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The VILLAGE BEACON RECORD M O U N T S I N A I • M I L L E R P L AC E • S O U N D B E AC H • R O C K Y P O I N T • WA D I N G R I V E R • S H O R E H A M
Vol. 37, No. 18
November 18, 2021
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Demanding change
Suffolk County Republican lawmakers ask Albany leaders for cashless bail repeal
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Deputy Chief Michael Presta with Huckleberry from Canine Companions.
Meet the newest member of Port Jefferson EMS — A5
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U.S. Rep. Lee Zeldin and Republican Suffolk County lawmakers held a press conference Nov. 10 to call on Democratic leaders in Albany to repeal the state’s cashless bail law.
Republican lawmakers call for change in bail reform
Suffolk County Republican lawmakers joined together last week calling on Democratic leaders in Albany to repeal the state’s cashless bail law. They argue that it has led to an uptick in violent crime. Spearheaded by U.S. Congressman Lee Zeldin (R-NY1) — who is also the GOP’s potential nominee for governor in 2022 — he said that while on the campaign trail, he hears from people across both political parties who agree that bail reform needs to change. “Many areas of the state that I’ve been to support repealing cashless bail,” Zeldin said during a press conference on Wednesday, Nov. 10. “They share stories about how cashless bail has eroded public safety.” He added that the “red wave” that hit Suffolk County — including the success of newly elected Republican District Attorney Ray Tierney, could help send a message to majority Democrats to repeal the bail reform law. “Too many New Yorkers have already witnessed the ramifications of this dangerous law first-hand, and on Election Day 2021 they made it abundantly clear that they have had enough,” Zeldin said. “This fatally flawed law undermines New York’s men and women in blue, their morale, their efforts and, most importantly, their authority. In the courtroom, it rips away judges’ judicial discretion, ties their hands and forces them to ignore prior convictions and the risk of repeat offenders. Instead of handcuffing criminals, this misguided law handcuffs justice, and every day New Yorkers are the ones paying the price.”
Tierney interjected and said that a package of newly enacted or proposed Democratic bills, including those that reform parole and would expunge many misdemeanor convictions and lower-level felonies, fail to keep the public safe. “We are here to say these laws do not keep us safer,” Tierney said. “And we need to repeal some of these laws and start to think about the victims and the victims’ families when we consider criminal justice reform.” He added that during the most-recent election, he and his GOP colleagues saw that bail reform and criminal justice were huge issues that needed to be tackled. “We saw suddenly our elected officials coming to the realization that bail reform and criminal justice reform did not keep us safe and it was not an effective law,” he said. Zeldin and Tierney were joined by members of the state Senate and Assembly. Sen. Mario Mattera (R-St. James) congratulated Tierney on his recent win. “I’m so excited that the people spoke,” Mattera said. “They wanted to make sure we have the right people in place to keep our residents safe.” Sen. Anthony Palumbo (R-New Suffolk) said that bail reform “needs to change — it’s dangerous. The people have spoken. They finally remember the victims who have been forgotten by the two majorities.” Assemblywoman Jodi Giglio (R-Riverhead) agreed that victims and witnesses are currently not safe. “It’s not right what happened, we need to repeal it,” she said. “Repeat offenders need to be behind bars and judges need that jurisdiction back.”
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Huck is on the way! Four-legged friend joins Port Jefferson EMS
BY JULIANNE MOSHER JULIANNE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
Huck is ready for action in the Port Jefferson EMS car. Photo by Julianne Mosher
facility dog programs, but Port Jefferson EMS is one of the first on Long Island within the health care industry. “The dogs work with patients, work with people that are receiving PT, OT services, work with kids — anybody that’s really suffered any trauma,” he said. “And that’s
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what we’re using Huck for; we’re using him to really engage with the community’s vulnerable populations.” Presta and his new furry friend will be working side by side engaging with children and adults affected by trauma who they deal with on a daily basis.
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Port Jefferson EMS has a new volunteer on staff — a golden lab named Huckleberry. Known to his counterparts as “Huck,” the 2-year-old Canine Companions for Independence facility dog has been hired to respond to stressful situations and bring a sense of relief to those in need. His handler Deputy Chief Michael Presta said that he became interested in adopting a facility dog when a friend — who is a police officer down in Maryland — told him about the program. Presta began researching Canine Companions and found that there are many different benefits to having a facility dog on premise. “A facility dog would be a dog that works in an educational, legal or some sort of clinical hospital health care setting,” he said. “For example, in the legal setting, they work as crime victim advocates for kids that have to testify and things like that, and it’s really kind of gained traction nationally in the education setting of the schools that have them.” Presta added that hospitals like Mount Sinai and Calvary Hospital in the Bronx have
“Not every solution in medicine is giving a medication or starting an IV,” he said. “Sometimes we can slow down work with the patients, and the dog is a great tool for that.” Since 1975, Canine Companions has bred, raised and expertly trained assistance dogs in over 40 commands designed to assist people with disabilities or to motivate and inspire clients with special needs. Huck can pull toy wagons, push drawers closed and retrieve all kinds of items. He has specific commands that allow him to interact with patients in a calm and appropriate way. But it’s not just fun and games having him around. He has a lot of responsibilities while on call. “Right now, he responds in the car with me when I’m working clinically,” Presta said. Not every opportunity is a good fit for Huck, Presta added. If a patient is extremely ill or isn’t a dog person, Huck usually stands back. But within the last few weeks — Huck just joined the team last month — he has calmed people in distress. Presta said that while working with patients who have developmental disabilities, sometimes the lights, trucks and uniforms can be a sensory overload for them.
PAGE A6 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • NOVEMBER 18, 2021
Perspective
Michael McClure:
A Veterans Day story
BY RICH ACRITELLI DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM On Veterans Day, there are always unique stories that originate from North Shore citizens who fulfilled their military duty to defend this nation. Rocky Point resident Michael McClure, a member of the U.S. Army for two decades, had some extremely memorable experiences in the service. This mild-mannered resident, who retired from the Army in 1995, was a native of North Massapequa and attended Farmingdale High School. As a young man, he was a three-sport athlete, who enjoyed cross country, track and wrestling. McClure was a talented runner, who was in superb physical shape, and ran many races through the polo fields, hills and trails at Bethpage State Park. After graduating from high school in 1971, McClure attended college for one year and eventually traveled to Washington state. West of Seattle, he worked as a logger at Port Angeles, located on a beautiful peninsula surrounded by the Pacific Ocean. This Nassau County boy was about 3,000 miles away from Long Island, where he learned how to drop trees, load them onto trucks and cut these massive pieces of wood into sections.
Army enlistment
Four years after leaving Farmingdale, McClure enlisted in the Army in April of 1975. He was trained by Vietnam, Korea, World War II and Cold War veterans with combat experience in Southeast Asia. At this point in the mid-1970s, the military was in poor shape after the Americans had pulled out of Vietnam with a diminished amount of funding toward the U.S. Armed Forces. But McClure was a young man who was always in good condition, and he was motivated to do well in the Army. After he completed his initial training at Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, he was a combat engineer who was transferred to Fort Belvoir, Virginia, where he learned how to move, store and detonate smaller nuclear weapons. Through the Medium Atomic Demolition Munition, also known as MADM, and the Special Atomic Demolition Munition, known as SADM, McClure learned how to use these weapons as obstacles and to slow down any potential Soviet military advances toward American territory and troops. An even-keeled individual, McClure easily describes his time as a combat engineer who received enhanced training to handle sensitive weapons and national security knowledge.
