The Village Beacon Record - October 15, 2020

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tbrnewsmedia.com

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. 13

October 15, 2020

$1.00

KYLE BARR

Catering Catastrophe Miller Place Inn was cited by Suffolk officials for “superspreader” Sweet 16 that led to 37 positive COVID cases and 270 having to quarantine across Long Island; left, a sign outside the Inn’s front door emphasizing social distancing — A4

SPACE RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBER ADDRESS

What’s Inside

Community votes ‘yes’ for more RPFD firehouse funds A3 Rocky Point couples’ new child was born on same day as dad A6 Experts talk about children coping with COVID-19 A8

Moving With You

Nightmare on Main Street Exhibit Heads to Huntington Also: Review of Robin’s Wish, Photo of the Week, Spookley the Square Pumpkin opens in Smithtown

B1

202 East Main Street Port Jefferson 631.828.2414 cell: 631.774.2264 palmarproperties.com

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PAGE A2 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • OCTOBER 15, 2020

How to Vote 2020

Three Ways to Vote This Election

Autumn Celebrations

BY JULIANNE MOSHER JULIANNE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM

Sponsored by Port Jefferson Chamber of Commerce And The Business Improvement District

Pumpkinmania

October 17th • Noon - 7 pm Location: 148 East Main Street Professional Pumpkin Carving Demonstrations & Carved Pumpkin Contest. Port Jeff residents bring down your carved pumpkins. Adults & children entrees by 4pm for judging. Contest Fee: $5.00

Harvest Photo Gathering for Friends & Families

There are several different ways to make a difference in this year’s election. The Board of Elections recently sent out a memo to help voters understand the options on how to vote during the 2020 election. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the state is allowing voters to receive an absentee ballot in case they do not feel comfortable visiting a voting location. By marking “temporary illness” on the application, voters can receive an absentee ballot. Voters interested in receiving an absentee application are recommended to visit the portal at absenteeballot.elections.ny.gov, mail an application to the Board of Elections at P.O. Box 700, Yaphank, NY 11980, or email a request with a name, address and date of birth to absentee.voters@suffolkcountyny.gov. Applications can also be dropped off in-person to the Board of Elections office, called in at (631) 852-4500, or faxed to (631) 852-4590. All applications — except for in-personCatal— og Free Gift must be sent to the board no later than Oct. 27. Home for the Holidays

T ime For Giving

October 24th • 1 - 4 pm

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Harvest Progressive Dinner November 11th • 6 - 9 pm

Location: Port Jeff Village restaurants Join us for a Dinner at our selected restaurants in the Village of Port Jefferson where you will be served appetizers, an entree, and a dessert. Each will be at different restaurants. PURCHASE tickets at www.PortJeffChamber.com

TIME S BEAC ON RECO RD NEW S MED IA

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Applications for in-person drops are available up to Nov. 2. Note that the post office cannot guarantee timely delivery for ballots applied for less than 15 days prior to Election Day. Voted ballots must be delivered to the board or postmarked by Nov. 3. Early voting is available in-person at several early voting sites starting Oct. 24 through Nov. 1. In the Town of Brookhaven, voters can visit Brookhaven Town Hall, located at 1 Independence Hill in Farmingville, and Mastic Recreation Community Center at 15 Herkimer Street, Mastic. Voters can also go to Babylon Town Hall Annex, Windmill Village, Dix Hills Fire Department, Huntington Library Station Branch, Islip Town Hall Annex, Knights of Columbus in Brentwood, Riverhead Senior Center, Nesconset Elementary School, Stony Brook University Southampton Campus and Southold Senior Center. Times vary, but voters can visit from 10 a.m. until 3 p.m. (Oct. 24-26), 12 p.m. through 8 p.m. (Oct. 27), 8 a.m. through 4 p.m. (Oct. 28 and 29), 12 p.m. through 8 p.m. (Oct. 30), 10 a.m. through 3 p.m. (Oct. 31 and Nov. 1).


OCTOBER 15, 2020 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A3

Town

T

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E

BEST

for Miller Place Families

CHOICE Officials said 123 more people voted in this year’s bond referendum than did in 2017 for the original $8.5 million. Photo by Kyle Barr

RPFD Narrowly Passes Extra $1 Million Bond Vote to Finish Firehouse RPFD is going ahead with a new $1 million bond after a community vote Tuesday, Oct. 13, with a narrow margin of just 18 votes. The community in the Rocky Point Fire District, which covers the Rocky Point and Shoreham hamlets, voted 271 to 253 on new funds to finish the Station 2 firehouse construction project on King Road. Officials have previously said that because of a delayed start, expanding construction costs and the pandemic they do not have the funds to complete the original $7.25 million project. District officials cited the projects late start, as well as increased costs due to the ongoing pandemic for why they needed these new funds. “We are all very pleased that a majority of our residents came out and supported the project,� David Brewer, vice chairman of the board of fire commissioners, said in a statement. “We are equally pleased that some of the misinformation and inaccuracies posted on some social media sites didn’t adversely affect the outcome of the vote. From the beginning, the board of fire commissioners has been committed to providing our members and residents with a safe and modern firehouse. Our goal remains unchanged and that is to complete this building despite many financial setbacks and delays, and we thank all of our supporters.� Social distancing and mask wearing rules were enforced, though the district did not allow people to cast absentee ballots, citing the extra time it would take to count those ballots as well. In a Zoom call last week relating to this vote, officials said the new bond will cost residents an average of $18 more per year on their fire district taxes, though they could not relate how many years it may take to pay off the new bond. Officials expect the project to be finished around the end of the year.

More Details on the Station 2 Firehouse Project

The district originally asked the community to support a $8.5 million bond in 2017, where $7.25 million would go to the construction of

the new firehouse. Fire District Chairman Anthony Gallino said they originally included about 7% contingency of over $500,000. This new $1 million bond is looking at a 25% contingency of about $250,000. Gallino added that any unused funds of the new bond will be put to paying down the bond. “We realized that [the original contingency] was not enough to cover obstacles, so we put a little more in there for this building,� Gallino said. On Saturday, Oct. 10, district officials made a full breakdown of the project budget available. Documents show the district lacked $752,310 to complete the firehouse. That number is out of a remaining $1.5 million on a firehouse that is 75% complete. The district still has $500,000 in contingency bond funds and $293,814 left in money taken from the general fund. There were issues on the project from the start, officials said during the call. The project manager they originally hired put out bids which were routinely around $1 million over budget. In August 2018, the district terminated its contract with its original construction manager. In February 2019, they hired a new project manager, Devin Kulka, the CEO of Hauppauge-based Kulka Group, and were able to get started with asbestos abatement in May 2019 and demolition followed in June. Materials and labor costs, especially with New York’s prevailing wage, also increased from when the bond vote was passed. The pandemic made things even more complicated. Documents show there were items that came in way over what they were originally budgeted for several years ago, resulting in the $752,310 shortfall. HVAC, for example, was slated for $600,000, but is now awarded at $925,000. While a few items came slightly under budget, those overages make up the total of the project’s $1.5 million excess. Kulka said during the Zoom call there was one contractor company that went under during construction due to COVID-19. He confirmed a surety company would be cutting a check for the cost between the work the contractor already did and what it wasn’t able to complete. Gallino said materials costs increased by 10%. Some community members questioned RPFD BOND Continued on A10

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PAGE A4 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • OCTOBER 15, 2020

County Miller Place Inn Fined $12K for Alleged COVID-19 Superspreader Event BY JULIANNE MOSHER AND KYLE BARR JULIANNE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM The well-known wedding and event venue Miller Place Inn has been issued with a fine for hosting an event that led to around 270 individuals having to quarantine across Long Island. Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone (D) said Oct. 13 a Sweet 16 party was hosted at the venue Sept. 25. The event involved 81 people, including 49 students and 32 adults, which is over the state-mandated limit. That party has now led to 334 people having been notified by the Suffolk County Department of Health Services for contact tracing. Of that number, 183 of those people were affiliated with schools, while 151 were nonschool specific. The county executive said the people affected were spread throughout the county. State law restricts all nonessential gatherings to 50 or fewer people or 50 percent capacity, whichever one of those is less. “It was the first time the health department has taken a course of action against a business,” Bellone said on a conference call with reporters, citing that businesses before have largely complied with COVID restrictions when confronted by officials. The inn has received previous warnings, he said.

The Miller Place Inn on North Country Road is the only business of its kind to be fined by Suffolk County so far in the COVID-19 pandemic. Photo by Kyle Barr

The venue was fined $10,000 for violations of the New York State executive orders, as well as $2,000 for violations of the Suffolk County sanitary code. The county exec said the determination that the inn was at fault based on the “comprehensive contact tracing investigation.” Though he noted not everyone at the party was wearing masks, the primary violation was breaking the mass gathering rules. Christopher Regina, a co-owner of the inn, said in a phone interview after Bellone’s announcement that they were made aware Oct. 8 they were in violation of the guidelines. They thought they were allowed to operate at 50% of

their fire marshal cap of 250 persons. He said, along with implementing air-filtration measures, they were “operating safely” with less than 125. “At no time before that did we know we were operating in the wrong,” he said. On Friday, Oct. 9, the inn announced it would be closing down after what they said was a warning call from the New York State Liquor Authority over reported COVID violations. Miller Place Inn co-owner Donna Regina, during an interview Friday, expressed that she was aware of “a group of teens [who] tested positive somewhere.” The event has become notorious in the past

few weeks, as the Sweet 16 was reported to have directly led to the Sachem school district having to temporarily shut down the North high school. Though the county executive said there is no dictionary definition for a so-called superspreader event, “Based on our experience in dealing with this pandemic for seven months now, this is a superspreader event without question.” On Friday, a spokesperson from the SLA told TBR News Media it had issued a warning to the inn about complaints. A spokesperson for the SLA did not immediately respond to a request for comment if it will take any action against the venue. Bellone said that people need to be mindful of the consequences of mass gatherings so no more clusters pop up. “We need to make sure as we move into the colder weather, as we move toward winter, that we cannot have these types of activities that could cause a super-spreader event like this,” he said. “We are entering a period of time where it is dangerous. We know as people move indoors they shut the windows, shut the doors and when inside that’s the real possibility for a second wave of cases happening.”

