The Times of Smithtown - October 21, 2021

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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. 35

October 21, 2021

$1.00 PHOTO FROM TOWN OF SMITHTOWN

Spooktacular fun Hoyt Farm hosts annual Halloweekend Festival — A3

Standing up for diversity, equity and inclusion

Parents, educators and students rally for DEI

A5

41st annual Setauket Artists exhibition opens this weekend Also: Halloween Happenings on the North Shore, Halloween Kills reviewed

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PAGE A2 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • OCTOBER 21, 2021

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OCTOBER 21, 2021 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A3

Town

Halloween festival returns

Hoyt Farm Nature Preserve hosted its 16th annual Halloweekend on Saturday, Oct. 16, and Sunday, Oct. 17. The sold out event attracted roughly 1200 residents, between both days. Families enjoyed touring the preserve and playing games, going on hay rides, picking pumpkin, face painting, drinking hot apple cider and piping hot chocolate and more. “I am so grateful for the team at Hoyt Farm and our Parks Department,” Town of Smithtown Superintendent Ed Wehrheim (R) said. “This is one of those events I refuse to miss every year. My grandkids have the time of

their lives ... and honestly so do I. Jeff, Sheryl, Kate, Dominick and the team at Hoyt Farm put so much passion and thoughtfulness into planning and orchestrating this event. It is truly indicative of how much they all love what they do and the community they do it for.” The staff enjoyed preparing for the annual festival, according to Jeff Gurmin, director of Hoyt Farm Nature Preserve. “We love to be able to transform Hoyt Farm from one of Smithtown’s hidden gems into a timeless world of dreams and fantasies,” Gurmin said. — Photos from Town of Smithtown

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PAGE A4 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • OCTOBER 21, 2021

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OCTOBER 21, 2021 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A5

County

DEI supporters rally at expressway welcome center

BY RITA J. EGAN RITA@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM School doors across Suffolk County may have been closed to study on Sunday, Oct. 17, but at the Long Island Welcome Center between exits 51 and 52 on the expressway, education was on many people’s minds. Long Island Parents for DEI headed up the Commack rally to show support for diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives in public schools. The event drew dozens of parents, educators and advocates and was cosponsored by Suffolk Progressives, Moms Against Racism and student-led Voices for Change. The subject of diversity, equity and inclusion programs in local schools has been a topic of debate at many school board meetings earlier this year, including Smithtown Central School District. DEI programs aim to make every student feel included and to create a culture of open-mindedness and objectivity regarding race, ethnicity, gender, culture, sexual orientations and disabilities. In an email after the rally, Shoshana Hershkowitz, founder of Suffolk Progressives, said she believes the misconception many have is that they think the DEI “curriculum is divisive.”

“DEI allows us to gain empathy and understanding for experiences and perspectives that are different than ours, and I believe it is ultimately an excellent preparation for our students becoming global citizens of the 21st century,” she said. Many have confused the program with critical race theory, which is an academic concept that looks at how racism is embedded in legal systems and politics — and not just a matter of individual bias or prejudice. According to a press release before the rally, the protesters’ goal was “to highlight the broad support for DEI initiatives.” Among those who stopped by to show support were Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone (D) and county Legislator Jason Richberg (D-West Babylon). Long Island Parents for DEI president, Amanda Cohen-Stein of Miller Place, founded the group in June to respond to what she described as “the rise of extremist groups on Long Island” who have not only targeted DEI learning but also mask wearing in schools. “We chose to connect with three other fabulous organizations — Suffolk Progressives, Moms Against Racism and student-led group Voices of Change — to hold our first-ever rally this past Sunday to support our mission of promoting the DEI

Protesters came out to support DEI programs in local schools on Oct. 17. Photo from Shoshana Hershkowitz

initiative passed down by the NYS Board of Regents and to deliver the truth about DEI to our boards of education and our communities,” she said in a statement. “I felt it was important to hold this event at the L.I. Welcome Center on the LIE to amplify the message that the hate these people are displaying toward diverse groups of students and other human beings will not be tolerated

on L.I. and that the majority of Long Islanders do not support this extremist behavior.” She added Parents for DEI has started a nonprofit with the goal “to continue to bring the truth about DEI to every school district and community on Long Island. We are working toward ensuring that our L.I. schools implement DEI programs and follow through on the commitment to be equitable and inclusive.”

