The Village Beacon Record - March 22, 2018

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he illage illage

BEACON

RECORD

MOUNT SINAI • MILLER PLACE • SOUND BEACH • ROCKY POINT • SHOREHAM • WADING RIVER

What’s inside

Verizon proposes cell tower at Heritage Park A3 Pocketknife displayed at Rocky Point PTA meeting A6 Rocky Point parents consider legal action against admin. A7 Miller Place girls lax coach says team has talent A11

‘In the Heights’ opens at Engeman Theater Also: Long Island Museum hosts tribute to Mose Allison, Photo of the Week, ‘Seussical Jr.’ heads over to Smithtown

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Does the punishment fit the crime? Rocky Point students protest suspension for joining in national walkout — A5 Delivering Results f or 30 Years in Port Jefferson Village

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PAGE A2 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • MARCH 22, 2018

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State Sen. Ken LaValle (R-Port Jefferson Station) announced the Conference of Italian-American State Legislators is now accepting applications for four $3,000 scholarships for high school seniors entering college or current college students. “With the high expenses of college, students should take advantage of every opportunity to offset the costs,” LaValle said. “I am hopeful that students in my district apply for the awards. Nothing would make me more proud than to have our area residents be selected to receive one of the scholarships.” Eligibility is based upon the student’s grade point average (85 or higher), involvement in sports, involvement in the local community and individual financial need. The scholarships are limited to

constituents who reside in a district represented by senators and assembly members that belong to the New York Conference of Italian-American State Legislators. The deadline for filing is April 13. Scholarships are scheduled to be awarded at this year’s Italian-American Day in Albany June 4. The application for the scholarship can be found at www.LaValle.nysenate.gov. The conference is a bipartisan organization of New York State Assembly and Senate members who are actively involved in promoting and celebrating the state’s Italian-American community. The conference’s mission is to work hard to elevate and highlight Italian-American contributions to the State of New York and beyond, in all aspects of society, including literature, the arts, architecture and politics.

The VILLAGE BEACON RECORD (USPS 004-808) is published Thursdays by TBR NEWS MEDIA, 185 Route 25A, Setauket, NY 11733. Periodicals postage paid at Setauket, NY and additionalmailing offices. Subscription price $49 annually. Leah S. Dunaief, Publisher. POSTMASTER: Send change of address to PO Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733.

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MARCH 22, 2018 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A3

TOWN

Talk of cell tower coming to Heritage Park

A beloved local park is gauging the reception of a potential development. Members of Heritage Trust in Mount Sinai are currently evaluating a proposal made by a Verizon representative last month to build a cellphone tower on the property. According to Lori Baldassare, president of the nonprofit, the group was contacted by Verizon Wireless consultant Robert Monteleone a few weeks before the trust’s annual meeting in early February. Without a design or any specific plan yet in place, Baldassare said Verizon’s bare-bones pitch is to install a tower somewhere on a 0.7-acre stretch of property at 633 Mount Sinai-Coram Road to help eliminate a cellular “dead zone” in the area, where weak signals and dropped calls can create safety issues. More and more cell towers have popped up across the state in recent years as residents forgo landlines for cellphones. Phone carriers, like Verizon and AT&T, are required to make sure dangerous coverage gaps are filled, and this is usually done with the addition of towers. Baldassare said she and other Heritage members requested more information from Monteleone as to how obtrusive the proposed tower would be and exactly where the structure might be located on the scenic site, which features a playground, baseball

TOM CARBONE

BY KEVIN REDDING KEVIN@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM

Heritage Trust and community members say if a cell tower were to come to Mount Sinai, they’d prefer to see it behind the Heritage Center at the park. field, walking path, gardens, a plant maze and mini-golf course. “Aesthetically, we would want it to look nice, and we don’t want it to change the whole character at Heritage,” Baldassare said, hoping the tower be built behind the Heritage Center building, where there are already tall poles and transformers installed. “We certainly don’t want it in front of our building.” But a cell tower at Heritage would come with an added benefit, Baldassare said. “Part of the reason we’re considering it is that the income generated from the cell tower — roughly between $2,500 and $3,500 a month — would go directly to Heritage

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Trust to help support our programs, activities and efforts at the park,” she said. “It would certainly be a help to us as we don’t get taxpayer money, and rely on donations.” She said she was “cautiously pursuing” the idea. “We’re trying to weigh out the pros and cons based on what comes back to us from Verizon,” Baldassare said. “We’re doing our due diligence.” The topic came up during a March 5 Mount Sinai Civic Association meeting. Civic Association President Ann Becker led the discussion, raising questions and making clear to the public that no application for the

cellphone tower has been submitted. “Nothing has happened yet, but it’s now on our radar,” Becker said. “The downside is, do we want a cell tower in the park? Every tower I’ve seen has been very big, tall and noticeable with a big concrete base.” Vice President Brad Arrington said there are alternative models and size options available when it comes to towers. “Would there be room on a cellphone tower to share and cooperate with other providers?” asked Fred Drewes, a volunteer at the park, referring to the service of not just Verizon customers. Becker said there is. “If Verizon builds it and, say, Sprint rents from Verizon by paying an additional fee, there would be that additional benefit,” she said. “One tower, more money, less construction.” Mount Sinai resident John Leonard said via Facebook that he would support the cell tower as long as the revenue went to the Heritage Trust, which he commended for being a 100 percent volunteer board. “They have done amazing things,” Leonard said. “This would be an example of the money going to a true community organization with low overhead and all the benefits directly applied to the community. It’ll help this group continue doing great things for our region.” But not all residents seem to be on board. “It’s a horrible idea,” Robyn Blumstein said. “What an eyesore for a beautiful park.”

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PAGE A4 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • MARCH 22, 2018

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Mount Sinai senior Damian Di Marco and Rocky Point senior Jade Pinkenburg show off certificates of congratulations from Brookhaven Town Highway Superintendent Dan Losquadro after receiving $500 scholarships.

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MARCH 22, 2018 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A5

EDUCATION

Rocky Point students speak up about suspension They were articulate. They were passionate. And they wanted answers. A week after they walked out and were punished by the district for it, a group of Rocky Point students stood before their administrators and spoke up. About a dozen of the high schoolers who lined up to address the board of education March 19 were among the more than 30 district students who participated in the national school walkout Page A22 five days earlier. The students, many of them AP scholars, student council members and star athletes, had each been issued one day of in-school suspension, and were banned from extracurricular activities for three days following their choice to stand behind the front gates of the high school for 17 minutes March 14. Those middle school and high school students joined young people across the country in holding up signs and demanding stricter gun legislation to help put an end to school violence, one month after the Parkland, Florida, school shooting that left 17 dead. While the students said during the meeting they anticipated and accepted consequences, based on a letter the district sent to parents a week prior to the protest declaring that all participants would be “subject to administrative action,” they told board members they found the ruling of suspension to be “unnecessarily harsh” and a violation of the district’s own code of conduct as well as New York state law. Many cited Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s (D) March 15 letter defending all students’ rights to peacefully express their views on controversial issues, stating that “any attempts to stifle this speech violates the constitutional rights of students and faculty to free speech.” “By suspending any student who participated in this peaceful nationwide movement, the administration is effectively discouraging

KEVIN REDDING

BY KEVIN REDDING KEVIN@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM

Editorial comment

Rocky Point students, above, who both did and didn’t walk out March 14, attended the March 19 board of education meeting supporting those who did, below left. Students like sophomore Emily Farrell, below right, addressed the administrator’s mishandling of the event. students to have their voices heard in society,” said senior Jade Pinkenburg, who helped organized the March 14 gathering. “This is an overreaction, and we need to find a more suitable compromise … Although I believe that students should not be punished for speaking their minds in a peaceful, nondisruptive protest, we would all have happily accepted three days of detention as a consequence for cutting class [as dictated in the code of conduct] … we didn’t walk out to just flout the school’s policies or denounce the administration, but we did this because it’s our lives on the line.” Sophomore Emily Farrell reminded board members that many schools across the country and on Long Island, including Ward Melville and Mount Sinai, ultimately did not punish students for walking out, even after forbidding students from exiting school buildings. “So why couldn’t you support us?” Farrell asked. “All that needed to be done was to send out an adult to escort the students and provide them appropriate permission to temporarily walk outside the school building — not leave school grounds, but just go outside. The students that walked out are good kids. … It’s disappointing that our administration suppressed our First Amendment rights by not supporting the walkout.”

