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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. 35
March 18, 2021
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A plan for the people Local activist groups rally in front of county offices for police reform — A3
Closing its doors Owners close Sound Beach’s Hartlin Inn
A7
Salute to Women Special Feature B1
Julianne Mosher
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PAGE A2 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • MARCH 18, 2021
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Frank Vene, and his daughter Laraine Kelly, were able to be vaccinated at Suffolk County Community College last week, with help from Legislator Nick Caracappa. Photo by Kimberly Brown
Selden WWII veteran finally gets his vaccine
Thank You
to those risking their lives and keeping us safe and supplied
During these difficult times, tips to reduce anxiety:
BY KIMBERLY BROWN DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
• Practice deep breathing and relaxation • Meditate • Connect with friends and family by telephone or online • Use visualization & guided imagery • Exercise, try to take a walk • Distract yourself by setting small goals • Mindfulness
REMEMBER TO KEEP SOCIAL DISTANCING AND THAT THIS WILL END If you would like a confidential, compassionate professional person to talk to, I am a psychotherapist working with adults, couples and families who are dealing with anxiety, depression, bereavement and trauma. Wishing you serenity and good health,
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Finding it difficult to make and obtain a COVID-19 vaccine appointment, 101-yearold WWII veteran Frank Vene was finally able to receive his Pfizer vaccination last week with the help of Suffolk County Legislator Nick Caracappa (R-Selden). As with many seniors, Vene and his 78-year-old daughter, Laraine Kelly, did not have access to the technology needed to book a vaccine, and had to rely on their friends and a family member to help them make an appointment — all to no avail. “Neither I nor my sister have a computer,” Kelly said. “We’ve been trying to make an appointment for months, but nothing was available.” Even with the help of a family member, trying to book an appointment online became nearly impossible, as available spaces would fill up within minutes. They were not able to reach anyone over the phone due to disconnections or being placed on hold for hours.
Seeing the difficulty Vene and his daughter were having trying to book a vaccine appointment, a neighbor of Vene’s called Caracappa and voiced their concern for the veteran. He took immediate action. “It was a frustrating process for them, but due to the diligence of our office of constantly monitoring the county’s website, we were able to hit it right and got two appointments scheduled for Mr. Vene and his daughter,” Caracappa said. “We were very fortunate to get them, because 99% of the time there is no availability.” Despite feeling nervous about the vaccine, Vene expressed his excitement about receiving it because he will now be able to see his grandchildren again. The last time he was able to see any family was in March of 2020. On Wednesday, March 10, he finally received his first dose of the Pfizer vaccine and gave a thumbs-up while nurse Daria Castrogivanni finished up the rest of his paperwork. “I thank Mr. Caracappa 100% because without his help we would’ve never got here,” Kelly said.
MARCH 18, 2021 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A3
County
Local groups rally to support ‘The People’s Plan’
BY JULIANNE MOSHER JULIANNE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
Dozens of community activists from across Long Island rallied outside Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone’s (D) office in Hauppauge this week, asking lawmakers to adopt “The People’s Plan.” Earlier this month, police reform advocates created their own plan to hold law enforcement accountable and calling on them to be transparent within the community. “We’re gathering here today nearly a year after the George Floyd uprisings because our communities took to the street and said enough is enough,” said Elmer Flores with Long Island United to Transform Policing and Community Safety. “We are yearning for change. And for far too long our elected officials have not met our demands with the gravitas that it demands.” Some of the plan includes civilian oversight of police misconduct, creating unarmed traffic enforcement and ending pretextual stops when someone is pulled over. “Mistrust is pervasive between the police and the communities they are supposed
to represent,” he added. “And part of that is that we need to get to the root causes of why crime happens and how we can address it and prevent it from happening. But to do that, it requires leadership. It requires bold and effective action that’s going to change the way policing happens on Long Island.” This plan is separate from the reform Bellone submitted to lawmakers last week, and these local activists demand the reforms be included in the plan due to the state April 1. Jackie Burbridge, co-founder of the Long Island Black Alliance, said to the crowd that for years the Suffolk County Police Department has been actively turning a blind eye to crime being committed in this county in order to continue harassing people who are not white. She said the recommendations that the county task force came up with don’t go far enough in preventing or mitigating discriminatory policing. “The plan that was released by Suffolk County in response to Governor Cuomo’s [D] executive order falls short of the transformative changes to the way we conceive of public safety that this moment in our community members are demanding,”
Clockwise from above: Activists rallied outside Suffolk County Steve Bellone’s office, calling on lawmakers to address a collaborative police reform called, ‘The People’s Plan;” Shoshana Hershkowitz, left, founder of the Suffolk Progressives group, showed her support at Monday’s event; A close up of an attendee’s mask. Photos by Julianne Mosher
she said. “Black and brown communities across Long Island are overpoliced, resulting in outsized opportunities for interactions between vulnerable community members and police officers. … It’s not that people are being brutalized because cops see threats. They don’t see threats in our community, they see prey. And what we need is police reform that’s actually going to address that.” The collective groups have spent months crafting the 12, research-backed proposals for structural reform that make up the 310-page “The People’s Plan” to address numerous structural components of transforming and reimagining policing and public safety on Long Island. Suffolk’s police reform proposal directs the county’s Human Rights Commission to review complaints of police misconduct. However, the police department would still have the power to investigate and discipline police misconduct. Activists say they are asking for lawmakers to consider other measures, like mental health counselors for certain situations, and create a community council to review and hold police accountable for misconduct. Members from local groups headed to Hauppauge, too, including Myrna Gordon of the North Country Peace Group, to show their support and signs. “How can we not be here?” she asked. “It’s what we need to do to keep fighting for peace and justice. We need to see that Steve Bellone is on board with ‘The People’s Plan,’ and every peace and justice group in Suffolk County and the Three Village area needs to be on board.”