By 1986, with over a decade of service and experience under his belt, McClure entered the special operations forces at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. At the height of the Cold War under the aggressive direction and funding of President Ronald Reagan (R) to defeat the Soviet Union, McClure was a sergeant first class and a “Green Beret.” Always in sound physical shape, McClure flourished within the advanced techniques and operations of this highly respected fighting force. He served with the 10th Special Forces Group at Fort Devens, Massachusetts, where the Green Berets prepared to oppose the Soviet menace. For nearly 15 years, McClure was stationed in Stuttgart, Germany, with the engineers and later the Special Forces. For many years, McClure spoke fluent German and he enjoyed his time living abroad in this allied country. He was a well-rounded noncommissioned officer who was instructed how to decipher and use intelligence for potential operations with the Green Berets.
Gulf War
During the Gulf War in 1991, McClure was not deployed immediately to the Middle East, rather his Green Beret unit was ordered to undertake serious training at Fort Bragg which his leadership refused to cancel. While this was a quick ground war that took only three days to defeat the Iraqi army in Kuwait, McClure was soon deployed to the region. Although Saddam Hussein was seriously crippled by the onslaught of American and coalition forces, the Iraqis held enough weapons to oppose the Shiites in southern Iraq and the Kurdish opposition groups in the northern mountainous areas. Operating 10,000 feet above sea level, through Operation Provide Comfort, McClure was sent to help the Kurdish minority group survive the assaults being waged against them by Hussein. From the ground, McClure witnessed the northern no-fly zone that was established to prevent Iraqi aggressive aircraft from attacking the almost powerless Kurds. McClure understood the Kurds suffered greatly at the hands of the Iraqi dictator, as they were attacked with biological and chemical weapons. The Kurds fought during the Gulf War and desperately wanted their homeland removed from the abusive power of Hussein. McClure saw the abandoned Kurdish towns which had been gassed and the poor regions of this part of Iraq, where people still traveled on dirt roads and goat trails.
civil war that raged between the Serbians, Bosnians and Croatians in the former Yugoslavia. This once-communist nation was torn apart by the fighting and the brutal ethnic cleansing that dictated in the mid-1990s an American military presence to aid the weaker Bosnian forces. With aerial missions being flown over the rugged Balkan Mountains, McClure and his Green Beret detachment were ordered to provide support for air rescues for pilots who were shot down or forced to parachute during this war. The 2001 film, “Behind Enemy Lines,” is a military combat film starring Owen Wilson and Gene Hackman that depicts parts of the terrible Yugoslavian conflict. McClure liked this film that had a good amount of action, but he doubted its historical accuracy.
Yugoslavian conflict
Back in the USA
After his time in Iraq, McClure was then stationed in eastern Italy, not too far from the
Rocky Point resident Michael McClure
After spending many years out of the United States, often on dangerous missions that ranged
from handling nuclear weapons to working with the Kurdish rebels, McClure retired as a master sergeant from the Army in 1995. Back in Rocky Point, McClure in civilian life for many years was a tractor-trailer driver. Currently, he delivers home heating oil for Swezey Fuel in Patchogue. Still an active man, he stays in good shape by competing in the annual Lt. Michael P. Murphy memorial run around Lake Ronkonkoma and Blydenburgh Park. McClure is an avid reader of military history, exercises almost every day and enjoys the chance to visit his family members in Colorado. May we never forget and always show appreciation toward veterans such as Michael McClure, who handled hazardous tasks and selflessly defended this proud nation. Author Rich Acritelli is a social studies teacher at Rocky Point High School and an adjunct professor of American history at Suffolk County Community College.
Movers and Shakers
NOVEMBER 18, 2021 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A7
Reflections on Jefferson’s Ferry’s 20th anniversary
BY LINDA KOLAKOWSKI DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM This is part one of three part series. Over its 20 years in existence, Jefferson’s Ferry has been home to a significant number of accomplished and creative older adults who have been groundbreakers, innovators, educators and artists. All were original thinkers with a desire to do something that hadn’t been done before, and many of these residents wrote books about their work, which can be found in the Jefferson’s Ferry library collection.
Gerhart Friedlander and Barbara Strongin: scientist and activist
Gerhart Friedlander and his wife, Barbara Strongin, were among the first residents of Jefferson’s Ferry when it opened in 2001. He was a nuclear chemist who emigrated to the United States in 1936 from Munich, Germany, when the Nazis forbade Jews from attending university. Friedlander studied at the University of California, Berkeley, receiving his doctorate in 1942. After gaining American citizenship in 1943, he was recruited to work on the Manhattan Project at Los Alamos, New Mexico. He later worked at Brookhaven National Laboratory for more than 30 years, conducting groundbreaking research on how high-energy particles trigger nuclear reactions. Friedlander also co-authored the textbook “Nuclear and Radiochemistry,” considered a classic in its field, with Manhattan Project colleague Joseph W. Kennedy. The book has been translated into 18 languages, and over the years, was updated twice with other co-authors. He received honorary degrees from many universities and countries and was an active elected member of the National Academy of Sciences. Friedlander died in 2009 at the age of 93. Strongin has spent her adult life dedicated to improving the lives of women and girls on Long Island. She met her husband when he was the chair of the board and she was the chief executive officer of Planned Parenthood of Suffolk County. They both received the Family Planning Advocates of New York State award. One of three founding members of the Women’s Fund of Long Island, Strongin was also an adviser and contributor to the Herstory Writers Workshop. She has co-authored curricula and articles on the Jewish perspective of human sexuality and has been honored by the New York Civil Liberties Union (Suffolk County Chapter) and Family Planning Advocates of New York State. Also, she won in 2011 the Good Neighbor award from The Village Times Herald. Strongin and Friedlander jointly received the Allard K. Lowenstein Memorial Award from the American Jewish Congress, Long Island Chapter, and were recognized by Newsday as “Long Islanders of the Century: Everyday Heroes.” Strongin continues to reside in her independent living cottage at Jefferson’s Ferry.
Gerhart Friedlander, Barbara Strongin and Joyce Edward are among the movers and shakers who have lived at Jefferson’s Ferry. Photos from Jefferson Ferry
Joyce Edward: author, advocate, activist
Joyce Edward enjoyed a long career as a respected and influential social worker psychoanalyst, teacher, writer and activist. The co-editor and co-author of several books showing the value of psychoanalytic theory in social work practice as well as in the analytic consulting room, she also authored a book on her own, “The Sibling Relationship.” Edward holds a Master of Social Work from Case Western Reserve University and earned post-master’s certificates in psychoanalysis and psychotherapy. “Therapists seek to help a patient understand what’s in their way, what’s keeping them from a congenial marriage, for example, or from exploring career options,” she said. “A therapist is a partner in the work. We do not tell you what to do but help identify what may be blocking you and what you can do for yourself to move past these obstacles.” Edward attended Antioch College in Ohio, attracted by its then unusual work study program. With the intention of becoming an advertising copywriter, Edward was placed in a salesclerk position at Macy’s as part of her work experience. She was uncomfortable in the post and quickly realigned her course, gravitating toward social work after helping Southerners who were recruited to come to work in a bomber plant up North find housing during World War II. At home she was exposed to acts of kindness, generosity and caring for those less fortunate. “My aunt, who was a social worker during the Depression, would say of the people she helped, ‘They are just people like us.’ At Antioch, there was an emphasis on helping others. For example, as students we helped integrate a barbershop and the local movie theater.”