Suozzi honors local police who have displayed exemplary heroism On Oct. 14, U.S. Rep. Tom Suozzi (D-NY3) stood outside the Glen Cove Police Department to host his second annual Hometown Heroes event, where he honored and thanked 11 law enforcement officers from across New York’s 3rd Congressional District who displayed exemplary heroism in the line of duty in service to local communities. During the ceremony, Suozzi shared how the exceptional work of each officer saved the lives of New Yorkers. “Every day, 24 hours a day, seven days a week, members of our local police departments are protecting us, and serving us,” Suozzi said. “Police have some of the hardest jobs in the country. These are tough times for them. We must support them and understand they are protecting our community. We cannot allow defund the police or antipolice rhetoric to discourage them. Today, we are highlighting just a few police officers who represent the good work done by members of our local police departments every day, and we say, ‘Thank you.’” Among those Suozzi honored were officers from Suffolk County Police Department Emergency Service Section as well as from the Nassau County Police Department, Glen Cove Police Department and New York Police

Department. Each officer was presented with a flag that had been flown over the U.S. Capitol, as well as a congressional citation. The SCPD officers included Lt. Thomas Zagajeski and Sgt. Ryan Sefton, with police officers Kevin Williamson, Daniel Colondona, Keith Jordan and Michael Cummings. These officers were unable to attend, but Deputy Inspector John Sumwalt came to the ceremony in their place. Suozzi’s recognition related to an April 25 incident when the Emergency Service Section officers responded to a call that a Medford man had assaulted a woman with a knife, barricading himself in her Kings Park home and holding the woman hostage for approximately eight hours. According to an April 26 press release from the SCPD, the 33-year-old woman sustained knife wounds in the incident. There were also two children in the home who were unharmed. The perpetrator then fled on foot and entered a neighboring home where he held a 77-year-old woman hostage. The officers involved helped the women and young children escape, as well as carrying out negotiations with the suspect until he finally emerged from the home peacefully.

Congressman Tom Suozzi poses with local officers he honored on Oct. 14. Photo from Suozzi’s office


PAGE A6 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • OCTOBER 21, 2021

Community News

Police

Photo from Rob Trotta’s office

Trotta checks out the improvements to County Road 14 Suffolk County Legislator Rob Trotta (R-Fort Salonga), right, was joined by local businessman Larry Flynn to check on the improvements to County Road 14, which is being done from Old Northport Road to Route 25A in Kings Park. The work, anticipated to be completed by this November, entails resurfacing the roadway, drainage repairs, sidewalk improvements and

traffic signal work. According to Larry Flynn, these are the first sidewalk improvements since 1963 on Indian Head Road. “I was only 2 then,” Trotta said. “It is one of the few county roads in my district you can expect the road to be repaved after the sidewalk and curbs are done. I wish I had more pull on the LIE.”

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Police search for man allegedly involved in Commack petit larceny case Suffolk County Crime Stoppers and Suffolk County Police Fourth Precinct Crime Section officers are seeking the public’s help to identify and locate the man who allegedly stole merchandise from a Commack store earlier this month. A man allegedly stole more than $600 worth of merchandise from Target, located at 98 Veterans Memorial Highway, on Oct. 10 at approximately 7:45 p.m.