Peggy Fort, a member of the United For Justice in Policing Long Island and Building Bridges in Brookhaven groups, said ‘The People’s Plan’ addresses not just the community, but could benefit police officers, acknowledging the stresses police officers face. “We’re not trying in ‘The People’s Plan’ to micromanage the police department,” she said. “What we’re trying to do is really address the problems and the racial bias that exists.” Visit tbrnewsmedia.com for more photos.
PAGE A4 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • MARCH 18, 2021
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MARCH 18, 2021 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A5
Local lawmakers call on Cuomo to resign
BY LEAH CHIAPPINO DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
Despite high marks from his handling of the pandemic, Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) has recently faced seven allegations of sexual harassment. The allegations come after a Jan. 28 report by the state attorney general, Letitia James (D), alleging the governor’s administration undercounted COVID-19 deaths in nursing homes by as much as 50 percent. Due to these recent developments, many elected officials have called on the governor to resign, including U.S. Sens. Chuck Schumer (D-NY) and Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY). “Confronting and overcoming the COVID crisis requires sure and steady leadership,” they said in a joint statement March 12. “We commend the brave actions of the individuals who have come forward with serious allegations of abuse and misconduct. Due to the multiple, credible sexual harassment and misconduct allegations, it is clear that Governor Cuomo has lost the confidence of his governing partners and the people of New York. Governor Cuomo should resign.” U.S. Rep. Lee Zeldin (R-NY1), an ardent Cuomo critic who is eyeing a run for governor next year, echoed calls for Cuomo to resign. When news of the seventh allegation broke, Zeldin issued a statement, also March 12, which read, “Andrew Cuomo has abused the power and privilege entrusted to him by the people of New York, and his most recent remarks could not make this more clear. His continued attempts to discredit the individuals who have come forward, question their ‘motives’ and more underscore just how far he’ll go to dodge any and all responsibility. His actions are inexcusable and unforgivable, and it’s up to each and every New Yorker — legislators, the media and voters — to hold him accountable.” The congressman also criticized Cuomo’s handling of nursing homes. “The [U.S.] Department of Justice needs to immediately open an obstruction of justice investigation into Governor Cuomo and his administration,” he said in another statement, Feb. 12. “It’s now being reported there has been a direct admission of their nursing home coverup with the intent of blocking a DOJ investigation. The families of thousands of dead New York seniors deserve accountability and justice for the true consequences of Governor Cuomo’s fatally flawed nursing home policy and the continued attempts to cover it up.” Local state Republicans, have also called on Cuomo to resign. State Sen. Mario Mattera (R-St. James) said that if Cuomo does not resign, the State Assembly and Senate should move forward with impeachment proceedings. “While I did not come to this decision lightly, the time has come for new leadership so that all elected officials can return to doing the work our residents need without the numerous
Where Local Officials Stand On Cuomo Resign while investigation is ongoing
Wait for results of the AG investigation
Impeach
cold, smooth & tasty.
REP. LEE ZELDIN
cold, smooth & tasty.
NYS SEN.MARIO MATTERA
cold, smooth & tasty.
NYS SEN, ANTHONY PALUMBO
Suffolk County lawmakers have a difference of opinion regarding Gov. Andrew Cuomo resigning.
Where Local Officials Stand On Cuomo Resign while investigation is ongoing
Wait for results of the AG investigation
Impeach
cold, smooth & tasty.
REP. TOM SUOZZI
cold, smooth & tasty.
NYS SEN. JIM GAUGHRAN
cold, smooth & tasty.
NYS ASSEMBLYMAN. STEVE STERN
distractions that have plagued our state recently,” the March 11 statement read. “As a husband and a father, the continual unveiling of new sexual assault allegations — now sexual abuse — against Governor Cuomo are simply appalling. Equally important, his administration’s admitted altering of data and misdirection regarding our state’s nursing
homes are simply unacceptable.” State Sen. Anthony Palumbo (R-New Suffolk) agreed the governor should resign in light of the harassment allegations against him. “In the wake of numerous sexual harassment allegations and now a deeply disturbing claim of sexual assault against Governor Cuomo, I truly question his ability to lead our state through
these difficult times,” he said in a statement, also March 11. “While I am a firm believer in due process and feel strongly that everyone is entitled to their day in court, these scandals undermine the governor’s ability to conduct his official duties and have irreparably damaged the public’s trust in the state’s top executive.” The majority of local Democrats are awaiting the independent investigation called for by AG James before making a final determination. However, state Sen. Jim Gaughran (D-Northport), released a statement in coordination with the Long Island State Senate majority, calling on Cuomo to step down until the attorney general finishes her investigation into the sexual harassment claims. “The gravity of these claims makes it clear to us that the governor cannot lead the state while faithfully responding to multiple investigations,” the March 12 statement read. “This is especially true in light of the impending state budget deadline, the need to continue guiding the state through the pandemic and the fragility of the state’s economic recovery.” U.S. Rep. Tom Suozzi (D-NY3), said that if Cuomo cannot simultaneously comply with the investigations against him and govern the state, he should consider resigning. “The governor is entitled to due process on the many serious and disturbing allegations that have been made against him,” he said in a March 12 statement. “I have confidence that the attorney general and the NYS Assembly will conduct thorough investigations. ... I believe the governor must seriously consider whether he can effectively continue to govern in the midst of these unfolding allegations. If he cannot effectively govern with all of the controversy surrounding him, he must put the interests of all New Yorkers first and he should resign.” State Assemblyman Steve Stern (D-Dix Hills), said he supports the investigation by the state attorney general into the accusations against Cuomo. “These allegations of sexual harassment must be taken seriously, and it is imperative that a transparent and independent inquiry begin immediately,” he said. “I also support the Assembly Judiciary Committee’s simultaneous investigation to determine if any impeachable offenses were committed. The committee will have the authority to interview witnesses, subpoena documents and evaluate evidence, all of which is provided under the New York State Constitution.” While Cuomo has repeatedly apologized for making his accusers feel uncomfortable, he has denied that he ever groped anyone and has refused to resign. A March 15 Siena poll, as reported by Politico, indicated that a total of 57% of respondents are “satisfied with the way Cuomo has addressed the allegations” while 32% are “not satisfied.” As for the resignation issue, 50% say he should not leave office, 35% say he should and 15% are undecided.