Edward did not intend being a practicing analyst. Balancing motherhood and career, she first volunteered at a newly founded small private school for emotionally disturbed children. As the school grew, so did her role. “It was a major and central working part of my life for 13 years and exposed me to psychoanalytic training,” she said. “As the social worker on the clinical team, I wanted more than a handmaiden role. I questioned the prevailing theory at the time that the cause of autism in children was ‘refrigerator parents’ who were cold and did not connect with their children. I saw the ‘coldness,’ when it was observed, as frequently being the result of living with an autistic child, whose needs are tremendous and time consuming. I realized that I had to get more training to gain prestige and acceptance of my ideas, so I enrolled in an analytic training course of study.” Upon publishing an article on her thoughts and observations, Edward was asked to write a book on the subject. She wrote “SeparationIndividuation” collaboratively with two colleagues, with each contributor writing several chapters. The book was well received and provided the basis for greater discussion and ideas about the developmental process that led to subsequent studies, articles and books. After 13 years at the school, Edward took a position in the Freeport Public Schools in a program funded by Democratic President Lyndon Johnson’s “war on poverty.” When the funding for this program ceased, she opened a small private practice and continued with this until she retired. During these years she also taught in the schools of social work at Adelphi University, Hunter College and Smith College as well as in two analytic training programs.
With the introduction of managed care into the mental health system, Edward and her colleagues founded the National Coalition of Mental Health Professionals & Consumers. The organization sought to restore privacy and to return to the clinician treating a patient their decision-making role. Edward has lived in an independent living apartment at Jefferson’s Ferry for more than 14 years. Over that time, she has served on the residents council and the health committee, the social activities committee, the education committee as well as others. Through Stony Brook University’s OLLI program, she enjoys courses via Zoom, which currently include a political discussion newsroom, a music course with essayist David Bouchier and a class on the work of Leonard Bernstein. An avid reader, she participates in book club discussions, one at the Emma S. Clark Memorial Library and the other at Jefferson’s Ferry. Recent reads include “Hamnet” by Maggie O’Farrell, “White Teeth” by Zadie Smith and works by Edith Wharton, George Eliot, George Packer and Anne Applebaum. According to Edward, the best thing about Jefferson’s Ferry is the people, the residents and the staff — there are many interesting, knowledgeable and accomplished people. “More importantly is the understanding and support that we offer each other,” she said. “The residents have an appreciation of each other gained through our ages and experiences and have come to recognize what’s important in life.” Linda Kolakowski is vice president of Residential Life at Jefferson’s Ferry Life Plan Community in South Setauket.
PAGE A8 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • NOVEMBER 18, 2021
LEGALS NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT: SUFFOLK COUNTY. 1900 CAPITAL TRUST II, BY U.S. BANK TRUST NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, NOT IN ITS INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY BUT SOLELY AS CERTIFICATE TRUSTEE, Pltf. vs. DONNA REYES AKA DONNA L. REYES, et al, D e f t s . I n d e x #608239/2019. Pursuant to order confirming referee report and judgment of foreclosure and sale dated Sept. 13, 2021, I will sell at public auction on the front steps of the Southampton Town Hall, 116 Hampton Road, Southampton, NY on December 8, 2021 at 11:00 a.m., prem. k/a 29 Gordon Avenue, Medford, NY a/k/a District 0200, Section 526.00, Block 06.00, Lot 013.000. Said property located in the Town of West Yaphank, Township of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk and State of NY, and designated on a certain map entitled, “Map of Gordon Heights, Section One, Yaphank, Long Island, New York”, surveyed by Herman P. Hawkins, C.E. of Port Jefferson, New York, May, 1927, for Island Properties, Inc., which map was filed with the Clerk of the County of Suffolk on Sept. 6, 1927 under Map No. 63, which lots are designated by Lot 1 to 5, both inclusive, Block 1, Section 1, on said Map of Gordon Heights and said lots when taken together as one parcel are bounded. Approx. amt. of judgment is $208,443.08 plus costs and interest. Sold subject to terms and conditions of filed judgment and terms of sale. CORNELIUS ROGERS, Referee. HILLWALLACK LLP, Attys. for Pltf., 25 W. 39th Street, 8th floor, New York, NY. File No. 23151-00005- #98968 52290 11/4 4x vbr
NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF SUFFOLK The Bank of New York Mellon, f/k/a, the Bank of New York, as Trustee for CWABS, Inc., Asset-Backed Certificates, Series 2005-3, Plaintiff AGAINST Salvatore DiBartolomeo, Defendant(s) Pursuant to a Judgment of
To Place A Legal Notice Email: legals@tbrnewsmedia.com Foreclosure and Sale duly entered 3-25-2020 I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the Southampton Town Hall, 116 Hampton Rd, Southampton, NY 11968 on December 7, 2021 at 11:30AM, premises known as 11 Whitmore Lane, Coram, NY 11727. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being in Coram, in the Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk, and State of New York, SECTION: 313.00, BLOCK: 03.00, LOT: 025.000, DISTRICT: 0200. Approximate amount of judgment $591,951.82 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Ju d g m e n t Index #612278/2018. The aforementioned auction will be conducted in accordance with the SUFFOLK County COVID-19 Protocols located on the Office of Court Administration (OCA) website (https://ww2.nycourts. gov/Admin/oca.shtml) and as such all persons must comply with social distancing, wearing masks and screening practices in effect at the time of this foreclosure sale. Gabrielle M. Weglein, Esq., Referee Frenkel Lamber t Weiss Weisman & Gordon, LLP 53 Gibson Street Bay Shore, NY 11706 01-073900-F00 70141 5390 11/4 4x vbr
Notice of formation of MPact Premium LLC. Arts of Org. filed with the Sec’y of State of NY (SSNY) on 10/21/21. Office located in Suffolk County. SSNY is designated for service of process. SSNY shall mail copy of any process served against the LLC to 1046 New York Ave, Suite A, Huntington Station, NY 11746. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. 5392 11/4 6x vbr
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NOTICE OF ANNUAL ELECTION OF THE ROCKY POINT FIRE DISTRICT December 14, 2021 PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the Annual Election of the Rocky Point Fire District will take place on December 14th, 2021 between the hours of 3:00 P.M. and 9:00 P.M. at the firehouse located at 90 King Road in Rocky Point, NY for the purpose of electing one Commissioner for a five (5) year term, commencing January 1, 2022 and ending December 31, 2026. The Election Clerks will meet on November 24th at 6 PM at the Fire District Office located at 49 Route 25A, Shoreham, NY to prepare the register. Candidates for the District Office of Commissioner shall file a petition signed by at least twenty five (25) registered voters of the Fire District, which petition must be filed with the Secretary of the Rocky Point Fire District, at the District Office located at 49 Route 25A, Shoreham, NY no later than 3:00 PM on November 24th, 2021. All residents of the Fire District duly registered with the Suffolk County Board of Elections as of November 22nd, 2021 shall be eligible to vote. Date: November 8, 2021 Edwin S. Brooks, Secretary BOARD OF FIRE COMMISSIONERS ROCKY POINT FIRE DISTRICT 5614 11/18 1x vbr