One student called the district’s handling of the walkout “unpatriotic” and another asked, “At what point does our educational curriculum tell us that peaceful protest is wrong?” Senior Nicki Tavares, a national honor society member, stepped to the microphone to address the punishment. “This is a blatant overextension of power that disregards rules and regulations set forth by the administration themselves,” he said. Another senior, Jo Herman, urged administrators to remove the suspensions from their school records permanently. “Our punishment contradicted the code of conduct,” Herman said. “When we got suspended we were informed that as long as there were no further disciplinary actions against us, they wouldn’t go on our records.” According to the students, nowhere in the district’s code of conduct, which was officially adopted in 2011, does it state any specific way to handle a situation like this, suggesting that administrators “took matters into their own hands” and enforced a rule that didn’t exist. Students called into question why a “peaceful” protest warranted a suspension, which is considered “a severe penalty” in the code — imposed on those who are “insubordinate, disorderly, violent or disruptive, or whose conduct otherwise endangers the safety, morals, health or welfare of others.” In the code of conduct it is stated under “prohibited student conduct” that “Students may be subject to disciplinary action, up to and including suspension from school, when they … engage in any willful act that disrupts the normal operation of the school community” and “The superintendent retains his/ her authority to suspend students, but places primary responsibility for the suspension of students with the building principal.” Pinkenburg said the students had done none of the prohibited actions in the code. “While the school claims that the walkout endangered the safety of those involved, we have not compromised the safety of other students, not ourselves, and we understood the risk involved,” he said. “We [also] did not disrupt the day at all, as all the students were watching tribute videos in the auditorium and gymnasium.” According to the code of conduct, a student is to be given “due process” before a suspension is authorized. And, for any shortterm suspension, as mandated by New York State Education Department policy section 3214 (3)(b), the school must notify parents

‘The students that walked out are good kids. … It’s disappointing that our administration suppressed our First Amendment rights.’ — Emily Farrell in writing within 24 hours of their child’s suspension via “personal delivery, express mail delivery or some other means that is reasonably calculated to assure receipt of the notice within 24 hours of the decision to propose suspension at the last known address for the parents.” An opportunity for an informal conference is also encouraged. But none of these procedures took place, according to the students and their parents. “I have seen these students’ reputations be dragged through the mud for no other reason than they felt strongly about doing something about the ongoing violence and bullying here, and in schools across the nation,” said Brian Botticelli, whose daughter in the middle school was issued her unexpected suspension, as well as some hate texts from her peers because of her involvement. “It is my opinion that [Superintendent Michael Ring] overstepped his authority by issuing arbitrary and extreme punishments based on his ideological opinion

ROCKY POINT SUSPENSIONS continued on page A7


PAGE A6 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • MARCH 22, 2018

JO HERMAN

VICTORIA ESPINOZA

EDUCATION

POLICE BLOTTER Incidents and arrests March 10–18 Damaged door Rocky Point senior Jade Pinkenburg, standing on left, becomes one of the main subjects of PTA meeting video.

Rocky Point incident prompts viral video BY DESIRÉE KEEGAN DESIREE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM One Rocky Point parent trying to make a point about school safety caused a stir. A video has gone viral following a PTA meeting in the Rocky Point school district March 14. In the video, a man is seen pulling out what looks to be a closed pocket knife while face to face with Rocky Point senior Jade Pinkenburg. The man was seemingly making a point about the fact that security is needed in rapidly escalating situations. “If something happened, if I decided to attack you, it would take the cops three to five minutes to come here, probably 10 if the traffic is bad,” he said to Pinkenburg as he pulled what appeared to be a pocket knife from his pocket. “What are you going to do now?” Pinkenburg’s father Chris, a physicist at Brookhaven National Lab, yells “Stop it!” as attendees watched the scenario unfold. Several parents at the meeting can be heard shouting, “This is inappropriate,” “He should be escorted out,” and “You can’t pull a switchblade out on a kid in a school, that’s insane.” The meeting was held in the evening the same day students walked out of school to join in the national walkout movement honoring the 17 lives lost in the Parkland, Florida, shooting Feb. 14 and to call attention to the need for stronger gun laws. “During a discussion on the topic of armed security guards, a parent in attendance attempted to conduct a demonstration to reinforce his belief that all school districts should have such resources at their disposal,” Rocky Point Superintendent Michael Ring wrote in a statement on the district’s website following the incident. “While the district firmly acknowledges that the demonstration was ill-conceived and inappropriate for the venue, we believe that the act was not intended to compromise the safety of those in attendance. District personnel stopped the demonstration and members of our school security team removed the individual from the meeting. The district has contacted our dedicated Suffolk County Police Department school resource officer to report the incident.” Students like Jo Herman, who said she was suspended for walking out, expressed anger with how the situation was handled.

Video: Rocky Point March 14 meeting

“I protested peacefully this morning and got suspended,” she said on Twitter. “A man threatened a kid with a knife at a PTA meeting and got gently escorted from the school. Show me the logic.” Herman’s Twitter post of the video received nearly 21,000 likes and 10,000 retweets in less than 24 hours. Hundreds of people, from Rocky Point school district and beyond, have reacted to what they saw. “Real quick to show their power against students, trying to show this is unacceptable, yet I don’t see a single administrator or security detail moving an inch when the knife was pulled on one of their students,” Rocky Point wrestler Ryan Callahan wrote. Others were alarmed at how the trend of comments were made about the man’s actions being deplorable, but there was no mention of the attendees’ reactions. “Every adult in that room should have jumped out of their seat and gotten between the student and that guy,” wrote Carmen Campos. “I would have, but what do I know — I’m a 61-year-old fourth-grade teacher.” Some commentors asked others to try to see beyond the knife to the point the speaker was trying to make. “The guy is presenting a scenario, albeit not in the brightest way,” wrote Cory Spence. “It’s clear to me that the kid didn’t feel threatened and the adult wasn’t being threatening. He’s holding the closed knife in a way to be clear to the kid.”

At a home on Main Street in Port Jefferson March 10 at about 3 a.m., a 22-year-old man from Ronkonkoma allegedly punched, kicked and used a snow shovel to damage the front door, according to police. He was arrested and charged with criminal mischief.

Drug bust

On March 15 at about 6 a.m., while executing a search warrant at a home on Virginia Street in Centereach, police allegedly discovered fentanyl, crack cocaine, powder cocaine, prescription medications, marijuana, drug packaging paraphernalia and scales, according to police. A 51-year-old man, a 56-year-old woman and a 19-year-old man, all from Centereach, were arrested and each charged with two counts of third-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance with the intent to sell, fourth-degree criminal possession of a narcotic drug, fifth-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance, fourth-degree criminal possession of marijuana and two counts of seconddegree criminal use of drug paraphernalia. The 19-year-old was charged with three additional counts of third-degree criminal sale of a controlled substance for allegedly selling heroin on separate occasions between Feb. 14 and March 16, according to police.

Vehicle break-in

Police say a 31-year-old man from Centereach allegedly stole a wallet and clipboard, both containing cash, from a cesspool company’s service truck parked in a shopping center on Middle Country Road in Centereach Feb. 14 at about 3 p.m. He allegedly resisted arrest and gave police false identification on March 15 at about 10:30 p.m., near the intersection of Stanley Drive and Dawn Drive in Centereach. He was arrested and charged with thirddegree grand larceny, second-degree criminal impersonation and resisting arrest.

Grand larceny

On Nov. 13, 2017, a 56-year-old man from Shirley allegedly stole cash from within a residence on Elmwood Avenue in Selden, according to police. He was arrested March 18 in Selden and charged with third-degree grand larceny.

Cocaine possession

While on Route 25 in Selden March 18 at about 11:30 p.m., a 28-year-old man from Farmingville allegedly possessed cocaine, according to police. He was arrested and charged with seventh-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance.

Groceries stolen

A 38-year-old woman from Rocky Point allegedly stole assorted groceries from ShopRite of Selden at about 4 p.m. March 17, according to police. She was arrested and charged with petit larceny.

Casino game breached

Between Aug. 1, 2017, and Oct. 12, 2017, a 39-year-old man from Lake Ronkonkoma allegedly stole cash from an electronic table gaming system at Jake’s 58 casino by exploiting a glitch in the system, according to police. He was arrested on Mooney Pond Road in Selden March 15 and charged with petit larceny.

Window broken

Someone threw a potato breaking the basement window of a home on Forsythia Court in Miller Place at about 11 p.m. March 17, according to police.