See Page A8 for More Details about the inn’s closing

“It’s time we got something back for our state tax dollars. And I’m going to make that happen.” ~ Laura Jens-Smith As Riverhead’s first female Supervisor, Laura Jens-Smith fought to reclaim over $5 million in state taxes to get Riverhead back on solid financial footing. As Town Police Commissioner, Laura increased police patrols and funded much needed police equipment. As School Board President, Laura saved the district money while expanding curriculum and services. As a Registered Nurse, Laura knows how to remain calm and resolve a crisis. WE NEED AND DESERVE WE NEED AND DESERVE • Sufficient funding for our schools • A strong voice for Long Island’s seniors • Roadway repairs and maintenance • An ethical, full-time fighter working on our behalf • Protections for our precious open space • Support for our farmers and shellfish industry

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WE NEED AND DESERVE • Lower priced prescriptions • Access to affordable health care • New businesses and industry creating good paying jobs Paid for by Friends of Laura Jens-Smith

Find out more at LauraforAssembly.com


OCTOBER 15, 2020 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A5

Town

Dr. Deborah Birx Praises Stony Brook University’s Coronavirus Efforts BY JULIANNE MOSHER JULIANNE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM

The head of the White House’s Coronavirus Task Force visited Stony Brook University last week to talk to faculty, students and administrators about college life during the pandemic. On Wednesday, Oct. 7, Dr. Deborah Birx met in a private roundtable talk with SBU representatives to gauge how everyone feels returning to campus, as part of a severalmonth-long tour of colleges across the country. The meeting lasted more than two hours, president of the university Dr. Maurie McInnis said, deeming it a successful discussion. “She was excited about what we’ve been doing on campus and at the hospital,” McInnis said. “We also learned an enormous amount from her about what we can expect in the fall.” The roundtable went over time, and so Birx only gave about 15 minutes to assembled reporters. With recent news of many colleges across the state struggling to stay open with an uptick in COVID-19 cases on their campus, Birx praised the university for how they initially handled the pandemic back in March, up until now. She added that she was particularly excited to visit Stony Brook because the university and hospital “stood out at one of the most difficult times in March, April and May in a really open, transparent and careful way.” “I was listening to the research activities that they started from day one,” she said. “And

it thrilled my heart to hear from them that their number one thing was collecting data and collecting information in real time.” Birx said the university’s research was fundamental in the beginning, by comparing and trying to understand how to find solutions with better care for patients. “That’s why we have medical research institutions,” she said. “I think you could really see the strength of that here.” She commended staff for their “months of planning” by implementing social distancing throughout the campus with signs, stickers on the floor and seating placed six-feet-apart from each other — things she hopes other colleges and universities will follow. “We want to find a pathway forward for other universities, and when we want to use what we have learned to make it available to others,” she said. “It’s been really a privilege to be here.” Reporters asked the head of the president’s coronavirus task force about President Donald Trump (R) testing positive for COVID-19, his trip to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center and his most recent return to the White House, especially his apparent eschewing of wearing a mask for photo ops despite being contagious. Birx replied, “We have been on the road, so I’ve been very concerned about what’s happening in the rest of America.” She added she would not question the judgement of the Walter Reed doctors, and she is “very proud of the physicians, between the Navy and the

Army, that are caring for him.” During her visit, she asked for insight from students, asking them for their comments and concerns for the remainder of the school year. “Meeting with students and really understanding what the university did to make sure that the students and the community were safe, I think really needs to constantly be applauded,” Birx said. “And I think understanding what’s happening with the commuting students and ensuring that they’re safe, has also been really important.”

Birx asked students for insight regarding communication with family members during holiday gatherings this upcoming season. “I think there are still people waiting for the epidemic to look like it looked before,” she said. “It’s not going to look like that. It’s not going to be a workplace driven epidemic. It is going to be what we’ve seen across the south — where it involves family members, social occasions and spreading silently in communities before and outside of the workplace.” But she also mentioned what she’s anticipating, and her own, personal, concerns. “I feel like at this moment, in many of the areas of the Northeast county by county, we still don’t have enough what we would call ‘eyes on the epidemic,’” she said. “What do I mean by that? Really active surveillance sites so that we can see early infections before we see hospitalizations, so we can do community mitigation.” By having eyes on the virus, it can be more easily contained especially among non-sick asymptomatic individuals. “I think working with the county, the university can use their data and their ability to translate information to be in regular communication with the community about where the virus is and where it isn’t,” Birx said. “We’ve demonstrated that we can learn, live and work together safely,” McInnis said. But before Birx left, she gave one big piece of advice for heading into the fall season. “Please get your flu shot.”

Sunrise Wind is also boasting that the chartered vessel is Jones Act compliant, a law that mandates new ships be manufactured in the U.S. The point, company reps said in an email to Romaine, is that offshore wind projects “can drive domestic jobs, manufacturing and investment growth.” Port Jefferson Mayor Margot Garant said that the idea of the area becoming a nationally recognized hub for such technology would be a “home run.” To help operate this vessel, Eversource and Ørsted reps have previously stated they would come into Port Jefferson Harbor for a 24-hour period in order to take on crew and resupply. The Town of Brookhaven has also sent letters of support for both the facility improvements in Port Jefferson Harbor as well as for any grant for a training facility that could be of national significance. Garant said there are multiple benefits for some kind of update to the pier, which is owned by the town. Such improvements could also, in effect, make the Port Jeff power plant property more valuable, something village officials have been aggressively arguing with the Long Island Power Authority, which owns the plant.

She said project managers have already done work to try and minimize the impact to the surrounding community, as the vessel will only be offloading people and resources once every two weeks. “It’s a win-win for so many reasons: Our harbor is being utilized, and wind power is where I think we have to go on a global national scale,” the mayor said. The project was originally slated to finish in 2024, but company reps have experienced some degree of opposition from those on the South Fork regarding, among other things, where the company can place the high-voltage cables. Instead of having the cables come in through that area, Romaine has proposed the cables come in at Smith Point, come up through Shirley and north up William Floyd Parkway. The town, he said, wouldn’t have the same hiccups as the South Fork had since major cables already run underneath the length of William Floyd, and there are existing buildings that Sunrise Wind can use as substations. Negotiations are still ongoing, though the Brookhaven supervisor said there will be a hosting fee that will go toward benefiting the local community.

Dr. Deborah Birx at Stony Brook University’s Wang Center Oct. 7. Photo by Julianne Mosher

Wind-Power Project Cements Plans for Home Base/Training Center on North Shore BY KYLE BARR KYLE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM A potentially huge economic boost for Port Jefferson, Setauket and the whole North Shore could soon be down the pike as more details of a regional wind-power project takes shape. Sunrise Wind, a combined venture with U.S.based Eversource and Denmark-based Ørsted, plans to create a 110-turbine, 880-megawatt wind farm 30 miles off the coast of Montauk. Announced back in 2019, project managers and local officials touted Port Jefferson as the new home base for the project, with offices located nearby and a repair ship to be stationed within the harbor itself. Things are moving forward in a big way, according to Brookhaven Town Supervisor Ed Romaine (R), who confirmed in a phone interview that Eversource has landed a new office space, specifically at a 59,525-square-foot office/warehouse located at 22 Research Way in East Setauket. Romaine, who recently was on a Zoom call with company representatives, said while the front part of the space is likely to be an office, the back portion of the property is to be a training

center for the people who will go out on the ship to work on and repair the massive turbines in the ocean. What’s more, since these offshore wind projects are still progressing with an everincreasing demand for renewable energy, the supervisor suggested such a facility could gain national significance. “You’re seeing offshore wind energy far more accepted, particularly with this crisis of climate change,” Romaine said. “This is a shot in the arm to the area, and wind energy will benefit the economics of all northern Brookhaven.” Sunrise Wind reps have previously talked about their plans to work with Suffolk County Community College for a training program, but in response to questions Eversource and Ørsted reps said in a statement they will have more details in the coming weeks about this new property. “This facility will serve a major role in our plans to make New York a leader in the U.S. offshore wind industry,” the statement read. What those in the facility would be training for is to go out on a new 260-plus foot service operations vessel. The ship is planned to hold 60 passengers, and then take trained technicians back and forth to take care of the turbines on the basis of two weeks on and two weeks off.


PAGE A6 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • OCTOBER 15, 2020

Holiday Grief: A TBR Series With the approaching emotions of the holidays, Suffolk County residents may face persistent and unwanted changes in their lives, from not seeing a cherished family member to remaining confined to the same house where they work, live, eat and study. Between now and the end of the year, TBR News Media will feature stories about the impact of the ongoing pandemic on mental health. The articles will explore how to recognize signs of mental health strain and will provide advice to help get through these difficult times. This week, the article focuses on youth.

