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The VILLAGE BEACON RECORD M O U N T S I N A I • M I L L E R P L AC E • S O U N D B E AC H • R O C K Y P O I N T • WA D I N G R I V E R • S H O R E H A M
Vol. 36, No. 26
January 14, 2021
$1.00 Julianne Mosher
A Story Behind the Statue How a new Rocky Point memorial tells the story of one soilder’s mental health
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Filtered Light Exhibit Opens at Gallery North
Also: Review of Netflix’s Mank, Photo of the Week, Plum Island update
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Residents Respond to Capitol Riot Protesters make their voices heard — A7 Southside Hospital is now
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PAGE A2 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • JANUARY 14, 2021
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The Suffolk County Sheriff’s Office recently welcomed two new canines to its Deputy Sheriff K9 Unit. K9 Agar and K9 Reis began their service with the Sheriff’s Office in the fall of 2020. The Sheriff’s Office has a total of six canine teams; three for the police division and three for the correction division. The mission of these New York State certified canine teams is to support the daily operations of the Suffolk County Sheriff’s Office as well as other law enforcement agencies upon request. The Sheriff’s Office Police Division canines are bred in Europe before being purchased by a third-party vendor and flown to the United States. The police dogs may receive some preliminary protection dog training in Europe but receive their policespecific training in the United States with our trainers. Both the dogs and their handlers spend 6 to 10 weeks in Columbus, Ohio for their basic certifications. K9 Agar and K9 Reis are certified in scent detection, narcotics detection, criminal apprehension, and handler protection. The canine teams are ready to serve the people of Suffolk County upon their return from Ohio and will conduct weekly in-service training for the length of their service to maintain New York State standards. Sheriff’s Office canines have an average service length of about eight years. Considering that they are usually 1 to 2 years of age when entering service, they retire around the age of 9 or 10. Once canines are retired, they live out the remainder of their lives at home with their handlers and family. K9 Agar is a 22-month-old sable colored German Shepherd from the Netherlands. K9
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Town
New Statue Stands for Veteran Mental Health
BY RICH ACRITELLI DESK@TBRNESMEDIA.COM
Through these daunting times, the men and women in the Armed Services have always made this nation proud of their efforts to protect, preserve and promote the ideals of this nation at home and abroad. Earlier this month, Tommy Fricke and his workers from Fricke Memorial added a tribute to the Rocky Point Veterans Square on the corner of Broadway and 25A — another reminder of national service to local residents — through the Combat Medic Joseph P. Dwyer Statue. This statue of Dwyer identifies the terrible impact of post traumatic stress disorder on combat veterans that have returned home after being involved in serious fighting. Since 1915, this recognized brain trauma, from the impact of fighting on a soldier was identified as “shell shocked.” There was no significant counseling that was offered by the government to properly treat millions of men and women from these different conflicts. Little was offered in therapy to the veteran that had fought over the skies of Europe, or who landed at D-Day, or through the islandhopping campaigns in the Pacific and Asia. In many cases, veterans were told to forget about their experiences, go home, get married, attend college, find a job and start a family. It is highly possible that many of the people who drive by the Dwyer Statue had family members who had no significant help to deal with PTSD. Some men and women had nightmares, outbursts, flashbacks and were in dire need of mental and physical attention that was not provided to them. According to the Veterans Administration, the most recent Gulf War veterans that served during Operations Iraqi Freedom and Enduring Freedom have been inflicted from 11-20 veterans out of every 100. During Desert Storm, the figure is 12 out of every 100 veterans have suffered from PTSD. And these numbers are staggering for Vietnam veterans, who at one point in their life had to deal with the enormous pressures of their service. It is estimated that at least 30% of Vietnam Veterans endured PTSD. This new statue focuses on the strength of American service, and the responsibilities of our government to care for all the members of the Armed Forces when they return home. As a child, Dwyer attended elementary school at Infant Jesus in Port Jefferson and graduated from Mount Sinai High School in 1994. As a young man, he enjoyed playing golf and going fishing with his friends and family. After he left high school, Dwyer moved to North Carolina with his parents and was employed at a local hospital where he transported people who needed
medical treatment. According to his older sister Kristine, Dwyer was a peaceful man who always wanted to care for others. When America was attacked on Sept. 11, 2001, after watching the assault on this nation, he tried to enlist that very day into the army but had to wait until Sept. 12. He eventually graduated from Basic and Advanced Individual Training from Fort Benning, Georgia, where he became a combat medic. Shortly after finishing his training, Dwyer was sent to Fort Bliss, Texas, where he vaccinated soldiers that were deployed overseas. On Feb. 15, 2003, he married his sweetheart, Matina, in Troy, North Carolina. When President George W. Bush (R) ordered American soldiers to be sent to the Middle East to attack Saddam Hussein and Iraq in 2003, Dwyer replaced a single mother, so that she was able to remain home with her child. He was one of the first soldiers to enter Iraq during this war with the 37th Cavalry Regiment. While Dwyer told his family that he was being deployed to a hospital in Kuwait, they had no idea that he was with the leading army units that were on the road toward Baghdad — it wasn’t until the media began to run stories of his actions saving a child when they realized he was serving in Iraq. This well-known picture of Dwyer carrying a young child to safety was published and reported across the nation, and around the globe. But to the day he died, Dwyer repeatedly stated that there was another combat medic that played a pivotal role in saving the life of this young boy. It was a difficult deployment for Dwyer who was constantly under attack, lonely and unable to sleep. An exhausted Dwyer began inhaling computer cleaner Dust-Off to help him sleep a few hours before going back onto duty. On June 20, 2008, Dwyer left Iraq and traveled alone to Fort Bliss to eventually meet his wife, where they set up their home. A month later, the couple headed back to Mount Sinai, where he enjoyed the reunion with his family, friends and teachers. Right away, his sister realized that he was grossly underweight. He lost over 40 pounds during his time in Iraq. While Kristine cherishes the moment of seeing her brother after his deployment, she is not sure of his true joy, due to his unknown PTSD condition. Once he was at home, Dwyer was continually impacted by the issues of his PTSD condition. There were points that when he was driving, that Dwyer feared possible unexploded ordinances that were on the roads. He never held the feeling of personal safety, had disturbing visions, and for the rest of his life, this peaceful man had no personal peace after he served in Iraq. Kristine noticed a stare that developed in her brother who always wanted to be outside. Matina observed that her husband never liked going out
Photos clockwise from above, the new statue of Joseph Dwyer in Rocky Point; the late Dwyer in uniform; Dwyer and his family before his death. Above photo by Kyle Barr, bottom two from Dwyer family
to dinner, he closely watched the other customers, and always kept an eye on the door. Dwyer eventually gained his discharge from the service, but it was a battle to fight the government to receive his full disability compensation. During his service at home and when he left the army, Dwyer was still unable to sleep, and he continued to inhale Dust-Off. By the end of his life in 2008, he did not have family members living with him and was unable to hold onto his own mental state. The picture that was widely presented across the nation and in different parts of the world was indicative of the kindness of Dwyer, even as he dealt with the horrors of his own personal concerns. Until he passed away, it was important for Dwyer to have his story truthfully reported that presented the negatives of PTSD, and how it drastically changed the mental state of this peaceful citizen. On June 28, 2008, Dwyer died from the inhalants that he used to cope with the severity of his PTSD. In speaking about the memory of her husband, Matina firmly recalls how he always sought to help others with an immense amount of love.
This affection was especially demonstrated to his then two-year-old daughter who was called his “little princess.” Meagan K. Dwyer is now 14 years old with a memory that lives on through family stories and pictures of her father. At the end of World War II, the historic Flag Raising at Mount Suribachi, Iwo Jima, was a similar picture that showed the resolve of American service overseas. When Ira Hayes, a marine that hoisted this flag during the earliest moments of this terrifying battle, came home, he suffered from PTSD where he drank heavily and agonized over his fellow marines and friends that died on this island. A short time later, he died from excessive drinking. Although Hayes passed away nearly 67 years ago, his story is connected to Dwyer. Both veterans were widely documented through a historic picture that rapidly received national acclaim from Americans across this country. But the hardships of PTSD never discriminate from one soldier or conflict to the next, and it is vital for this government to always perfect its ways to help combat veterans.
PAGE A6 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • JANUARY 14, 2021
County
Protesters Petition to Get Zeldin Out of Office BY JULIANNE MOSHER JULIANNE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
Groups gathered outside local congressional offices demanding that President Donald Trump (R) be impeached and convicted, and that Rep. Lee Zeldin (R-NY1) to be expelled from Con-gress following his vote against the certification of Electoral College ballots. On Monday, Jan. 11, the group Suffolk Progressives organized the protest and created a petition, demanding Zeldin leave his position. Shoshana Hershkowitz, from South Setauket, who founded the group, said they are against the congressman’s vote challenging the results of
LEGALS
PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given that the partnership heretofore existing between Ernestine Ruberto Franco and Beatrice Ruberto under the name Pern Editorial Services is dissolved by mutual consent effective January 1, 2021. All accounts due the partnership are payable to Ernestine Ruberto Franco and all liabilities are assumed by her. 024 1/14 1x vbr NOTICE OF MEETINGS OF THE ROCKY POINT FIRE DISTRICT PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that pursuant to a resolution of the Board of Fire Commissioners of the Rocky Point Fire District, Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk, State of New York, the monthly meetings of the Board of Fire Commissioners of said District for 2021 will be held at the administrative office of the Fire District adjacent to the Shoreham Firehouse, 49 State Route 25A, Shoreham, New York at 7:00 PM (prevailing time) on the 4th Tuesday of each month. Workshop sessions will be held on the 3rd Tuesday of each month. There will not be a workshop meeting in the months of July and August. Dated: January 06, 2021 BY ORDER OF THE BOARD
the 2020 presidential election — even after the deadly riots at the U.S. Capitol Jan. 6. “He continued to talk about his feelings despite the evidence from the country,” Hershkowitz said. “On Jan. 2, he put a tweet out saying this is a lie. … Those words unfortunately they came to fruition on Jan. 6.” After the mass attack on the Capitol by proTrump extremists, Zeldin still voted to object the election of President-elect Joe Biden (D), and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris (D). “The combination of all of it, and then going back into the chamber after all of this violence and death, refusing to accept those results, trying to overturn the people … it was mind-blowing,” she said.