Sound Beach firemen during the Veterans Day event on Nov. 11. Photos by Karina Gerry
Sound Beach community remembers veterans
BY KARINA GERRY DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
Sound Beach community members gathered at the Sound Beach Veterans Memorial Park on New York Avenue Thursday to honor veterans on the “11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month.” The Sound Beach Civic Association held its annual Veteran’s Day Ceremony, and members of the civic association were joined by the Sound Beach Fire Department, Councilwoman Jane Bonner (R-Rocky Point), Senator Anthony Palumbo (R-New Suffolk), Scout Troop 2019, and Rocky Point High School chorus and band members leading the ceremony. Last year’s ceremony was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as this year’s Memorial Day Ceremony. “The freedoms we enjoy every day are due to your sacrifice,” said Bea Ruberto, president of the Sound Beach Civic Association, during her opening remarks. “All we can do today is say thank you, but there is so much more that we can do and that we should do every day … At this point we thought, it’s time, we need to do this.” During the ceremony, Rocky Point High School chorus led the crowd in the National Anthem and America the Beautiful, while the band played God Bless America. The students were applauded for their performance and for coming out on their day off. Palumbo gave the reins over to his Special Assistant for Veterans Affairs, Chad Lennon, a veteran and major in the Marine Corps Reserves, to speak to the crowd about his experience and the importance of honoring them not just on Veterans Day, but every day. “Today’s the one day that we come out to recognize but there are sacrifices made every day,” Lennon said. “It’s not just the sacrifice of
the bodies, it’s the sacrifice of the families, it’s not just a one-day event it’s every day.” Lennon noted that Suffolk County has the largest population of veterans out of all 62 counties across the state. The high numbers from Suffolk and Nassau came as “a shock” to Lennon, but the high volume of vets in the county could be seen even during the intimate Sound Beach event — when during the ceremony veterans were called up to stand under the flag of the branch they served and a little over 40 vets came forward from the crowd. “We couldn’t be where we are today without the service of those who came before us and laid the foundation,” Lennon said. “Our responsibility is to continue to push that legacy by giving a good foundation for the next generation that comes through.”
NOVEMBER 18, 2021 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A9
Make a Statement...
HUCK
Continued from page A5 That’s where Huck comes in. “We’re hoping that the dog is going to be a great icebreaker tool to kind of break down that barrier,” the deputy chief said. “Establish a lot of communication and get them into the ambulance, get patients to the hospital.” Port Jefferson EMS is a combination EMS agency of career and volunteer paramedics and EMTs providing 24/7/365 advanced life support ambulance service to the communities of Port Jefferson, Belle Terre, Mount Sinai and Miller Place. There is also a unique live-in program for Stony Brook University students where about 15 of them live on premise. They get free room and board in exchange for riding in the ambulance 24 hours a week. “They get an immersive clinical experience,” Presta said. “They’re here all the time. They get a lot of clinical hours, which makes them really competitive for programs, and we get EMTs in the community here which is needed.” And Presta said Huck has made friends with each and every one of them.
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Above, left, Huck’s badge on the back of his harness. Photo by Julianne Mosher
“In addition to his role, he helps serve the 200 people in this organization,” he added. “We see some pretty gnarly things from time to time, so Huck is our de-facto licensed therapist here.” Since his first tour in October, Huck is already off to an excellent start helping out others. “It’s been great for us,” Presta said. “He’s been really engaging with the community. We’re out in the village walking around, meeting people, talking to people from all walks of life and he really has been a great tool for us.”
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PAGE A10 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • NOVEMBER 18, 2021
Perspective
Traveling on the edge of a pandemic
Taking a solo backpacking tour through Europe proves the scars of COVID-19 are deep BY KYLE BARR DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM This is part one of a two part series.
France
There was a young man in Toulouse, France, one of only two people in a hostel dorm room, the other being me. We were two in a room meant to facilitate 15. A Parisian traveler, he had taken trains and buses down to Toulouse, named the Pink City (Ville Rose) for its famous blush-red brick. We had a good sight of the street and that colored stone out of the window we shared between our beds. “I want to see more of my country while I can,” he told me during that cool, wet night in July. He also told me he still hadn’t gotten a vaccine for COVID-19. I had, but I was sleeping just 3 feet away from him. This should be a normal interaction for travelers through Europe but, in a space like that, the conversation inevitably moves toward the pandemic. He tells me he did not know why he hesitated to get the vaccine. It could have been nerves. It could be the kind of anti-authoritarian impulses that us Americans know only too well. He, along with so many French citizens, have railed against the French President Emmanuel Macron for their mandated proof of a vaccine or negative COVID test for everything from cafés to concerts. On July 14, Bastille Day, protests rolled out from France’s cities. I watched one in Marseille make its way from the old docks up to the local municipal building. The protesters were shouting “Liberté!” while holding signs reading, “Mon corps m’appartient!” meaning “My body belongs to me!” But the young Parisian man said that, despite his anger, it could actually change his mind. “Maybe this will finally make me get the vaccine,” he told me. Reuters’ data show an estimated 73% of France’s population has been vaccinated. That compares to an approximate 59% in the U.S. I wonder if that young man I met in Toulouse ever got his shot, but we were traveling in opposite directions, and I don’t think I’ll ever know. There’s only one time that something can be done for the first time. So doing a European backpacking trip is one thing — an enormous thing to do as a novice. Doing it during a oncein-a-century pandemic is another thing entirely. This past summer I made a very sudden decision to take a two-month backpacking trip through several countries in western Europe, starting June 23 and ending Aug. 18.
Left, the statue of Ludwig I, Koenig von Bayern, King of Bavaria in Munich. Above, French citizens in Marseille protest the country’s mandate of proof of vaccine or a negative COVID-19 test. Below, the Monument to the Girondins in Bourdeaux. Photos by Kyle Barr
Beginning in France, I went south to Basque country in Spain, back into France before going into Switzerland, then Germany, the Netherlands, then to Denmark before a quick flight over to Iceland. My trip began on the very edge of when we all thought the pandemic would subside, just after many European countries started opening their doors to overseas travelers. My trip coincidentally ended just after those same nations started to roll back those open-armed policies. France instituted a COVID passport system just weeks after I left, and it is still only really available to French citizens, meaning that it would be nearly impossible to do half of what I could do just a few months before. Other European countries have instituted new restrictions and lockdowns. It means there was one small three-month period, one golden time slate when the classic Euro tour was still possible. That’s gone now.