Youth Deal with Mental Health Strain During Pandemic

BY DANIEL DUNAIEF DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM

In a normal year, when school is out, the number of referrals Dr. Sharon Skariah, Director of Child Adolescent Psychiatry at South Oaks Hospital in Amityville, declines during the summer. That’s not the case this year, as children continued to seek help for mental health challenges caused by the loss of a parent, the loss of financial or health security and the decline in social contact amid social distancing. “We’ve been seeing significant anxiety and depression,” Skariah said. “Part of that is the prolonged time that [children] have been out of school.” Skariah expects that the ongoing pandemic losses and restrictions will likely continue to cause those figures to increase. Several mental health professionals shared their dos and don’ts for parents with grieving children.

Grieving Dos

For starters, Skariah suggests that parents should recognize their own anxiety and depression. “If they find that they are themselves overwhelmed with the chaos of the pandemic, they should be aware that their own anxiety and mood can play a role in their children’s behavior,” she said. Dr. Meghan Downey, clinical psychologist and Director of Northwell Health’s OnTrackNY, urged people to maintain a routine. “Often, a holiday can exacerbate our stress levels,” Downey said. “Changes to our routine can increase stress. Continuing with the same sleep wake routine, normal eating and [finding time] for joy and relaxation provide a good foundation for managing grief.” Based on prior group traumatic events, like the 9/11 terrorist attacks and the SARS virus, Skariah said the restoration of order happens over time and depends on personal and predisposing factors. She urged families to be genuine and open and actively listen to what children say. Downey suggests children need to feel that they are allowed to mourn. A support network can and should consider showing empathy, care and concern. Approach-

Dr. Sharon Skariah says parents should recognize their own issues in order to help their children. Photo by Sharon Skariah

ing people when they are calm, rather than in a distressed state, can provide some mental health relief. People who are experiencing grief also can benefit from staying connected, even through holiday letters, phone calls, or a card, Downey said. When Downey gives presentations to children and educators in school, she advises people working with young children to allow them to play death, to display their emotions through play.

Grieving Don’ts

Telling children platitudes like “time heals all wounds” may not be helpful for someone who is “acutely grieving,” Skariah said. Downey added that telling children that a loved one is “sleeping” or that they should “stop crying, other people might get upset” provides mixed and confusing messages. Telling children that “at least [the person who died is] not in pain anymore, they are in a better place” often doesn’t help and distracts people from feeling their emotional intensity, Downey said. Downey cautioned youths, and their adult guardians, to manage over-indulgent behavior, such as with food or with excess spending. While those indulgences provide temporary reMENTAL HEALTH Continued on A10

Town

Rocky Point Father/Daughter Born on Same Day to Same Doctor

BY KYLE BARR KYLE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM The same hospital, the same doctor, the same day and month. With all that, there’s very little separating this father and baby girl, save a few years. Sean Ryan and Emily Sugarman, of Rocky Point, are the new parents of little baby girl, Lily Sugarman-Ryan, who was born Oct. 6 at St. Charles Hospital. Funnily enough, that is the same date and the same place where Ryan was born 26 years ago. Young Lily was also delivered by the same doctor, Dr. Gus San Roman, who delivered her father. Ryan, a construction superintendent, and Sugarman, a nurse at Peconic Bay Medical Center, were originally anticipating the birth of their first child Sept 23. Though Ryan, who, as a kind of joke, told his wife throughout the pregnancy he knew the baby would be born on his birthday. She wasn’t buying it, knowing it was rare she would deliver her baby so long after the due date. St. Charles Hospital officials said that after September came and went, doctors decided it was time “to give the baby an eviction notice.” Ryan said his first thought wasn’t hinging on the date, but instead about his girlfriend’s and Emily Sugarman and Sean Ryan celebrated the birth of their new baby girl Lily. Behind them stands Dr. Gus San unborn child’s health. Roman, who helped deliver both Lily and Ryan, separated Though indeed, in the weeks before going by 26 years. Photo from St. Charles to the hospital, Ryan said in prepared to bring their chatting with his mother and baby girl home a few describing where and with days later, they said it what doctor their daughter would be a joy to have a would be born. dual birthday celebration San Roman did not know in all the years to come. it was the husband’s birthday, Now that Ryan and but they scheduled Sugarman Sugarman have returned to arrive at the hospital that to their Rocky Point Tuesday evening. She was home, the husband said originally set to be induced his daughter has been then give birth the following angel,” and that “she day. At the last minute, the —Dr. Gus San Roman “an just eats and sleeps and time was moved to that goes to the bathroom.” morning, but still there was no given she would be born on that day either. He added that he appreciates everything St. As the soon-to-be mother was going into Charles did to help them, and that they’ll labor, just minutes before the new daughter likely be back in the future for the next was set to be born, San Roman was told he little one. San Roman, himself the father of six was the same doctor who delivered Ryan. Lily was born at 6:26 p.m. Oct. 6, weighing daughters, reportedly beamed as he gave parenting advice to the proud new parents. 8 pounds and 3 ounces. “A new addition to one’s family is always a Sean said the doctor was astonished and asked, “Are you sure it wasn’t my brother?” wonderful event but, to have your daughter’s Dr. Gerardo San Roman, Gus’ brother, is also arrival as your birthday present is utterly an obstetrician. When hospital records were amazing,” he said. “I am honored that the checked, the proof was there. Dr. Gus San generation of babies whose births I assisted Roman delivered Sean Ryan Oct. 6, 1994, now trust me to assist at their own. Lily’s birth at St. Charles Hospital. As Sean and Emily will be one that I will always remember.”

‘I am honored that the generation of babies whose births I assisted now trust me to assist at their own’


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LEGALS

Email: legals@tbrnewsmedia.com

Miller Place Union Free School District Town of Brookhaven Miller Place, New York 11764 Notice is hereby given that the fiscal affairs of the Miller Place Union Free School District for the period beginning on July 1, 2019 and ending on June 30, 2020, have been examined by an independent public accountant, and that the report prepared in conjunction with the external audit by the independent public accountant has been filed in my office where it is available as a public record for inspection by all interested persons. Pursuant to §35 of the General Municipal Law, the governing board of Miller Place UFSD may, in its discretion, prepare a written response to the report of external audit or management letter by independent public accountant and file any such response in my office as a public record for inspection by all interested persons not later than 90 days after the report presentation to the Board of Education. Patricia Morbillo District Clerk ANALYSIS OF GENERAL FUND Opening Fund Balance - July 1, 2019 Add Revenues: Real Property Taxes Other Real Property Tax Items State Sources Federal Sources Charges for Services Use of Money and Property Sale of Property & Compensation for Loss Interfund Transfers Miscellaneous Sub Total: Less Expenditures: General Support Instruction Pupil Transportation Employee Benefits Debt Service Interfund Transfers

15,005,692 42,690,779 4,240,656 22,944,962 8,376 4,979 315,201 6,760 238,060 765,616

7,099,253 39,753,999 2,844,668 14,690,782 3,713,210 441,890

Ending Fund Balance - June 30, 2020 ANALYSIS OF SCHOOL LUNCH FUND Opening Fund Balance - July 1, 2019 Add Revenues: 369,213 Sales 7,820 State Sources 2,250 Use of Money and Property 187,342 Federal Sources 432 Miscellaneous Sub Total: Less Expenditures: 515,795 Cost of Sales Ending Fund Balance - June 30, 2020 ANALYSIS OF SPECIAL AID FUND Opening Fund Balance - July 1, 2019 Add Revenues: State sources 358,222 Federal Sources 731,799 Interfund Transfers 89,555 Sub Total: Less Expenditures: Instruction 1,179,576 Ending Fund Balance - June 30, 2020 ANALYSIS OF TRUST & AGENCY EXPENDABLE TRUST FUND Opening Fund Balance - July 1, 2019 Add Revenues: Contributions 14,500 Sub Total: Less Expenditures: 5,285 Scholarships and Awards Ending Fund Balance - June 30, 2020 ANALYSIS OF CAPITAL PROJECTS FUND Opening Fund Balance - July 1, 2019 Add Revenues: 662,746 State Sources 352,335 Interfund Transfers Sub Total: Less Expenditures: Capital Outlay Interfund Transfers Ending Fund Balance - June 30, 2020

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OCTOBER 15, 2020 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A7

940,581 238,060

71,215,389 86,221,081

68,543,802 17,677,279

Stony Brook Athletics Director Talks Teams’ Futures During Virtual Town Hall

BY JULIANNE MOSHER JULIANNE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Stony Brook Athletics launched its latest fundraising campaign asking people to “Believe in the Seawolves” as the university sports program faces an uncertain future. On Thursday, Oct. 8, the university’s Giving Day, Director of Athletics Shawn Heilbron held a virtual town hall through Facebook Live to answer questions surrounding the status of Stony Brook Athletics for this school year and for the future. “Let’s have the Stony Brook Athletics story of 2020-2021 be the greatest story in our history,” Heilbron said during the town hall. “I think we’re going to do that.” One of the major concerns, he said, was the financial standing of the university since reve-

LEGALS NOTICE OF SALE

150,342

567,057 717,399 515,795 201,604 0

1,179,576 1,179,576 1,179,576 0 25,955 14,500 40,455 5,285 35,170 861,743 1,015,081 1,876,824

1,178,641 698,183

SUPREME COURT: COUNTY OF SUFFOLK BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF HUNT CLUB AT CORAM HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION, INC., Plaintiff, against JOHN P. BRENNAN a/k/a JOHN BRENNAN a/k/a JOHN BRENNAN, JR.; JPMORGAN CHASE BANK; CAPITAL ONE BANK USA NA; PORTFOLIO RECOVERY ASSOCIATES LLC; CLERK OF THE SUFFOLK COUNTY TRAFFIC AND PARKING VIOLATIONS AGENCY; TEACHERS FEDERAL CREDIT UNION; and “JOHN DOE” and “JANE DOE”, Defendants. LEGAL NOTICE OF POSTPONEMENT OF SALE Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered herein and dated October 30, 2019, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the front steps of the Brookhaven Town Hall, One Independence Hill, Farmingville, New York, on November 9, 2020 at 10:00 a.m. premises being at Coram in the Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk and State of New York, known and designated as Unit No. 190 on a certain map entitled, “Map of the Hunt Club”