Upon Zeldin’s vote, Hershkowitz and her group penned a petition that is now up to nearly 2,000 signatures, calling for his expulsion. “I was hoping that after all this he would change his tune,” she said. On Monday, Jan. 11, a group of more than 100 people gathered outside of Zeldin’s Patchogue office. A smaller group of counterprotesters stood across the street. Members further west rallied outside Rep. Tom Suozzi’s (D-NY3) Huntington office, asking him to demand that Zeldin be accountable. Suozzi supports the removal of Trump through the 25th Amendment or impeachment. The day of the insurrection, Zeldin released a statement.
“This should never be the scene at the U.S. Capitol,” he said. “This is not the America we all love. We can debate, and we can disagree, even on a January 6th following a presidential election. We can all passionately love our country, but in our republic, we elect people to represent us to voice our objections in the House and Senate on this day.” He added that there must be “zero tolerance for violence in any form.” Hershkowitz said she will be sending the petition to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA). “I believe that these people shouldn’t be sitting in Congress,” the group organizer said.
To Place A Legal Notice
Email: legals@tbrnewsmedia.com OF FIRE COMMISSIONERS OF THE ROCKY POINT FIRE DISTR1CT, Town of Brookhaven, Suffolk County, New York. By: Edwin S. Brooks Fire District Secretary 031 1/14 1x vbr NOTICE OF REGULAR MEETINGS OF THE BOARD OF FIRE COMMISSIONERS OF THE SOUND BEACH FIRE DISTRICT FOR 2021 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the Board of Fire Commissioners of the Sound Beach Fire District in the Town of Brookhaven, Suffolk County, New York, will hold its regular monthly meetings for calendar year 2021 at 7:00 P.M. on the First and Fourth Tuesdays of each month except for the month of December which will be the first and third Tuesday, at the Main Firehouse of the Sound Beach Fire District, 152 Sound Beach Boulevard, Sound Beach, New York. Dated: Sound Beach, New York January 6, 2021 By Order of the Board of Fire Commissioners of the Sound Beach Fire District
Lynnann Frank, District Manager/Secretary 036 1/14 1x vbr NOTICE OF REGULAR MEETINGS OFTHE BOARD OF FIRE COMMISSIONERS OF THE MILLER PLACE FIRE DISTRICT FOR 2021 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the Regular Meetings for the calendar year 2021 of the Board of Fire Commissioners of the Miller Place Fire District in the Town of Brookhaven, Suffolk County, New York, commencing with the February 10th meeting, will be held on the second Wednesday of the month at 5:00 P.M., except for July, which meeting will be Monday, July 12, 2021 at 7:00 p.m. at the Main Firehouse of the Miller Place Fire District, 12 Miller Place Road, Miller Place, New York. Dated: Miller Place, New York January 6, 2021 By Order of the Board of Fire Commissioners of the Miller Place Fire District Robert Ryder, District Secretary 039 1/14 1x vbr
Photos clockwise from above: Suffolk Progressives organizer Shoshana Hershkowitz joined a large group of people who rallied outside Rep. Zeldin’s Patchogue office; community members join the protest. Photos by Steven Zaitz
JANUARY 14, 2021 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A7
County
Local Republican State Senators React to Capitol Riot BY JULIANNE MOSHER JULIANNE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
Several protesters stand on the corner of Routes 347 and 112 in Port Jefferson Station, responding to events taken place at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6. Photo by Julianne Mosher
Protesters Respond to Insurrection at the Capitol BY JULIANNE MOSHER JULIANNE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Protesters rallied in two North Shore locations this past weekend, to demonstrate their First Amendment right to protest. Nearly 100 people stood on the corner of Route 25A and Bennetts Road in Setauket on Saturday holding signs urging that President Donald Trump (R) be impeached. For the last 18 years, the North Country Peace Group has stood on the bend, every weekend, to protest. This year was different. “I’m going on 79 years, and I’ve seen a good chunk of American history,” said protester Jerry Shor. “I’m really sad this happened to our government, which I owe a lot to … We have tremendous respect for our government.” And although Shor said he doesn’t always agree with what the government does, he knew he had to exercise his right to demonstrate, protest and make his feelings known. In response to the storming of the United States Capitol Wednesday, Jan. 6, members of the group wanted to make their voices heard — their anger at the president for inciting violence, and their urge to remove Rep. Lee Zeldin (R-NY1) from Congress. “I usually don’t come out, but today seemed like a day we had to because of what happened in Washington on Wednesday,” said protester Bob Keeler. “And Lee Zeldin, who supposedly represents us in the Congress, is not representing me very well. It’s time for him to be a former congressman.” Normally the corner has a large group of counter-protesters — known as the North Country Patriots — across the way. This weekend there was only a small group of five. “The real patriots are the ones who are
voicing their opinions the way our forefathers really meant to be voiced,” Shor said. Protester Paige Pearson said she had a bad feeling that something was going to happen Jan. 6. “My immediate thought was I wasn’t surprised,” she said. “But I’m extremely disappointed.” Pearson said she was disheartened to see what was happening in Washington D.C., especially when she previously participated in other protests that were peaceful and civil. “We’ve been fighting for months and months, trying to stay as peaceful as possible,” she said. “And then all of these people can just storm into the Capitol, and cause all of this violence and destruction, and get out clean and unharmed.” At the same time, at Resistance Corner on Routes 347 and 112 in Port Jefferson Station, a smaller, but just as loud group rallied against the president. Organizers of the Friends for Justice group Holly Fils-Aime said the protesters chose to stand at the corner of Nesconset Highway because nearly 3,000 cars pass every hour. “Obviously we were very upset when Trump claimed election fraud,” she said. With the riots down south, Fils-Aime said she and her group are calling for the president to be impeached. Holding signs of Trump’s face on a peach, the group voiced their hopes that Congress will vote to remove the president from power. “I can’t believe this is happening to our country,” Fils-Aime said. “He’s been talking about this for months. … We need to get him out of office, so he can’t do this again.” To see more photos from the rallies, visit www.tbrnewsmedia.com.
A lot has happened since the start of 2021, only two weeks ago. Shortly before the insurrection at the United States Capitol Jan. 6, Long Island sent four Republicans to the New York State Senate to kick off the new legislative session. Two of those are newly elected Sen. Anthony Palumbo (R-New Suffolk) and Sen. Mario Mattera (R-St. James), both local to the North Shore. On top of their swearing-in and preparation for the new year ahead, various local and national elected officials released statements surrounding the horrors Americans witnessed that Wednesday. The two state lawmakers are not condoning what happened Jan. 6. “Most, if not all, New Yorkers were happy to put the year 2020 behind them and are looking forward to the promise of a better 2021,” Palumbo said. “Sadly, last Wednesday’s storming of the Capitol using acts of violence does not help any cause and instead leads to incarceration.” Palumbo said he will condemn all lawless attacks on America’s institutions and cities. “I fully support our men and women in law
enforcement who continue to find themselves in ever more dangerous situations,” he said. “I appeal to everyone’s better angels, both on the right and left. We must all focus on important issues like public health and economic recovery, not stoking division from the political extremes.” Mattera said that he supports the right to peaceful protests. “The right to express views peacefully is a fundamental freedom for all Americans and it is essential to who we are,” he said. “But when the events become violent or unlawful, as they did last week and have in the recent past, those responsible must be held accountable and must be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.” Mattera said that what was witnessed must not be condoned or excused. “There can be no acceptance of these actions regardless of motivations,” he said. “They attacked our men and women in blue, and their actions insulted all who support the First Amendment.” But he said that through it all and at the end of the day, Americans must work together. “We must now join together as Americans to show we are stronger when we stand together,” the state senator said. “This nation has stood for over 240 years and we must work together to ensure its future.”
Pro-Trump Facebook Group Taken Down BY JULIANNE MOSHER JULIANNE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
Notorious pro-Trump group, the Setauket Patriots — who have headed several marches and caravans across the North Shore of Long Island in support of President Donald Trump (R) — have lost their Facebook page and are now operating under a private group account. James Robitsek, founder of the group, said that last week 200 members of his group gathered on four charter buses to visit the Capitol on Jan. 6, with an extra 100 members driving themselves to the rally. “The actions by those storming the Capitol building [Jan. 6] should not be tolerated, are condemned, and were not conducted by any of the members that came on our buses to attend a peaceful protest. He said the Setauket Patriots page, that holds more than 20,000 members, was taken down by Facebook. The private group is still online. “The group will remain, and we will continue to hold community events like we have in the past,” he said.
James Robitsek, and Setauket Patriot supporters, rally outside Village Hall in Port Jefferson in November. File photo by Julianne Mosher
Robitsek added that “false information that is being disseminated on social media, mischaracterizing members of our group is hateful and vengeful and just plain wrong. Just as violence and domestic terrorism will not be tolerated, we also will not allow other groups to violate and slander good-hearted citizens that love our America.”