PAGE A6 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • MARCH 18, 2021
LEGALS Laurea Marketing LLC, Arts of Org filed with SSNY on 01/26/2021. Off. Loc.: Suffolk Cnty. SSNY designated as agent of LLC whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: Victoria Tomao, 17 Clare Drive, East Northport, NY 11731. Purpose: all lawful activities. 6130 2/11 6x vbr
Notice of formation of LIFLANY BRANDS LLC. Arts. Of Org. filed with Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 7/27/2020. Office location: Suffolk County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of the process to the LLC: 1930 Veterans Memorial Hwy, #12-437, Islandia, NY 11749. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. 6990 2/18 6x vbr
Notice of formation of 3V ELECTRICAL LLC.Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York SSNY on January 25, 2021. Office located in Suffolk County. SSNY has been designated for service of process. SSNY shall mail copy of any process served against the LLC 2 Lynn St South Setauket, NY 11720.
To Place A Legal Notice Email: legals@tbrnewsmedia.com situate, lying and being in the Town of Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk and State of New York, D/S/B/L:0200/ 423.00/02.00/016.000. Approximate amount of judgment is $496,825.80 plus interest and costs. Sold subject to terms and conditions of filed judgment and terms of sale. BRIAN EGAN, Esq., Referee. The foreclosure sale will be conducted in accordance with the 10th Judicial District’s Covid-19 Policies. All parties attending must wear a mask and practice social distancing. HILL WALLACK LLP, 575 Lexington Ave, 4th Fl, Ste 4057, NY, NY 10022, Attorneys for Pltf. 20292-965 8860 3/4 4x vbr
NOTICE OF FORMATION OF SOUND HARBOR LLC. Articles of Organization filed with Secretary of State of New York (“SSNY”) on January 14, 2021. Office location: Suffolk County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of the process to the LLC: 37 Shore Rd., Stony Brook, NY 11790. Purpose: any lawful purpose.
SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF SUFFOLK, 1900 CAPITAL TRUST II, BY U.S. BANK TRUST NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, NOT IN ITS INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY BUT SOLELY AS CERTIFICATE TRUSTEE, Plaintiff, vs. STEVEN W. BAUMANN, et al., Defts. Idx.# 616656/2018 Pursuant to an Order of Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered on 01/26/2021, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at front steps of the Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville, NY 11738 on 04/07/2021 at 9:00 AM premises known as 16 ADAMS AVENUE, CENTEREACH NY, 11720. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected,
1. To elect one (1) Trustee of the North Shore Public Library District to fill one seat. a. One five (5) year term commencing July 1, 2021 and ending June 30, 2026, filled by the candidate receiving the greatest number of votes. FURTHER N OT I C E IS HEREBY GIVEN, that for the purpose of voting at such meeting/election on April 6, 2021 the polls will be open between the hours of 9:30 a.m. and 9:00 p.m., prevailing time, and the voting will be held in the Young Adult Area of the North Shore Public Library, 250 Route 25A, Shoreham, New York; and
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NOTICE OF SALE
Meeting/Election of the qualified voters of the ShorehamWading River Central School District in the Towns of Brookhaven and Riverhead, and the qualified voters of the Rocky Point Union Free School District No. 9, Town of Brookhaven, Suffolk County, New York, will be held in the Young Adult Area of the North Shore Public Library, 250 Route 25A, Shoreham, New York, on Tuesday, April 6, 2021, at 9:30 a.m., prevailing time, for the purpose of voting by paper ballot, upon the following item:
Notice of formation of The Euclid Shop, LLC, filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 1/25/2021. Office location: Suffolk County. SSNY has been designated for service of process. SSNY shall mail copy of the process to the LLC: 3 Constance Court, East Setauket, NY, 11733. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. 930 3/4 6x vbr
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SPECIAL DISTRICT MEETING/ELECTION OF NORTH SHORE PUBLIC LIBRARY DISTRICT, TOWNS OF BROOKHAVEN AND RIVERHEAD, COUNTY OF SUFFOLK, STATE OF NEW YORK NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that a Special District
FURTHER N OT I C E IS HEREBY GIVEN, that residents of the ShorehamWading River Central School District and the Rocky Point Union Free School District No. 9 may vote on April 6, 2021, only if they meet they qualifications to vote, pursuant to Education Law 2012, by averring that they are (1) a United States Citizen; (2) eighteen years of age or older; and (3) a resident of the Shoreham-Wading River School District or the Rocky Point Union Free School District No. 9 for thirty (30) days preceding the vote, and possessing identification in the form of a North Shore Public Library card, a valid driver’s license, or some other comparable and reasonable form of identification; and FURTHER N OT I C E IS HEREBY GIVEN, that pursuant to the provisions of the Education Law, absentee ballots for the election of a
Trustee of the Library District may be applied for at the Office of the Secretary of the Librar y District during regular business hours. A list of all persons to whom absentee ballots shall have been issued will be available in said Office of the Secretary on each of the five (5) days prior to April 6, 2021, except Saturdays, Sundays and holidays, and such list will be posted at the North Shore Public Library on April 6, 2021; and FURTHER N OT I C E IS HEREBY GIVEN, that a qualified voter whose ability to appear personally at the polling place is substantially impaired by reason of permanent illness or physical disability and whose registration record has been marked “permanently disabled” by the Board of Elections pursuant to the provisions of the Election Law shall be entitled to receive an absentee ballot pursuant to the provisions of the Education Law without making separate application for such absentee ballot; and FURTHER N OT I C E IS HEREBY GIVEN, that such “in-person” voting will be dependent upon whether the Governor of the State of New York issues an Executive Order prescribing the use of absentee ballots (exclusively) for such vote/election. Dated: Shoreham, New York March 1, 2021 BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE NORTH SHORE PUBLIC LIBRARY WILLIAM SCHIAVO, L I B R A R Y B O A R D PRESIDENT 1017 3/18 2x vbr