Currently, rules are in flux, and Americans may find that restrictions can change between the time they book a trip and their departure dates. Unvaccinated U.S. passengers especially need to keep on top of all the changing regulations. I wonder now if things will ever return to that golden age of pandemic-era travel and, at the same time, whether we ever should go back. Because even during this perfect period when summer travel was (mostly) possible if one carried a vaccine card tucked inside a passport, adventuring alone in pandemicscarred lands is not as it once was. It may never be the same again.
Germany
I stayed in a total of 17 hostels, one tiny hotel, two Airbnbs and two stays at kindly people’s homes. During my visit to Hamburg, Germany, I chatted up the hostel staff and heard, like most hostels along my route, they
were doing barely 30 to 40% of what they had done in 2019. Backpacking alone relies on one’s ability to strike up conversations with strangers, to meet new people from all over and organize a day’s activities, but the pandemic has done more than hamper worldwide travel. It has also changed certain attitudes. Less people seem to be willing to sit down with strangers to have conversations while the pandemic lingers. That’s not to say people are more obtuse or less friendly, but there is a sort of wariness hanging about all interactions. Most travelers I met spoke similarly about that general feeling hanging like a cloud above people’s heads. Part of it was the lack of people in hostels, but there also was a defining sense of separation. Kyle Barr is a freelancer writer and the former editor of The Port Times Record, The Village Beacon Record and The Times of Middle Country.
NOVEMBER 18, 2021 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A11
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PAGE A16 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • NOVEMBER 18, 2021
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Cesspool Services MR SEWERMAN CESSPOOL SERVICE All types of cesspool servicing, all work guaranteed, family owned and operated since 1985, 631-924-7502. Licensed and Insured.
Cleaning TRIPLE C SOLUTIONS Residential/Commercial Weekly/Biweekly/monthly agreements, Call 631-747-1016, SEE OUR DISPLAY AD FOR MORE INFORMATION.
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
Floor Services/Sales FINE SANDING & REFINISHING Wood Floor Installations Craig Aliperti, Wood Floors LLC. All work done by owner. 29 years experience. Lic.#47595-H/Insured. 631-875-5856
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Handyman Services HANDYMAN SERVICES AND PAINTING. Dependable, Honest, Professional. No job too small. Call Steve 631-831-3089. SEE DISPLAY AD FOR MORE INFORMATION.
Home Improvement ALL PHASES OF HOME IMPROVEMENT From attic to your basement, RCJ Construction www.rcjconstruction.com commercial/residential, lic/ins 631-580-4518.
Home Improvement BLUSTAR CONSTRUCTION The North Shore’s Most Trusted Renovation Experts. 631-751-0751 We love small jobs too! Suffolk Lic. #48714-H, Ins. SEE OUR DISPLAY AD FOR MORE INFORMATION. E L I M I N AT E G U T T E R CLEANING FOREVER! LeafFilter, the most advanced debrisblocking gutter protection. Schedule a FREE LeafFilter estimate today.15% off and 0% financing for those who qualify. PLUS Senior & Military Discounts. Call 1-877-763-2379 FUSARO HOME IMPROVEMENTS Fall In love with your home all over again. We set the industry standard for quality craftmanshift and home remodeling. Call 631-399-2095 and SEE OUR DISPLAY FOR MORE INFORMATION LAMPS FIXED, $65. In Home Service!! Handy Howard. My cell 646-996-7628 NEVER PAY FOR COVERED HOME REPAIRS AGAIN, Complete Care Home Warranty, Covers all major systems and appliances. 30 day risk free. $200.00 OFF +2 FREE Months, 866-440-6501 THE GENERAC PWRcell, a solar plus battery storage system. SAVE money, reduce your reliance on the grid, prepare for power outages and power your home. Full installation services available. $0 Down Financing Option. Request a FREE, no obligation, quote today. Call 1-888-871-0194
Home Repairs/ Construction GENERAL CONTRACTOR, TILE & MASONRY SPECIALIST. 20 years of experience. Also clean-ups and junk removal. Call 631-232-0174. FOR MORE INFORMATION SEE DISPLAY AD.
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Lawn & Landscaping GOT VINES? Poison Ivy is dangerous to us but invasive vines and noxious weeds are dangerous to your trees and landscapes! Call 631-286-4600 and SEE DISPLAY AD FOR MORE INFORMATION. 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, Cleanups, Shrub/Tree Pruning, Removals. Landscape Design/ Installation, Ponds/Waterfalls, Stone Walls. Firewood. Free estimates. Lic/Ins.631-6898089
Landscape Materials SCREENED TOP SOIL Mulch, compost, decorative and driveway stone, concrete pavers, sand/block/portland. Fertilizer and seed. JOS. M. TROFFA MATERIALS CORP. 631-928-4665, www.troffa.com
Masonry CARL BONGIORNO LANDSCAPE/MASON CONTRACTOR All phases Masonry Work:Stone Walls, Patios, Poolscapes. All phases of Landscaping Design. Theme Gardens. Residential & Commercial. Lic/Ins. 631-928-2110
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 LA ROTONDA PAINTING & DESIGN Interior/exterior, sheetrock repairs, taping/spackling, wallpaper removal, faux, decorative finishings. Free estimates. Lic. #53278-H/Ins. Ross LaRotonda 631-689-5998 WORTH PAINTING “PAINTING WITH PRIDE” Interiors/exteriors. Staining & deck restoration, powerwashing, wallpaper removal, sheetrocktape/spackling, carpentry/trimwork. Lead paint certified. References. Free estimates. Lic./Ins. SINCE 1989 Ryan Southworth. SEE DISPLAY AD FOR MORE INFO. 631-331-5556
Power Washing EXTERIOR CLEANING SPECIALISTS Roof cleaning, pressure washing/softwashing, gutter maintenance. Squeaky Clean Property Solutions 631-387-2156 www. SqueakyCleanli.com THREE VILLAGE POWERWASHING LLC Protect your investment & freshen up your home, outside furniture, garage doors, gazebo, decks, patio, fence, porches, shed, etc Threevillagepowerwashing.com 631-678-7313.
Restorations LUX DEVELOPMENT GROUP Historical restorations, extensions & dormers, cedar siding & clapboard installation, basements, kitchens, doors & windows, finished carpentry & moulding, SEE OUR DISPLAY AD FOR MORE INFORMATION Call 631-283-2266.
Satellite TV BEST SATELLITE TV WITH 2 YEAR PRICE GUARANTEE, $59.99/mo with 190 channels and 3 months free premium movie channels, Free next day installation,Call 888-508-5313
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 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
Business Opportunities LOOKING FOR INVESTMENT AND PARTNER in vinyl siding and window company, Suffolk County, established 25 years, s e r i o u s i n q u i r e s o n l y, 631-321-4005.