PAGE A8 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • JANUARY 14, 2021
County
Suffolk Legislators Sworn in, Set Goals for 2021 BY JULIANNE MOSHER JULIANNE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
The Suffolk County Legislature has officially started its new session, with new lawmakers sworn in this week for the body’s 52nd organizational meeting Jan. 4. Legislator Nicholas Caracappa (R-Selden) took his ceremonial oath of office as a new lawmaker, while Rob Calarco (D-Patchogue) and Kara Hahn (D-Setauket) were reelected to their leadership posts. Calarco, legislator for the 7th District, was reelected to lead the body for a second year as presiding officer in a bipartisan vote, and Hahn, who represents the 5th District, was reelected deputy presiding officer, also in a bipartisan vote. “Important projects await us in the coming year, and we will confront the challenges of 2021 the same way we did in 2020 —in a bipartisan fashion with a shared commitment to cooperation and finding common ground,” Calarco said in a statement. In his remarks, he reflected on the challenges of 2020 and pointed to legislative progress on diversity and inclusion, open space and farmland preservation, and updates to the county’s wastewater code. In 2021, Calarco looks forward to building out sewers in Patchogue, the Mastic Peninsula, Deer Park, Smithtown and Kings Park, which will help protect Suffolk County’s water and provide an economic boost to downtowns. Additionally, he said the Legislature will soon be presented with a plan to reinvent policing in Suffolk, as required by an executive order from Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D). “The men and women of our law enforcement agencies work hard every day to do their jobs professionally and with a commitment to protecting all the residents of Suffolk County, yet we also know whole portions of our population fear the presence of police in their community, making officers’ jobs far more difficult,” he said. “We must put politics aside to ensure the plan addresses the root of those fears, and builds on the initiatives already underway to establish trust and confidence between our police and the communities they protect.” Hahn intends to continue focusing on the global pandemic that has hit close to home. “Looking ahead, 2021 will once again be a tough year, but with a vaccine there is now a light at the end of the tunnel,” she said in a statement. “We will focus our efforts on halting the spread of COVID-19, helping those in need, conquering our financial challenges and getting through this pandemic with as little heartache and pain as possible. There is hope on the horizon, and I know we will come back stronger than ever.”
Clockwise from left, Kara Hahn takes the oath of office as deputy presiding officer administered by County Clerk Judy Pascale Jan. 4; Rob Calarco takes the oath of office as presiding officer of the Suffolk County Legislature; Nicholas Caracappa is sworn in as new legislator for Suffolk County’s 4th District. Photos from Suffolk County legislators
After winning a special election in November, Caracappa will now represent the 4th District, filling the seat left by Republican Tom Muratore (R-Ronkonkoma) who passed suddenly in September. A lifelong resident of Selden, Caracappa was a 34-year employee of the Suffolk County Water Authority. He was president of the Utility Workers Union of America, AFLCIO, Local-393 for 14 years and previously served as a member of the union’s national executive board. He also served as a Middle Country school district board of education trustee for seven years and volunteered at Ground Zero. He said his goal is to keep his district’s quality of life at the forefront. “I am committed to the quality of life issues that make this community a great place for families to live, work and enjoy recreation,” he said in a statement. “My focus will be to eliminate wasteful spending, support our law enforcement, first responders and frontline health care workers, and protect our senior citizens, veterans and youth services.” He added that he wants to continue enhancing Long Island’s environmental protection initiatives including critical waterquality measures and expanding the existing sewer studies in his district’s downtown regions. The Legislature’s Hauppauge auditorium is named after his late mother, Rose Caracappa. Legislator Sarah Anker (D-Mount Sinai) was sworn in last year. Representing the 6th District, she said she looks forward to continuing and expanding on the important
‘I am committed to the quality of life issues that make this community a great place for families to live, work and enjoy recrecration.’ — LEG. NICK CARACAPPA
work she’s been doing for the community. Specifically, for 2021, her top priority is working with the health department, along with federal, state and local governments to address the COVID-19 pandemic. Anker said she wants to prioritize public safety and plans to continue to work with the county’s Department of Public Works and the state’s Department of Transportation to monitor and create safer roads. As the chair of the county’s Health Committee and chair of the Heroin and Opiate Epidemic Advisory Panel, she also plans to continue to collaborate with panel members to monitor the impact the COVID-19 pandemic has had on the opioid epidemic on Long Island.
“Together we have worked to protect the integrity of this great community by addressing issues and improving our quality of life,” Anker said. “This year, I will continue to be proactive in dealing with this current pandemic and prioritize issues including stabilizing county finances, fighting crime and the drug epidemic, addressing traffic safety and working to preserve what’s left of our precious open space.”
JANUARY 14, 2021 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A9
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PAGE A10 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • JANUARY 14, 2021
County
Report: Opioid Addiction Rates ‘Skyrocket’ BY KYLE BARR DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Suffolk County’s 2020 annual report on the lingering opioid crisis showed an increase in the number of overdoses from the previous year, with experts expressing concern for the impact the pandemic has had on addiction rates. The Suffolk County Heroin and Opiate Epidemic Advisory Panel released its findings Dec. 29 showing there were 345 fatal overdoses in 2020, which includes pending analysis of some drug overdose cases, according to the county medical examiner’s office. While, on its face, that number did not increase over the past year, nonfatal overdoses climbed by 90 to 1,208, com-pared to 2019, according to Suffolk County police. This increase defies a general trending de-crease in nonfatal overdoses since 2017. Police also reported 910 opioid overdose-antidote na-loxone saves for individuals compared to 863 in 2019. In some ways more worrying than overall overdose numbers has been the treatment situation on the ground, with professionals in the field reporting an increase in relapses during the pan-demic, according to the report. Numbers released by police after a May inquiry from TBR News Media showed overdoses were up dramatically when comparing months before the start of the shutdown orders in March to the weeks directly afterward. Medical experts and elected officials all agreed that pandemic-related anxiety, plus the economic downturn and mandated isolation led to increased drug use overall. People in the treatment industry have also said the pandemic has pushed them toward utilizing telehealth. Legislator Sarah Anker (D-Mount Sinai), the panel chair, said COVID-19 has led to challenges among all county governmental and community agencies, with “overwhelmed hospitals fighting on the frontline, addiction rates skyrocketing with limited resources and economic un-certainty due to business disruption.” There have been 184 deaths related to opioids in 2020, according to the report, with 161 poten-tial drug overdoses still pending review. Among the North Shore towns, not accounting for those still in review, there were 18 deaths reported in Huntington, 13 in Smithtown and 69 in Brookhaven, the latter of which had the most opioid-related deaths of any Suffolk township. Police data also shows the 6th Precinct bore the brunt of the most overdoses and the most Narcan saves. National data also bears a grim toll. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Pre-vention’s National Center for Health Statistics there has been a 10% increase in drug overdose deaths from March 2019 to
Capitol Punishment: FBI Asks for Public’s Help
BY CHRIS CUMELLA DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
Sarah Anker, the legislative chair of the opioid panel, said addresses the high rate of opioid addiction as a result from COVID-19. File photo by Erika Karp
March 2020. Approximately 19,416 died from overdoses in the U.S. in the first three months of 2020, compared to 16,682 in 2019. In addition to Suffolk’s report, the advisory panel has sent letters to state and federal reps ask-ing them not to cut any state funding for treatment and prevention and for the state to sup-port provider reimbursement rates for telehealth and virtual care that are on par with face-to-face rates. They also requested that New York State waives the in-person meeting requirement for people to receive buprenorphine treatment, which can help aid in addiction to painkillers. County legislators are also touting a new youth addiction panel, which is set to begin meeting in the new year. The county is also continuing its lawsuits against several pharmaceutical com-panies for their hand in starting the opioid epidemic. That’s not to say there haven’t been other setbacks in Suffolk’s efforts against opioids. Last October, county Legislator William “Doc” Spencer (D-Centerport) was arrested for an alleged at-tempt to trade oxycodone for sex. Spencer was the one to initiate the creation of the youth panel. He has pleaded not guilty, though he has stepped down from his position on the panel, among other responsibilities. There are currently 29 members on the opioid advisory panel, including representatives from the county Legislature, law enforcement, first responders, treatment centers and shelters. While Anker thanked current members of the panel for their continued efforts, she said more work is needed. “The opioid epidemic is an ongoing issue that needs to be addressed continuously from all fronts,” she said.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation has released a statement that it is seeking assistance in locating individuals who had participated in the riots, which took place at the United States Capitol building Wednesday, Jan. 6. In addition to citizens, the FBI is also looking for off-duty police officers and firefighters who may have been involved. A brief memo on the FBI official website at www.fbi.gov noted that an investigation has been launched to track down and arrest those individuals. “We have deployed our full investigative resources and are working closely with our federal, state and local partners to aggressively pursue those involved in criminal activity during the events of January 6,” the memo said. Next to the bureau’s statement can be seen a list of news events about the Capitol riots, with arrests and charges. The bureau’s call to action was for citizens to utilize their online forum, specifically if they had documents, photos or video to attach. There is also an option enabling participants to utilize the FBI’s phone number at 800-CALLFBI (800-225-5324) to report any relevant tips. FBI Director Christopher Wray made a statement detailing that the violence and destruction of property at the U.S. Capitol building was appalling and disrespectful to the democratic process.
“As we have said consistently, we do not tolerate violent agitators and extremists who use the guise of First Amendmentprotected activity to incite violence and wreak havoc,” he said. “Our agents and analysts have been hard at work … gathering evidence, sharing intelligence, and working with federal prosecutors to bring charges,” Wray added. “We are determined to find those responsible and ensure justice is served.” These investigations follow directly after the attacks on the Capitol building, which many outlets and organizations have blamed on President Trump’s (R) morning rally as a direct cause of the violence. During his speech, the president urged his supporters to “fight much harder” against “bad people” and “show strength” at the Capitol, where lawmakers were about to certify the Electoral College votes giving victory to President-elect Joe Biden (D), who is to be inaugurated on Jan. 20. Regarding off-duty police officers, a media liaison for the Suffolk police department stated in an email that they currently have no specific knowledge that any of its off-duty members attended the event, and will comply with any investigations necessary moving forward. “The Suffolk County Police Department will cooperate, if requested, with the federal investigation into the events at the U.S. Capitol, including any alleged involvement of our members,” the statement said.