SBU Athletics Director Shawn Heilbron said the university lost $700,000 from basketball alone. File photo

nue dropped throughout the COVID-19 crisis, calling it a “dramatic financial impact.” He mentioned that the program lost nearly SBU ATHLETICS Continued on A10

To Place A Legal Notice

Email: legals@tbrnewsmedia.com filed in the Suffolk County Clerk’s Office on the June 14, 1974, as Map No. 6113. Said premises being known as 2 Dove Path, Coram, New York, (District 0200, Section 316.00, Block 08.00, Lot 024.000). Said premises will be sold subject to zoning restrictions, covenants, easements, conditions, reservations and agreements, if any; subject to any state of facts as may appear from an accurate survey; subject to facts as to possession and occupancy and subject to whatever physical condition of the premises may be; subject to any violations of the zoning and other municipal ordinances and regulations, if any, and if the United States of America should file a tax lien, or other lien, subject to the equity of redemption of the United States of America; subject to the rights of any lienors of record whose liens have not been foreclosed herein, if any; subject to the rights of holders of security in fixtures as defined by the Uniform Commercial Code; subject to taxes, assessments and water rates which are liens on the premises at the time of sale, with accrued interest or penalties thereon; and a first mortgage held

by Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., as nominee for Countrywide Home Loans, Inc., mortgagee, given to JOHN P. BRENNAN, mortgagor, in the original amount of $135,000.00 dated 12/30/2003 and recorded 01/13/2004 in Liber 20621 at page 604. Said mortgage having been assigned to Nationstar Mortgage, LLC by Assignment of Mortgage dated 9/23/2015 and recorded 11/19/2015 in Liber 22651 at page 614. THIS SALE WAS ORIGINALLY SCHEDULED FOR FEBRUARY 26, 2020 AT 9:00 A.M. THE SALE IS NOW SCHEDULED FOR NOVEMBER 9, 2020 AT 10:00 A.M. AT THE FRONT STEPS OF THE BROOKHAVEN TOWN HALL, NEW YORK. All persons attending the sale must follow all COVID-19 New York State/CDC Protocols, wear a face/nose covering and practice social distancing. Index No. 604207-2016 Dated: September 28, 2020 Cheryl Mintz, Esq., Referee Cohen, Warren, Meyer & Gitter, P.C., Attorneys for Plaintiff, 80 Maple Avenue, Smithtown, NY 11787. 869 10/8 4x vbr


PAGE A8 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • OCTOBER 15, 2020

Health

Evaluating Availability and Effectiveness of Trump’s COVID Drugs BY DANIEL DUNAIEF DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Residents on Long Island and elsewhere can’t call their doctor’s offices and ask to receive all of the same treatment that sent President Donald Trump (R) from the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center back to the White House and the campaign trail. After officials said he tested positive for COVID-19 Oct. 2, the president received a combination of the antiviral drug Remdesivir, an antibody cocktail from Regeneron, and the steroid dexamethasone. Remdesivir has become more widely used in hospitals on Long Island. The last two months, “all patients admitted to the hospital may qualify for Remdesivir according to the clinical judgment of your doctor,” said Dr. Luis Marcos, Associate Professor of Clinical Medicine at Renaissance School of Medicine at Stony Brook University. The patient population that is most likely to benefit from Remdesivir includes residents who are over 60, have diabetes with hypertension and have been admitted to the hospital with mild pneumonia. Patients who have liver disease or kidney fail-

Town

ure may not be prescribed the intravenous drug. Typically, Remdesivir, like other antiviral drugs, benefits patients who have contracted COVID-19 within a week, because the medicine stops the replication of the virus. Patients who received Remdesivir after an infection that lasted more than 10 days may not benefit as much because the drug won’t reverse damage done to the lungs. The side effects of antivirals typically last one to two days. Dexamethasone is also available and used in hospitals including Huntington Hospitals and Stony Brook. As a steroid, dexamethasone has “multiple side effects,” said Dr. Michael Grosso, Chief Medical Officer at Huntington Hospital. “It is only given when the benefit is expected to significantly outweigh the risk and so there’s going to be that assessment in every case,” Dr. Grosso said. Patients with diabetes are likely to experience “more trouble with their blood sugar control if they’re receiving dexamethasone,” Grosso added. Dexamethasone can also produce sleeplessness and, in some cases, psychiatric disturbances, doctors added. The monoclonal antibody cocktail from Regeneron the president received has had limited

Dr. Luis Marcos said SBU was planning to participate in the second Regeneron trial, but a general lack of COVID patients scrapped that idea. Photo from SBU

use, mostly through clinical trials and in compassionate care cases. It has not received approval from the Food and Drug Administration, although it has applied for emergency use authorization. Stony Brook was planning to participate in the second trial of Regeneron, with Dr. Bettina Fries, Chief of the Division of Infectious Diseases, as the principal investigator and Dr. Marcos as the co-principal investigator. The hospital did not

participate because it didn’t have enough cases. Marcos said the cocktail of antibodies block the virus actively causing inflammation. The good news with the Regeneron treatment is that the side effects appear minimal, Marcos said. Regeneron is unlikely to reverse the damage in the lungs caused by the virus. In managing patient care, doctors try to slow or stop the progression of pneumonia from the virus. Marcos said patients who are asymptomatic or have minor symptoms shouldn’t race to take the more widely available Remdesivir or Dexamethasone because 99% of patients with COVID infection do not have pneumonia. Those patients with a mild upper respiratory infection may not need anything but Tylenol. Patients who are developing more severe symptoms can come to the hospital to determine the best medical response. “If you have fever or you don’t feel that great, of course, come to the Emergency Room, we can evaluate you, and decide what to do next. For mild, mild cases, I don’t think we should be using Remdesivir,” Grosso said. Remdesivir is currently only available intravenously, which means that residents can’t administer the drug on their own at home.

Miller Place Inn Temporarily Closes After SLA Concerns BY JULIANNE MOSHER JULIANNE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM The Miller Place Inn has temporarily halted wedding operations as of Oct. 9 at their banquet hall due to the COVID-19 crisis. Donna Regina, co-owner of the Miller Place Inn, said the decision to temporarily close came after a courtesy call they received from the New York State Liquor Authority. An official “said he has orders from Albany to go to venues on Long Island and close them down if they’re not in compliance,” she said. “As of yesterday, they added no cocktail hour and at that point, it’s not a wedding. It’s not what the bride paid for.” She said the rules are constantly changing. “The governor tightened the noose on us,” she said. “Our capacity is 250 … why do we have to have 50 guests?” William Crowley, director of public affairs for the SLA, said the office received a complaint about weddings in excess of 50 people, and that an official called to warn and advise of the need to retain the 50-person limit and ensure social distancing. He added that he reminded them there is no dancing allowed, even with masks. Those set for weddings as early as Saturday,

‘You can’t make me have an event that I’m not going to be here for’

—Selena Rodriguez

Oct. 17, also received the news Oct. 9. Selena Rodriguez, a bride-to-be from Brooklyn who was set to get married next weekend at the venue, said she got a phone call Thursday night from the inn, saying they were shut down by the SLA. Rodriguez was told she can only postpone her wedding, but earlier in discussions she made it clear that the wedding needed to happen by the end of 2020, as her and her fiancé are moving across the country. They were planning a wedding of 40 people, well under the state’s limit. She said because she physically cannot postpone her event, the inn would not refund her money. “You can’t make me have an event that I’m not going to be here for,” she said. This comes after an Oct. 2 rally was held outside the H. Lee Dennison Building in Hauppauge where venue owners, wedding industry professionals, brides and elected officials begged the

governor to loosen the maximum cap. Christopher Regina, fellow co-owner of the Miller Place Inn and brother of Donna, said they decided Oct. 8 to temporarily halt events inside their venue because of the state’s 50-person limit. The immediate closure decision was “a conscious one,” the sister added, because “the rules were too much to handle.” “We cannot operate under these restrictions,” Christopher Regina said. “When a wedding venue cannot hold at least 50 percent capacity, it’s very, very, very hard.” Rodriguez added that her contract was “bare bones” and did not mention any clauses regarding the venue closing at their own discretion. The original call she received made it sound like the venue was claiming all venues on the Island were being moderated by the state. “They told me they got shut down by the SLA and they’re shutting everything down on Long Island,” she said. The Miller Place Inn wanted to be clear that the venue did not close its doors permanently or lose its liquor license. “That’s absolutely not true,” Christopher Regina said. Donna Regina said that the inn reached out to all the brides scheduled to get married up until early December.

“We told them simply we would work with you, move your date, provide out-of-house catering,” she said. “We bent over backward for each bride — we understand the brides are hurt. Their dream wedding can’t happen if they cannot get out of their seats.” She added that claims from brides that they could not get refunds are “not true.” “Our lawyer advised us we’re not able to refund anything within six months,” she said. “But we never punished a bride, never, so we moved eight months’ worth of weddings not to punish our brides. … Every bride and groom have our cellphone numbers, anyone who knows us knows we will answer our phones.” Caterers across the state have filed a class-action lawsuit against Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) saying their businesses can be just as safe, if not safer than others. They argue that with many venues being able to hold more than 300 people, a 50 percent cap would still allow social distancing, with guests still being able to celebrate. “Please talk to your local government and the people in Albany,” Christopher Regina said. “They are the ones keeping us closed.” The Miller Place Inn’s plans to reopen fully are up in the air. It will be “when the government revokes the 50-person cap, but that’s up to them,” he said.