Car damaged

The driver’s side door of a 2012 Hyundai was damaged while it was parked in the driveway of a home on Windward Drive in Port Jefferson March 17 at about 10:30 p.m., according to police.

Backyard equipment stolen

A space heater and grill were stolen from the backyard of a home on University Heights Drive in Stony Brook March 18 at about 9 p.m., according to police.

Possible arson

At about 1 a.m. March 17, a home on Arbor Lane in Centereach caught fire, and police said they are investigating if it was criminal arson. All of the inhabitants of the home evacuated without injury, according to police.

Shoplifting

Perfume and cologne were stolen from Harmon Face Values beauty supply store on Nesconset Highway in Port Jefferson Station March 17 at about 4 p.m., according to police.

Tires stolen off vehicle

A 23-year-old man from Massapequa and a 35-year-old man from St. James allegedly stole two tires and two rims off a vehicle at North Shore Certified used car dealership on Route 112 in Port Jefferson Station March 17 at about 4:30 a.m., according to police. They were arrested and each charged with fourth-degree grand larceny. The Massapequa man was also charged with fifth-degree criminal possession of stolen property. — COMPILED BY ALEX PETROSKI


MARCH 22, 2018 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A7

EDUCATION

Mother proposes legal action against suspension suspension over a detention — a penalty Salz felt should be reserved for “violent or bad kids … not for cutting class.” Michelle Salz, the mother of Rocky “She was surprised and dismayed,” Salz Point Middle School student Isadora Luce said. “She’s lost respect for her principal, and — an eighth-grader who participated in she also realizes how mishandled the whole the walkout March 14 — said she and a situation is. … As educators, I think the group of parents are in the process of con- district could’ve made this an empowering tacting the American Civil event that the kids would’ve Liberties Union in hopes never forgotten. They of fighting their children’s could’ve helped make signs, suspensions legally. talked to them about laws, According to Salz, in the tradition of protests and suspending her daughter, civil liberties. Instead, they who is the president of chose to do this.” the student council and O’Brien and Rocky National Junior Honor Point Superintendent MiSociety, and was one of chael Ring did not return eight middle schoolers requests for comment. involved, the administraIsadora herself said, tion violated its code of although this was preconduct by denying her — Michelle Salz dominantly a high school the right to due process, movement, she was foregoing an informal coninspired to participate ference and not issuing a written notifi- from seeing the Parkland survivors take cation within 24 hours of the authorized initiative, and because she said she’s suspension. Salz said when she requested passionate when it comes to gun control. information regarding consequences in the “I knew there would be punishment, code of conduct for cutting class, Princi- but I’m very disappointed the school didn’t pal Scott O’Brien said there was nothing reward us at all for taking leadership,” Isalisted. It was O’Brien, she said, who ulti- dora said. “I wish they would respect that mately made the decision to issue Isadora a we’re doing this as a nationwide thing,

‘She realizes how mishandled the whole situation is. … As educators, I think the district could’ve made this an empowering event.’

ROCKY POINT SUSPENSIONS Continued from page A5

Michelle Salz is disappointed with the district’s suspension decision. dence in the future of our democracy and their schools should be proud of them.” Salz said while she knows lawsuits will be a costly endeavor, she and the fellow parents are currently drumming up ideas on how to go about it. “I don’t know how we’re going to afford it right now,” the mother said. “But this is the only way this school district is going to be made to change.”

We the students: a reflection Four students speak to TBR News Media March 16 regarding their opinions and feelings about Rocky Point school district administration’s decision to give them in-school suspension for taking part in the March 14 National School Walkout.

KEVIN REDDING

instead of what is best for the student body … I ask that the board conduct a thorough investigation into the allegations that this was negligently mishandled.” Botticelli explained that the students who walked out scheduled a meeting with Ring to better understand the penalties of their involvement March 13, which turned out to be a snow day. The parent said the meeting was canceled by Ring and never rescheduled. In response to this, Ring said, “The students did send an email that evening [Tuesday, March 13], but we didn’t get it until the following morning … I was not available then. But it was my intention for that meeting to take place.” Nicolette Green, a senior, said while she didn’t participate in the walkout, she still stands for those who did, and encouraged administrators to do the same. “It is our right as students to speak about problems we have — not only within our schools but within our country,” she said. “Fighting against gun violence shouldn’t just be a student cause and, as members of the school, you should stand with us. We are calling for change.” Green also addressed the district’s “heightened interest of safety and security,” as stated in the letter sent to parents as the main reason the walkout was prohibited and “not a viable option for our schools.” But, she said, that was proven to not be the case last week, referring to a PTA meeting in the school district March 14 in which a man pulled out a closed pocketknife while faceto-face with Pinkenburg, making a point

that security is needed in rapidly escalating situations. Green said, although a security guard was present during that meeting, nothing was done to stop the man in an urgent manner. (See story on page A6.) “This behavior should not be tolerated, and the event should not have happened,” Green said. “This man was told to leave by other parents, but he was not escorted out of the building. How was I or anyone else in that room supposed to blindly trust this guy? I don’t know this man or his background. Something should have been done.” Ring interjected, assuring Green and the rest of the room that the district has since banned that individual from school property. But not all speakers were against the district’s handling of the walkout. “I would like to say that what the school district did with the walkout was appropriate,” eighth-grader Quentin Palifka said. “There was an email that was sent, and it did say that we were allowed to write letters to Congress, Senate and the Parkland victims … if you wanted to be heard, I think that you should’ve written a letter.” Board Trustee Ed Casswell, who remembered being a history teacher the day the Columbine shootings occurred and how “numb” it left him, thanked all the students for weighing in. “Someone said you’re all good students … you’re not good students, you’re great students,” Casswell said, turning his attention to parents in the room. “There have been 24 shootings in a K-12 institute since 1999, 10 since Sandy Hook. When is it going to be enough? We’re all united under the umbrella of health and safety for our kids. What I ask is rather than turn on each other, that we move forward locking arms.”

rather than saying ‘Oh, it’s a risk to safety.’ They knew about this way ahead of time.” A fellow eighth-grader who participated in the walkout with Isadora agreed that the punishment didn’t fit the crime. “I feel like the superintendent used his own opinions to make a quick decision rather than take his time to see what would be best for everyone,” 14-year-old Ella Botticelli said. “I feel that this was wrong on his part and he should admit to that.” Salz said she and a group of parents who met through Facebook are waiting for a response to an email sent to New York Civil Liberties Union-Suffolk Chapter Director Irma Solis last week. Salz has also been in contact with attorneys from the area. According to the ACLU website, while the law allows school districts to discipline students for missing class, “even if they’re doing so to participate in a protest” or to express themselves, a school can’t “discipline students more harshly because they are walking out to express a political view or because school administrators don’t support the views behind the protest.” “We hope those schools recognize that even when they are within their right to discipline students for protests, that doesn’t always mean they should,” wrote ACLU member Vera Eidelman in a Feb. 22 article. “[The students’] activism inspires confi-

MICHELLE SALZ

BY KEVIN REDDING KEVIN@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM

Bernard Sanchez, senior

“I’m just disappointed in how the district handled it. You have kids going out into the world within six months and you’re basically using a mix of both inciting fear and trying to teach them just to stick by what you say. We had a majority of our teachers and the students coming up and supporting us and saying, ‘good for you that you’re doing it and that you’re not afraid.’ I definitely think the school should be promoting a culture in which the students are able to express themselves and represent themselves equally.”

Jo Herman, senior

“I think we really got the message across that we want change. It was

Jade Pinkenburg really impactful that we did it, and now it’s getting attention … A lot of our classes require us to keep up with current events, so they educate us on what’s happening, but when we try to take part in something like this, they punish us.”

Isadora Luce, eighth-grader

“In the middle school, I know that a lot of people supported this. A lot of them didn’t participate because I think they were scared. The punishments were so nonspecific that they didn’t know if they were going to be out of school for a week or just have detention.”

Jade Pinkenburg, senior

Jo Herman

“I’m happy for all the students that [participated in the walkout]. I thought the whole movement was really great, and I’m really proud we got that many people, because the school threatened disciplinary action. I wasn’t expecting them to suspend them all, so I was kind of mad. The rest of the day I was looking up state laws.”