TO SUBSCRIBE, CALL 631-751-7744 ©105749
©107173
Cable/Telephone
PAGE A18 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • NOVEMBER 18, 2021
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
HOME SERV ICES BOB’S PAINTING SERVICE
INTERIOR • EXTERIOR
40 Y E A RS EX PER IENCE • Interiors • Exteriors • Powerwashing • Staining & Deck Restoration • Wallpaper Removal • Gutter Cleaning • Spackling & Wall Restoration
“We take pride in our work”
Ryan Southworth 631-331-5556
Licensed/Insured
CALLS PROMPTLY RETURNED
©27630
FREE ESTIMATES
Since 1989
FREE ESTIMATES
631-744-8859
REFERENCES GLADLY GIVEN
Lic./Ins. (#17,981)
#37074-H; RI 18499-10-34230
Since 1995 Family Owned & Operated
GOT VINES?
DECKS ONLY®
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Faux Finishes
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Decorative Finishes
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O wne r Ope rat ed S i n c e 19 78
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FYI‚
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516-433-WIRE (9473) 631-667-WIRE (9473) 516-353-1118 (TEXT)
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Specializing in Paver Restoration
Pressure Washing/Softwashing
Protect Your Investment & Freshen Up Your:
Siding, Decks, Patios, Fences
Insured
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Fence Porches Shed Etc.
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Home Gazebo Outside Furniture Decks Garage Doors Patio
Licensed #55467-H & Fully Insured
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Custom Built – Decks • Patios/Hardscapes Pergolas • Outdoor Kitchens • Lighting
SAVE THE TREES - CONTROL THE VINES
NOVEMBER 18, 2021 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A19
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
HOME SERV ICES VINCENT ALFANO FURNITURE RESTORATION
GENERAL CONTRACTOR, TILE & MASONRY SPECIALIST
Family
40 Years Experience
631.707.1228 343 So. Country Rd., Brookhaven
• Kitchen Cabinet Refinishing • Upholstery • Table Pads • Water & Fire Damage Restoration • Insurance Estimates Licensed/Insured
FUSARO HOME IMPROVEMENTS
Licensed and Insured #15,279 HI
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EXPERIENCED AND RELIABLE
Nick Cordovano 631–696–8150
(631) 744-1577
LICENSED #19604-H & INSURED
RANDALL BROTHERS TREE SERVICE
©53160
CALL REACT TO REMOVE YOUR UNWANTED GUESTS
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Planting Grinding
FREE ESTIMATES New Location COMMERCIAL/ RESIDENTIAL
70 Jayne Blvd., Port Jeff Station (631) 743-9797
Free Estimates ©54920
OVER 40 YEARS EXPERIENCE
©57460
Specializing in all phases of fencing: Wood • PVC • Chain Link • Stockade
Local family owned business since 1993
631-862-9291 516-319-2595 (cell & text) LIC# 50701-H
CALL 631-689-1421 WWW.REACTPESTCONTROL.COM ©51030
FALL IS HERE! ~Advertise Your Seasonal Services~ Firewood • Chimney Work • Home Improvement Painting & Siding • Furniture Restoration • Heating & Plumbing, etc.
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PAGE A20 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • NOVEMBER 18, 2021
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
HOME SERV ICES Craig Aliperti, Wood Floors, LLC
Fine Sanding
MATERIALS CORP
10% OFF
631-928-4665
Construction
Wood Floor Installations
Topsoil * Mulch * Compost Fine Sand * Paver Sand * Concrete Sand
Old Wood Floors Made Beautiful All Work Done By Owner
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29 YEARS EXPERIENCE
www.BluStarBuilders.com
REFERENCES AVAILABLE
LAMPS FIXED $ 65
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NO JOB TOO SMALL
CALL STEVE @ (631) 831-3089
49650
OVER 45 YEARS EXPERIENCE
CO N S T R U C T I O N
• All Forms of Masonry • Driveways/Sidewalks • Pavers/ Brick/Block Work • Culture Stone
All Phases of Home Improvement
Lic. 3637H
C U S TO M F I N I S H E D C A R P E N T RY & M O L D I N G
631–744–0752
Ins.
SPECIALIZING IN FINISHED BASEMENTS
Residential/Commercial
©53430
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www.rcjconstruction.com
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631-283-2266
©52270
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COMMERCIAL/RESIDENTIAL • LIC. #H-32198/INS | OWNER OPERATED
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RCJ
AND
PAINTING
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(631) 580-4518
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In Home Service !! Handy Howard
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longhill7511764@aol.com ✔ All Phases of Home Improvement ✔ Old & Historic Home Restorations ✔ Extensions & Dormers ✔ Kitchens & Baths
70 Comsewogue Road, Suite 9, East Setauket
Lic. #48714-H & Insured
32220
45 YEARS EXPERIENCE
Please call our Stony Brook office today for a FREE in home consultation ©31410
631-875-5856
Owner/Operator has 25+ years serving The North Shore
©51010
Lic. #47595-H/Insured
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NOVEMBER 18, 2021 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A21
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
AUTOMOTI V E SERV ICES CA$H FOR ALL CAR$ & CA$H FOR JUNK CAR$ WANTED
AUTOMOTIVE SERVICES DIRECTORY
No Keys No Title No Problem
FREE Pickup
PLEASE CALL US FOR DETAILS AND SPECIAL RATES. ©107135
631.331.1154 OR 631.751.7663
JUNK CARS BOUGHT
Habla Español Lic. # 7112911/Ins.
(631) 445-1848
GIVE THIS AD TO THE DRIVER and receive an extra $50.
©51990
All Trucks, Cars & Vans
Toyota, Honda, Nissan, Domestic/Foreign ©56420
Highest prices paid for fixable vehicles. Also buy motorcycles and muscle cars.
CALL US LAST WE’LL BEAT ANY PRICE USED AUTO PARTS
ask for mark • 631-258-7919
LICENSED • BONDED INSURED
631.500.1015
Houses For Sale
PUBLISHERS’ NOTICE
PORT JEFFERSON FOR SALE BY OWNER brand new, custom built, 4 bedroom Catherdral ceilings, hardwood floors, custom cabinets granite, counter high end appliances, $455K, 631-346-7167.
EXTRA! EXTRA! ADVERTISE HERE! ©FILL000050
Offices For Rent/Share COUNSELOR THERAPIST LCSW PHD MENTAL HEALTH COUNSELOR established small group practice, abundant referrals, terms to suit, South Setauket Centereach, develop a private practice 631-751-7222.
Rentals MILLER PLACE Basement Studio. Available December 1st. Street parking. Private entrance. Includes all. Verifiable employment. No pets/smoking. $1300/ mo. Call 631-599-6050.
Renting or Selling Your House? TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWSPAPERS
IS THE PLACE TO ADVERTISE Our track record is the best of any local newspaper. Call us for special rates.
Buy 4 weeks. Get 2 weeks FREE.* 631-331–1154 or 631-751–7663 *Private Party ads only. Applies to Classifieds Line/Reader ads only.
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All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination.” We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.