Residents Opt to ‘Take Back Our Flag’
BY JULIANNE MOSHER JULIANNE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
They said the American flag belongs to everyone — not a single party or point of view. With the recent events at the United States Capitol and the riots that ensued from proTrump groups, local residents are joining in a national campaign to Take Back Our Flag. Beatrice Ruberto, a Sound Beach resident, said the campaign, which started online around the 2020 election, implies that the American flag has become a symbol of President Donald Trump’s (R) beliefs. “We started searching the internet, wondering how the American flag was being used,” she said. “We saw that over the past four years, it became shorthand for MAGA.” That’s Trump’s campaign slogan of Make America Great Again. During her research, she found that after the election, many people on all sides of the
political spectrum were ready to take it back. “We want to make the flag a unified symbol rather than a one-sided symbol,” she said. So now, Ruberto and many members within the community, are looking to make sure the flag stands for its initial emblem, a symbol of We the People. Ruberto and her group are hoping to persuade all people to hang their American flags outside their homes the day of the U.S. presidential inauguration, next Wednesday on Jan. 20. “This is not a message of division,” she said. “It’s a message of inclusion.” After making its rounds online locally and nationally, Ruberto said the feedback so far has been generally positive, although some has been otherwise. But the message is simple, Ruberto noted. “Fly the flag,” she said. “Continue flying the flag, no matter what your point of view is. Everyone should be flying it.”
JANUARY 14, 2021 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A11
Kelp Is on the Way as Task Force Begins Pilot Project in Harbor
BY CHRIS CUMELLA DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
Rows of sugar kelp – a brown native seaweed — are being planted and will be harvested in Setauket Harbor, not for decoration but to provide cleaner water and other benefits to the community. Neighboring next to Port Jefferson Harbor, the Setauket Harbor Task Force has installed two 100-foot lines with sugar kelp seedlings in hopes of cultivating them when they are ready for harvesting. There are numerous ways in which the sugar kelp can be benefited from. This aquatic plant is edible for both people and pets. It can be used as a fertilizer, bioplastic, biofuel, cosmetics and is a method to help improve water quality. “Our main goal for this year is to spread the word about kelp and where it grows, the conditions it needs, how to process it and how it can benefit growers on Long Island,” said Wendy Moore, benefactor and manager of the sugar kelp project. Moore, along with her husband, Justin, founded The Moore Family Charitable Foundation, a nonprofit community involvement program. “To that end, we’ve developed relationships with 11 growers this season,” she said. Moore attributes her profound interest in the project to the fact that sugar kelp is selfsustaining. It is what she describes as a “low-
intensity process,” which has seen nearly no obstacles other than lesser amounts of sun in the winter months. The Town of Brookhaven was one of the first to support the project and even provided equipment to the task force. There are plans to expand the project in the following years. Even in a continuous pandemic, the project has not been swayed. According to Moore, the gear distribution and out-planting have been outdoors. Everyone on the team has been able to gather safely and follow proper COIVD protocols. “We’re lucky that much of the needed operations at this time are outdoors,” she said. David Berg, a scientific advisor to the Moore Foundation, said that the cultivation rate would be more likely to increase after the equinox in March. Besides Setauket and Port Jefferson Harbors, the Moore foundation has set up in other locations including Islip, Brookhaven, Greenport and Oyster Bay. Two years ago, the Setauket Harbor Task Force began conducting water monitoring in Setauket Harbor. They set out in the spring, summer and fall seasons to take water chemistry readings and samples to document the water quality. With authorization from New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, the task force has been able to look at what can be done about the water and possibly cleaning it up.
Task force member Mark Smith at Setauket Harbor installing buoys and lines in Setauket Harbor for growing sugar kelp. Photo from Setauket Harbor Task Force
“There’s oyster harvesting and clam harvesting,” said George Hoffman, a trustee of the task force which helps oversee the sugar kelp cultivation and production. “We decided to try sugar kelp harvesting, and they’re cleaning up the water by feeding on the C02 … which leads to water acidification.” Hoffman describes his feelings about the task force being included in this pilot project as “exciting” and wants to show the public that harbors like Setauket can become productive areas for marine agriculture. “We’re happy to have a product that will help us clean and improve the quality of the water and likewise providing beneficial food,” he said. Cultivating the sugar kelp requires attaching the seeds to two 100-feet lines in the
harbor, held together in place by mushroom anchors. When the kelp is ready to harvest, it is thick, rubbery, and a glistening shade of brown before it is processed and cleaned into a vibrant emerald green color, ready for distribution. According to Hoffman, the harvesting sites take up roughly 200 feet of water, and he hopes to see expansion in a couple of years if this project yields successful results. “The main thing we’re interested in doing is taking the interest that’s already here and helping Long Island along in the momentum of progressing further,” Moore said. “We want to seek out and connect with people and help get the word out about the amazing potential that it has.”
Golf Clubs in ‘Fore-Ground’ During Pandemic BY KIMBERLY BROWN DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
Staying active has been hard enough during the COVID-19 pandemic. Most indoor sports still have restrictions or are closed entirely, making it difficult for Long Islanders to keep themselves occupied while living life under pandemic rules. Yet luckily for some, there is one sport that has not let anyone down in 2020 — golf. As the virus pandemic hit Long Island in March, golf became one of the most popular outdoor sports to play throughout last year. It is one of the few activities where contact is either extremely limited, or even nonexistent, as it can even be played alone. General manager of the Port Jefferson Country Club, Brian Macmillan, explained how his business has done exceedingly well given the circumstances. “We saw a great increase in membership and play,” he said. “With many off of work or not losing time in their day-from-work travel, more people were on the course. It seemed to be the only safe activity for anyone to do.”
But the pandemic has created minor setbacks for some golf courses like PJCC. The shortage of cleaning supplies stunted the business for only a short time, but what became a bigger issue was the shutdown of production from golf companies. “Keeping up with golf balls and gloves was an issue that hit later in the year,” Macmillan said. “The golf companies shut down production for a period while product was in the highest demand ever. Getting products in the door was tough, but we found ways to use different companies to get our members what they needed.” Besides the increased play, there were many positive attributes to come out of the pandemic. For example, the Willow Creek Golf & Country Club in Mount Sinai said COVID brought their members closer together as they combated the new mandates New York State implemented. “The challenges of 2020 triggered changes in how we operate on a day-today basis,” Robin Rasch, general manager of Willow Creek, said. “This strengthened our team here as we continue to evolve and
While other activities were canceled throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, golf courses like this one at the Port Jefferson Country Club became a popular pastime. Photo by Kimberly Brown
adapt to COVID mandates.” Without consistent loyalty from golf members, country clubs would have had a difficult time surviving. Thankfully, the businesses have been able to thrive while simultaneously bringing golf lovers
together, at a safe distance of course. “Eventually, golfers came to understand that being on the golf course was a safer place to enjoy the outdoors — the game of golf — and connect in a safer manner with friends,” Rasch said.
PAGE A12 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • JANUARY 14, 2021
Town
Stony Brook Resident Announces Run for Town Council
BY RITA J. EGAN RITA@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
One of the names on the ballot for a special election in Brookhaven March 23 is a familiar one to many Three Village residents. With the Town of Brookhaven Council District 1 seat vacant, after Valerie Cartright (D-Port Jefferson Station) won her run as a judge for the Supreme Court of the State of New York, the town called for a special election. While the Republican candidate has not yet been officially named, Jonathan Kornreich has been announced as the Democrat in the race. Kornreich has been a Three Village Central School District trustee for more than a dozen years and is president of the Three Village Civic Association. When he first heard Cartright was vacating the seat, he said he didn’t even think of running. “A few people contacted me, and they were like, ‘What are you doing?’ Kornreich said. “So, I agreed to think it over.” He added the argument many made to him was that it would allow him to continue doing the work he has been doing through the years, but more effectively. Although he had considered a run for the seat in the past, it had been many years since he had considered entering politics. “I just have been focused on doing the work,” he said. Kornreich said he feels his experience as both a board of education trustee and a civic president will be an asset to the position as he regularly interacts with residents and listens to their concerns. “Over the years, having been a civic president for so many years and being involved in the community as a school board member, I’ve just learned how to serve the public, and
how to listen, so it’s not going to be a hard adjustment for me,” he said. “I’m used to hearing from people.” The 51-year-old, who lives in Stony Brook with his wife, Linda, and his two daughters, first became involved with school boards when his children attended the North Shore Montessori School in Stony Brook. “It was important for me to be involved in their education so I got very active in their school, and eventually I joined the board of the Montessori school,” he said. “Soon after that I became the president of that board, and that’s where I really got my start in civic involvement.” When his children left to attend school in the Three Village district, Kornreich said he decided to run for its school board in 2008. While he will take a leave of absence from his role in the Three Village Civic Association, he plans to continue with the school board. A lifetime Long Islander, he grew up in Hauppauge and graduated from the local high school in 1987. He went on to study at SUNY Albany where he majored in English and minored in philosophy. After graduating from college, he developed an entrepreneurial spirit and started up a pool business that he ran for 20 years before selling it. He then transitioned into construction and real estate. Through the years, in addition to the pool business, he has started a computer company, an importing company and has invested in a restaurant in Thailand and a farm in Cambodia. Kornreich said during his years of community involvement he has worked with Cartright regularly. “What I admire was her ability to bring stakeholders together, and just make sure that everyone was heard,” Kornreich said. “Even if
Three Village Civic Association president and school district board trustee Jonathan Kornreich, above, announced he is running for Brookhaven Town Council in a special election in March. Below, Kornreich, left, with former Councilwoman Valerie Cartright and town Supervisor Ed Romaine at a 2017 press conference. Above photo from Kornreich; below by Rita J. Egan
she didn’t agree with them, she always made sure that everyone felt heard.” He added he never wants constituents to be frustrated with their representation, and he feels it’s important for all residents to be given the opportunity to be heard as Cartright did. “It’s time consuming and it can be difficult, but you have to go slowly and give people a chance to weigh in on things,” he said. Kornreich said it’s important to continue the work that Cartright started including making sure the ideas gathered from area residents a few years ago for the Route 25A Three Village Area Visioning Report are implemented, and a similar study for redeveloping Upper Port Jefferson is continued. He said planning is important for the future of the district, especially regarding keeping each area’s personality. “To maintain that sense of place is a result of planning,” he said. “In the Three Village area, for example, the 25A area is clearly in need of redevelopment. It’s not all that it could be, and I think it doesn’t have the kind of amenities that people in this community expect.” He gave the example of the East Setauket Pond Park area, which once was a traditional waterfront where residents could see boats. “But now it’s all overgrown with weeds, and in that park, you can’t really see out,” he said. “There’s buildings there that are vacant and have been vacant for years, and that’s an area that really needs to be redeveloped. And, I don’t mean to build buildings, I mean that’s a good place for public spaces, for parks, for preservation.” He said Upper Port, with access to Route 347 and having a Long Island Rail Road station, is an example of where a vibrant, walkable downtown area can be developed.
