduce greenhouse gases, including measures to
reduce methane emissions at oil and gas wells? Must be the oil and gas industry has a huge presence on Long Island, creating thousands of jobs. Oh wait — that’s not true. And it’s not like we on Long Island, being surrounded by water and with an elevation for the most part of below 50 feet, have nothing to fear from global warming. I’m not cherry-picking Zeldin’s record of pleasing bigwigs of his party at the expense of his constituents; there are plenty more examples, but space doesn’t permit. But anybody who’s been following his political career knows what the score is. David Friedman St. James
Get up already
I agree with the letter written by Art Billadello of East Setauket in the July 8 edition, “Are you awake or woke.” Pragmatically speaking, this letter was “right on the money.” In my opinion, it cannot be debated among sanethinking, patriotic, law-abiding citizens of America. For example: Say bye-bye to the statue of Lewis and Clark featuring Sacagawea [in Charlottesville, Virginia]. Down it comes! Why? Because she was depicted as crouching behind two white men. To some it is disparaging. On the other hand, to some she is looked upon as their guide doing her job, looking down and tracking. And what about the statue of Pee Wee Reese and Jackie Robinson [of the Brooklyn Dodgers, located in Coney Island], two of America’s greatest baseball players, working together as a team — one a white man and the other an African American. Is this woke because these two men were united, instead of being divided? And what about the statue of the three women consisting of Sojourner Truth, Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton in Central Park, one African American woman and two white women. Three women working in unity instead of division in the struggle for women’s rights. Will this too be considered woke at some point? Time out people! Start working together instead of looking for reasons not to work together. Aren’t you tired of acting like children instead of grownups? I know it’s easy to go along in order to get along, but I bet most of you are fed up with this ridiculous word woke, but don’t have the fortitude to admit it. I remember when woke meant when you got up! So why don’t all of you get up already? Rhoda Angelier Port Jefferson Station
The opinions of columnists and letter writers are their own. They do not speak for the newspaper.
JULY 29, 2021 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A19
Opinion
Parenting milestones: from a deer in the headlights to planning vacations for two
O
ne day, you wake up and your kids who called noodles “noonies” are getting ready for college. No, not exactly. It’s a long journey filled with skinned knees, ripped tee shirts — don’t ask -— eye rolling and muttering between clenched teeth. Still, here we are, as our kids prepare to move on from the educational minor leagues. Along the way, we went through numerous milestones. Please find below a few of the phases in D. None our journey. of the above — Deer in the headlights. I’ve seen BY DANIEL DUNAIEF deer in my headlights. The only difference between them and us
when we first brought our children home is that the deer’s eyes are open much wider. We almost instantly became sleep-deprived. Other than that, we had that frozen not-surewhere-to-move feeling, knowing we had to do something, but not exactly sure what or in what order to take care of those needs. — Hating everyone. People meant well back in the days when our children were young and cried. Numerous people, who didn’t live with or even know our needy infants, offered unsolicited advice about what this scream or that scream meant. Strangers would tell us how our daughter’s cry meant she had gas, was hungry, needed her diaper changed, or was hot or cold. Yes, thanks, those are the options. Thanks for the help! — Cooking the plastics. Yup, back in the early days, I was so sleep deprived that I put plastic bottles in a pot of boiling water to sterilize them and fell asleep. It wasn’t until I smelled the burning plastic that I realized how long I’d been out.
— Carrying everything: We couldn’t go four blocks without a diaper bag filled with everything, including the special toy each of them needed, diapers, wipes, ointment, sunscreen, bug spray, rain jackets, boots, and extra clothing. — Straining our backs: Picking the kids up and playing with them was fun when they were under 20 pounds. When they reached 50 and above, holding them the entire length of a ski slope became impossible. — Crazy sports parents: This phase lasted much longer than it should have. It was only when the kids reached late middle school that I appreciated the fresh air, the sparkling sunlight and the excitement of the moment. Exercise and making friends are the goal. Everything else, including winning, is gravy. — Giving them space (aka, it’s not about us). As they reached adolescence, our children needed to make their own decisions. Tempting as it was to jump in and redirect them or even to kiss them before they left the car for middle
school, we bit our tongues as often as we could, leaving us feeling lonely and nostalgic in our cars as they joined their friends. — Beautiful naps: Giving them space allowed us to do what we wanted. After years of living our lives while monitoring and helping theirs, we had a chance to do exactly what we wanted, which started with restorative naps. — Sending them into space. We aren’t putting them in a Jeff Bezos rocket ship or sending them to the International Space Station, but we are preparing to give them an opportunity to explore the world outside our house. — Looking at the calendar differently. With both of them on the way to their futures, we can choose places to visit that didn’t interest them. We can visit these places when school is in session, which should mean lower costs for us. — Telling other people how to take care of their kids: With our free time, we see parents struggling with young children. We, of course, know better. Or maybe not.