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OCTOBER 21, 2021 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A7

Health

Doctors discuss potential mix-n-match COVID boosters

BY DANIEL DUNAIEF DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM With the Food and Drug Administration expected to vote this week on boosters for Johnson & Johnson and Moderna vaccines for COVID-19, local doctors suggested the current studies may support some switching, particularly for those who received a single dose of Johnson & Johnson. “There is preliminary data that has demonstrated that mixing and matching the vaccines may be beneficial,” said Dr. Sunil Dhuper, chief medical officer at Port Jefferson’s St. Charles Hospital. Indeed, recent studies suggested that people who received the J&J vaccine had a considerably higher increase in their antibody response from a Moderna booster than from a second J&J shot. “There may be some merit” to switching from the traditional method J&J deployed to create an antibody response to the mRNAbased approach from Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna, Dhuper added. Dr. Adrian Popp, chair of Infection Control at Huntington Hospital, added that

data from studies with J&J are “showing that folks who received the initial J&J vaccine may benefit from receiving a booster with Pfizer or Moderna as this may lead to a very high immune response.” As for side effects from the boosters, Popp explained that the reactions are similar to those for the initial series of vaccinations. In an email, Popp noted that the Moderna booster is half the dose of the original shots, which “may lead to a decrease in side effects.” Dr. Susan Donelan, medical director of the Healthcare Epidemiology Department at Stony Brook Medicine and assistant professor of Infectious Diseases in the Renaissance School of Medicine at Stony Brook University, is pleased that “many people are quite eager to obtain boosters. This bodes well for enhanced protection as we enter the indoor/ holiday season.” In another encouraging sign, the percentage of people who have tested positive for COVID-19 in Suffolk County continues to decline, with the seven-day average falling to 3% as of Oct. 19, which is down from 4.2% a month earlier, according to the Suffolk County Department of Health.

Stock photo

Sporting events

Meanwhile, people have been attending college and professional sporting events in large numbers, often without masks. These competitions haven’t yet produced documented superspreader events. “Outdoor venues overall provide a reduced opportunity for spread compared to indoor events,” Donelan explained in an email. “If proof of vaccination or a negative

test within a set time frame (e.g. 72 hours) before the event is required for entry, it is reasonable to anticipate that inadvertent spread can be limited.” Other health care professionals also suggested that outdoor events, despite thousands of people standing and shouting to urge on their teams, presented lower risk than indoor gatherings. “In an outdoor event, the virus would get diluted within seconds,” said Duper. “You’re not going to get a high dose” of any viral particles at such a gathering. As for the bigger picture, Popp said he is “happy to report that, as of Oct. 6, the fully vaccinated rate is 69% in Nassau and 65% in Suffolk. It is not as high as we would like to see, but it is an increase of 7% to 8% since July 29.” Health care professionals urged residents who haven’t already done so to get a flu shot soon. “With all the attention on COVID vaccinations, masks will come off as people are reassured that they are safer in regards to COVID, and flu will ‘take advantage’ of this scenario,” Donelan explained. “We need to be vaccinated against both viruses.”

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PAGE A8 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • OCTOBER 21, 2021

Health

Suffolk County hospitals feature procedure to ease chronic lower back pain BY DANIEL DUNAIEF DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Over 30 years as a plumber took its toll on Daniel Tuttle. The 79-year old Northport resident felt daily pain in his lower back, which limited his ability to walk for any length of time. “I always lifted up [stuff] you shouldn’t lift,” Tuttle said. “It was too heavy. Over the years, I got more and more pain.” Tuttle visited several specialists. His cardiologist recommended he see Dr. Frank Ocasio, director of Acute Pain Management and chair of Pain Management at Huntington Hospital and the director of North Shore Head and Spine in Huntington. Ocasio recently started performing a therapeutic treatment called Intracept, which involves cutting a small incision in the back, inserting a tube and providing enough heat to deactivate the nerve that causes chronic lower back pain. About a month after the procedure, Tuttle is pleased to report that his pain has declined from “an 11” to closer to a three on a daily basis. Several doctors around Long Island have provided the Intracept procedure, which was developed by Relievant Medsystems, over the last few years, including at Stony Brook University and Port Jefferson’s St. Charles Hospital. Dr. Jonathan Raanan, assistant professor of Neurosurgery, Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation in the Department of Neurosurgery at the Renaissance School of Medicine at Stony Brook University, has performed about 10 such surgeries over the last