OCTOBER 15, 2020 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A9

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PAGE A10 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • OCTOBER 15, 2020

Town

Brookhaven Completes Paving of 37 Roads in Sound Beach

MENTAL HEALTH Continued from A6

lief, they can also contribute to feelings of guilt, which can exacerbate grief, Downey cautioned. Bradley Lewis, Administrative Manager for School Based Mental Health Services for South Oaks Hospital, said he has received numerous requests during the pandemic for support related to COVID-19.

Brookhaven Councilwoman Jane Bonner and Highway Superintendent Dan Losquadro on Malba Drive in Sound Beachcelebrated a $1 million project paving 37 roads in the area. Photo from TOB

set Road, Marion Court, Medford Road, Murray Hill Road, Parkside Road, Peconic Road, Pinelawn Road, Plandome Road, Port Washington Road, Richmond Hill Road, Rosedale Road, Sayville Road, Seaside Road, Southold Road, Springfield Road, Stewart Road, Whitestone Road, and Woodhaven Drive. Lewis said Downey’s presentations to some of the 11 school districts went beyond the thought of death, but include losses in other areas, like access to friends, senior awards dinners, and graduations. “A lot of families appreciated the opportunity to learn more about grief and loss, to understand the different types of grief their children might be going through,” Lewis said. With parents, Lewis urges parents to “end the stigma of mental health,” he said.

SWR Coaches Honored for Hall of Fame Induction

Shoreham-Wading River Central School District cross-country and track and field coaches Paul Koretzki and Bob Szymanski were recently honored by the board of education for being named inductees into the Suffolk Sports Hall of Fame. Shoreham-Wading River student-athlete Thomas Cutinella, who died from an injury sustained during a school football game in 2014, will also be inducted posthumously. The gentlemen join a list of Suffolk County athletes, coaches, officials and journalists who will be inducted at a ceremony in May 2021. The veteran coaches were lauded by Mark Passamonte, the district’s director of health, physical education, athletics and nurses. Passamonte cited their positive influence and unique coaching styles with countless students as well as their four decades of success with some of the top runners on Long Island coming through Shoreham-Wading River’s program. Both gentlemen were presented with certificates from Board of Education President Michael Lewis and Superintendent of Schools Gerard Poole. Thomas Cutinella left behind a lasting leg-

SBU ATHLETICS Continued from A7

$700,000 from basketball, alone, and when the school closed in March, students were reimbursed their student fees which neared a $2 million loss. “Ticket sales, donations, corporate partnerships … you could imagine the impact there,” he said. “The trickle down comes from the state to the school to us, and many universities across the country are dealing with it.” He said it was close to $5 million in revenues lost. “We’ve made some tough decisions, many staff positions are being left unfilled,” he said. “We’re very concerned about our future … schools across the country are cutting sports, these are difficult decisions that are hard to come back.” The new fundraising campaign coined “Believe In the Seawolves” comes from asking people to do just that. “Believe in our value and commitment to this university,” Heilbron said. “If we can get people to get behind that we can come out of this stronger … It’s more than a campaign, I want it to be a movement.” But just because COVID-19 guidelines aren’t allowing sports to be played as of right now,

RPFD BOND

Continued from A3

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More North Shore roads have a shiny new coat of asphalt. Brookhaven Town Highway Superintendent Dan Losquadro (R) and Councilwoman Jane Bonner (R) announced the completion of a 37-road, $1 million paving project in a residential Sound Beach neighborhood. “The roads in this paving project had deteriorated and were in need of repair,” Losquadro said in a release. “We have greatly improved the safety of the 37 roads in this neighborhood for residents and motorists who travel in the area.” Prior to paving, crews inspected drains and made concrete improvements in the area, including replacing damaged curb and aprons. The total cost for this paving project was approximately $980,700. Bonner also congratulated the highway department on a job well done. “This 37-road paving project in Sound Beach is one of the most extensive ever in my council district,” she said. Roads resurfaced during this paving project include: Amagansett Drive, Amityville Road, Babylon Drive, Bellrose Road, Cedar Road, Clinton Court, Club Road, Corona Road, Douglaston Road, Elmhurst Road, Flushing Road, Garden Road, Hewlett Drive, Hollis Drive, Huntington Road, Islip Drive, Jamaica Drive, Malba Drive, Malverne Road, Manhas-

School News

what the cost could be on what has already been constructed, which now resembles a cinder block exterior, but officials said the price of prevailing wages kept costs high.

Bob Szymanski, left, and Paul Koretzki. Photo by SWRCSD

acy throughout the school and community. It was noted in the Hall of Fame’s initial induction announcement in January how Cutinella “in his passing successfully donated his heart, kidneys, liver, pancreas, corneas, numerous bones and skin tissue and saved many lives.” The Thomas Cutinella Memorial Foundation, named for him, raises money for scholarships, organ donation awareness and promoting football safety. In April 2019, the football field at Shoreham-Wading River High School was formally named The Thomas Cutinella Memorial Field and a concession stand was built and formally unveiled in his memory. Heilbron they are not cancelled, just postponed. He added that fall sports were moved to the spring, which will make for a very active season. “It’s going to be quite an active period for us,” he said. “We’re just starting to look at what those schedules will look like and will be announced very soon.” He said that utilizing this time now will be a springboard for next fall, and are keeping safe in doing so. The athletes who are participating in practices now, like basketball, have a regimented screening process before hitting the court. “Student athletes come through one entrance, have their temperature checked and then they get a wrist band,” Heilbron said. “They can’t come in if they don’t have the wristband.” Although it is an uncertain time for the student athletes who worked to play at Stony Brook University, Heilbron said the first day of fall semester was a good one. “It literally was an energetic lift in our department that they needed,” he said. “It was good to have the family back together.” The university announced after Thursday’s Giving Day campaign, more than 240 donors combined to contribute gifts exceeding $200,000 to go towards athletics. The campaign will continue to fundraise throughout the remainder of the year. Currently the station 2 company is housed in the old Thurber Lumber property on King Road, which is owned by local developer Mark Baisch. The developer allowed the company into the property free of charge but plans to turn that property into a slate of 55-and-older rental pieces and would need the fire company to be out by the end of the year.


OCTOBER 15, 2020 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A11

County

Suffolk Unveils Part of 2021 Operating Budget, Showing Significant Reductions BY KYLE BARR KYLE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM After weeks of warnings and missives about an upcoming budget shortfall, Suffolk officials finally published this upcoming year’s budget, one that has to take into consideration an apparent $437 million deficit over the next two years. Cuts won’t be instituted until the middle of 2021. Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone (D) revealed a 2021 recommended operating budget of $3.197 billion, representing $33 million less than the current year’s budget. It is a reaction to a total revenue shortfall of $325 million in 2020. In a proposed budget released Oct. 9, the county would be letting go 500 full-time employees. The county exec said it would also mean a reduction in health care and mental health services, the loss of two full classes of trainees at the police academy and the elimination of 19 bus routes. Most cuts will be implemented July 1, 2021. County officials said this gives time in case some federal aid is received in the future. “We have submitted a COVID-19 budget with cuts that would have been unimaginable just a short time ago,” Bellone said on a call with

Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone at a recent conference said county-funded health services would be impacted by this year’s budget. Photo by Julianne Mosher

reporters Oct. 13. “These cuts should not happen, these are cuts that are devastating in many ways and would in effect undermine our recovery.” The budget accounts for a sales tax loss from 2019 to 2020 of an estimated $131.7 million. The anticipated sales tax for 2021 is still $102.5 million less than 2019’s figures. Among other losses across the board, the one increase seems to be property taxes from a real estate boom on Long Island. Suffolk County received $4 million more than last year, and anticipates $18.6 million more in 2021 than this

current year. In expenditures, contractual expenses and employee benefits are also set to marginally increase. The county expects a negative fund balance for 2021 of about $176.98 million. Overall, Bellone said Suffolk could be looking at a cumulative $460 million deficit within the next year. This year’s budget was originally set to roll in back in September, but it has since been delayed until the start of this month. The projected budget also may be another general cry for help to the federal government. Suffolk officials also decry the withholding of state aid to the tune of $1.9 billion to local municipalities. Cutting employees would save about $25 million next year. The bus route cuts, along with reductions to the Suffolk County Accessible Transportation bus service affecting a total of 2,500 riders of both systems, will save $18 million. The police class cuts will save approximately $20 million, while a 50% cut across the board for contract agencies, which include substance abuse clinics, mental health providers, domestic violence shelters and gang prevention programs, would save another $8 million in 2021 and annualized savings of $16 million.

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The budget also shows an overall 1.9% increase in taxes for the police district, though that remains under the New York State tax cap. Bellone has constantly reiterated Suffolk’s need for federal funds over the past few months, holding press conference after press conference to reiterate loss of services because of COVID19-induced budget shortfalls. Republicans in the Legislature, however, have consistently attacked the executive for what they have called fiscal mismanagement over the past few years, citing Suffolk’s bond downgrades and a report from Tom DiNapoli (D), the New York State comptroller, saying Suffolk was the most fiscally stressed county in the state in 2019. Bellone, on the other hand, claimed he inherited in 2012 a $500 million deficit but that the County finished 2019 with a surplus. He added the county would have been on track for $50 million surplus in 2020 that would have wiped out the accumulated deficit prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. Suffolk did receive $257 million in CARES Act funding in April, as well as an additional $26.6 million for public transportation. Officials have said most or all that funding has been spent or earmarked, and it does not help cover overall losses.