“That’s a place where it’s OK to build buildings and have a nice walkable downtown area with affordable housing,” he said. “A place where young people can live and seniors, and have shops and that feeling of being in a place. There’s a lot of opportunities for that in the Upper Port Jefferson Station area.” If elected, Kornreich — as with Cartright — will be the only Democrat on the Town Board, but he said with his work with the civic and school district, he has worked with elected officials from different parties. “I think that a lot of the issues that we face in the town, there’s no Republican or Democrat way to conduct town business,” he said. “And I think that a lot of those national issues don’t really come into play — they don’t apply.” He said he’s worked frequently with town Supervisor Ed Romaine (R), and he admires Romaine’s respect for the environment. “From what I’ve seen of the other people on the Town Council, their hearts are in the right place,” the candidate said. In addition to working with those on the town level through the years, Kornreich has worked with elected officials on the county, state and federal levels, and said he has a good working relationship with many of them. He said when residents come into an elected official’s office, many don’t know if the issue falls under town, county or state jurisdiction. “They don’t need to, because as an elected official, if someone has a problem with their road or with this or that, they don’t care,” Kornreich said. … “They want to know: ‘Who do I talk to, how do I get this problem fixed?’ ... So, having those relationships — I just want to be able to help people solve problems.”
JANUARY 14, 2021 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A13
University SBU’s Leaders Deal with Present, Prepare for Future Pandemic Response
BY DANIEL DUNAIEF DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Stony Brook University has been at the center of the COVID-19 pandemic, as hospital staff has treated and comforted residents stricken with the virus and researchers have worked tirelessly on a range of projects, including manufacturing personal protective equipment. Amid a host of challenges, administrators at Stony Brook have had to do more with less under budgetary pressure. In a two-part series, Interim Provost Fotis Sotiropoulos and President Maurie McInnis share their approaches and solutions, while offering their appreciation for their staff. Part I: Like many other administrators at universities across the country and world, Fotis Sotiropoulos, dean of the College of Engineering and Applied Sciences and Interim Provost of Stony Brook University, has been juggling numerous challenges. Named interim provost in September, Sotiropoulos, who is also a SUNY Distinguished Professor of Civil Engineering, has focused on ways to help President Maurie McInnis keep the campus community safe, keep the university running amid financial stress and strain, and think creatively about ways to enhance the university’s educational programs. In January, Stony Brook University which is one of two State University of New York programs to earn an Association of American Universities distinction, plans to announce new degree programs aimed at combining expertise across at least two colleges. “We have charged all the deans to work together to come up with this future-of-work initiative,” Sotiropoulos said. “It has to satisfy a number of criteria,” which include involving at least two colleges or schools and it has to be unique. Such programs will “allow us to market the value of a Stony Brook education.” Sotiropoulos said Stony Brook hoped to announce at least two or three degree ideas by the middle of January. Under financial pressure caused by the pandemic, the university has “undertaken this unprecedented initiative to think of the university as one,” Sotiropoulos said. Looking at the East and West campus together, the university plans to reduce costs and improve efficiency in an organization that is “complex with multiple silos,” he said. At times, Stony Brook has paid double or triple for the same product or service. The university is taking a step back to understand and optimize its expenses, he added. On the other side of the ledger, Stony Brook is seeking ways to increase its revenue, by creating these new degrees and attracting more students, particularly from outside the state. Out-of-state students pay more in tuition, which provides financial support for the school and for in-state students as well.
Fotis Sotiropoulos Photo from SBU
“We have some room to increase out-ofstate students,” Sotiropoulos said. “There is some flexibility” as the university attempts to balance between the lower tuition in-state students pay, which benefits socioeconomically challenged students, and the higher tuition from out-of-state students. While the university has been eager to bring in talented international students as well in what Sotiropoulos described as a “globally-connected world,” the interim provost recognized that this effort has been “extremely challenging right now,” in part because of political tension with China and in part because Chinese universities are also growing. Stony Brook “recognizes that it needs to diversify right now. The university is considering strategies for trying to really expand in other countries. We need to do a lot more to engage students from African countries,” he said. Sotiropoulos described Africa as an important part of the future, in part because of the projected quadrupling of the population in coming decades. “We are trying to preserve our Asian base of students,” he said, but, at the same time, “we are thinking of other opportunities to be prepared for the future.” While the administration at the university continues to focus on cutting costs, generating revenue and attracting students to new programs, officials recognize the need to evaluate the effectiveness of these efforts for students. “Assessment is an integral part,” Sotiropoulos said. The school will explore the jobs students are able to find. “It’s all about the success of our students,” he added. The school plans to assess constantly, while making adjustments to its efforts.
Stony Brook University has been at the forefront of reacting to the pandemic on a number of fronts. The hospital treated patients during the heavy first wave of illnesses last spring, while the engineering school developed ways to produce personal protective equipment, hand sanitizer, and even MacGyver-style ventilators. The university has also participated in multi-site studies about the SARS-CoV-2 virus that causes COVID-19. Stony Brook has been involved in more than 200 dedicated research projects across all disciplines, which span 45 academic departments and eight colleges and schools within the university. Sotiropoulos, whose expertise is in computational fluid mechanics, joined a group of researchers at SBU to conduct experiments on the effectiveness of masks in stopping the way aerosolized viral particles remain in the air, long after patients cough, sneeze, and even leave the room. “Some of these droplets could stay suspended for many minutes and could take up to half an hour” to dissipate in a room, especially if there’s no ventilation, Sotiropoulos said, and added he was pleased and proud of the scientific community for working together to understand the problem and to find solutions. “The commitment of scientists at Stony Brook and other universities was quite inspirational,” he said. According to Sotiropoulos, the biggest danger to combatting the virus comes from the “mistrust” of science, He hopes the effectiveness of the vaccine in turning around the number of people infected and stricken with a variety of difficult and painful symptoms can convince people of the value of the research. Sotiropoulos said the rules the National Institutes of Health have put in place have also ensured that the vaccine is safe and effective. People who question the validity of the research “don’t understand how strict this process is and how many hurdles you have to go through.” Part 2 will appear in next week’s issue.
Selden National Guard soldier receives promotion
Major General Ray Shields, the Adjutant General for the State of New York, announced the recent promotion of Evan Sidorowicz of the New York Army National Guard in recognition of his capability for additional responsibility and leadership. Sidorowicz, who hails from Selden and is assigned to the Company B, 642nd Support Battalion, received a promotion to the rank of specialist on Oct. 25, 2020.
SCCC’s Talise Geer, Finalist for Prestigious Vanguard Award Suffolk County Community College’s Talise Geer is a finalist for a prestigious Vanguard Student Recognition Award that acknowledges outstanding students who are enrolled in career and technical education programs that prepare them for professions that are not traditional for their gender. The Vanguard Award is presented annually by the NET (Nontraditional Employment & Training) Project, an initiative administered by SUNY Albany’s Center for Women in Government & Civil Society in partnership with the New York State Education Talise Geer Department. Geer is one of 15 state-wide finalists for the award and pursuing a new career in cybersecurity. A Wading River, married mom to a six-year-old daughter, Geer was working successfully in sales after earning a bachelor’s degree from SUNY Old Westbury. But, she wanted more. “I wanted to find a profession with job security,” she said, adding “and to do something I loved and with the opportunity for advancement.” Geer researched emerging professions and settled on cybersecurity. “I needed a school offering a cyber security major, a great faculty, affordability and convenience,” she said, “Suffolk County Community College had everything I needed.” “Talise fully understands the significance of a nontraditional career,” said Assistant Professor of Cybersecurity Susan Frank, who nominated Geer for the award. “She is determined and prepared to succeed in the male dominated field of information technology. Cybersecurity offers her a world of opportunity with a higher salary, quick career advancement and job security. A traditional field could not provide all of these benefits. All of her training, along with her amazing attitude and aptitude, makes Talise Geer one of the most deserving Vanguard Award nominees,” said Frank. “I’m very thankful for the time I spent at Suffolk, the professors and for Professor Frank nominating me for this prestigious award,” Geer said, and also thanked all of her professors for their help in her journey. Geer’s next stop is the New York Institute of Technology (NYIT) Cybersecurity Master’s program. “I hope to inspire more girls and women to enter cyber security. I’m honored and hope that a girl or woman in a seemingly dead-end job considers cybersecurity as a future career,” she said.