PAGE A8 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • MARCH 22, 2018

LEGALS

Notice of formation of Land in2 Cash, LLC. Arts of Org. filed with Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 02/27/2018. Office location: Suffolk County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of the process to the LLC: 1069 Main Street, Suite 156, Holbrook, NY 11741. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. 184 3/8 6x vbr NOTICE OF SPECIAL DISTRICT MEETING/ELECTION OF NORTH SHORE PUBLIC LIBRARY DISTRICT, TOWNS OF BROOKHAVEN AND RIVERHEAD, COUNTY OF SUFFOLK, STATE OF NEW YORK NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that a Special District Meeting/Election of the qualified voters of the Shoreham-Wading River Central School District in the Towns of Brookhaven and Riverhead, and the qualified voters of the Rocky Point Union Free School District No. 9, Town of Brookhaven, Suffolk County, New York, will be held in the Central Adult Study Area of the North Shore Public Library, 250 Route 25A, Shoreham, New York, on Tuesday, April 10, at 9:30 a.m., prevailing time, for the purpose of voting by paper ballot, upon the following items: 1. To adopt the Annual Library District Budget of the North Shore Public Library District for the Fiscal year 2018-2019 and to authorize the requisite portion thereof to be raised by taxation on the taxable property of said School Districts; and 2. To elect one (1) Trustee of the North Shore Public Library District to fill one seat. a. One five (5) year term commencing July 1, 2018 and ending June 30, 2023. FURTHER NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that for the purpose of voting at such meeting/election on April 10, 2018 the polls will be open between the hours of 9:30 a.m. and 9:00 p.m.,

prevailing time, and the voting will be held in the Central Adult Study Area of the North Shore Public Library, 250 Route 25A, Shoreham, New York; and FURTHER NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that a copy of the statement of the amount of money which will be required for the ensuing year for the North Shore Public Library District’s purposes, exclusive of public monies, may be obtained by any taxpayer in either School District during the seven (7) days immediately preceding said meeting/election, except Saturday, Sunday and holidays, from the North Shore Public Library, located at 250 Route 25A, Shoreham, New York, during the hours of 10:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., prevailing time; and FURTHER NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that a budget hearing will be conducted on March 29, 2018 at 5 pm at the Library located on the lower level to present the 2018-2019 budget. FURTHER NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that residents of the Shoreham-Wading River Central School District and the Rocky Point Union Free School District No. 9 may vote on April 10, 2018, only if they meet the qualifications to vote, pursuant to Education Law 2012, by averring that they are (1) a United States Citizen; (2) eighteen years of age or older; and (3) a resident of the Shoreham-Wading River School District or the Rocky Point Union Free School District No. 9 for thirty (30) days preceding the vote, and possessing identification in the form of a North Shore Public Library card, a valid driver’s license, or some other comparable and reasonable form of identification; and FURTHER NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that pursuant to the provisions of the Education Law, absentee ballots for the election of a Trustee of the Library District and for the adoption of the annual budget may be applied for at the Office of the Secretary of the Library District during regular business hours. A list of all persons to

whom absentee ballots have been issued will be available in said Office of the Secretary on each of the five (5) days prior to April 10, 2018, except Saturdays, Sundays and holidays, and such list will be posted at the North Shore Public Library on April 10, 2018; and FURTHER NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that a qualified voter whose ability to appear personally at the polling place is substantially impaired by reason of permanent illness or physical disability and whose registration record has been marked “permanently disabled” by the Board of Elections pursuant to the provisions of the Election Law shall be entitled to receive an absentee ballot pursuant to the provisions of the Education Law without making separate application for such absentee ballot. Dated: Shoreham, New York March 22, 2018 BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE NORTH SHORE PUBLIC LIBRARY WILLIAM SCHIAVO, LIBRARY BOARD PRESIDENT 222 3/22 2x vbr NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Thomas O’Grady of 691 Route 25A, Miller Place, New York 11764, has made application to the Town of Brookhaven Planning Board for approval of a special permit for outdoor or overnight parking of registered vehicles. This proposal is known as Tuscany Market @ Miller Place, located at 691 Route 25A, Miller Place, Town of Brookhaven, Suffolk County, New York and described as follows: NORTH: TOLEDO ST. (NOT OPEN); WEST:

MINEOLA AVE.;

SOUTH: ROUTE 25A; EAST: N/F ROBERT

EDMUND,

Notice is hereby given that the Town of Brookhaven

Planning Board will hold a public hearing in the Town Office Building 2nd floor auditorium, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville, New York on Monday, April 2, 2018 @ 4:00 P.M., when adjacent property owners and/or others interested in any way in the proposed site plan may appear before the Board to be heard.

This notice is advertised in accordance with the requirements of Town law.

Permissive Referendum: The Resolution authorizes the purchase of a S650 T4 Bobcat Skid-Steer Loader with related and necessary equipment, at an estimated total cost not to exceed $45,000.00, and the expenditure for such purpose of not more than $45,000.00 from monies now in the Capital Reserve Fund of the Miller Place Fire District heretofore previously established.

DATED: March 12, 2018

Dated: March 15, 2018

Vincent Pascale, Chairman

Vincent Pascale, Chairperson

227 3/22 1x vbr

241 3/22 1x vbr

BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF FIRE COMMISSIONERS MILLER PLACE FIRE DISTRICT

This notice is advertised in accordance with the requirements of Town law. DATED: March 9, 2018

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Campo Brothers, 907 Main Street, Port Jefferson, NY 11777 has made application to the Town of Brookhaven Planning Board for approval of a Preliminary/Final Subdivision with cluster treatment for 8-lot subdivision, cul-de-sac roadway, recharge basin, drainage and associated site improvements. Project is known as Manor Court @ Mount Sinai and is located on the W/S of Mount Sinai – Coram Road, 123’ N/O Plymouth Road, Mount Sinai, N.Y., Town of Brookhaven, Suffolk County, New York as described as follows: NORTH: lands n/f of Town of Brookhaven; EAST: Mount Sinai – Coram Road; SOUTH: lands n/f of Kevin & Dina Kershow; land n/f of Michael & Kimberly Rotella; lands n/f of Jennifer Friedrich and Roman Friedrich; land n/f of Richard & Pamela Maksym; land n/f of Franklin & Kathryn Needles; land n/f of Elanor Kirshak; WEST: lands n/f of John Urbinati and Deborah Urbinati; land n/f of Glenn & Debra Daly; and land n/f of Charles Newland. Notice is hereby given that the Town of Brookhaven

Planning Board will hold a public hearing in the Town Board Meeting Room, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville, New York on April 2, 2018 @ 4:00 P.M., when adjacent property owners and/or others interested in any way in the proposed site plan may appear before the Board to be heard.

NOTICE OF SPECIAL MEETING NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Board of Fire Commissioners of the Rocky Point Fire District will hold a special meeting commencing at 6:00 P.M. on March 28, 2018 at the Fire District Office, 49 Route 25A, Shoreham, New York. The purpose of this meeting shall be to discuss the North Shore Beach Firehouse building replacement project. Dated: March 15, 2018 BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF FIRE COMMISSIONERS OF THE ROCKY POINT FIRE DISTRICT Town of Brookhaven Suffolk County, New York By: EDWIN S. BROOKS Fire District Secretary 243 3/22 1x vbr NOTICE OF ADOPTION OF RESOLUTION SUBJECT TO PERMISSIVE REFERENDUM #18-02 MILLER PLACE FIRE DISTRICT TOWN OF BROOKHAVEN, SUFFOLK COUNTY, NEW YORK PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the Board of Fire Commissioners of the Miller Place Fire District, in the Town of Brookhaven, Suffolk County, New York, at a meeting held on March 14, 2018, duly adopted the following Resolution subject to

Janet Staufer, District Secretary 245 3/22 1x vbr NOTICE OF ADOPTION OF RESOLUTION SUBJECT TO PERMISSIVE REFERENDUM #18-03 MILLER PLACE FIRE DISTRICT TOWN OF BROOKHAVEN, SUFFOLK COUNTY, NEW YORK PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the Board of Fire Commissioners of the Miller Place Fire District, in the Town of Brookhaven, Suffolk County, New York, at a meeting held on March 14, 2018, duly adopted the following Resolution subject to Permissive Referendum: The Resolution authorizes the purchase of Hurst Tools with related and necessary equipment, at an estimated total cost not to exceed $40,000.00, and the expenditure for such purpose of not more than $40,000.00 from monies now in the Capital Reserve Fund of the Miller Place Fire District heretofore previously established. Dated: March 15, 2018 BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF FIRE COMMISSIONERS MILLER PLACE FIRE DISTRICT Janet Staufer, District Secretary 246 3/22 1x vbr

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MARCH 22, 2018 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A9

SCHOOL NEWS Frank J. Carasiti Elementary School

Miller Avenue School

took part in theme days over the course of the two-week program. These included Sweat Day, when everyone came to school in sweats, because reading jogs the mind, and Spot Day, when everyone wore spots, because readers can “spot” a good book. Students and families gathered for the annual milk and cookies night, where school administrators shared stories aloud and the PTA provided chocolate chip cookies and milk. The students also attended a music assembly featuring the Hip Pickles.