What could be worse than COVID-19?
A
t this time of renewed attention to COVID-19, I recommend escapism. I have managed it, and this is how I did it. I immersed myself in two books, one after the other. They weren’t great classics, just handme-downs from a person whose reading tastes I respect. He gave me both books, and like a magic carpet ride, they took me to a different time and place with interesting characters for travel companions. I enjoy historical fiction, and interestingly enough, both books use the siege of Leningrad by the Nazis during World War II as a critical Between context for their plots. you and me Although we are being BY LEAH S. DUNAIEF laid siege today by a malevolent virus, that act of war almost exactly 80 years ago was far different. Hitler wanted
to bomb the city into oblivion, believing that Eastern Europeans were worthless, and survivors were to be starved to death. The German army was under orders not to accept any truce offer that might be extended to them by the city leadership. The siege began on Sept. 8, 1941, and ended, after 872 days of torment, on Jan. 27, 1944. The pre-war population of about two and a half million was reduced at the end to about 800,000 by extreme famine, disease and artillery strikes, one of the most destructive blockades in history. To make matters even worse, that first winter saw temperatures plummet as low as - 40 degrees. The dead piled up in the streets. There were even instances of cannibalism. The survivors were marked forever. This is a major catalyst of the first book, “Winter Garden,” by best-selling author, Kristin Hannah. It is the story of the relationship between a mother and her two daughters, and between the daughters themselves, that bears the aftereffects of what has been termed by historians as attempted genocide in Leningrad. Anya is a cold and disapproving mother to
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her children, and they feel cast out to survive emotionally, each in their own way as they grow up. The glue that holds the family together is the father, and when he becomes terminally ill, the dysfunction of the women is clearly revealed. The writing is dramatic and manages to sustain a heart-rending pathos as the plot builds. I tried to keep a dry eye as I read, but in vain. Each continuing episode tugged at my heart and my tears flowed anew with just about every chapter. The surprise ending is a stunner. Having barely recovered from Hannah’s epic story, I plowed into “City of Thieves,” by David Benioff. Unlike “Winter Garden,” in which the siege of Leningrad is considered for its profound and intergenerational consequences half a century later, Benioff’s main characters deal with the horror as it is unfolding. Seventeen-year-old Lev and 20-year-old Kolya somehow manage to make this into a coming-of-age story, with some laugh-out-loud dialogue even as they are fighting to survive. But don’t be misled. This account of the tragedy of Leningrad is, if anything, more brutal for its contemporaneous setting.
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 Minnie Yancey SPECIAL PROJECTS MANAGER Kathryn Mandracchia
The two young men, through a bit of incredible yet somehow acceptable events, are sent off by a Soviet colonel amidst a starving city in search of a dozen eggs. It might as well be the holy grail for Arthurian medieval knights. In the course of the quest, they see and sometimes experience some of the individual terrors of the siege in what Benioff claims is historically accurate fashion. Benioff has delineated the plot according to specifics in Harrison Salisbury’s book, “The 900 Days,” and Curzio Malaparte’s “Kaputt.” The latter, a novel published in 1946 by an Italian war correspondent, is about the descent of European civilization on the Eastern Front during World War II, and the former, written in 1969, is by the respected American journalist detailing the definitive story of the prolonged battle. Benioff cites them as sources for his novel. They were hardly light reading, these two books my friend gave me, but they certainly kept my attention. They also taught me a bit, as good books do.
ART AND PRODUCTION DIRECTOR Beth Heller Mason PRODUCTION Janet Fortuna Sharon Nicholson CLASSIFIEDS DIRECTOR & SUBSCRIPTIONS MANAGER Sheila Murray
CLASSIFIEDS Joann Brady BUSINESS MANAGER Sandi Gross CIRCULATION MANAGER Courtney Biondo INTERNET STRATEGY DIRECTOR Rob Alfano
PAGE A20 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • JULY 29, 2021
ELEGANT EATING FROM OUR GARDEN...
TO YOUR TABLE...
Elegant Eating uses its garden to set us apart. When placing an order come and take a tour of our garden to observe the source of our seasonal offerings. The ingredients for our “Garden Salad” best reflects Elegant Eating’s farm-to-table philosophy. Each day Myra and Neil head out the back door of Elegant Eating to the source of much of their culinary inspiration, a one-third acre organic garden that produces fruit trees, asparagus, herbs, carrots, heirloom tomatoes, strawberries, squash, and more. In less than a few hours, some of the day’s harvest will make its way from the garden into customers’ orders for our “Garden Salad” and many other dishes. With a short growing season on Long Island, we take advantage of the just-picked produce and put it on the menu as much as we can. We have been serving our customers for the past 39 years and are always looking for new and exciting dishes to add to our menu. We take pride in being a sustainable caterer sourcing local produce whenever possible. Thank you to all our clients who have supported us for the past 39 years!
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