few years. Raanan described such lower back pain that lasts more than six months or a year as being something of a “big black hole” in terms of treatment. In a magnetic resonance image, the disc becomes darker, indicating it doesn’t have good hydration and that it isn’t an effective shock absorber. Intracept can help reduce the pain. “It’s very satisfying when someone comes in who has tried everything but the kitchen sink to treat this” who then says “I do feel better,” Raanan said. Tuttle’s wife Susan, who has been married to him for over three decades, said the procedure has improved his quality of life. Susan Tuttle said her husband has been able to “do everything he wanted to do.” Ocasio found the idea of Intracept appealing, particularly because it was a one-time effort that didn’t require ongoing follow up visits. “There’s not much out there in the pain management space that’s a non medication, a non-opioid strategy that’s a one and done,” Ocasio said. The surgery is an outpatient procedure and can take anywhere from 45 minutes to two hours, depending on the area over which the nerve is sending a repeated pain signal. Patients either receive mild sedation or are under general anesthesia. “People see results within weeks,” Ocasio said. In some cases, they can get relief within 24 hours. To be sure, the procedure, as with any, involves some level of risk and isn’t appropriate

School News Accompsett Middle School

International welcome

Visitors to Accompsett Middle School now will be greeted with an international flair. After Assistant Principal Theresa Donohue shared the idea with teachers Melanie Ulloa and Scott Freiberger, the educators enlisted the help of ENL students at the school to create “welcome” signs in their native languages. On Oct. 18, the group of staff and students affixed the welcome signs in eight languages to a post at the school’s entrance. The languages represented on the signs in addition to English — Hebrew, Hungarian, Korean, Mandarin, Spanish, Turkish and

Ukrainian — are the native languages of the ENL students currently at Accompsett Middle School. Accompsett is an English as a New Language magnet school for the district. Students handled all facets of the sign creation — stenciling and painting the words, sawing and sanding the signs, and screwing the signs into a post at the school’s entrance. The last step included Principal Paul McNeil, since he had the height and arm span to reach the very top of the post to affix the final two signs. A similar set of “farewell” signs soon will be installed. — Photos from Smithtown Central School District

Daniel Tuttle, who received the therapeutic treatment Intracept for back pain, enjoys a ride on a boat. Photo from Tuttle

for everyone. Raanan advised potential patients to discuss the risks and benefits with any provider. Starting in January, Intracept will have a Current Procedural Terminology, or CPT, code, which will give health care providers a standard way to describe the procedure and insurance companies a way of determining patient eligibility. Until then, patients need to appeal to indicate to insurance companies what other treatments they’ve had for back pain. In Raanan’s experience, patients sometimes have flare-ups of other pain that is similar to

sciatic discomfort after the treatment for days or even weeks after Intracept. “That might be a reasonable trade-off in the eyes of the patient,” Raanan added. Deadening the nerve doesn’t cause any loss of control of motor function, Ocasio said, as the nerve provides a sensory benefit while others provide necessary muscle control. “You still have multiple nerves around that area,” Ocasio added. Candidates for this procedure typically have lower back pain associated with activities that require bending forward, like loading a dishwasher or flexing at the waist, Ocasio described. Ocasio said doctors who perform Intracept receive training under guidance from the company. Patients interested in this approach are anywhere from their 30s through their late 70s, local doctors said. For Daniel Tuttle, the procedure provided relief. “He’s outside, puttering around, doing the things that make him happy,” Susan Tuttle said. “It gave me my lifestyle back,” Daniel Tuttle said. The Tuttles are planning a trip to Italy next summer. Raanan cautioned that, for at least one patient, the relief led to another problem. A female patient returned to working out in the gym, where she exercised so vigorously that she created a different spine injury that he treated. “When patients feel better, they have to remember they are still vulnerable,” Raanan said. “Poor mechanics, postures, flexibility or excessive and prolonged activity come with some risk.”