LEGAL NOTICE AVISO DE REUNION / ELECCION ESPECIAL DEL DISTRITO DE LA BILIOTECA PUBLICA DE NORTH SHORE, PUEBLOS DE BROOKHAVEN Y RIVERHEAD, CONDADO DE SUFFOLK, ESTADO DE NUEVA YORK AVISO que la Reunión / Elección Especial del Dístrito de los votantes elegibles del distrito escolar central de Shoreham-Wading River en los pueblos de Brookhaven y
Riverhead y los votantes elegibles del distrito escolar del distrito escolar No.9 de Rocky Point Union Free district, pueblo de Brookhaven, Condado de Suffolk, Nueva York se llevará a cabo en el Area de Estudio de Adolescentes de la Biblioteca Pública de North Shore el martes 06 de abril, 2021 a las 9:30am, hora local, para el propósito de la votación por papeleta, de acuerdo a los siguientes términos: 1. Elegir un (1) fideicomiso del distrito escolar de la biblioteca de North Shore para ocupar una vacante. A. Un término de 5 años comenzando el 1 de julio del 2021 y terminando el 30 de junio 2026, que será otorgado al candidato que reciba el mayor número de votos. ASIMISMO SE COMUICA POR ANTICIPADO, que para el propósito de la votación la reunión/elección, el martes 06 de abril, 2021 las urnas se abrirán entre las horas de 9:30am y 9:00 pm, hora local, y que la votación se llevará a cabo en el Area de Estudio de Adolescents de la Biblioteca Pública de North Shore, 250 Route 25A, Shoreham, New York. ASIMISMO SE COMUNICA POR ANTICIPADO, que los residentes de los distritos de Shoreham-Wading River Central School District y Rocky Point Union Free District No. 9 pueden votar el martes 06 de abril, 2021, única y exclusivamente si cumplen con los requisitos para votar, de acuerdo a la Ley de Educación 2012, si afirman (1) Ser ciudadano de Los Estados Unidos, (2) Tener 18 años o ser mayor de 18 años, y (3) ser residente del Distrito Escolar de Shoreham-Wading River School District o Rocky Point Union Free School District No 9 por 30 días precedentes a la votación y poseer identificación en la forma de tarjeta de la Biblioteca Pública de North Shore, una licencia de conducir válida, u otra forma de identificación comparable, y ASIMISMO SE COMUNICA POR ANTICIPADO, que de acuerdo a las provisiones de la Ley de Educación, los votos por correo, para la elección de un Fideicomiso
para el Distrito Escolar de la Biblioteca pueden ser solicitados en la Oficina de la Secretaria del Distrito de la Biblioteca durante horas de oficina regular. La Oficina de la Secretaria cuenta con una lista de todas las personas a las que le han sido otorgadas votos por correo, la que estará disponible cinco (5) días antes del martes 06 de abril, 2021 con excepción de los sábados, domingos y feriados, dicha lista estará publicada en la Biblioteca Pública de North Shore. ASIMISMO SE COMUNICA POR ANTICIPADO que cualquier votante calificado que no se puede presentar en persona en las urnas debido a una enfermedad permanente o discapacidad física y cuya registración ha sido marcada como “disc a p a c i t a d o p e r manentemente” por la Junta de Elecciones de acuerdo a las provisiones de la Ley de Elección tienen el derecho a recibir una balota para votar por correo de conformidad con las provisiones de la Ley de Educación sin requerir una solicitud separada para dicha balota, y ASIMISMO SE COMUICA POR ANTICIPADO, que tal votación “en persona” dependerá de que si el Gobernador del Estado de Nueva York promulga una Orden Ejecutiva autorizando el uso de votos por coreo (exclusivamente) para tal votación/elección. Fechado: 1 de marzo, 2021 Shoreham, Nueva York POR ORDEN DE LA JUNTA DE FIDEICOMISOS DE LA BIBLIOTECA PUBLICA DE NORTH SHORE WILLIAM SCHIAVO, PRESIDENTE DE LA JUNTA DE LA BIBLIOTECA 1018 3/18 2x vbr
Notice of Formation of Stone Avenue LLC. Articles of Org. filed with Sec’y of State of NY (SSNY) on 2/22/21. Office location is Suffolk County. SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to 15 Jay Ln
LEGALS con’t on pg. 7
MARCH 18, 2021 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A7
Community News
Shoreham Garden Club announces two scholarship opportunities The Shoreham Garden Club invites graduating high school seniors in Riverhead High School and Shoreham-Wading River High School to apply for a scholarship dedicated to college students pursuing studies in the Environmental Sciences, Horticulture/ Agriculture, Botany, or related fields. The Club will award two $500 scholarships; one to one Riverhead student and another to a SWR student. Interested applicants should contact either Ms. Carlson at the SWR High School Guidance Office or Mrs. Allen at the Riverhead High
School Guidance Office. Applications are available on both school websites. Students who are interested are asked to submit an application, along with a 250word essay on why they want to pursue environmentally related studies. All applications must be postmarked no later than April 1, 2021. Completed applications and essays should be mailed to: Shoreham Garden Club, PO Box 323, Shoreham NY 11786-0328. Any questions should be directed to Kate Ventura, Chairperson of the SGC Scholarship Committee at kmlv@optonline.net
LEGALS
To Place A Legal Notice Email: legals@tbrnewsmedia.com
LEGALS con’t from pg.
#746, Mount Sinai, NY, 11766. Purpose: Any lawful purpose
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Holbrook NY 11741. Purpose: any lawful activity.
Notice of regular meetings of the Board of the North Shore Public Library 2021 should be held on the fourth Tuesday of every month at 5:00 pm. All meeting dates are subject to phone verification. BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE NORTH SHORE PUBLIC LIBRARY WILLIAM SCHIAVO, L I B R A R Y B O A R D PRESIDENT
1107 3/11 6x vbr 1072 3/11 6x vbr Notice of formation of Sharon L Hayes LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with the Secretary of State of New York SSNY on Feb. 24, 2021. Office located in Suffolk County. SSNY has been designated for service of process. SSNY shall mail copy of any process served against the LLC 7 Salty Way, Shoreham NY 11786. Purpose: any lawful purpose.