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Garage Sales 3 FAMILY YARD SALE, HOLIDAY CRAFT TABLE SATURDAY 10/17 9:00-2:00PM 19 Linda Street Port Jefferson Station across from Ward Melville HS. Comics, toys, tools, Housewares, small furniture & more. Mask required.

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3 VINTAGE CAMERAS and accessories. Olympus, Polaroid, Kalloflex $50 631-751-2463. ANTIQUE HIGH CHAIR Asking $50.00 Call 631-261-7882 FULL SIZE OZIO TOUR GOLF BAG w/cover, good condition $20 originally $160.00, 516-381-7152. HOLIDAY SLIDE PROJECTOR SET beautifully colored cute slides, indoor/outdoor, brand new in box, $20 631-864-9273. RAZOR SCOOTER metal foldable, $15.00, Teddy 631-928-5392. TREK 3700 MOUNTAIN BIKE Great condition. $45 631-475-1177 VINTAGE CEDAR-LINED HOPE CHEST $50, 631-327-7915 leave message. VINTAGE PROMASTER SLIDE PROJECTOR Model 8661 w/remote and 2 trays, each holds 30 slides. $35 631-941-4425.

“Wiggy� is a beautiful white cat, 8 years young and desperately missing her mom, who passed away. The family wanted to keep her but their dogs wouldn’t cooperate. Can you give her the home she misses so much?

Prepare for power outages with a Generac home standby generator SCHEDULE YOUR FREE IN-HOME ASSESSMENT TODAY!

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7-Year Extended Warranty* A $695 Value! Offer valid August 24, 2020 - December 31, 2020

Special Financing Available Subject to Credit Approval

*Terms & Conditions Apply 107932


PAGE A14 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • OCTOBER 15, 2020

WE ARE:

CONTACT US:

BASIC AD RATES • FIRST 20 WORDS

The Village TIMES HERALD The Village BEACON RECORD The Port TIMES RECORD The TIMES of Smithtown The TIMES of Middle Country The TIMES of Huntington, Northport & East Northport tbrnewsmedia.com

631–751–7744 Fax 631–751–4165

This Publication is Subject to All Fair Housing Acts OFFICE HOURS Monday–Friday 10:00 am–4:00 pm

TBR News Media 185 Route 25A (Bruce Street entrance) Setauket, NY 11733 Call: 631-331-1154 or 631-751-7663

1 Week $29.00 4 Weeks $99.00 DISPLAY ADS Call for rates.

SPECIALS*

*May change without notice REAL ESTATE FREE FREE FREE ACTION AD 20 words Merchandise DISPLAY ADS $44 for 4 weeks under Ask about our for all your used $50 15 words Contract Rates. merchandise 1 item only. EMPLOYMENT GARAGE SALE Fax•Mail•E-mail Buy 2 weeks of ADS $29.00 Drop Off any size BOXED 20 words Include Name, ad get 2 weeks Address, Phone # Free 2 signs with free placement of ad

MAIL ADDRESS

TBR News Media Classifieds Department P.O. Box 707 Setauket, NY 11733

EMAIL

class@tbrnewsmedia.com CONTACT CLASSIFIEDS:

(631) 331–1154 or (631) 751–7663 Fax (631) 751–4165 class@tbrnewsmedia.com tbrnewsmedia.com

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.

DENTAL Insurance

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107181

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Š107173

Š98619

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OCTOBER 15, 2020 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A15

E M PL OY M E N T / C A R E E R S

NEED HELP?

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Busy Alternative Care Office seeks front desk/ assistant for appointment scheduling, filing, phones and more. Must be people oriented and a multi-tasker.

CALL

631-331-1154 OR 631-751-7663

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Š107889

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Place Your

HELP WANTED

Weekly hours vary from 40-60 hours to include Saturday & some Sunday events. Compensation negotiable.

3$5$/(*$/ 5($/ (67$7(

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday & Friday 8:30 am - 3:00 pm Š107898

FRONT DESK ASSISTANT Busy Alternative Care Office, P/T. Must be computer savvy and a multi-tasker. Call 631-804-7961. Please see ad in employment display for complete details

PARALEGAL/REAL ESTATE P/T to F/T, Rocky Point Law office, friendly congenial office, salary commensurate with experience Resumes to: Lavitalaw@aol.com SEE DISPLAY AD FOR MORE INFORMATION

Please email resume to: wecare@bryantfh.com

&DOO

IMMEDIATE OPENING For

CUSTODIAL WORKER – PT

Comsewogue Public Library 170 Terryville Rd., Port Jefferson Station 631-928-1212 ext. 123 16-20 hrs/wk including afternoon, evening and weekend hours $16.00 per hr.

Applications available at cplib.org, under “Jobs�.

HVAC TECHS & INSTALLERS NEEDED IMMEDIATELY! FULL TIME ƔYEAR ROUND Ɣ FULL BENEFITS For Senior Installers & Sr. Service Techs Signing Bonus! w/ 5yrs Experience.

$3,000

$1,000

Signing Bonus!

For Junior Installers & Jr. Service Techs w/ 2yrs Experience.

107861

DENTAL RECEPTIONIST PT/FT. Experience preferred, private practice. Family Atmosphere, Shoreham. Call 631-921-9493

JOB OPPORTUNITY $18.50 P/H NYC $16 P/H LI Up to $13.50 P/H UPSTATE NY CDPAP Caregiver Hourly Pay Rate! Under NYS CDPAP Medicaid program you can hire your family or friends for your care. Phone: 347-713-3553

P/T (approx. 10-15 hrs/week) For weekday/night and weekend shifts

Interested?

5KPEG

HEATING & AIR CONDITIONING

CALL AUDREY TODAY!

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Looking for that perfect career? or that perfect employee? Search our employment section each week! TIMES BEACON RECORD CLASSIFIED ADS • 631.331.1154 or 631.751.7663 �

Š108000

COMSEWOGUE PUBLIC LIBRARY Immediate opening for Custodial worker, P/T, 16-20 hrs/wk including afternoon, evening and weekend hours, $16.00 per hour 631-928-1212 Ext 123 See Display ad for more information.

Seeking Door Greeter

Suffolk County established caterer (35+ years) with clients from Montauk to Manhattan. Immediate opening for culinary professional with minimum 6 years off-premises catering experience. Will be responsible for maintaining menu & brand identity, ensure food is prepared properly, aesthetically pleasing, and manage kitchen operations and staff (under 10). Collaborate with management on inventory, budget, and food presentation. New American cuisine. Plant-based, Latin & Asian a plus. Responsibilities include: Purchase food & supplies from vendors approved by the company; monitor & track inventory (minimize waste, ensure quality & freshness); develop menus & create new dishes seasonally; hire, train & supervise kitchen personnel; stay current on industry trends; identify new culinary techniques & presentations; assist kitchen staff with food prep; strong knowledge of food handling health code regulations; provide direction & supervision to kitchen staff.

Š108087

BRYANT FUNERAL HOME seeking Door Greeter. P/T ( approx. 10-15 hrs/week) For weekday/night and weekend shifts. Please email resume to: wecare@bryantfh.com

HVAC TECHS & INSTALLERS NEEDED IMMEDIATELY F/T, year round, full benefits Flanders Heating and Air conditioning, Call Audrey 631-727-2760 See our display ad for more information

107883

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.

EXECUTIVE CHEF

Help Wanted

Š101441

Help Wanted

Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154


PAGE A16 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • OCTOBER 15, 2020

SERV ICES Cesspool Services MR SEWERMAN CESSPOOL SERVICE All types of cesspool servicing, all work guaranteed, family owned and operated since 1985, 631-924-7502. Licensed and Insured.

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.

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

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

Exterminating SCIENTIFIC EXTERMINATING SERVICES let’s all stay safe, ecological protection, ticks, ants, mosquitoes, termites, Natural Organic products 631-265-5252-See Display ad for more information.

Fences 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

Gutters/Leaders GREG TRINKLE PAINTING & GUTTER CLEANING Powerwashing, window washing, staining. Neat, reliable, 25 years experience. Free Estimates. Lic/Ins.#31398-H. 631-331-0976

Housesitting Services TRAVELING? Need someone to check on your home? Contact Tender Loving Pet Care, LLC. We’re more than just pets. Insured/Bonded. 631-675-1938

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

Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154 Home Improvement

Landscape Materials

ALL PHASES OF HOME IMPROVEMENT From attic to your basement, no job too big or too small, RCJ Construction www.rcjconstruction.com commercial/residential, lic/ins 631-580-4518. LAMPS FIXED, $65. In Home Service!! Handy Howard. My cell 646-996-7628 MJD BONILLA CONSTRUCTION All Phases of Construction! Masonry, Blacktop Driveways, Decks, Fences, Waterproofing, roofing, Retaining Walls, Painting. Danny 631-882-7410.

Home Repairs/ Construction URBAN VILLAGE CONTRACTING, INC Roofing, windows, entry doors, siding, masonry, foundation waterproofing, free estimates since 1998, 631-484-8161. See our Display Ad for more information.