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R E A L ESTAT E Real Estate Services
©55370
$$$ TOP CASH PAID $$$
PAGE A22 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • NOVEMBER 18, 2021
Editorial
Deer aren’t the only road hazards in the fall. Drivers also need to be mindful of pedestrians walking along the sides of roadways. Pixabay photo
Proceed with caution
As the days get shorter and the sun sets sooner, car crashes are more common. According to the American Automobile Association, after the clocks are turned back to standard time in the fall, more incidents happen between 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. AAA recently reported that in 2020 there were 33,956 animal-related crashes in the state. Suffolk County, with 1,310 animal-related incidents, was the second highest in the state, tying with Monroe and behind Orange County. After the sun sets, residents are aware that animals can dart across the street, especially deer. Their sudden appearance on roadways in the fall is a regular occurrence as it’s rutting season for the creatures. It’s the time that they mate, and they have matters on their mind other than safety. While the last thing any driver wants to do is hit an animal, there are other dangers to look out for after dark. Pedestrians can still be walking in the evening hours. Many people wear dark colors and are hard to spot. The problem is compounded when they aren’t carrying flashlights that would draw attention to them. While pedestrians can take care to wear the appropriate clothing and take a flashlight or wear some type of reflective material on jackets or shirts, experts advise drivers to pay extra attention, especially on streets that are lit dimly or not at all. In areas where deer signs are posted or while traveling in busy areas where people may be walking, it’s best to drive slowly, of course, and keep more distance than usual between your car and the one in front of you. The same advice can come in handy when leaves are wet and can cause dangerous road conditions that make it difficult to stop. If a driver finds a deer or a pedestrian close by, or tires slipping on leaves, the best thing is not to swerve suddenly and to brake slowly. One last note, drivers need to make sure they stay centered in the lane. Many tend to gravitate more to the side when headlights go on; however, this can place vehicles even closer to pedestrians and animals. To make sure your car is centered in the lane, try to draw an imaginary line that goes from the asphalt to the sky. Look at the level of the horizon to stay on course if you feel you are gravitating to one side. Driving at night can be a little tricky, but with extra care we can keep ourselves and our neighbors safe.
Letters to the Editor Biden’s flaws overlooked
It is very easy to believe that President Joe Biden [D] is really good at heart, doing his best to save this troubled country from climate change and racism, and to open our borders to millions of unfortunate illegal aliens, since we are, after all, a nation of immigrants. Because of these noble goals, we should overlook Biden’s shortcomings, including his apparent appearance as a blithering dunderhead. We look forward to a charming and enlightening history of the Biden family’s recent political and financial exploits in an upcoming book by New York Post columnist Miranda Devine, titled “Laptop from Hell,” as described in documentation provided by Joe’s profligate and degenerate son, Hunter Biden. The president is indeed fortunate to have the support of his Democratic confederates in the U.S. Congress, including socialists Sen. Bernie Sanders [I-VT] in the Senate and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez [D-NY14] in the House of Representatives. Together, they have conspired to undo many of the accomplishments of the former Trump administration, at least temporarily, and have instituted new initiatives that were not previously imagined. They have discontinued the construction of border walls, both structurally and figuratively, to allow and even encourage millions of illegal aliens to enter our country and may even pay each of them hundreds of thousands of dollars as compensation for being inconvenienced. They have reversed the Trump administration’s achievement of energy independence and transformed the United States from being an energy exporter to a nation dependent on OPEC to meet our oil requirements. As a result, the prices of gasoline and home-heating fuel oil will continue to skyrocket, with no end in sight. Sanders and Ocasio-Cortez are in the process of finding ways to unnecessarily spend trillions of taxpayer dollars, under the guise of “infrastructure,” which has already begun to lead to runaway inflation. They are presiding
over the spiraling supply chain fiasco, led by Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg [D] from South Bend, Indiana, where he was known as “Mayor Pete.” South Bend reportedly had several large traffic jams during Mayor Pete’s tenure, making him clearly qualified for his present task and assuring that his recent two-month paternity leave was no problem at all. Following his imminent solution of the pesky supply chain nuisance, Buttigieg has promised to tackle a real problem, which is the existence of our racist roadways. A good start would be with the low bridges on Southern State Parkway, which may have been designed to prevent Indigenous people in double-decker buses from making the trip to Heckscher State Park. After the new infrastructure bill has been passed, the cost of replacing these racist bridges with solar-powered drawbridges will be not even a small drop in our endless bucket. We can also thank Biden, in his capacity as commander in chief of our armed forces, for our expeditious exit from Afghanistan, although it was unfortunate that a few lives may have been lost in the process. But the best part was all the money we saved by not having to evacuate all of those heavy tanks, trucks, planes, guns and other weapons, which Biden cleverly left for the Taliban to get rid of. Well done, Mr. President. George Altemose Setauket
Pride in party shows unfitness for office
Rob Cornicelli, the writer of a letter to the editor [“Major victory,” Nov. 11], demonstrates a very thin understanding of U.S. democracy. He speaks of capitalism which has been a great engine of our economy but he does not seem to understand how the average person has been seriously hurt by its excesses: corporations used to have the common good in mind. Today’s corporations are only concerned about the bottom line and market share. Capitalism needs to be tempered. At present the fabulously wealthy own
most of the wealth of this country and together with large corporations exert far too much influence on government to the detriment of the common good. Today we have more of an oligarchy than a democracy. Cornicelli speaks about freedom. Does he think the freedom to own a gun is more important than the freedom of those children and educators in Sandy Hook to life and their parents to have their children? Isn’t it reasonable to ban military style assault weapons and have background checks? He says he is proud to call himself a “Conservative Republican.” Unfortunately, there is little to be proud of in today’s Republican party. We need a responsible right of center party ready to be involved in governing. The late Sen. John McCain [R-AZ] was one such Republican, a man of enormous integrity and of devotion to America, who has been vilified by our past president. Instead, we have Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell [RKY] who tries to stand in the way of legislation that Republicans wanted — infrastructure — but now rejects because it was proposed by a Democrat. Where are the John McCains today? Instead we have a party that traffics in conspiracy theories, that attacks and threatens any Republican who deviates from the party line, who threatens violence against elected officials, which tries to stop the investigation into the Jan. 6 insurrection, that wants to limit voting, claiming voter fraud when there is practically none, that denies global warming which is the most serious threat we have ever faced, that follows former President Donald Trump [R] and his former aide Steve Bannon, and others, who lie repeatedly and either voice or tolerate racism and anti-Semitism and who perpetuate the false claim that the 2020 election was stolen. This is only a partial list of the depths to which a once-proud Republican Party has sunk. Cornicelli’s pride in belonging to such a party shows that he is unfit for office. Adam D. Fisher Port Jefferson Station
WRITE TO US … We welcome your letters. They should be no longer than 400 words and may be edited for length, libel,
style and good taste. We do not publish anonymous letters. Please include a phone number and address for confirmation. Email letters to julianne@tbrnewsmedia.com or mail them to The Village Beacon Record, P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733.
The opinions of columnists and letter writers are their own. They do not speak for the newspaper.