Notice of formation of Grandison Brown Consultants, LLC. Arts of Org. filed with Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on October 2, 2020. Office location: Suffolk County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of the process to the LLC: 457 NY-25A, St
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Instead of approaching what would have been its 25th year open, the Hartlin Inn had to close its doors this week. Photos from Linda Sarich
Sound Beach’s Hartlin Inn closes BY JULIANNE MOSHER JULIANNE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM A community staple has officially shut its doors for good. The Hartlin Inn, located at 30 New York Ave in Sound Beach, announced this week that they will be closing after 25 years in business. Linda Sarich, one of its three owners, said the trio is preparing to retire. “We were going to try and reopen in April, but after COVID, it was very stressful,” she said. Sarich said the Hartlin Inn had to temporarily close, like other restaurants did, right before St. Patrick’s Day last year — their busiest holiday. When restaurants were allowed to open up with outdoor dining and half capacity in May, Sarich said they scrambled to adhere to the new guidelines, but it was a stressful situation. “We just weren’t doing enough business 6 with 50% capacity,” she said. Sarich added that the Inn holds just 11 tables, so half of it would fit only six. The Hartlin Inn closed for the winter, because the owners didn’t want to operate additional costs with low revenue and let go of their staff. Recently, the owners talked it over, preparing to reopen in April and decided it was time to close up shop. April 12 would have been the inn’s 25th anniversary. “It’s a sad thing, but at least were going out on our own terms,” Sarich said. “We’ve been talking about retiring and COVID forced our hand … the next people who come in will make it a great place. I have high hopes.”
PAGE A8 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • MARCH 18, 2021
Town
Family member reflects on funerals, personal loss amid pandemic BY DANIEL DUNAIEF DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
In September, Richard Spence, 64, of Selden, died of a heart attack. Stunned by the loss, the extended family confronted the difficulty of planning a funeral during the COVID-19 pandemic. Carole Ganzenmuller, Spence’s sister, knows firsthand the suffering and difficulty the pandemic has created for mourning families. Ganzenmuller works as a funeral director’s assistant at East Setauket-based Bryant Funeral Home, where she and the staffs at so many other funeral homes on Long Island and around the country grappled with restrictions on the kinds of personal support people could normally provide after the loss of a loved one. “We couldn’t do the normal funeral,” Ganzenmuller said. “We felt we had to be strict. My mother is 91, so we were diligent in who was coming and who was not able to come.” Indeed, she said many of the extended relatives from out of state couldn’t attend the funeral for Spence, who served in active duty for the Navy for four years and as a reserve for two years. He was buried at Calverton National Cemetery. While the family did have visitation and used Zoom, Ganzenmuller said they didn’t “go
County
through the normal process.” She said her children, who are in California and were on lockdown, knew they couldn’t attend. “We didn’t want that many people around my mom,” Ganzenmuller said. Telling people not to come was a “very hard thing to do” as it cuts the grieving process and the goodbyes become more complicated, she added. The grandchildren couldn’t embrace their grandmother, which would have provided the customary comfort and support. Ganzenmuller’s family has had several members play active roles in serving the country through the armed forces. Her Carole Ganzenmuller, right, with her brother Richard Spence at an late brother William, who died at the age event a few years ago. Photo from Ganzenmuller of 43, served in the Air Force, while her oldest brother Gary is a Marine veteran In some cases, Ganzenmuller recalled how who served in Vietnam. Her late father Robert she went to a cemetery on her own, bringing a was in the Merchant Marine. casket without a family along. “We hang an American flag with great pride,” “I was going to Calverton where the families she said. could not attend the funerals,” she said. She said Sad as it was for Ganzenmuller and her family the “Hail Mary” prayer on behalf of the families to lose Spence this fall, she recognized that they when she brought the deceased to the cemetery. had more opportunities to grieve her brother than The increasing number of deceased people people who lost loved ones in the spring of 2020, Ganzenmuller bought to the cemetery or the during the earlier part of the pandemic. crematorium made her feel as if she were “in
a war zone.” Ganzenmuller’s family had an honor guard for her brother, and the flag was presented to her mother. “It’s very special,” she said. She has thought of all the people who couldn’t receive that honor. In fact, she said some religious officials didn’t feel comfortable entering the funeral home, so those services occurred outside. “What was a normal ritual was no longer a normal ritual for people,” Ganzenmuller said. The pandemic changed the way people could grieve and could say goodbye. “I felt a little blessed that my family was allowed to have what we had,” she said. “I’m sure the healing process was tougher” for people during the early months of the pandemic, regardless of what caused a close friend or family member to die. Through all the funerals, some of which continue for COVID-19, Ganzenmuller appreciated how the staff at Bryant Funeral Home and in the industry as a whole pulled together as a team. “We’re saying to ourselves, ‘There’s hopefully light at the end of the tunnel when masks will come down and people can grieve in a normal way,’” she said. “They want to hug their family, they want to cry on them — and not give the elbows anymore.”