Lawn & Landscaping CAUTION! www.GotPoisonIvy.com 631-286-4600 Poison Ivy and Invasive Vines. Trained Horticulturist Autumn Special $50 off code - BETTER SAFE 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

J. BRENZINSKI INC. Landscape Material Delivery Service. MULCH, SOIL, STONE. Delivery 7 days a week. Prompt and courteous service. Call with your Material Needs. 631-566-1826 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 ED’S PAINTING INTERIOR/EXTERIOR Wallpaper removal, spackling, sheetrock repair. Over 25 years experience. Commercial/Residential. Reasonable rates. Call Ed Bernstein 631-704-7547 JAY A. SPILLMANN PAINTING CO. Over 35 years in business. Spackling/Taping, Wallpaper removal. Quality prep work. Interior/Exterior. Lic. #17856-H/Ins. 631-331-3712, 631-525-2206 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 THE PAINT PROFESSIONALS Three Generations of Excellence. Interior and exterior services, residential and commercial. A+ rating with BBB. 631-682-9506. See Display Ad for more information. 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

Place your ad in the

Professional & Business Services Directory

Power Washing

Painting/Spackling/ Wallpaper

EXTERIOR CLEANING SPECIALISTS Roof cleaning, pressure washing/softwashing, deck restorations, gutter maintenance. Squeaky Clean Property Solutions 631-387-2156 www.SqueakyCleanli.com 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. WORKING & LIVING IN THE THREE VILLAGES FOR 30 YEARS. Owner does the work, guarantees satisfaction. COUNTY-WIDE, Lic/Ins. 37153-H, 631-751-8280

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 CLOVIS OUTDOOR SERVICES LTD. Expert Tree Removal AND Pruning. Landscape Design and maintenance, Edible Gardens, Plant Healthcare, Exterior Lighting. 631-751-4880 clovisoutdoors@gmail.com 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

Single size $228/4 weeks

Buy 4 weeks and get the 5th week

Double size $296/4 weeks

(631) 751-7663 or (631) 331-1154

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FREE


OCTOBER 15, 2020 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A17

PROF E S SION A L & B U SI N E S S Place Your Ad in the

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Professional Services Directory

ALWAYS BUYING

Buy 4 weeks and get the 5th week

FREE

Single size • $228/4 weeks Double size • $296/4 weeks Ask about our 13 & 26 week special rates

(631) 751.7663 or (631) 331.1154

Brad Merila Certified Piano Technician 6 Barnwell Lane, Stony Brook

631.681.9723

bluesmanpianotuning@gmail.com bluesmanpianotuning.com

LICENSED & BONDED

Call 631-633-9108

Š108135

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CALL US LAST WE’LL BEAT ANY PRICE

No Keys No Title No Problem

FREE Pickup Habla EspaĂąol

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Š107651

(631) 445-1848

LICENSED • BONDED INSURED

USED AUTO PARTS

631.500.1015

Š107058

HOME SERV ICES

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Toyota, Honda, Nissan, Domestic/Foreign

CA$H FOR ALL CAR$ & CA$H FOR JUNK CAR$ WANTED

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JUNK CARS BOUGHT

All Trucks, Cars & Vans

Š107669

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Blues Man Piano Tuning

• Glassware • Military Items • China • Anything Old or Unusual

• Old Mirrors • Lamps • Clocks • Watches • Furniture

Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154

DMV CERTIFIED 7002706

Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154 PAGE E

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Š107337


PAGE A18 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • OCTOBER 15, 2020

HOME SERV ICES ALL PRO PAINTING

Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154 PAGE B

INTERIOR • EXTERIOR

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Nick Cordovano 631–696–8150 �

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Jay A. Spillman Painting Co.

Lic. # 53278-H/Ins.

Lic. #17856-H/Ins.

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C U S TO M F I N I S H E D C A R P E N T R Y & M O L D I N G

Specializing in Finished Basements

www.rcjconstruction.com COMMERCIAL/RESIDENTIAL • LIC. #H-32198/INS | OWNER OPERATED

CALLS PROMPTLY RETURNED

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631-566-1826

GROW YOUR BUSINESS?

Lic. #48714-H & Insured

for 13 or 26 weeks.

FREE BONUS WEEKS! & a free 13 or 26 week subscription to our newspaper.

631.331.1154 or 631.751.7663

• Interiors • Exteriors • Cabinet Refinishing, Staining & Painting • Faux Finishes • Power Washing • Wallpaper Removal • Tape & Spackling • Staining & Deck Restoration BBB A1 Rating #1 Recommendation on BBB website

“We take pride in our work�

FREE ESTIMATES

Ryan Southworth 631-331-5556

Licensed/Insured

#37074-H; RI 18499-10-34230

CERTIFIED LEAD PAINT REMOVAL

Since 1989

Š106304

Š98213

www.BluStarBuilders.com

HOME SERVICES DIRECTORY

Š101630

Please call our Stony Brook office today for a FREE in home consultation

DELIVERY 7 DAYS A WEEK!

REFERENCES GLADLY GIVEN

Place your ad in our

Additions & renovations, decks, windows, doors, siding, kitchens, baths, roofs & custom carpentry. We love small jobs too!

• MULCH • • SOIL • • STONE •

Š107053

(631) 580-4518

Š107191

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LANDSCAPE MATERIAL DELIVERY SERVICE

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PAGE A22 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • OCTOBER 15, 2020

Editorial

Far Beyond COVID

In 2016, Stony Brook University rebranded itself to a new campaign called Far Beyond. The idea behind the campaign was to highlight the wide range of programs and activities the school offered, since everyone normally acknowledges the university for its medicine, science and technology specialties. But this year in 2020, the institution proved that it indeed has gone “far beyond” with protecting public health. Dr. Deborah Birx, head of the White House’s coronavirus task force, visited SBU last week, a stop in a several-month-long tour of different colleges and universities across the United States. But her visit to the local university was different, and she made that clear. During her press conference, she spoke highly of how Stony Brook has handled the COVID-19 crisis. She said from the start, it was going, well, “far beyond” what other schools, and even hospitals, were doing. She said that back in March when the university shut down and patients with the virus were filling the rooms, Stony Brook did something different from other institutions — it actually collected data, while continuing to take care of the patients. “I was listening to the research activities that they started from day one,” she said during the press conference. “And it thrilled my heart to hear from them that their number one thing was collecting data and collecting information in real time.” It’s right to give credit where its due, and Stony Brook, both on the medical and campus side, has done good work in keeping the number of cases down. The university’s COVID dashboard reports just two students, one university employee and four Stony Brook Medicine employees have currently tested positive as of Oct. 11. Better yet, the school has been upfront in where those cases are located and how it is handling them. This is compared to places like SUNY Oneonta, which had to close back in August after hundreds of students tested positive after a large super-spreader party. The Oneonta dashboard reports 712 confirmed cases among students since the start of the fall semester. It’s also not to say that SBU has not made stumbles, especially in communicating with students. Right off the bat during the start of the pandemic, students were rightfully upset at how the university handled the virus. In March, dorming students were shocked when each received an email saying they needed to move out, go home or find shelter elsewhere because the campus was officially closed. Students said they felt rushed, and felt the university wasn’t being truthful or transparent with everything being so abrupt. Some international students couldn’t even go home since their countries were in lockdown. But the students are back, and cases remain low. Is it because of the incentives the university has taken with social distancing guidelines, removing of sports and recreational activities, hybrid learning and sanitizing stations? Or is it just because Stony Brook is not a “party school” and the students there really don’t congregate as at some of the schools upstate, like Oneonta. It’s also important to note the number of students living on campus has fallen from 39% in 2019 to 17% this fall. With a new president installed at SBU, Maurie McInnis, we think that communication with students has improved. Every person, every institution has been impacted by the pandemic. The students, who feel they are paying a lot for what at times must feel like a mostly online education, need that person-on-person interaction to let their voices be heard, even if it’s behind a clear plastic barrier. Nonetheless, Stony Brook gets high praise from both us and those involved in the national response to COVID-19, as well as Birx, for going “far beyond.” We kindly ask that the university keeps it up, for the sake of both your students and the wider community.

Letters to the Editor

Knights of Columbus Supports Local Communities Lately some politicians feel comfortable attacking Catholics and Jews. In a hearing for for the position of a federal judge, the nominee’s membership in the Knights of Columbus was disparaged. It was a veiled attempt to impugn his Catholic faith. The Knights of Columbus is a Catholic fraternal organization founded by Rev. Fri Michael McEivney for assisting surviving poor widows and children. There are 1.9 million Knights worldwide in 16,000 local councils including Joan of Arc Council 1992 in Port Jefferson,

and 27.535 college Knights on 348 campuses including the Donald J Burns Council 13588 on the State University of New York at Stony Brook campus. Among the most famous Knights have been President John F. Kennedy, Gov. Jeb Bush, heavyweight champion Floyd Patterson, Hall of Famer George Herinan “Babe” ruth, Special Olympics founder Sargent Shriver, Super Bowl winning coach Vincent Lom ardi, popular radio and television lecturer Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen and many more. In 2019, the Knights of Columbus

donated $187 million and 77 million volunteer hours to charities. The K of C supports Meals on Wheels, Wounded Warriors Project, Habitat for Humanity, veterans’ facilities at Northport and Stony Brook Special Olympics Hospitality Food Pantries, Coots for Kids, USO, blood donor drives, disaster relief fundraisers, scholarships and too many more worthy causes to incorporate in this article. Our motto is: “In Service to One, in Service to All.” Philip Griffith Port Jefferson

“Give me your tired, your poor” concluding with “your huddled masses yearning to breath free, / the wretched refuse of your teeming shore. Send these

the homeless, tempest-tost to me, / I lift my lamp beside the golden door.” Do you think the 70,000 migrant children in U.S. detention centers will

appreciate what the Statue of Liberty stands for. History books will not be kind to us. Mary Stevenson Mount Sinai