OCTOBER 21, 2021 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A9

WOULD YOU HELP SOCIALISTS DEFUND-THEPOLICE? ROB TROTTA DID. It’s no secret that Rob Trotta is holding a grudge against our County police. He even admitted that he only ran for office to “become their boss.”1 Maybe that’s why he’s willing to work with defund-the-police socialists on his agenda, but the people he should be listening to are the families he serves, and the police who protect and serve all of us.

VOTE

NO ON Rob Trotta 1 https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/26/opinion/police-suffolk-county-unions.html

PAID FOR BY THE LONG ISLAND LAW ENFORCEMENT FOUNDATION. This communication was not expressly authorized or requested by any candidate or by any candidate’s political committees or any of its agents.

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On November 2, Reject Trotta the Traitor!


PAGE A10 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • OCTOBER 21, 2021

Sports

Go to tbrnewsmedia.com for more sports photos

Bulls fall to Sachem, 5-0

BY BILL LANDON

WE’RE OPEN!!

Smithtown West (5-7) had their hands full when Sachem East (11-1) came to visit in a Division I matchup where the Bulls struggled to find traction falling to the Flaming Arrows, 5-0, Oct 19. Smithtown West goalie made 10 saves on the day. The loss all but extinguishes the Bulls from a post-season appearance with one game

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remaining. Smithtown West will host Pat-Med (7-5) Oct. 21 with a 4:30 start. Pictured clockwise from above left, Smithtown West senior Alison Tom battles a Sachem East defender; senior midfielder Gillian DiCostanzo advances the ball for the Bulls; and Smithtown West junior Kaitlyn Singleton pushes upfield in the home game against Sachem East Oct 19. — Photos by Bill Landon


OCTOBER 21, 2021 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A11

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PAGE A12 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • OCTOBER 21, 2021

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PAGE A16 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • OCTOBER 21, 2021

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OCTOBER 21, 2021 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A17

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PAGE A18 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • OCTOBER 21, 2021

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PAGE A22 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • OCTOBER 21, 2021

Editorial

Letters to the Editor Setting a dangerous precedent

Stock photo

Fall cleanups Over the summer, dozens of nonprofits and organizations hosted beach and park cleanups across Long Island. People came together with their trash bags in hand to pick up debris and trash. Families made days out of it, grabbing dinner afterward with the kids. Couples turned it into a bonding experience. While it’s inspirational and helpful for members of the community to work together to clean up the communities in which we live, shouldn’t the town government take the lead with these efforts? To that end, the road along Route 25A in Setauket has eyesores that detract from the beauty and safety of our community, including several dead trees, overgrown gardens, leaves and debris. Street lights that protect pedestrians and help drivers navigate the area are dimming, making them less useful as we approach days with less sunlight. Long Islanders receive and appreciate the return on investment from their taxes, particularly when roads are cleared after a storm or when children receive excellent educations from public schools. Given the tax bill, however, shouldn’t the town be able to use some of that money for upkeep? The community doesn’t police itself and shouldn’t need to clean up accumulating messes or detritus from trees or other vegetative growth. Residents can, and should, dispose of their own trash. Landlords should also take responsibility for the space outside their residences. As for those public places the village, town or county oversees, those responsible for upkeep on those properties should step up their game. We appreciate the work the municipalities do, particularly under difficult circumstances and, at times, with limited resources. We are also grateful to the go-getters whose efforts enhance the beauty of the communities we share. At the same time, we need our elected officials and people with authority to take action to remove these dead trees, fix dim lights and remove garbage by the side of the road. The effort they put in now will save money and aggravation later, as well as improve the local environment.