SBU scientist finds nitrogen filter also reduces possible carcinogen
BY DANIEL DUNAIEF DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
Water, water everywhere and several scientists want to make sure there are plenty of drops to drink. Christopher Gobler, director of the New York State Center for Clean Water Technology, and Arjun Venkatesan, the CCWT’s associate director for Drinking Water Initiatives, recently published two studies in which they highlighted how their efforts to reduce nitrogen also cut back on 1,4 dioxane, a likely carcinogen. Gobler, who is also endowed chair of Coastal Ecology and Conservation at Stony Brook University’s School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences, is leading a center whose mission is to solve the nitrogen overloading crisis in Long Island’s groundwater and surface water by developing alternative onsite septic systems. Nitrogen, which comes from a host of sources including fertilizer, creates the kind of conditions that lead to algal blooms, which can and have closed beaches around Long Island. Nitrogen also harms seagrass meadows and can cause the collapse of shellfisheries like clams and scallops. In the meantime, 1,4 dioxane, which is a
potential health threat in Suffolk and Nassau counties, comes from household products ranging from shampoos to cleaning products and detergents. Manufacturing on Long Island in prior decades contributed to the increase in its prevalence in water sources. Indeed, recent studies from the center showed “very high levels of 1,4 dioxane have been detected in our groundwater,” Venkatesan said in a recent press conference. The chemical doesn’t easily degrade, conventional wastewater treatment doesn’t remote it, and household and personal care products contribute to its prevalence in the area. A one-year study “confirmed this suspicion,” Venkatesan said. “The level of 1,4 dioxane in a septic effluent is, on average, 10 times higher than tap water levels.” This finding is “important” and suggests that the use of these products can ultimately end up polluting groundwater, Venkatesan continued. At the same time, the increasing population on Long Island has contributed to a rise in the concentration of nitrogen in groundwater, Gobler added during the press conference. The center hoped to create a septic-enhancing system that met a 10, 20, 30 criteria.
They wanted to reduce the concentration of nitrogen to below 10 milligrams per liter, the cost to below $20,000 to install and the lifespan of the system to 30 years. The center developed nitrogen removing biofilters, or NRBs. In a second paper, the researchers showed that the NRBs removed 80 to 90 percent of nitrogen. At the same time, the NRBs are removing nearly 60 percent of 1,4 dioxane, driving the concentration down to levels that are at, or below, the concentration in tap water, which is 1 part per billion. This is the “first published study to demonstrate a significant removal of 1,4 dioxane,” Gobler said at the press conference. NRBs have advanced “to the piloting stage.” The center anticipates that the NRBs could be available for widespread installation throughout Suffolk County by June 2022. The center currently has 20 NRBs in the ground and will have over 25 by the end of the year. In 2022, anyone should be able to install them, Gobler said. Residents interested in NRBs can contact the center, which is “working toward being prepared for widespread installation,” Gobler
explained in an email. Residents interested in learning what financial assistance they might receive for a septic improvement program can find information at the website www.reclaimourwater.info. Gobler said the microbes in the NRBs do the work of removing nitrogen and 1,4 dioxane, which continually reside within the filters. He explained that they should continue to be functional for decades. Adrienne Esposito, executive director of Citizens Campaign for the Environment, which has offices in five locations and is committed to an environmental agenda, was pleased with the research Gobler and Venkatesan presented. She was “beyond thrilled with the science released today,” she said during the press conference. This research on the effectiveness of the NRBs “validates all of the work going on for the last four years.” Esposito urged the state’s Department of Environmental Conservation to test wastewater from laundromats, car washes and other sources to determine the amount of 1,4 dioxane that enters into groundwater and surface water systems. Esposito is “thankful for science-based work that allows us to attain clean water.”
MARCH 18, 2021 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A9
Sports
tbrnewsmedia.com Goforto more sports photos
Rocky Point Eagles fall to Hills West BY BILL LANDON DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM The Eagles of Rocky Point opened their season with a nail-biting win against Hills West that went 5 sets but had all they could handle against Sayville in a league IV matchup March 13 at home falling to the Golden Flashes 25-13, 25-18, 25-14. Rocky Point edged ahead early in the second set but Sayville had the upper hand at net to win their first game of the season. The loss drops the Eagles to 1-2 where they’ll look to regain their winning ways on the road against Harborfields March 18 before returning home to host Kings Park the following day. Game time for both is 4 p.m.
Photos by Bill Landon
Co-Captain Julia Wheeler with a kill.
Anna Lanze and Kylie Modine battle at net for the Eagles.
Rocky Point libero Chloe Graham digs one out for the Eagles. Celine Singh with a return for Rocky Point.
Rocky Point Co-Captain Jessica Barrett sets the play.
PAGE A10 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • MARCH 18, 2021
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PAGE A18 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • MARCH 18, 2021
Editorial
Letters to the Editor
Gov. Andrew Cuomo must go
Activists attend a rally for police reform in Hauppauge March 15. Photo by Julianne Mosher
‘The People’s Plan’
This week, dozens of groups across Long Island stood together, calling on lawmakers to adopt “The People’s Plan” for police reform, including one outside county offices in Hauppauge on March 15. Created by community task force and advocacy groups, the plan is in response to a separate version Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone (D) submitted to lawmakers last week. And it’s needed, especially since the plan has taken into consideration feedback from retired law enforcement, civil rights attorneys, advocates and activists. Earlier this month, Bellone held an urgent press conference, alleging the assault from police on a man who stole a car and ran from the cops, in Port Jefferson Station — our backyard. Of course, there are two sides to every story. The county’s current police reform proposal directs the Suffolk County Human Rights Commission to review complaints of police misconduct. That being said, the police department would still have the power to investigate and discipline their own. The plan created by advocacy groups would create a community council to review and hold the police accountable for misconduct. What’s wrong with that? By allowing the community to deliberate on what was wrong, it would alleviate some of the stresses that police officers constantly deal with. It might even prevent the “bad apples” from doing bad things. A year after Breonna Taylor’s death and nearing 365 days since the George Floyd killing, 2020 was a mess filled with protests, anger, fear and arguments. We’re three months into 2021. Let’s start anew, afresh and let open conversations prevent the beatings of innocent people, prevent unlawful deaths and make the communities we live in a better place for everyone — no matter their gender, race, income level or role in society. Transparency is a good thing in all walks of public life.