NOVEMBER 18, 2021 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A23
Opinion
A stream of consciousness from the first college parent’s weekend with our son
F
lying? Are we really flying? Well, sure, why not, right? Everyone else is flying. Wait, then again, everyone else seems to be flying. What if one of those other people is sick? Don’t think too much about it and breathe through your nose. Oh, you can’t because the two masks you’re wearing are pinching your nose? Well, tough! They’re serving drinks and cookies? People have to lower their masks to eat and drink, right? So, doesn’t that defeat the purpose of D. None mandatory masks? Look away from everyone of the above who’s breathing. Yeah, BY DANIEL DUNAIEF that’ll help. Okay, finally, we’re on the ground. Hey, this is a nice campus. The sidewalks are packed and filled with so much energy, not
all of which is positive. “Why are all these $#@! parents here this weekend? I have several tests and I don’t need them all staring at me!” That girl is sharing her academic anxiety with her friend and anyone else within 100 feet of her. Subtle, real subtle! Tempted as I am to let her know that parents, likely including her own, make this sometimes miserable experience possible, I refrain. She might be my son’s current or future friend. I ask two students for the location of a building. The first shrugs and points me in the wrong direction and the second nearly draws a map. Okay, one for two. I sit just in time for the start of a talk by successful alumni, who connect their careers to the lessons they learned at school. Clever marketing! Other parents chuckle at the jokes. I imagine these parents as college students. In my mind, the presenters onstage become Broadway performers. Each of the two men and two women, which I presume is a wellplanned balance of genders, does his or her
rendition of “how I succeeded,” with the subtext, just feet from the school president, of, “keep paying those tuitions!” When the session ends, the phone rings. It’s my son! He’s strolling across a lawn. Wait, is that really him? Much as I want to run over and squeeze him, I play it cool, congratulating myself on my impulse control. Well done, Dan. You haven’t embarrassed him so far, but the weekend is young yet, even if you are not. He adjusts his hair, a move I’ve seen him and almost all his friends do frequently, even while running back and forth on a basketball court. What’s with all the hair adjustment? I quietly ask for permission to hug him. Yay! He agrees. I wrap my arms around his shoulders and fight the urge to pick him up, which is probably best for my back. As we head to his dorm, he tells me he hasn’t done laundry in nine days. I don’t know whether that’s a hint, as in, “Dad, while you’re here…” or a statement of fact. We part company and I learn about the evolving world of the commercialization of
college athletes, who can use their name, image and likeness to make money. He’s listening to a psychology lecture about, who else, Sigmund Freud. At a football game, I wonder how it can be this cold in Louisiana. Aren’t we in the deep south? We leave before it’s over, waiting in the cool air for 11 minutes for an expensive Uber — they must know it’s parents weekend — to take two families who are heading back to the same hotel. 10 pm. Who eats this late? I’m usually half way to sleep by now. My older brother is undoubtedly already in REM sleep. My stomach is going to hate this. Shut up stomach! Looking around the table at these families, one thing is clear: these parents adore their children. This is part of the story of how these boys got here and, hopefully, will help them continue to learn lessons, like how to dress for a cold football game and how to make reservations in advance before a busy parents weekend so we can eat earlier.
Researchers don’t know exactly how the deer get infected by humans, but they suggest it might occur when people in Iowa feed deer in their backyards, or through sewage discharges or anything partially chewed by an infected human, like a “splotch of chewing tobacco” that then might be licked by a deer. The study of the deer was led by veterinary microbiologists from Penn State, according to an article in The New York Times on November 9, and they were able to make their analysis by examining the lymph nodes of dead deer. But they have not yet been able to determine whether the animals were sickened by the pathogen. They also are going to examine other wild animals, especially mice, that live in close proximity to humans, to see if they too might carry the virus. There is well established research that shows some pathogens do move back and forth between animals and humans, including those that cause yellow fever and West Nile. And we do know our dogs and cats can get COVID-19.
Also in the news is something called epizootic hemorrhagic disease, transmitted by the EHD virus that can kill deer within 36 hours of infection. This often-fatal disease is transmitted by biting midges. We call them “no-see-ums.” Deer do not catch it from each other, nor can humans be infected by either deer or midges. But stricken deer bleed to death, especially in late summer and early fall when midges are abundant. While there is no treatment for EHD, the first frost kills the midges, ending the outbreak. The virus was first confirmed in New York in 2007 with small outbreaks in the state’s northern counties, according to Cornell University College of Veterinary Medicine. By 2020, the affected deer were found in the lower Hudson Valley, in other states along the eastern United States, and also in zoos. “The dead deer do not serve as a source of infection for other animals because the virus is not long lived in dead animals,” according to the Cornell Wildlife Health Lab. Suffolk County has 139 cases reported and 8 confirmed as of last week.
Deer in the headlines with COVID-19
T
alk about mixed emotions. That’s what we feel when we are driving along and suddenly see a deer running out from among the trees. They are beautiful and graceful animals, and we stop the car and point them out to our small children in the back seat, who are thrilled at the sighting, perhaps recalling Bambi. But there is a lot more to the deer story here in suburbia. Long Island is home to more than 20,000 white-tailed Between deer, and that number you and me has been exploding BY LEAH S. DUNAIEF because there haven’t been many threats — until now. As long as they could find enough food and survive particularly harsh winters, the occasional highway collision and the short hunting season, they were largely untroubled.
However, they have been a nuisance to residents because they devour flowers and vegetable gardens. And while they can be the innocent carriers of an infected tick, whose bite causes the miserable Lyme disease, they are gentle enough souls who leap out of sight as humans approach. Now it turns out that they may be a more serious problem to us. A new study in Iowa found that the deer seem to be contracting the coronavirus from humans and spreading it to one another. This means the deer could become a reservoir for deadly mutations of the virus that could then possibly be passed back to humans. In that event, another vaccine would have to be developed to target the new variant in much the same way as flu shots are modified from year to year. Researchers were astonished at how widespread the infection was among the deer population there, estimated at 80%. Deer hunters and others who handle deer (as road kill) are being urged to take precautions to avoid transmission, like wearing rubber gloves and a mask.
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Year After Year
PAGE A24 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • NOVEMBER 18, 2021
Sports
Wildcats claw Panthers BY BILL LANDON DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM The Wildcats of Shoreham-Wading River did what they usually do, struck first in the Suffolk Division IV semi-final game at Thomas A. Cutinella Memorial Field for a 6-0 lead against Miller Place Nov. 12. The Panthers answered the call with a touchdown of their own at the 5:40 minute mark in the first to tie the game, 6-6, on a 10-yard run by Scotty Seymour but that would be the last time the Panthers picked up the phone. Senior running back Max Barone on the
Wildcats ensuing possession punched in from 12 yards and then ran it in for the two-point conversion for a 14-6 lead. From there it was all Shoreham-Wading River who led 29-6 at the half. Quarterback Dylan Zahn, a senior, found the endzone three times, as did Barone for the 43-6 final. Zahn covered 170 yards on 29 attempts and Barone pounded out 148 yards on 22 carries. The Wildcats return to Stony Brook University Friday, Nov. 19 where they’ll face Mt Sinai/ Bayport for the Suffolk County Division IV championship game. Kickoff is 4 p.m. — Photos
by Bill Landon
Pictured clockwise from top right, Shoreham-Wading River senior running back Max Barone powers his way out of the backfield; Miller Place wide-receiver Owen Connolly and cornerback Liam Leonard go for the jump ball; ShorehamWading River free safety Ryan Herr with the interception for the Wildcats; and Miller Place senior running back Scotty Seymore powers his way up the middle.
tbrnewsmedia.com Goforto more sports photos
SWR Miller Place
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