An open letter to County Executive Steve Bellone [D]: The Suffolk County Legislature recently passed a bill — unfortunately supported by Legislators Kara Hahn [D-Setauket] and Sarah Anker [D-Mount Sinai] — introduced at your request and which you recently signed into law to allow nearly 300 acres of public parkland, including more than a 1-mile stretch of the Peconic River, to be leased for 25 more years for the exclusive use of the Peconic River Sportsman’s Club. This use of public parkland, owned by all county residents, for exclusive use by the members of the hunting club, puts private interests in front of the public’s. It betrays the public trust, establishes a very dangerous precedent and has the potential to undercut public support for future acquisition of parkland and open space. If operational control and exclusive use of this public parkland can be turned over to a private entity, then what park is next? Turn Indian Island County Park over as a private golf course or let Smith Point County Park become an exclusive, privately run beach club? Please keep in mind, County Executive Bellone, that as of today, county residents have been prohibited, because of past leases, from using land they own for 57 years. Add another 25 years in the lease extension you promoted, and it will be more than 80 years in which county residents will have been banned from their own land and river. This is wrong, unacceptable and must not stand. While much damage has been done by the passage of this ill-conceived and dangerous proposal, you have the ability to reduce its damage by providing meaningful public access to land they own. You can do this by instructing your county parks commissioner, Jason Smagin, to include in the lease language a requirement that sets a number of days each week or month that residents can visit the county property, such as making the property open for residents every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. There is nothing more sacred than public parks held in the public trust. This law is a stain on the county’s exceptionally successful and proud park acquisition

and management legacy. Please stand up for Suffolk County taxpayers over the interests of a private shooting club by ensuring taxpayers can enjoy the land they collectively own. John Turner, East Setauket Conservation Policy Advocate Seatuck Environmental Association

What’s wrong with today’s politics

The most recent letter to the editor attacking Congressman Lee Zeldin [R-NY1] by frequent letter writer Shoshana Hershkowitz [“Public health has become politicized,” Oct. 7] is a good example of what is wrong with today’s politics. She accuses Zeldin of playing politics and yet her entire letter— as all of her quite numerous anti-Zeldin letters do — proceeds to leave out facts. The congressman is simply calling for a more reasonable policy that respects our heroes in health care, while avoiding staffing shortages at the worst possible time. Why do progressives embrace authoritative measures so quickly against health care workers that were literally putting their own lives in danger in the beginning of the pandemic? Why is it so unthinkable for Ms. Hershkowitz to give a health care worker who has had COVID-19 and acquired natural immunity a testing option? Or why couldn’t the policy allow for workers to wear an N95 mask when dealing with patients? The supply of masks that actually stop virus particles — unlike cloth masks — has increased and these professionals are trained to properly wear them. Why is naturally acquired immunity not embraced by progressives even though there have been numerous studies released by reputable sources, including the Cleveland Clinic, Washington University in St. Louis, a Johns Hopkins University professor and a major study out of Israel, that show it can be more effective than vaccinated immunity, and that prior COVID infection induces “robust” and “longlived immune response”? Why do all the people that claim to “follow the

science” leave out any mention of these options for health care workers? They deserve more than a lawn sign saying “thank you,” they deserve reasonable, sensible, fact-based options. Another disturbing issue revealed in her anti-Zeldin letter is what is destroying civil discourse and politics in this country. She stated it is “a failure of leadership and of morals.” That is the problem, folks. Why can’t the discussion stay on topic regarding science and facts and reason? Is it really immoral to offer health care workers — many of whom are our neighbors that risked their lives — a safe way to keep doing their jobs? I have not heard Republican leaders say to not get vaccinated. I am not against vaccines. I am against people who make every issue a moral one when it is something that can be addressed fairly by making reasonable accommodations for the health care workers who most certainly earned them. Charles Cozzolino Setauket