Joseph A. Edgar Intermediate School ROCKY POINT SCHOOL DISTRICT

In honor of American Heart Month this past February, Joseph A. Edgar Intermediate School students and staff participated in the annual Jump Rope for Heart event. During the after-school program, students demonstrated their jump-roping skills to the

beat of popular music, and as part of their participation, collected donations. Under the leadership of physical education teacher Maria Amoscato, the students helped to raise more than $11,672 for the American Heart Association.

Rocky Point Middle School Rocky Point Middle School seventhgraders in Greg Havranek’s class participated in a virtual debate about the Bill of Rights with students from Greenlawn’s Oldfield Middle School. Teaming up with Havranek’s brother, Chris, students of the two social studies classes discussed with each other what parts of the Bill of Rights they agree and disagree with. The students were also able to create scenarios and quiz the students in the other class as to which amendment was being discussed in each of those scenarios. At the end of the assignment and virtual connection period, the children were able to ask each other questions about each other.

ROCKY POINT SCHOOL DISTRICT

Tech connects debaters

Wading River School

Captivating curiosity at science fair

To help inspire the next generation of scientists, Wading River School hosted a science fair Feb. 28. The action-packed and scientifically engaging evening was an opportunity to promote curiosity, discovery and spark an interest in student exploration. “Scientific discovery becomes more and more essential as we compete on a global scale, and grapple with the challenges facing us and future generations,” Principal Louis Parrinello said. “The science fair offers our students a chance to explore innovative ideas while learning how to make scientific advances

on their own or with the help of a family member or friend.” Students entered one of three categories: discovery, curator or expedition. “Expedition” was for those who wanted to be considered eligible to take part in the Brookhaven National Laboratory science fair.

Albert G. Prodell Middle School

Utilizing technology to spread kindness

As sixth-grade students continue to navigate, learn and connect through the 21st century, teacher Lisa McEvoy at Albert G. Prodell Middle School came up with a unique way for her class to weave a Valentine’s message and words of kindness with an academic focus. She instructed students to use a Google classroom form and anonymously write some positive traits about a classmate. She then compiled all their comments and handed them out on Valentine’s Day. “The students really rose to the occasion and wrote some very thoughtful, kind and funny notes for one another,” she said.

SWR SCHOOL DISTRICT

Jumping for heart health

“The students were excited by the opportunity to understand some of the STEM concepts they are learning in the classroom,” teacher Alice Steinbrecher said. “They were able to use their inquiry and investigative skills to comprehend the hands-on exhibits.”

SWR SCHOOL DISTRICT

Frank J. Carasiti Elementary School students are working to develop a love of reading both in school and through activities that extend beyond the traditional school day, including the annual Parents as Reading Partners initiative. The program, which is supported by the school’s PTA, encourages students to take time each day to enjoy a piece of literature. Following this year’s theme of Be a Reading Superhero, students created superhero capes for their favorite reading hero and

Second-grade students from Miller Avenue School took part in a STEM field trip to Brookhaven National Laboratory. The interactive exhibits and hands-on opportunities in BNL’s Science Learning Center helped students connect to cuttingedge science, technology, engineering and mathematics topics, an extension of their classroom learning. Focused on the physical sciences, the inquiry-based environment included exhibits on sound waves, engineering concepts and an air cannon, where students learned that air has mass and takes up space, among other opportunities for them to investigate and explore.

SWR SCHOOL DISTRICT

ROCKY POINT SCHOOL DISTRICT

Building a relationship with reading

Students learn at BNL

McEvoy also used the lesson to reiterate the school’s philosophy of students and staff promoting and exemplifying respect, growth and awareness of self and others. “Whenever they may be having a rough day, I want them to use these unique notes as special reminders of how important each one of them is to others,” McEvoy said.

March 25th

Donations for furry friends

Rocky Point FUNERAL HOME

631-744-9000 603 Route 25A

Rocky Point, NY 11778 www.rockypointfuneralhome.com

©156321

ROCKY POINT SCHOOL DISTRICT

As a result of a multiyear effort, Rocky Point Middle School presented a $2,431 donation to Port Jefferson Station-based Save-A-Pet, an animal shelter. Spearheaded by school library media specialist Catherine O’Connell, students and staff raised funds through a variety of activities.


PAGE A10 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • MARCH 22, 2018

Nicole Christian

Debbie Engelhardt

Assemblyman Steve Englebright, Maddie and Joseph Mastriano and Legislator Kara Hahn

Christine Austen

Joe Camarda, Pete Costa, publisher Leah Dunaief, Stephanie Mendelson and Priscilla Arena

Joseph Rizzo

Kelli and Frank Cutinella with Dunaief

Sgt. Michael Alfieri and Dunaief

Rich Fink and Tommy O’Grady from Tuscany Gourmet Market with Dunaief

Dr. James Vosswinkel

Representatives from the Reboli Center

Ed Darcey

Dunaief and Charles Lefkowitz

John Turner

Dunaief with representatives from Building Bridges

Jack and Steven Soldano

Frank and Diana Rivera

TBR News honors Brookhaven People of the Year TBR News Media’s People of the Year were honored at the Three Village Inn in Stony Brook, Sunday, March 11. The 2017 honorees are Margo Arceri Christine Austen, Building Bridges, Champions for the Autistic (Joe Camarda and Pete Costa from TOPSoccer, Priscilla

Arena and Stephanie Mendelson from SASI, and Tristan Whitworth from Game On), Nicole Christian, Frank and Kelli Cutinella, Ed Darcey, Debbie Engelhardt, Joseph Higgins, Charles Lefkowitz, Joseph and Maddie Mastriano, the Reboli Center, Frank Rivera, Joseph Rizzo, Jack Soldano, Suffolk

County Police Department’s 6th Precinct officers, John Turner, Tuscany Gourmet Market and Dr. James Vosswinkel. TBR News Media would like to thank Stony Brook University, the Three Village Inn, Dan Lafitte and the Lessing Family for sponsoring the reception; the Setauket

Frame Shop for framing the award certificates; and Beverly Tyler for being our event photographer. Not pictured are Margo Arceri, Joseph Higgins and Tristan Whitworth who were unable to attend the event. — RITA J. EGAN


MARCH 22, 2018 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A11

BILL LANDON

SPORTS

Panthers girls don’t want their age to fool you Miller Place returners come in all ages and positions BY BILL LANDON Miller Place boasts a mix of youth and experience in its girls lacrosse team this season, including nine eighth-graders, many of which were on the Panthers playoff team last year. The team finished its 2017 campaign with a 7-6 record, making the playoffs but falling to rival Shoreham-Wading River in the opening round. The girls scrimmaged Syosset before going toe-to-toe March 17 with New York State champion Mount Sinai, scoring several goals on their formidable neighbors. Being a young team, boasting just four seniors with sophomores, freshmen and the nine eighth-graders making up the rest of the roster, Miller Place head coach Thomas Carro is under no illusion as to what’s in store for his squad this season. “We’re going to have some growing pains in the beginning,” he said. “They’re going to make mistakes. We turned the ball over like 11 times in that last scrimmage [against Syosset], so we’ve got to limit those — and we will.” Carro said five-year senior goalkeeper Hailey Duchnowski, along with returning defenders, should keep the Panthers in games. “I think we have one of the best goalies we’ve ever had,” Carro said of Duchnowski, also pointing to junior defender Ava Burns and sophomore midfielder Madison Murphy, who he said is “going to have a good year.” The coach added, “If those girls play hard, that stuff becomes contagious and the younger group will follow them.” Duchnowski pointed to areas of promise and areas of concern she has with her unit up to this point in practice. “We are doing really well at moving the ball fast on offense, coming together on defense, working hard,” she said. “But we’ll have to get better in transition.”