New York’s Gov. Andrew Cuomo [D] is clearly responsible for the unnecessary deaths of thousands of our friends, neighbors and fellow citizens, and he must be held accountable for his heartless actions. Cuomo wrote a directive requiring all New York nursing homes to accept all COVID-19 patients who were residents, without regard for the problem that most nursing homes were not medical facilities, and lacked both the equipment and the personnel to deal with this infectious disease. Furthermore, the nursing homes were prohibited from testing the incoming residents for having the disease at the time of their entry. This unwise policy led inexorably to the needless deaths of thousands of elderly patients, many of whom could have been saved if proper medical treatment had been provided for them. And, as it turned out, the medical facilities were indeed available, including those in New York City at the USNS Comfort, which treated fewer than 200 patients, and the Javits Center,
which treated little more than 1,000, although these large venues could have handled many more patients with ease. In the summer of 2020, Cuomo’s staff issued a report claiming that approximately 4,800 New York residents had died from COVID-19 in nursing homes. Cuomo himself, meanwhile, was living it up as a TV celebrity, delivering daily lectures on his inspirational leadership, modestly expressing humble amazement when he received an Emmy award, writing — or claiming to write — a best-selling book entitled “American Crisis: Leadership Lessons from the COVID-19 Pandemic,” and having a high old time laughing it up with his CNN celebrity weightlifter brother, Chris, making jokes about their mother’s spaghetti sauce and the size of the governor’s nose. Then the truth came out, triggered by a report from state Attorney General Letitia James [D], which revealed that the Cuomo administration had intentionally misreported the number
of nursing home deaths, and that the actual number was more like 12,000, rather than the 4,800 that had been reported. Cuomo, whose incompetence is exceeded only by his arrogance, went immediately into attack mode, saying, among other things, “But who cares? 33 [percent]. 28 [percent]. Died in a hospital. Died in a nursing home. They died.” He then proceeded to blame every conceivable suspect, focusing, to the surprise of no one, on President Donald Trump [R] and his administration, while exempting, of course, his own guilty self. There are calls for prosecution by AG James, impeachment by the state Legislature and voluntary resignation. In the event that none of these highly desirable outcomes happens to eventuate, let us look forward to the election of 2022, when the voters of New York can put an end to the unfortunate Cuomo dynasty, once and for all. George Altemose Setauket
I, for one, with the hope that others share my feelings, find that some of the current elected officials’ reactions regarding the present New York State governor, are quite repulsive, disheartening and disappointing, to state the least. Firstly, these individuals hold positions by which they could choose to be viewed as role models, demonstrating on a daily basis leadership skills, administrative skills, positive humanistic skills, to whom they serve. Secondly, some allow themselves to adhere to behaviors that are hurtful, dishonest, backstabbing, with underhanded motivations, which are
manipulative and destructive in nature. As of this writing, I hold licensing in the State of New York as a mental health worker, as well as a license in administration and leadership. These are licenses some of the elected officials do not hold but yet they are performing these duties on a daily basis, with no formal training or licensing to do so. Would a teacher, dentist, physician, plumber, electrician or mechanic be allowed to carry out their trade without the proper credentials to do so? Whatever happened to the process of innocence until proven guilty, before an individual is publicly attacked? This process, as a reminder, is elaborated
upon within several amendments in our U.S. Constitution. This is a basic model which needs to be adhered to. This backstabbing, manipulative, sick behavior and motivations must be seen for what they are and not tolerated by the electorate any longer. We have the power to support true statespersons who demonstrate observable behaviors that can carry out leadership tasks that support “the greatest good for the greatest number,” and represent behaviors that are fair, respectful, caring, kind, compassionate and honest. Paul Feinberg South Setauket
Underhanded political motivations
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.
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The opinions of columnists and letter writers are their own. They do not speak for the newspaper. EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Leah S. Dunaief GENERAL MANAGER Johness Kuisel MANAGING EDITOR Rita J. Egan EDITOR Julianne Moshers LEISURE EDITOR Heidi Sutton COPY EDITOR John Broven
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BUSINESS MANAGER Sandi Gross CIRCULATION MANAGER Courtney Biondo SUBSCRIPTION MANAGER Sheila Murray
MARCH 18, 2021 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A19
Opinion The pandemic in the words of community members over the last year
T
his month, we completed our first pandemic year. As we prepare for a hopeful future, please find below the words that reflected the realities of our past year. — “We were behind the eight ball on testing for a while now,” Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone (D) on a conference call with members of the National Association of Counties and the press, March 18, 2020. – “These are not helpful hints. These D. None are legal provisions. of the above They will be enforced.” BY DANIEL DUNAIEF Governor Andrew Cuomo (D) on a conference call with reporters, describing his decision to shut down businesses not considered essential, March 20, 2020. – “A lot of us are thinking about staff on the hospital side who are really being tested in an unprecedented way.” Cathrine Duffy, director of HealthierU, an employee wellness program at Stony Brook University, March 25, 2020. — “I’ve never seen anything like it.” Joan Dickinson, community relations director at Stony Brook University, in response to the over 100 emails she received each night from people eager to donate to the university, March 27, 2020 — “For the N95 masks to come in without a charge helps all those local entities laying out a lot of cash at the moment.” Rep. Lee Zeldin (R-NY1) in response to the announcement that President Donald Trump (R) would ship
200,000 masks to Suffolk County, April 6, 2020. — “I never imagined being in the position of reporting the numbers on a daily basis of people who have died in our county from anything like this.” Bellone on his daily conference call with reporters, April 12, 2020. — “We feel that science will solve this problem, and hopefully soon.” John Hill, director of the National Synchrotron Light Source II, who was part of a team coordinating Brookhaven National Laboratory’s COVID-19 research across all the Department of Energy labs, April 19, 2020. — “We have a hard winter ahead of us.” Bettina Fries, chief of the Division of Infectious Diseases at Stony Brook Renaissance School of Medicine, regarding projected increases in viral cases, April 23, 2020. — “I always felt an urgency about cancer, but this has an urgency on steroids.” Mikala Egeblad, associate professor at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, in describing her efforts to apply her scientific expertise to COVID, April 26, 2020. — “Coming to the hospital is still safer than going to the supermarket.” Todd Griffin, the president of Medical Staff and chair of the Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Medicine at Stony Brook Renaissance School of Medicine, April 30, 2020. — “We love you, but you can’t come anywhere near us.” Malcolm Bowman, distinguished service professor at Stony Brook University’s School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences, recalls his extended family in New Zealand telling him and his wife Waveney as they left an old car with food at the airport so the couple could live in a camper in New Zealand , May 1, 2020.