PAGE A14 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • JANUARY 14, 2021
School News
Brooke Roff
Photo from SWRCSD
Shoreham-Wading River senior designs poster campaign
Shoreham-Wading River High School senior Brooke Roff took part in a precollege intensive course through Parsons School of Design where she created a set of posters to promote a topic of her choosing. Brooke chose to focus on anxiety awareness. She designed three posters digitally and showed them to art teacher Ms. Samantha Shepard, who thought it was a great idea to have them hung in the high school guidance office. Her three pieces, “It’s Okay to Not Be Okay,” “It’s Okay to Accept Help” and
“It’s Okay to Have Anxiety,” proudly hang in the hallway of the guidance office as a graphically creative reminder to her peers who can recognize they are not alone in their feelings. “Anxiety is not just being nervous or being nitpicky,” Brooke said. “It can manifest through panic attacks or the constant worry that you are not good enough. Anxiety comes in many different ways, but it is best to accept yourself as you are with the help of others. I wanted to portray that through this poster campaign.”
Sister act of kindness in Rocky Point
A Coupon for Exceptional Character
North Country Road Middle School in the Miller Place School District recently announced the December Coupons for Character recipients — Andy Luo, 6th grade; Shane Kiernan, 7th grade; and Jackson Thompson, 8th grade pictured with their teachers. The initiative, which began in 2019, is designed to reward North Country Road Middle School’s students who serve as positive role models, promote respect and help NCRMS build a caring school community. Each month, students who have demonstrated exceptional character have their name placed into a container in the main office. At the end of the
Jackson Thompson
Joseph A. Edgar Intermediate School fourth grader Elyanis Ramirez (left) and fifth grader Kamyla Ramirez. Photo from RPSD
Shane Kiernan
month, three students are randomly selected to receive a prize for their leadership. Additionally, each student whose name made it into the jar receives a letter home in recognition for their commitment to making NCRMS a great place to learn and gain leadership skills. Photos from MPSD
Two sisters from Joseph A. Edgar Intermediate School in Rocky Point set out to collect supplies to share with the local shelters to help the animals. When fourth grader Elyanis Ramirez and fifth grader Kamyla Ramirez brought the idea to their teachers and classmates, Rocky Point pride took center stage. The students in Mrs. Deborah Vieira and Mrs. Lisa Celentano’s fourth grade class and Mr. Dave Falcone’s fifth grade class created posters that explained the importance of helping pet shelters. Dog and cat toys, blankets, beds and food are always in demand from the shelters, and Port Jefferson-based Save A Pet was to be the beneficiary of the fundraiser. With both classes participating, the sisters were able to raise more than $50 for their cause. “We were so proud of them for thinking about animals in need and figuring out a way to help,” Vieira said.
Andy Luo
JANUARY 14, 2021 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A15
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COMPUTER & IT TRAINING PROGRAM! Train ONLINE to get the skills to become a Computer & Help Desk Professional now! Grants and scholarship available for certain programs for qualified applicants. Call CTI for details! (844) 947- 0192 (M-F 8am-6pm ET) The
631.331.1154
If you want to advertise, do it soon!
GREAT FOR GIFT OR FLORAL SHOP Wicker gift baskets, $1.00 each 631-732-2763. MONITOR ACER FLAT WIDESCREEN G185HAb,SNID01401718143, 18�W x11�H. Paid $120. Now $45. Leave message at 631-228-4232.
RAZOR SCOOTER metal foldable, $15.00, Teddy 631-928-5392. RECORDS 54 Records that are 78rpms. Perfect Condition. $50 Call 631-929-3336 WOMEN’S FIGURE SKATES Lake Placid size 9 new, never used, $35 631-941-4425.
YOUR AD COULD BE HERE! CALL 631.331.1154
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877-516-1160
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DVD RECORDER AND PLAYER. Asking $45 Call 631-744-3722
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Finds Under 50
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Prepare for power outages with a Generac home standby generator
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class@tbrnewsmedia.com TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA
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631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
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TRAIN AT HOME TO DO MEDICAL BILLING! Become a Medical Office Professional online at CTI! Get Trained, Certified & ready to work in months! Call 855-543-6440. (M-F 8am-6pm ET)
Schools/Instruction/ Tutoring
Š105748
Automobiles/Trucks Vans/Rec Vehicles
Drive Out Breast Cancer: Donate a car today! The benefits of donating your car or boat: Fast Free Pickup - 24hr Response Tax Deduction - Easy To Do! Call 24/7: 855-905-4755
Š102897
SETAUKET: FRIDAY, JANUARY 15, SATURDAY, JANUARY 16, 9AM.-3:00PM Contents of charming Victorian home. Furniture (LR, DR, BR, occasional pieces, shelving), lighting, rugs, decorative. Kitchen, electronics, high-quality men’s/women’s clothing, children’s items, linens. Tools, camping equipment, washer and dryer, much more. 28 CAROLINE AVENUE. Face coverings required. Photos/social distancing procedures at www.redesign-ny.com. Sale by Mr. Cleanout.
Auto Services
Automobiles/Trucks Vans/Rec Vehicles
101872
Garage Sales
PAGE A16 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • JANUARY 14, 2021
WE ARE:
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The Classifieds Section is published by TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA every Thursday. Leah S. Dunaief, Publisher, Sheila Murray, Classifieds Director. We welcome your comments and ads. TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA will not be responsible for errors after the first week’s insertion. Please check your ad carefully. • Statewide or Regional Classifieds also available - Reach more than 7 million readers in New York’s community newspapers. Line ads 25 words : Long Island region $69 - $129 – New York City region $289 - $499 – Central region $29 - $59 – Western region $59 - $99 - Capital region $59 - $99 – all regions $389 - $689 words. $10 each additional word. Call for display ad rates.
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INDEX The following are some of our available categories listed in the order in which they appear. • Garage Sales • Computer Services • Announcements • Electricians • Antiques & Collectibles • Financial Services • Automobiles/Trucks etc. • Furniture Repair • Finds under $50 • Handyman Services • Health/Fitness/Beauty • Home Improvement • Merchandise • Lawn & Landscaping • Personals • Painting/Wallpaper • Novenas • Plumbing/Heating • Pets/Pet Services • Power Washing • Professional Services • Roofing/Siding • Schools/Instruction/Tutoring • Tree Work • Wanted to Buy • Window Cleaning • Employment • Real Estate • Cleaning • Residential Property • Commercial Property • Out of State Property DEADLINE: Tuesday at Noon
E M PL OY M E N T / C A R E E R S Help Wanted $18.50 NYC, $16 L.I. & up to $13.50 Upstate NY! If you need care from your relative, friend or neighbor and you have Medicaid, they may be eligible to start taking care of you as a personal assistant under NYS Medicaid CDPA Program. No Certificates needed. Phone: 347-713-3553
HELP WANTED SPECIAL!
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.
Display Ads
SCHOOL BUS AND VAN DRIVERS Best Pay/Benefits package in the industry Start at $25.19 Bus and $21.97 Van Call Huntington Coach today 631-2718931 www.huntingtoncoach.com
Buy 2 Weeks - Get 2 FREE Call Classifieds for sizes and pricing.
BIG BIG BIG BIG BIG BIG BIG
small space
BIG BIG BIG BIG BIG BIG BIG
631–331–1154 or 631–751–7663
RIVERHEAD CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT Employment opportunities * Lunch Monitors: supervise elementary students during lunch and recess *Special Education Aides: assist students in various settings, benefits available * Bus Driver, permanent and substitute: valid and clean NYS Driver’s License, CDL Class B preferred will train, benefits available for permanent employees *Substitute Custodial Workers: clean school buildings, able to lift up to 50 pounds *Substitute Special Education Aides & Computer Lab Aides: assist students in various settings *Substitute Office Assistants: answer phones and perform clerical duties 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
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RESULTS
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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
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
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JANUARY 14, 2021 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A17
SERV ICES Fences
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
Clean-Ups LET STEVE DO IT Clean-ups, yards, basements, whole house, painting, tree work, local moving and anything else. Totally overwhelmed? Call Steve @ 631-745-2598, leave message.
SMITHPOINT FENCE. DEER PROBLEM? WE CAN HELP! Wood, PVC, Chain Link, Stockade. Free estimates. Now offering 12 month interest free financing. Commercial/Residential. 70 Jayne Blvd., PJS. Lic.37690-H/Ins. 631-743-9797 www.smithpointfence.com.
Floor Services/Sales FINE SANDING & REFINISHING Wood Floor Installations Craig Aliperti, Wood Floors LLC. All work done by owner. 28 years experience. Lic.#47595-H/Insured. 631-875-5856
Furniture/Restoration/ Repairs REFINISHING & RESTORATION Antiques restored, repairing recane, reupholstery, touch-ups kitchen, front doors, 40 yrs exp, SAVE$$$, free estimates. Vincent Alfano 631-707-1228
Decks DECKS ONLY BUILDERS & DESIGNERS Of Outdoor Living By Northern Construction of LI. Decks, Patios/Hardscapes, Pergolas, Outdoor Kitchens and Lighting. Since 1995. Lic/Ins. 3rd Party Financing Available. 105 Broadway, Greenlawn. 631-651-8478. www.DecksOnly.com
Heating/Cooling HEATING SPECIALIST FOR ALL HEATING SERVICES Installations and repairs for Boilers, Oil tanks and Hot Water Heaters. 10 years of excellent experience. See Display Ad for more info. Call 631-704-0218
Electricians SOUNDVIEW ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING Prompt* Reliable* Professional. Residential/Commercial, Free Estimates. Ins/Lic#57478-ME. Owner Operator, 631-828-4675 See our Display Ad in the Home Services Directory
Home Improvement ALL PHASES OF HOME IMPROVEMENT From attic to your basement, RCJ Construction www.rcjconstruction.com commercial/residential, lic/ins 631-580-4518.