Biden needs to end the filibuster

In November 2020, millions of voters like me went to the polls and cast a ballot for Joe Biden [D]. Now, with a relentless GOP attack on our voting rights underway, I’m asking President Biden to return the favor. It’s time for Biden to go further than talking about supporting voting rights legislation. We need him to come out and fully support ending the filibuster so the U.S. Senate can finally pass voting rights legislation like the Freedom to Vote Act and the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act. With the filibuster intact, these bills stand little chance of passing. We need the president to use his power of office to pressure the Senate to end the filibuster and clear a path for voting rights reform. We can’t outorganize voter suppression. History will remember how Biden handles these attacks on our right to vote. I’m urging him to do the right thing. Tricia Kilcommons Miller Place

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.

We don’t accept letters of support on behalf of candidates in the last issue before Election Day when there is no chance for rebuttal. We will continue to publish any letters we receive on our website. Instead, we will be featuring our candidate endorsements on this page along with articles based on our interviews and a sample ballot elsewhere in the paper.


OCTOBER 21, 2021 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A23

Opinion Thoughts on items to include in a 2021 time capsule

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ith 10 weeks left until the end of 2021, it seems fitting to consider what we might put into a time capsule that future generations might open to understand the strange world that was so incredibly different from the one just two years ago. Here are a few items I’d throw into a box I’d bury or shoot into space. — Masks. Even with so many events where people aren’t wearing masks, including huge D. None gatherings of fans at sporting events, masks of the above are still a part of our BY DANIEL DUNAIEF lives in 2021. — A Netflix app. I’m not a streaming TV person. Most of my regular TV watching involves sports or movies (many of which I’ve seen a few times before). Still, I got caught up in the “Stranger Things” phenomenon and am now impressed with the storylines from

“Madam Secretary,” which include prescient references to our withdrawal from Afghanistan and to the potential (and now real) pandemic. — Pet paraphernalia. The number of homes with pets has climbed dramatically, as people who seemed unwilling or uninterested in having dogs are out with their collection of poop bags, leashes and pieces of dog food to entice the wayward wanderer in the right direction. — A zoom app. Even with people returning to work, many of us are still interacting with large groups of people on a divided screen. Future generations may find all this normal and the start of eSocializing and virtual working. Many of us today are still trying to figure out where to look and avoid the temptation to scrutinize our own image. — Cargo ships. The year started off in March with the blocking of the Suez Canal. For six days, the Ever Given kept one of the world’s most important canals from functioning, blocking container ships from going from the Mediterranean Sea to the Red Sea. As the year has progressed, concerns about shortages and supply chains have triggered fears about empty shelves.

— A small model of the Enterprise. The ship from the show “Star Trek” seems apt in a 2021 time capsule in part because William Shatner, who played the fictional Captain James T. Kirk (or admiral, if you’re also a fan of the movies), traveled briefly into space. In many ways, the science fiction of the past — a telephone that allowed you to look at someone else — is the fact of the present, with FaceTime and the aforementioned zoom. — Competing signs. Protesting seems to have returned in full force this year. As the year comes to a close, people who do and don’t believe in vaccinations often stand on opposite sides of a road, shouting at cars, each other and the wind to get their messages across. — A syringe. We started the year with people over 65 and in vulnerable groups getting their first doses of a vaccine that has slowed the progression of COVID-19, and we’re ending it with the distribution of booster shots for this population and, eventually, for others who received a vaccine eight months earlier. — Take-out menus. I would throw several take-out menus, along with instructions about leaving food at a front door, into the time capsule. While numerous restaurants are operating close to

their in-dining capacity, some of us are still eating the same food at home. — An Amazon box. Barely a day goes by when I don’t see an Amazon delivery truck in the neighborhood, leaving the familiar smiling boxes at my neighbors’ front doors. — Broken glass. I would include some carefully protected broken glass to reflect some of the divisions in the country and to remember the moment protesters stormed the capital, overwhelming the police and sending politicians scrambling for cover. — Houses of gold. I would throw in a golden house, to show how the value of homes, particularly those outside of a city, increased amid an urban exodus. — A Broadway playbill. My wife and I saw a musical for the first time in over two years. We were thrilled to attend “Wicked.” The combination of songs, staging, acting, and lighting transported us back to the land of Oz. Judging from the thunderous applause at the end from a fully masked audience, we were not the only ones grateful to enjoy the incredible talents of performers who must have struggled amid the shutdown.