— “At a certain point, it’s not just about the patient. It’s about the whole support system. You’re pulling not just for them, but for their whole family.” Amanda Groveman, Stony Brook quality management practitioner, describing the My Story effort to personalize patient stays at the hospital, May 7, 2020. — “I always knew you were smart, but now I know you are brilliant.” Marna said to her daughter Tamara Rosen, who defended her graduate thesis at Stony Brook University through a Zoom call, May 24, 2020. — The death of Minnesota resident George Floyd at the hands of police officers was “an outrage” and was “unacceptable.” Suffolk County Police Commissioner Geraldine Hart in a statement on a media call, May 30, 2020. — Army veteran Gary Degrijze has “truly made a remarkable recovery.” Jerry Rubano, a doctor in Trauma/ Acute Care/ Surgical Critical Care in the Department of Surgery at Stony Brook Medicine, said after he spent seven weeks on a ventilator and twice lost his pulse , June 9, 2020. — “You couldn’t have found a happier group of people.” Dr. Frank Darras, clinical professor of Urology and Clinical / Medical Director of the Renal Transplantation Program at Stony Brook Renaissance School of Medicine, about a transplant at 3:30 a.m. on a Saturday morning, June 12, 2020. — “My whole career has brought me to be who I am in this moment.” Risco MentionLewis, deputy police commissioner, in the wake of protests over policing, July 3, 2020. — “When you have untreated mental health and substance abuse disorders, the county will pay for that one way or the other.” Children’s
Association Chief Executive Officer Jeffrey Reynolds amid an increase in demand for mental health during the pandemic, July 31, 2020. — “People sent really moving and emotional notes. We saw a lot of good in people” [during a difficult time.] Colby Rowe, Trauma Center Education & Prehospital outreach coordinator who helped coordinate donations to Stony Brook, Aug. 7, 2020. — “Long Islanders deserve better.” Thomas Falcone, CEO of LIPA, in response to a letter from Senator James Gaughran (D-Northport) questioning LIPA’s oversight of PSEG after extensive power outages and communication failures following Tropical Storm Isaias, Aug. 28, 2020. — “I tell my patients, I take their hands, I say, ‘Listen, I was in there, too. I know what you’re feeling. I know you’re scared. I know you’re feeling you can die.” Feliciano Lucuix, a patient care assistant at St. Catherine of Siena Medical Center, describing her hospitalization with COVID and then her return to her work in the same hospital, Dec. 14, 2020. — “As hard and as difficult and sad and heart wrenching [as it was], so many other parts, you just saw such humanity. It was amazing.” Patricia Coffey, nurse manager at the Critical Care Unit at Huntington Hospital reflecting on the challenges and responses of the health care field amid the pandemic, Dec. 31, 2020. — “When we reach our number, we make an announcement inside.” Michael Connell, who runs the M.A. Connell Funeral Home in Huntington Station, said about alerting people about crowds awaiting a chance to visit with family during a funeral service, Feb. 26, 2021.
Funny stories about being a woman early in business
T
here are some funny stories I could share with you about being a woman in business this Women’s History Month. Like any storyteller, I may be repeating myself with a couple, so please indulge me with your patience. I hope they will give you a chuckle even if you’ve already heard them. First though, I would call your attention elsewhere in the newspaper and on our website to a section in which local businesswomen are Between you and me participating in this BY LEAH S. DUNAIEF month’s spotlight. They have sent in headshots of themselves and have answered one of three questions that we posed: how do you balance work-life duties; who inspired you; what words would you offer younger women interested in
following in your footsteps? Please look for them and enjoy their responses. We hope you will also shop in their stores and use their services, thus supporting both the local economy and minorityowned enterprise. We started the first newspaper, The Village Times, on April 8, 1976. After some wildly chaotic and exciting first months, just before Christmas, I was waiting in line at the deli across from the office when I was greeted by the ad director of a local competitor newspaper. We had met several times before, and he was filled with the good cheer of the season. “Congratulations on your new venture,” he said. “The paper looks very good every week.” “Thank you,” I replied, thinking it was a generous thing for him to say to another publisher. “You tell the fellow up there that he’s doing a great job,” he added, pointing upward to my office building on the hill. “What fellow?” I asked, ‘Fiddler on the Roof’ crossing my mind. “Aw, c’mon,” he said with a laugh. “We all know
you have some guy up there running the show.” “Merry Christmas,” I replied and took the encounter back to the staff of half a dozen wives and mothers, who howled. Then there was the time I was seated on the dais next to the New York Press Association’s keynote speaker, Mike Wallace. It was the Spring Convention, 1984. On his other side was the association’s president finishing his meal, and I was the president-elect. Wallace, good journalist that he was, chatted with us throughout the dinner, sincerely asking about the names and locations of our newspapers. After it was my turn, and I answered his queries, he looked at me and asked, “And where is your husband?” I could hear the president choking on his food as he feared my response. “He’s at home watching the children,” I answered with a smile. At this point, the president was able to get out, “No, she is the owner and publisher of her paper.” Wallace turned back to me, patted my arm, and after a long pause, offered, “Forgive me, my dear. I’m an old dinosaur.”
Here’s another. It was 1978 and I had arrived the night before the NYPA convention was to start. I was already checked into the hotel and was eating dinner in the dining room with a book for company. “May I join you?” I looked up and saw a pleasant-looking man smiling down at me. “Yes,” I answered, returning the smile and assuming he was another early arrival for the convention. We exchanged names and hometowns, chatted briefly about the weather in Albany, and then he slid his room key across the tablecloth. “Come up about 9:00,” he instructed. I stared at him puzzled, then realized what he was saying. “Why would you think I would be coming to your room?” I asked astonished. “Well,” he said, “you are down here in the hotel eating by yourself.” He withdrew the key and quickly left. I looked around, realized I was the only woman eating alone, skipped dessert, paid the check, rode the elevator up to my room, and once inside, double-locked the door. That was life in the fast lane for a woman in business in the 1970s.
PAGE A20 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • MARCH 18, 2021
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