Home Improvement BLUSTAR CONSTRUCTION The North Shore’s Most Trusted Renovation Experts. 631-751-0751 We love small jobs too! Suffolk Lic. #48714-H, Ins. See Our Display Ad LAMPS FIXED, $65. In Home Service!! Handy Howard. My cell 646-996-7628 THE GENERAC PWRCELL, a solar plus battery storage system. SAVE money, reduce your reliance on the grid, prepare for power outages and power your home. Full installation services available. $0 Down Financing Option. Request a FREE, no obligation, quote today. Call 1-888-871-0194
Lawn & Landscaping SETAUKET LANDSCAPE DESIGN Stone Driveways/Walkways, Walls/Stairs/Patios/Masonry, Brickwork/Repairs Land Clearing/Drainage,Grading/ Excavating. Plantings/Mulch, Rain Gardens. Steve Antos, 631-689-6082 setauketlandscape.com Serving Three Villages SWAN COVE LANDSCAPING Lawn Maintenance, Clean-ups, Shrub/Tree Pruning, Removals. Landscape Design/Installation, Ponds/Waterfalls, Stone Walls. Firewood. Free estimates. Lic/Ins.631-689-8089
Landscape Materials SCREENED TOP SOIL Mulch, compost, decorative and driveway stone, concrete pavers, sand/block/portland. Fertilizer and seed. JOS. M. TROFFA MATERIALS CORP. 631-928-4665, www.troffa.com
Masonry CARL BONGIORNO LANDSCAPE/MASON CONTRACTOR All phases Masonry Work:Stone Walls, Patios, Poolscapes. All phases of Landscaping Design. Theme Gardens. Residential & Commercial. Lic/Ins. 631-928-2110
Miscellaneous DISH TV $59.99 For 190 Channels + $14.95 High Speed Internet. Free Installation, Smart HD DVR Included, Free Voice Remote. Some restrictions apply. 1-888-609-9405 GET DIRECTV! ONLY $35/month! 155 Channels & 1000s of Shows/Movies on Demand. (w/SELECT All Included Package). PLUS Stream on Up to FIVE Screens Simultaneously at No Additional Cost. Call DIRECTV, 1-888-534-6918
Painting/Spackling/ Wallpaper ALL PRO PAINTING INTERIOR/EXTERIOR Power Washing, Staining, Wallpaper Removal. Free estimates. Lic/Ins #19604HI 631-696-8150. Nick BOB’S PAINTING SERVICE 25 Years Experience. Interior/Exterior Painting, Spackling, Staining, Wallpaper Removal, Staining and Deck Restoration Power Washing. Free Estimates. Lic/Ins. #17981. 631-744-8859 COUNTY-WIDE PAINTING INTERIOR/EXTERIOR Painting/Staining. Quality workmanship. Living and Serving Three Village Area for over 30 years. Lic#37153-H. 631-751-8280
Painting/Spackling/ Wallpaper LaROTONDA PAINTING & DESIGN Interior/exterior, sheetrock repairs, taping/spackling, wallpaper removal, Faux, decorative finishings. Free estimates. Lic.#53278-H/Ins. Ross LaRotonda 631-689-5998 WORTH PAINTING “PAINTING WITH PRIDE” Interiors/exteriors. Staining & deck restoration, power-washing, wallpaper removal, sheetrocktape/spackling, carpentry/trimwork. Lead paint certified. References. Free estimates. Lic./Ins. SINCE 1989 Ryan Southworth. See Display Ad. 631-331-5556
Tree Work RANDALL BROTHERS TREE SERVICE Planting, pruning, removals, stump grinding. Free Estimates. Fully insured. LIC# 50701-H. 631-862-9291
SUNBURST TREE EXPERTS Since 1974, our history of customer satisfaction is second to none. Pruning/removals/planting, plant health care. Insect/ Disease Management. ASK ABOUT GYPSY MOTH AND TICK SPRAYS Bonded employees. Lic/Ins. #8864HI 631-744-1577
Power Washing EXTERIOR CLEANING SPECIALISTS Roof cleaning, pressure washing/softwashing, deck restorations, gutter maintenance. Squeaky Clean Property Solutions 631-387-2156 www.SqueakyCleanli.com
Advertise Your Seasonal Services SPECIAL RATES AVAILABLE NOW! Landscaping
Painting
Home Improvement
Pest Control
Air Conditioning
POWERWASHING PETE Sanitize your home professionally- house, deck, fence, roof, driveway, pavers and outdoor furniture. $50 off any job! Free Estimates. Call 631-240-3313. Powerwashpete.com. See Display Ad for more Info.
Tree Work ARBOR-VISTA TREE CARE A COMPLETE TREE CARE SERVICE devoted to the care of trees. Maintenance pruning, water-view work, sun-trimming, elevating, pool areas, storm thinning, large tree removal, stump grinding. Wood chips. Lic#18902HI. Free estimates. 631-246-5377
Call Our Classifieds Advertising Dept.
631-331–1154 631-751–7663
ADVERTISE IN OUR HOME SERVICES DIRECTORY
Automatically your ad will appear in all 6 papers from Huntington to Wading River, plus you receive a on our website tbrnewsmedia.com – which has over 103,000 views per month!
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Cesspool Services
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
PAGE A18 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • JANUARY 14, 2021
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Call (631) 331-1154 or (631) 751-7663 â&#x20AC;&#x153;Liamâ&#x20AC;? Is a handsome orange and white male who is super friendly and affectionate. He was returned because he meowed too much. Really? Thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s how cats talk to us, engage with us, and isnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t that what we want in our pet? Liam needs a home with a real cat lover, someone who wonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t punish him for being who he is.
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JANUARY 14, 2021 â&#x20AC;˘ THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD â&#x20AC;˘ PAGE A21
R E A L ESTAT E Professional Properties
25A SETAUKET On way to supermarkets. Hi visibility office for rent on 25A in charming stand alone professional office building. 650 sq. ft. Private entrance, 2 private bathrooms, private A/C and heating controls. Built-in bookcases. Light and bright. Ample parking. Previous tenants included; an attorney, an accountant and a software developer. Call 631-751-7744.
SETAUKET, 25 A CORNER OFFICE SUITE: high visibility, large plate glass window, private bath, own thermostat, private entrance, off street parking. Village Times Building. Call 631-751-7744
STONY BROOK 1 bedroom, 1 bath, new paint, carpet, close to Stony Brook, $1300 utilities included, private entrance 631-680-2101.
WATERVIEWS PORT JEFFERSON VILLAGE beautiful newly updated 2 bedroom, full bath, a/c, parking available, heart of village, $2,700 per month Coach Realtor Loretta Bove 631-928-5484.
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PAGE A22 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • JANUARY 14, 2021
Editorial
Letters to the Editor
An Open Letter to U.S. Rep. Lee Zeldin
Photo from Pixabay
Community Journalism Matters More than Ever
Not every publication out there is “Fake News.” During last week’s insurgence at the U.S. Capitol, a photo — taken by a journalist — has made its way around social media, memorializing the words “Murder the Media” written on a wall inside The People’s House. That’s disheartening to say the least. Now more than ever, facts are important — whether you like us or not. The fact that journalists, reporters and photographers down in D.C. are now sharing their stories about that Wednesday’s events — how they were attacked, name called, hurt and threatened — is a terrifying thought. The media has always had a rocky relationship with readers. A lot of the time, many people don’t like what is being reported on or how it’s being said. That is something this field has dealt with since the first newsletter came out centuries ago. But the last four years are on a different level. It’s a whole new battle. There have been many times that reporters at TBR News Media were harassed on assignment, also being called “fake.” We are your local paper. We are the ones who cover the issues in your backyard, who tell the stories of your neighbors that you live beside, and we showcase your children, whom you love, playing their favorite sports. We aren’t commentators or analyzers, except on our opinions pages that are clearly labeled. We are the eyes and ears of our community, and we do the heavy lifting when you have questions. We interview your elected officials and bring awareness to issues other larger papers or TV stations forget to research or mention. How is that fake? Now more than ever, we ask you to support what we have put our hearts and our livelihoods into. Next time you might think that the media had it coming to them, just remember that those reporters who have been hurt and humiliated don’t come into your workplaces, breaking your equipment and ridiculing you for what you do. We serve all the public and are proud to do so.
Letters … 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 julianne@tbrnewsmedia.com or mail them to The Village BeaconRecord, P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733.
Thank you for the revisionist email sent Saturday evening to your constituents (of whom I am one). You wrote in response to last week’s President Donald Trump [R] planned and inspired insurrection. You tried to wrap yourself in the flag and to feign victimhood. You sought to shield yourself from your responsibility for what took place. I, as a lifelong Republican — and a conservative one at that — hold you accountable for enabling, endorsing and abetting the president’s assault on our democracy. I hold you accountable for this last four years of Trump-led attack on the truth, and his Joseph Goebbels class promulgation of lies. I hold you complicit in holding hands with ignorance and disregard of science in a march into darkness. It is ironic that you may have found yourself in harm’s way during the assault on the Capitol. It is even more ironic that the systematic assault, supported by you, on the truth and our
democratic processes, however flawed, has driven America into the arms of the Democrats, who will now control the Congress and the executive branch of our government. I’m not at ease with that, but I am way more at ease with the Democrats’ stewardship than I have been of these last four years of demagoguery, totalitarianism and Trump’s attempt to destroy faith in the truth. You say in your email that we have big challenges and “real disagreement.” There are real disagreements to be sure. Economic policy, defense policy, health care, social security, environmental policy, education and many others. These are things about which reasonable people can differ. What is not a real disagreement is the outcome of the presidential election in which voters rejected Donald Trump while electing many Republican candidates, including yourself. That Trump won is nonsense that no informed person can reasonably believe. You must renounce this lie.