Congratulations to the Rocky Point Fire District on the Bond Approval. However, the close vote does not indicate a mandate by any means and the hard work now starts. I would highly encourage the district to provide rigorous oversight on the project to get the most for our money. I also encourage review of the questions from the community forum last week and that

the district publish public answers to the community, especially with regard to the expenditures and contracts that were not directly answered at that virtual meeting. Transparency on these contracts and expenditures is essential! I would also implore the Board to hold the line on their operating costs next year to avoid an additional tax increase above what will be received for

the bond. Rocky Point and Shoreham citizens should be aware that the Board of Fire Commissioners is holding a special budget meeting regarding next year’s operating budget next Wednesday, Oct. 20, from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the District Administration Office in Shoreham. Let your voice be heard. John Searing Shoreham

In the Oct. 1 issue of the Village Beacon Record, the letter, “Republicans Won’t be Rioting,” essentially blames the Democrats for creating an environment that likely will lead to violence in the streets should they lose the election. I disagree. In the face of blatant racism and right wing provocation the overwhelming number of progressive protests have been peaceful. And when this has not been the case, the Democratic leaders have consistently and forcefully and unanimously denounced any violence. Joe Bidden and Kamala Harris certainly have. This is a far cry from President Donald Trump’s (R) advice to White supremacist group The Proud Boys, “stand back and stand by.” Indeed, the FBI has deemed ex-

treme right wing organizations and white supremacist groups as the number one domestic threat to our homeland security today. President Trump has worked hard to divide our country since he announced his candidacy in 2015. Tragically he has succeeded. Russian President Vladimir Putin must be so proud. Americans have every reason to be worried about what will happen in the likely event that Biden wins. Trump has essentially called for violence in the streets should he lose. And those heading the call most certainly will be Trump Republicans. He has all but stated the only way the Democrats could win is with a rigged election. He has thrown obstacles in the way of letting people vote, from de-

funding the post office to maligning mail in voting to priming his Attorney General William Barr to investigate election result validity should he lose. This is not a close call. It really is quite obvious. Let’s not repeat the mistakes made by Germany under Adolf Hitler. It reminds me of what Nazis said during the Nuremberg trials: “We did not see it. We did not realize what was going on.” Hog wash. We need to call out evil when we see it. And today Donald Trump is the biggest threat to our democracy and human decency the United States has ever encountered. Let’s recognize this. Let’s all do something about it. VOTE! Dave Hensen Miller Place

History Books Will Not Be Kind to Us

‘Yes’ on RPFD Bond Vote is Not a Mandate

Trump’s Dividing Rhetoric Could Lead to Violence

The opinions of columnists and letter writers are their own. They do not speak for the newspaper.

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 kyle@tbrnewsmedia.com or mail them to The Village Beacon Record, P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733.


OCTOBER 15, 2020 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A23

Opinion My Lunch at CSHL With a Future Nobel Prize Winner

T

hree years and a different world ago, I attended a scientific conference at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory on a gene editing technique called CRISPR, or more technically CRISPR-cas9. I rubbed elbows with some of the many talented scientists at an internationally renowned institution. In a casual atmosphere filled with high-powered talks from people who speak the language of science with accents from all over the world, the grounds at CSHL, with its D. None winding roads and of the above personalized parking BY DANIEL DUNAIEF spaces, offers a treelined backdrop for new collaborations and discoveries. Back then, I invited one of the conference

organizers, Jennifer Doudna (pronounced Dowd nuh), who is a Professor of Chemistry and Molecular and Cell Biology at the University of California, to lunch. After a talk she gave to a packed Grace Auditorium, she and I strolled to the cafeteria to discuss a gene editing tool that has the potential to change the world. Indeed, even today, labs around the world are using a technique based on the way bacteria recognize and fight off viruses to combat the effect of SARS-CoV-2, or the virus that causes COVID-19. During that sunny July day in 2017, however, we were blissfully unaware of the challenges to come in 2020. We sat down at a central table outside, with people passing, nodding and acknowledging my tall and talented lunch guest. While she responded to an appreciative crowd of casually dressed researchers, she was present and focused on the many questions I’d prepared for an upcoming Power of 3 column (see page B9 for another look at that column). Like many revolutionary technologies and inventions such as splitting the atom, CRISPR is

neither all good nor all bad. Editing genes creates opportunities to cure or prevent diseases and to disarm a range of miniature invaders. At the same time, gene editing puts the power of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein into the hands of scientists or doctors, offering the kind of tool that requires careful ethical considerations. Indeed, just last year, a Chinese court sentenced a researcher to three years in prison for using gene editing in unborn babies. Doudna, who moved to Hawaii when she was seven and is a passionate gardener, is in the third year of a four-year $65 million grant from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, which monitors security concerns for the intentional or accidental misuse of the technology. Eating with Doudna on a breezy, bright summer day, I appreciated how ready she was to tailor the conversation to my level of understanding of this technology, offering details about gene editing and making sure I understood her. While she was impressive and articulate, she certainly didn’t seem as if she were speaking to me from on high. She shared a deliberate and

A Benefit Amid Pandemic Problems: Binging

B

lame it all on the pandemic, but in an effort to practice social distancing from my refrigerator, I have seriously begun to binge. On what am I binging? I plead guilty to the following definition of binging from my cell phone browser: “watching multiple episodes of a television program over a short period of time.” Now I am not exactly an innocent when it comes to watching a serialized story all at once. Given the opportunity, I did just that with the last year of Between “Downton Abbey.” you and me I got all the coming BY LEAH S. DUNAIEF installments at once in return for a donation to PBS, and I stayed up past three o’clock in the morning, too hypnotized to

turn off the TV until the series had ended. I guess that was the tip off to my plot-addicted personality. The reveal is that I love stories, and like the monarch lover of Scheherazade, Persian King Shahryar, in “One Thousand and One Nights,” I cannot leave a tale in the middle when I have the opportunity to see how it ends, regardless of my fatigue. So on a recommendation, I started watching “The Crown,” and you guessed it. This marvelous series, a historical drama about Elizabeth II, the Windsors, and some of the events that have marked her reign, captivated me. The first season starts with the marriage of Elizabeth and Philip, Duke of Edinburgh in 1947, to the end of her sister Margaret’s involvement with Group Captain Peter Townsend in 1955. After dinner each night, I turned on the television and watched all the stories filmed to this point until I fell asleep in my chair. I eagerly await the start of the fourth season, which I believe will happen Nov. 15 and include Margaret Thatcher’s premiership and more on Lady Diana Spencer. The fifth and sixth seasons are to cover the years in the 21st

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 kyle@tbrnewsmedia.com. Times Beacon Record Newspapers are published every Thursday. Subscription $49/year • 631-751-7744 www.tbrnewsmedia.com • Contents copyright 2020

century. Sadly, though, I will be limited only to one episode at a time because I am caught up. The problem with a series is that sooner or later, they end. I guess they just run out of juice or the talented people involved want to move on to something else. Having gone as far as permitted with “The Crown,” I started casting around for another compelling show and stumbled upon “Grace and Frankie,” with an incredible cast: Lily Tomlin, Jane Fonda, Sam Waterston, Martin Sheen and a seemingly endless list of talented actors. Far from being an historical drama, this series could only run in today’s world. Begun in 2015 and scheduled to finish in 2021, after filming resumes, the story begins when the lawyer husbands of Grace and Frankie announce that they are not only business partners for the past 40 years but also have been lovers for the last 20. They are “coming out” and wish to be married. The two couples, their relationships redrawn, now have to deal with their revised circumstances, and as they move forward in this comedy-drama, their lives touch on so many current themes with sympathy and occasional belly-laughter results.

EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Leah S. Dunaief GENERAL MANAGER Johness Kuisel MANAGING EDITOR Kyle Barr EDITOR Kyle Barr

LEISURE EDITOR Heidi Sutton EDITORIAL Julianne Mosher ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Kathleen Gobos

directed intelligence, blending a combination of an explanation of what she’d done and thoughts on the next scientific steps. Doudna, who lives with her husband Jamie Cate, who is also a Berkeley scientist, and their high school senior son Andrew, shared an appreciation for the history of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, where she’d visited at different points in her career. Back in 1987, she spotted a woman walking towards her. Nobel prize winner Barbara McClintock, whose name still comes up regularly in conversations with scientists at the site, strolled by in a tee shirt, giving Doudna a thrill. The next time someone spots or interacts with the Berkeley Professor at CSHL, they will likely feel the same excitement, as Doudna was recently named a recipient of the Nobel Prize. Then again, it was clear from the way the attendees at the conference reacted to Doudna three years ago that, Nobel prize or not, she was already a rock star in the scientific community whose foundational work may, one day, lead to the kind of breakthroughs that extend and improve life.

Both couples, forced to recognize their advanced years, deal with physical limitations, retirement issues, health insurance frustrations, bigoted elderly parents, interracial relationships, sexual needs and computer challenges. Both couples have adult children, who bring into the plots some of the pain and satisfactions of the twenty-somethings: raising young children, not wanting children, addiction, being able to afford buying a home, and worrying how to take care of older parents who don’t want to acknowledge aging. It is primarily the story, though, of two women, Grace and Frankie, who could not be more different. They cannot stand to be in the same room with each other at the start, yet we see how they slowly come together in trying to deal with their mutually altered circumstances. The characters are well drawn by the authors and actors, and they ultimately reveal much about the value of supportive friendships between women. Can Grace and Frankie, two women in their 70s, survive being outcasts? The answer is a resounding YES! Be assured, there are already 78 episodes with more on the way, enough for a great binge.

ART AND PRODUCTION DIRECTOR Beth Heller Mason 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 • OCTOBER 15, 2020

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