With frogs in my pool and woodpeckers on my shingles, I wonder what Nature plans next

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here I was, tapping on my computer keyboard, when what sounded like a pneumatic drill started tapping right outside my window. I jumped up, ran down the hall, out the front door and around the house to be greeted by the sight of an unperturbed woodpecker. Busily bobbing his beak into my shingles, he ignored me for a few seconds, despite my frantic hand waving and yelling, then cocked his head to see what the fuss was about. We looked at each other but he didn’t leave. I picked up a pine cone that had fallen on my driveway and threw it in his direction, along Between with a couple of words I you and me wouldn’t repeat in polite BY LEAH S. DUNAIEF company. Slowly, letting me know it was his idea, he flew away.

He left behind three black holes on the side of the house, each the size of a quarter. I went back inside to my computer, and then there he was again, rat-tat-tatting on the shingles. The words, “How much wood could a woodpecker peck if a woodpecker would peck wood?” passed through my mind as I again ran out the door and yelled. This time he moved away more quickly. I made a little pile of pine cones along the side of my driveway and returned to my computer. Not five minutes later, the scene repeated itself. I replenished my arsenal, knowing he would be back, and he was. Good heavens, what was I to do, stand guard all day? What if I hadn’t been home? From the number and size of the holes, he had clearly been there before. A truce seemed at hand. I pulled out my cell phone and dialed my neighbor. Yes, he was aware that there was an energetic woodpecker among us. In fact, hadn’t I heard? The neighbor on the other side of my house was having his wood shingles removed and replaced with vinyl that looked like wood but obviously didn’t taste the same. Maybe

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the culprit had just moved over to my shingles. Next, I called my trusty neighborhood hardware store. Yes, they had heard of such a problem before and they did have one possible remedy, a roll of reflective tape for $7 that I should cut into 3-foot strips and hang from my house. We rushed down to get the tape and also bought a roll of twine. Back home we did as instructed, knotted the red and silver streamers to the twine at five-foot intervals as if on a clothesline, then hung the entire line high up across the side of the house. We repeated the process for the front of the house where he had also started pecking. I am lucky to have saintly friends who executed these maneuvers on ladders for me. When it was done, we stood back and looked at the handwork. The house looked decorated for Halloween. As you might expect of me, I researched “woodpeckers” on my computer and found four reasons that woodpeckers would carry on this way. The first was to make a “satisfyingly loud noise and proclaim that this was his territory and attract a

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mate.” Bully for him. The other three explanations were less romantic but more practical: to find food in the shingles, especially larvae of carpenter bees, leafcutter bees and grass bagworms; to store food; for nesting. I further found some good news, or at least some consolation. It seems that ancient cultures associated woodpeckers with luck, prosperity and spiritual healing. To other cultures they represented hard work, perseverance, strength and determination. Woodpeckers are, apparently, among the most intelligent and smartest birds in the world. More good news in the form of fortune cookie messages: When they appear, it is time to unleash one’s potential and change any situation to one’s best advantage. From woodpeckers one can imbibe the skills of being resourceful and determined. They encourage the power to unshackle ingenuity and creativity in those around them. Well, now you know. Whatever success ensues, I will owe it to my woodpecker. P.S. After one more short visit, he has not come back.

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

Year After Year


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PAGE A24 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • OCTOBER 21, 2021


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