Its persistence is a cancer on the body politic that will eat away at America and at democracy itself for years to come. If we survive this — you acknowledge the future of our republic is precarious — it will be because our free press sheds light powerful enough to blot out the shadows cast by the president and his cronies, you among them. There is bias in the news media, sure enough, but there are many sources and, across the board, you can take the average and divine the truth. Your inexplicable adherence to the Trump narrative has increased the threat to our democracy. One of the mantras of the last week has been, “This is not who we are.” Unfortunately, it may well be who we are, gone from the worldwide promise of democracy and equal treatment to a bigoted, parochial and incendiary banana republic. Mr. Zeldin, answer the question: “Is that who you are?” Timothy Glynn Setauket
Decision Time for Republicans My Republican fellow citizens, the time has come to finally choose for yourself between two mutually exclusive views of reality. The first is that there was a nationwide conspiracy to steal the election from President Donald Trump [R], presumably involving hundreds of state and local election officials and workers, voting machine manufacturers and contractors, with 60-plus judges — many Republican or even Trumpappointed — inexplicably disregarding evidence of fraud in courts around the country. (And that despite successfully stealing the election for Biden, Democrats lost seats in the House and failed to avoid Senate runoffs in Georgia.) That there was a conspiracy to accuse the Trump campaign of involvement with the Russian effort to influence the election, and that the 140-plus contacts with Russian nationals by Trump and 18 of his associates — which included
sharing internal campaign polling data — were innocuous. And that the investigation into those contacts, led by a Republican former FBI director, which indicted and convicted seven of those associates, was baseless. That Trump didn’t withhold military aid to Ukraine to force an investigation into a domestic political rival, or threaten a Republican Georgia election official with prosecution if he didn’t falsify votes to change the outcome of an election — transcripts and tapes of these conversations notwithstanding. That former President Barack Obama [D] wasn’t born in the United States and was able to run for president only thanks to a conspiracy to falsify his early history in Hawaii and Washington state, presumably involving state officials, schoolteachers and friends, dating all the way back to a fake birth announcement placed in a Honolulu newspaper in 1961. The second view is that Trump was simply lying to you all along.
Not spinning, shading or selectively arguing the truth — which all public figures do — but outright lying to your face about nearly everything, big (COVID-19, election fraud) and small (his inauguration crowd, his wealth). He told you things that felt good to hear, to feed his ego with your approval, and to benefit himself financially and politically. He never cared about you or any part of his constituency — rich or poor — or the country or even the Republican party. To be healthy, American politics needs a viable, national conservative party made up of reality-based, true conservatives arguing in good faith for a principled agenda, not crackpot conspiracy-weaving Confederate cultists devoted to one individual. Last week clearly illustrated the predictable consequences of trying to have it both ways. The time has come to make a choice. John Hover East Setauket
The opinions of columnists and letter writers are their own. They do not speak for the newspaper.
JANUARY 14, 2021 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A23
Opinion
Comparing Life Now to the Beginning of the Pandemic
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or my family and me, the pandemictriggered life change started almost exactly 10 months ago, on March 13. How different is the life we lead now from the one we led way back in March? Comparing answers to the same questions then and now can offer a perspective on the time that’s passed and our current position. Question: What do we do? March 2020: Shut businesses down, encourage people to D. None stay home and track of the above everything. Talk about BY DANIEL DUNAIEF where we are “on the curve” and hope that we can “flatten the curve” and reach the other side, allowing us to return to the lives and habits we used to know.
January 2021: Try to keep infection rates down and take measured chances in public places, while hoping officials allow schools, restaurants and other businesses to remain open. Question: What do we eat? March 2020: Pick up take out food whenever we can. Go to the grocery store and cook. Baking rapidly became a release and relief for parents and children, who enjoyed the sweet smell of the house and the familiar, reassuring and restorative taste of cookies and cakes. January 2021: In some places, we can eat indoors. Many people still order take out or cook their own food. Question: What do we do with our children? March 2020: Overburdened parents, who are conducting zoom calls, conference calls and staring for hours at computer screens, face the reality of needing to educate their children in subjects they either forgot or never learned. January 2021: Many students continue to go to school, even as the threat of closing, particularly in hot spots, continues. Question: What do we do for exercise? March 2020: People take to the streets,
order exercise equipment or circle the inside or outside of their house countless times, hoping to break free from their blinking, beeping and demanding electronic devices. January 2021: Gyms have reopened, with some people heading to fitness centers and others continuing their own version of counting the number of times they’ve circled the neighborhood, with and without their dogs. Question: What can we do about work? March 2020: Many businesses close, asking employees to work from home. January 2021: Many businesses are trying to stay open, even as others have continued to ask their employees to work from home, where they can talk on computer screens in mismatched outfits, with nice blouses and shirts on top and gym shorts or pajamas. Question: What can we plan for? March 2020: We cancel weddings, parties, family gatherings and all manner of events that involve crowds. January 2021: We have learned not to make plans that are set in stone, because the calendar has become stone intolerant. We make plans
Freedom of Speech or Unlawful Speech
I
t may have been the start of a new year last week, but life certainly hasn’t calmed down much. We are witnessing history in the making. Demonstrators who had traveled from all over the United States to Washington, DC last Wednesday turned from listening to President Trump rage to marching on the Capitol. Once there, many broke into the building and caused vandalism, chaos and death. Thanks to instantaneous news flashes, we heard it and saw it Between happen, and now we are living through you and me the consequences. BY LEAH S. DUNAIEF One of the consequences is bans of certain accounts by social media, led by Twitter and Facebook. Is that censorship? Is that an assault on our Freedom of Speech enshrined in the First Amendment to our Constitution?
A simple way to offer an answer is to take you into the world in which community newspapers and media operate. As you know, we are the ones who report on the news closest to our daily lives, the events and issues that concern us here in the villages and towns where we live, send our children to school and most of us work. We report comprehensively on local people, local politicians and local businesses that would otherwise be overlooked by the bigger dailies and networks. We are the watchdogs on behalf of the local citizenry. Here are the rules by which we must publish: While we print opinions as well as facts, opinions must be clearly labelled as such and are usually confined to two or three pages specifically designated for Letters to the Editor and Editorials. We also publish pieces called “Your Turn,” or “Our Turn,” again as opinion or analysis. Everyone has a right to their opinion, and the publisher has a right to its policies about those articles and letters. Our policy is to publish opinions in as balanced a way as we are sent submissions, subject to libel and good taste.
TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA We welcome letters, photographs, comments and story ideas. Send your items to P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733 or email julianne@tbrnewsmedia.com. Times Beacon Record Newspapers are published every Thursday. Subscription $59/year • 631-751-7744 www.tbrnewsmedia.com • Contents copyright 2020
Libel rules are more straightforward than good taste, which is, of course, subjective. But here is the bottom line: publishers have the final say in what they publish because they are private, not governmental enterprises. Freedom of Speech, which specifically prohibits censorship by the government, does not apply to us. Decisions made by private businesses on what to publish are not First Amendment issues. And those decisions may reflect any number of concerns that may affect the company: financial considerations, the environment in which the publisher operates and whether the publication is an avowed partisan or an independent one. We, for example, are an independent news media company, supporting neither major party unilaterally but rather our own sense of merit. We are responsible for the accuracy of the facts in our stories. Do we sometimes err? Of course. When we make a mistake, our policy is to print a correction in the same place that we ran the error, even if that’s on the front page. When we run ads, by the way, we are also responsible for the facts in them — although not the advertiser’s opinions, which still are subject to considerations of libel and good
EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Leah S. Dunaief GENERAL MANAGER Johness Kuise MANAGING EDITOR Rita J. Egan EDITOR Julianne Mosher
LEISURE EDITOR Heidi Sutton ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Kathleen Gobos ART AND PRODUCTION DIRECTOR Beth Heller Mason
and contingency plans. Question: What do we do for entertainment? March 2020: We secretly binge watch TV shows, although we don’t share our indulgences. January 2021: After we ask how everyone is doing, we regularly interject questions about the latest TV shows or movies. Question: What do we notice in the supermarkets? March 2020: Toilet paper and paper towels are hard to find. January 2021: Toilet paper and paper towels are generally available, but we may only be allowed to buy two packages. The cost of paper goods and other items seems to have risen. Question: Do we let our children play sports? March 2020: Almost every league in every sport shut down, following the lead of professional teams. January 2021: Youth leagues have restarted. Question: What’s a cause for optimism? March 2020: We believe in flattening the curve. January 2021: The vaccine offers hope for a return to a life we used to know.
taste. And when we run political ads, we must print who paid for the ad in the ad itself. When it is a group under a generic name rather than an individual, we must have on file the names of the executive officers of that group and those must be subject to review by any member of the public. Do we have the legal right to refuse an ad or an opinion or a misstatement of facts? As a private company, we do. Further, just as it is against the law to yell “Fire!” in a crowded theater when there is none because that is not protected free speech, we have the civic responsibility to vet misstatements and untruths. And while we consider our papers safety valves for community members to let off steam with their strongly held opinions, we do not publish just to add fuel to a fire. Twitter and Facebook and the rest who consider themselves publishers of news and not just telephone companies also have a responsibility to the public. That, of course, raises another issue. Do we want so much power in the hands of a few high tech moguls, whose messages instantly circle the world? Or should they, like us, be subject to regulatory control?
INTERNET STRATEGY DIRECTOR Rob Alfano CLASSIFIEDS DIRECTOR Sheila Murray BUSINESS MANAGER Sandi Gross
CREDIT MANAGER Diane Wattecamps CIRCULATION MANAGER Courtney Biondo SUBSCRIPTION MANAGER Sheila Murray
PAGE A24 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • JANUARY 14, 2021
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