Clockwise from top, Lauren Mancini moves the ball downfield in a scrimmage against Mount Sinai; Alexa Corbin attempts to progress up the field through defenders; Ava Burns battles for a ground ball; and Madison Murphy grabs possession on the draw. Murphy’s assessment of her team’s progress so far she said belies its age, but also noticed moments of weakness. “We have a bunch of athletes,” she said. “We need to play together as a team, and if we do that it’ll all come together. We’ll need a lot of communication on the defensive end as well as on offense, and if we can do that fluently we can win.” Senior Nicole Beck will also provide the Panthers with the leadership they need, and said, like her coach always does, Miller Place doesn’t rebuild, it reloads. “We lost a great amount of talent last year, but so far we’re still able to put up the numbers offensively,” Beck said. “It’s been impressive — we didn’t think we’d be able to do that — we have a lot of young girls who are playing really well.” Murphy said her team’s preparation for the league opener at home against last year’s

nemesis won’t have anything to do with the athleticism of the team, but with the mental preparedness. Miller Place will host Shoreham-Wading River March 28 at 4 p.m. “If we go into that game with a positive mindset, work as hard as we can, I think there could be a positive outcome,” she said. Carro said his team competes with some of the sport’s top Long Island talents, and finding a way to neutralize high-caliber opponent’s threats will be key to competing with the cream of the crop. “Shoreham lost a lot [of talent] last year, but it’ll be a test for us to play a team that’s next door to us; the girls all know each other,” the coach said. “We have Rocky Point and Mount Sinai [as neighbors and opponents this year], and those are tough teams. These girls come out and play hard against those teams, and if we take care of the ball and make good decisions, we can be in the game with anybody.”


PAGE A12 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • MARCH 22, 2018

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We are part of the NEW YORK PRESS SERVICE NETWORK Call or email us today and let’s get started! 631.331.1154 or 631.751.7663 class@tbrnewspapers.com TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA www.tbrnewsmedia.com


PAGE A14 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • MARCH 22, 2018

E M P L OY M E N T / C A R E E R S 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. AIRLINE CAREERS Start Here. Get trained as FAA certified Aviation Technician. Financial aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. Call AIM for free information, 866-296-7094

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JOB FAIR SATURDAY MARCH 10TH SATURDAY MARCH 17TH 10:00AM TO 5:00PM Watersedge at Port Jefferson Country Club * Executive Chef/Sous Chef * Banquet Cooks * Stewards/Dishwashers * Banquet/Restaurant Wait Staff * Banquet/Restaurant Buspersons * Banquet/Restaurant Bartenders * Banquet Housemen * Banquet Manager * Banquet Captains/MaĂŽtre D Apply in Person at: 44 Fairway Drive, Port Jefferson, NY 11777 Email Resumes to JMollberg@Danfords.com

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Food Service Port Jefferson Ferry

OFFICE ASSISTANT, PT Possible F/T. Busy Islandia Doctor’s Office. Day and evening hours. Excellent phone and computer skills Fax resume to: 631-656-0634, or call 631-656-0472 Please see Employment Display for complete description PAINTERS HELPER P/T. Experienced a must. Flexible hours. clean drivers license. Call for details. Miller Place. 631-473-2179, Please leave message.

6--0*, (::0:;(5; 7; 7VZZPISL -; FOR BUSY ISLANDIA DOCTOR’S OFFICE

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THREE VILLAGE MEALS ON WHEELS, INC.

Office Administrator P / T M o n d a y - Fr i d a y 8:30 am - 1:30 pm

Provide overall administration & coordination of the program. Must be organized, detail-oriented and have excellent communication skills. Computer savvy and ability to multi-task required. Previous experience working with volunteers a plus.

P.O. Box 853 Stony Brook, NY 11790 3villagemow@gmail.com Š99568 Fax (631) 689-7077

SEEKS MATE JOB Retired fishing Cpt. for full season, Comm’l/Pantry, Pinhook/Handline/Gillnet, cool with young skipper, 631-697-6147. “THE TYPE-EST� ARE YOU LOOKING FOR A RELIABLE Part-Time Professional Typist/Administrative Assistant and Notary Public? Computer Savvy. Secretarial AND BOOKKEEPING services. Trustworthy AVAILABLE Mondays and Wednesdays. References. Eleanor, (516) 375-3922, Cell

Cleaning out a garage or attic? Are you looking to increase your home improvement or landscaping business? Hiring someone?

Call Our Classified Department to ask about our special rates.

631.331.1154 or 751.7663

Saturday, March 10th & Saturday, March 17th 10 am - 5 pm

Experienced Servers and Catering Staff

Situation/Job Wanted

Selling a home?

JOB FAIR

37 )7

for busy Riverhead restaurant and catering hall. Great pay.

PT/FT EXPERIENCED servers and catering staff for busy Riverhead restaurant and catering hall. Great pay. 631-727-4449

Spring is here!

The Water’s Edge at Port Jefferson Country Club •  Executive Chef/Sous Chef •  Banquet Cooks •  Stewards/Dishwashers •  Banquet/Restaurant Wait Staff •  Banquet/Restaurant Buspersons •  Banquet/Restaurant Bartenders •  Banquet Housemen •  Banquet Manager •  Banquet Captains/MaÎtre D

Apply in Person at 44 Fairway Drive, Port Jefferson, NY   11777 Email Resumes to JMollberg@Danfords.com

Š99500

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PROOFREADER needed for annual literary journal, salary commensurate with experience, Call evenings 631-751-7840 or email johnedwardgill@cs.com.

TO SUBSCRIBE CALL 631.751.7744

Š99593

to work on-board The Port Jefferson Ferry. Full-time, early morning & afternoon shifts available. Excellent pay, benefits package. Light cooking, good attitude & people skills a must. Call: 631.331.2167 between 10am – 1pm or Fax: 631.331.2547

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Snack Bar Associates Bartenders

Help Wanted

LITTLE FLOWER CHILDREN AND FAMILY SERVICES OF NY SEEKS: RN’S Development Associate Direct Care Workers Child Care Workers HCI Enrollment Marketer Assistant House Manager Health Care Intergrator Valid NYS Driver’s License required for most positions. Little Flower Children and Family Services in Wading River NY. SUBMIT YOUR RESUME & COVER LETTER AND TO VIEW VARIOUS SHIFTS AVAILABLE PLEASE GO TO WADINGRIVERJOBS@LFCHILD.ORG OR FAX TO 631-929-6203. EOE PLEASE SEE COMPLETE DETAILS IN EMPLOYMENT DISPLAY ADS

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Š99569

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FOOD SERVICE PJ Ferry seeks Snack Bar Associates & Bartenders to work on-board. FT, early morning & afternoon shifts available. Excellent pay/benefits pkg. Light cooking, people skills a must. Call 631-331-2167 between 10am-1pm or fax 631-331-2547.

Office administrator P/T M-Fri 8:30am-1:30pm Provide overall administration & coordination of the program, Three Village Meals on Wheels PO Box 853 Stony Brook, NY 11790, 3villagemow@gmail.com, Fax (631)689-7077.

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

Help Wanted

Š61403

Help Wanted

Š41479

Help Wanted

Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154


MARCH 22, 2018 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A15

E M P L OY M E N T / C A R E E R S ):- A7= 01:16/'

Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154

www.littleflowerny.org wadingriver-jobs@lfchild.org

MULTIPLE OPPORTUNITIES AVAILABLE IN WADING RIVER! RN’s Child Care Workers

Direct Care Workers

HCI Enrollment Marketer

Full-Time/Part-Time/Per Diem positions available. Valid NYS Driver’s License required for most positions. Send & cover letter to wadingriver-jobs@lfchild.org or fax to 631-929-6203.

Looking for a nanny • nurse • medical biller computer programmer • chef driver • private fitness trainer...?

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Development Associate Assistant House Manager

Join the Little Flower family and be part of a dynamic organization that is turning potential into promise for at risk youth and individuals with developmental disabilities!

CALL TIMES BEACON RECORD’S CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT

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EOE

S E R V IC E S Cleaning

Electricians

COME HOME TO A CLEAN HOUSE! Attention to detail is our priority. Excellent References. Serving the Three Village Area. Call Jacquie or Joyce 347-840-0890

ANTHEM ELECTRIC Quality Light & Power since 2004. Master Electrician. Commercial, Industrial, Residential. Port Jefferson. Please call 631-291-8754 Andrew@Anthem-Electric.net

KAREN’S HOUSECLEANING/ HOUSEKEEPER Trusted and professional service. Weekly, Bi-weekly, Monthly. Home and Offices. Free estimates. 631-384-2432

FARRELL ELECTRIC Serving Suffolk for over 40 years All types electrical work, service changes, landscape lighting, automatic standby generators. 631-928-0684

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

GREENLITE ELECTRIC, INC. Repairs, installations, motor controls, PV systems. Piotr Dziadula, Master Electrician. Lic. #4694-ME/Ins. 631-331-3449 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

Š99651

);3 )*7=< 7=: ;8-+1)4; Place your ad by Take advantage Tuesday noon and of our North Shore it will appear in that distribution. Reach over Thursday’s editions. 169,000 readers.

Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154 Fences SMITHPOINT FENCE. Vinyl Fence Sale! Wood, PVC, Chain Link Stockade. Free estimates. Commercial/Residential 70 Jayne Blvd., PJS Lic.37690-H/Ins. 631-743-9797 www.smithpointfence.com.

Floor Services/Sales CALL EMPIRE TODAY to schedule a FREE in-home estimate on carpeting & flooring. Call today, 800-496-3180 FINE SANDING & REFINISHING Wood Floor Installations Craig Aliperti, Wood Floors LLC. All work done by owner. 26 years experience. Lic.#47595-H/Insured. 631-875-5856

TO SUBSCRIBE

CALL 631.751.7744

Š51942

Furniture/Restoration/ Repairs

Housesitting Services

Home Improvement

REFINISHING & RESTORATION Antiques restored, repairing recane, reupholstery, touchups kitchen, front doors, 40 yrs exp, SAVE$$$, free estimates. Vincent Alfano 631-286-1407

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

Handyman Services

Home Improvement

JOHN’S A-1 HANDYMAN SERVICE *Crown moldings* Wainscoting/raised panels. Kitchen/Bathroom Specialist. Painting, windows, finished basements, ceramic tile. All types repairs. Dependable craftsmanship. Reasonable rates. Lic/Ins. #19136-H. 631-744-0976 c.631 697-3518

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.

HELP YOUR LOCAL ECONOMY and save money with Solar Power! Solar power has a strong return on investment, Free Maintenance, Free quote. Simple Reliable energy with no out of pocket costs. Call Now, 800-678-0569 THREE VILLAGE HOME IMPROVEMENT Kitchens & Baths, Ceramic Tile, Hardwood floors, Windows/Doors, Interior Finish trim, Interior/Exterior Painting, Composite Decking, Wood Shingles. Serving the community for 30 years. Rich Beresford, 631-689-3169

THE TOOLMAN HANDYMAN SERVICES Fix it! Build it! Change it! Repair it! Paint it! The big name in small jobs, lic#-454612-H & insured Call 928-1811.

*BluStar Construction* The North Shore’s Most Trusted Renovation Experts. 631-751-0751 Suffolk Lic. #48714-H, Ins. See Our Display Ad

Home Repairs/ Construction LONG HILL CARPENTRY 40 years experience All phases of home improvement. Old & Historic Restorations. Lic.#H22336/Ins. 631-751-1764 longhill7511764@aol.com


PAGE A16 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • MARCH 22, 2018

S E R V IC E S Home Repairs/ Construction JOHN T. LYNDE CONSTRUCTION Renovations, New Homes, Fine Carpentry, Framing Expert. On line portfolio available. Lic/Ins. johntlyndeconstruction.com 631-246-9541

Lawn & Landscaping

Legal Services

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

LUNG CANCER? And Age 60+? You and your family may be entitled to significant cash award. Call 866-951-9073 for information. No Risk, No money out of pocket.

Masonry

Lawn & Landscaping

ALL SUFFOLK PAVING AND MASONRY Asphalt Paving, Cambridge Paving Stone, Belgium Block Supplied & fitted. All types of drainage work. Free written estimates. Lic#47247-H/Ins. 631-764-9098/631-365-6353 www.allsuffolkpaving.com

Landscape Materials SCREENED TOP SOIL Mulch, wood compost, fill, decorative and driveway stone, sand/brick/cement. Fertilizer and seed. JOSEPH M. TROFFA Landscape/Mason Supply 631-928-4665 www.troffa.com

PRIVACY HEDGES SPRING BLOWOUT SALE! 6ft Arborvitae. Regular $179 Now $75. Beautiful, Nursery grown. FREE InstallationFREE delivery. Limited Supply! Order Now: 518-536-1367 www.lowcosttreefarm.com

is Tuesday at noon. If you want to advertise, do it soon! ll a C

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The CLASSIFIED DEADLINE

TO SUBSCRIBE CALL 751–7744

ALL STONE DRIVEWAYS & PATIOS. Retaining walls, concrete/asphalt repair, parking lots, steps, drains, curbs, etc. Lic.#59451/Ins. 631-220-1430, John

SWAN COVE LANDSCAPING Lawn Maintenance, Cleanups, Shrub/Tree Pruning, Removals. Landscape Design/Installation, Ponds/Waterfalls, Stone Walls. Firewood. Free estimates. Lic/Ins.631-689-8089

LANDSCAPES UNLIMITED SPRING/FALL CLEANUPS Call For Details. Property Clean-ups, Tree Removal, Pruning & Maintenance. Low Voltage lighting available. Aeration,Seed, Fertilization and Lime Package deal. Free Estimates. Commercial/Residential. Steven Long Lic.#36715-H/Ins. 631-675-6685, for details

751–7663 or 331–1154

Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154

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 DEALING WITH WATER damage requires immediate action. Local professionals that respond immediately. Nationwide and 24/7. No Mold Calls, 1-800-760-1845 DISH NETWORK-SATELLITE TV. Over 190 channels now only 59.99/mo! 2 year price guarantee. Free installation. Free streaming. More of what you want. Save HUNDREDS over Cable and DIRECTV. Add internet as low as $14.95/mo! 800-943-0838 DO YOU HAVE CHRONIC knee or back pain? If you have insurance, you may qualify for the perfect brace at little to no cost. Get yours today! 1-800-510-3338 HUGHESNET SATELLITE INTERNET 25mpbs starting at $49.99/month. Fast download speeds. WiFi built in, Free Standard Installation for lease customers! Limited time, call 1-800-214-1903

Painting/Spackling/ Wallpaper ALL PRO PAINTING Interior/Exterior. Power washing, Staining, Wallpaper Removal. Free estimates. Lic/Ins #19604HI. 631-696-8150, Nick

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COUNTY-WIDE PAINTING INTERIOR/EXTERIOR Painting/Staining. Quality workmanship. Living/Serving 3 Village Area Over 25 Years. Lic#37153-H. 631-751-8280 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

(631)

821-2558

Email: jim@pc-d-o-c.com

Š54806

Phone:

Your Ad Could be Here 631.331.1154

Š96840

EASTWOOD TREE & LANDSCAPE, INC. Experts in tree care and landscaping. Serving Suffolk County for 25 years. Lic.#35866H/Ins. 631-928-4070 eastwoodtree.com RANDALL BROTHERS TREE SERVICE Planting, pruning, removals, stump grinding. Free Estimates. Fully insured. LIC# 50701-H. 631-862-9291

Tree Work ARBOR-VISTA TREE CARE Complete Tree care service devoted to the care of trees. Maintenance pruning, waterview work, sun-trimming, elevating, pool areas, storm thinning, large tree removal, stump grinding. Wood chips. Lic#18902HI. Free estimates. 631-246-5377

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

Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154

'2 025( 6+5('',1* ,1& Paper & Documents

Protect Yourself and Your Clients. Shred In Our Truck at Your Location At a Cost You Can Afford! P.O. Box 282, Port Jefferson Station 11776 631.428.2225 • (fax) 631.473.8178

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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

BOB’S PAINTING SERVICE 25 Years Experience Interior/Exterior Painting, Spackling, Staining, Wallpaper Removal, Power washing. Free Estimates. Lic/Ins. #17981. 631-744-8859

PROF E S SIONA L & B U SI N E S S Providing solutions to all your home or office computing needs. • Software and Hardware Installation • Wireless Home and Office Networking Reasonable • PC System Upgrades and Repairs Rates, • Internet, Web, and Email Systems Dependable • System Troubleshooting Service, • Software Configuration and Training • Computer System Tune-Up Plenty of • Network Design, Setup and Support References • Backup and Power Failure Safety Systems

Tree Work

Painting/Spackling/ Wallpaper

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Professional & Business Services Directory Buy 4 weeks and get the 5th week

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(631) 751.7663 or (631) 331.1154

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

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Place your ad in the

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TIMES BEACON RECORD CLASSIFIEDS • 331–1154 0R 751–7663


MARCH 22, 2018 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A17

H O M E S E R V IC E S

Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154

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Fall Clean Up Special Call for details

Low Voltage Lighting Available We Represent a Green Approach For the Discerning Property Owner or Management Firm

FREE ESTIMATES

Steven Long, Lic.#36715-H & Ins. 99016

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Lifelong Three Village Resident

Member 3 Village Chamber of Commerce

631-675-6685 Free Estimates

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Eastwood Tree & Landscaping, Inc.

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631.928.4070 631.235.0897 EastwoodTree.com Lic. 35866H/Ins.

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ANTHEM ELECTRIC

Quality Light & Power Since 2004

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Ornamental Pruning FIREWOOD Storm Damage Prevention Deadwood Removal Crown Thinning Organic Tree/Shrub Spraying/Fertilizing Natural Stone Walls & Walkways Waterfall/Garden Designs Sod Installations

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VINYL FENCE SALE

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New Location

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70 Jayne Blvd., Port Jeff Station (631) 743-9797

www.smithpointfence.com • smithpointfence@gmail.com PAGE A

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PAGE A18 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • MARCH 22, 2018

H O M E S E R V IC E S

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“We take pride in our work�

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FREE ESTIMATES

Since 1989

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

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ADVERTISE YOUR SEASONAL SERVICES

All Phases of Home Improvement Porches & Decks Old & Historic Home Restorations Aging in Place Remodeling Custom Carpentry: Extensions & Dormers Built-ins, Pantries, and More Kitchens & Baths Siding & Windows

Faux Finishes

Wallpaper Removal

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REFERENCES AVAILABLE

Power Washing

PAINTING & DESIGN

Please call our Stony Brook office today for a FREE in home consultation Lic. #48714-H & Insured

40 YEARS EXPERIENCE

Lic #45612-H & Insured

longhill7511764@aol.com

Owner/Operator has 25+ years serving The North Shore

www.BluStarBuilders.com

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PAGE A20 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • MARCH 22, 2018

R E A L E S TAT E PUBLISHERS’ NOTICE 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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Residential Styles Learn about the home styles in your market and beyond. Our Residential Styles guide includes illustrations, photographs, and detailed descriptions about popular styles. Plus, use our Home Features guide to learn about architectural elements such as dormers, roofs, and arches that make a property distinct.

Art Deco A vertically oriented design includes flat roofs and metal window casements. Neoclassical Neoclassical homes exist in incarnations from onestory cottages to multilevel manses. Bungalow A forerunner of the craftsman style, you'll find rustic exteriors and sheltered-feeling interiors. Prairie Originated by Frank Lloyd Wright, this style can be house boxy or lowslung. Cape Cod A true classic, Cape Cod homes have gabled roofs and unornamented fronts. Pueblo Flat roofs, straightedge window frames, and earth-colored walls typify Pueblos. Colonial An offshoot of the Cape Cod style, it features a rectangular design and secondfloor bedrooms.

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SATURDAY 3/24 11:30-1:30PM MT. SINAI 14 Little Harbor Rd. Farm Ranch, 5 BR, 2 master BRs, IGP, SD# 7. MLS# 3004598. $739,000. 1:00-2:30PM STONY BROOK 35 Hollow Rd. Colonial, IGP, CAC, Sunroom, 3VSD #1. MLS# 2944013. $649,800. SUNDAY 3/25 11:30-1:30PM STONY BROOK 20 North Rd. Colonial w/ Beach Rights on Dead End. 3VSD #1. MLS# 2982398. $739,000. DANIEL GALE SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY 631.689.6980

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Queen Anne Emerging in the Victorian era, the style features inventive floor plans and decorative chimneys. Contemporary Unmistakably modern, this style has odd-sized windows and little ornamentation. Ranch Ranch homes are set apart by pitched-roof construction, built-in garages, and picture windows. Craftsman Full- or partial-width porches are framed by tapered columns and overhanging eaves. Regency The style borrows the Georgian's classic lines, yet eschews ornamentation. Creole A front wall recedes to form a first-story porch and a second-story balcony. Saltbox Its sharply sloping gable roof resembles old-time boxes used for storing salt. Dutch Colonial German settlers originated this style, which features a broad, barn-like roof. Second Empire This Victorian style features mansard roofs with dormer windows. Federal This style arose amid a renewed interest in Greek and

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Roman culture. Shed A subset of the Modern style, Shed houses are asymmetric with sloping roofs. French Provincial Balance and symmetry define the French Provincial style, which has a steep hip roof. Shingle An American style that echoes Queen Anne, it has unadorned doors and large porches. Georgian With paired chimneys and a decorative crown, this style was named after English royalty. Shotgun Tradition says that a shotgun blast can trace a straight path from the front to back door. Gothic Revival English romanticism influenced this style, marked by Gothic windows and vaulted roofs. Spanish Eclectic This style has details from Moorish, Byzantine, Gothic, and Renaissance styles. Greek Revival Entryway columns and a front door surrounded by rectangular windows are characteristic. Split Level A Modern style, Split levels sequester living activities, such as sleeping and socializing.

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MARCH 22, 2018 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A21

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PAGE A22 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • MARCH 22, 2018

OPINION Editorial

Letters to the editor METRO/CREATIVE CONNECTIONS

Receiving a more educational punishment than suspension would help students, but they should not be stripped of First Amendment rights.

Teens have First Amendment rights I made the following comments at the March 19 Rocky Point School District board of education meeting. I think they can apply to all the districts that decided to prohibit their students from taking part in the March 14 walkout. I’d like to preface my comments by saying I don’t have children in the district. I am not here to support any specific student and I completely appreciate that parents may have different feelings about the walkout. I’m also not here to have a discussion for or against gun control. What I’d like to speak to is everyone’s right to have their voices heard in our democracy — including those of our children.

Historically, after all, it’s young people who have affected change. Granted, often it’s not children this young who do this, but wait, let’s not forget that in May of 1963 thousands of students, most of them teenagers, left their classrooms and marched on downtown Birmingham, Alabama. Their Children’s Crusade helped to change a nation. I can’t adequately express my sadness and disappointment with this board and this administration to choose to let caution and fear influence their decision to not allow students to participate in their constitutional rights with civic expression and activism. This district has lost an opportunity to teach students what it means to be

a citizen and an American. Peaceful protest is one of the most important rights we have as Americans and it is one we should protect for all people — including our children. Rather than tell them they shouldn’t participate, we should celebrate their protest as a sign that our democracy remains strong. This next generation will inherit many of the issues that we have struggled with for years. When they look back, they may want to know that they did not sit quietly in the face of the violence that is affecting them. Shouldn’t we as adults make it possible for them to speak?

I am writing this letter regarding the armed, off-duty police officers in the Miller Place School District. I understand the concerns of some of the parents. However, the officers of the Suffolk and Nassau counties and New York City police department are well trained and would not hesitate to take down a shooter at any school, unlike the sheriff in Florida. I am a retired Suffolk County police officer and served 31 years with the department. My last 14 years in the department I was a D.A.R.E. instructor in the Longwood, East Moriches and Patchogue-Medford school

districts. The program was 17 weeks in length and taught fifthgrade students about peer pressure, consequences, drugs and gang resistance. I was in the school and the classrooms with the students, in full uniform, and I was armed. I was known as Officer Richie, and I was a positive role model for the students. The faculty, administrators and parents all knew me and welcomed my presence in the school buildings. There were approximately 28 police officers in schools throughout Suffolk County until then-Executive Steve Levy decided to dismantle the D.A.R.E. program because

he felt that the officers would better serve the communities if they went back on street patrol. This was unfortunate because the D.A.R.E. program was one of the best public relations programs for the community, police officers and students in the county, and enabled students to interact positively with all police officers. Therefore, I feel there is a need for armed off-duty police officers, whether in the school building or on the school grounds, in case they are needed to protect the students and faculty.

Ernestine Franco Sound Beach

Have the punishment As a former officer: ‘Arm school guards’ fit the crime The discussion locally and nationally about potential suspensions for students who participated in the walkout March 14 has us thinking. The issue with suspensions, we feel, is that it’s the wrong way to go about punishing a student for his or her wrongdoing, based on both context and merit. Giving a student a day off from school for misbehaving or not completing his or her work doesn’t seem quite like a punishment. Even an in-school suspension doesn’t seem like an effective answer. Surely something more productive and positive can be born from an instance of student rule breaking. Community service or completion of acts of kindness in lieu of a day at home on the couch, for a student who talks poorly about another student or answers foully when speaking to a teacher or administrator seems more appropriate. Exercises that create more inclusion and less exclusion might have a more positive effect in the long run. In situations when a student is violent, sending a message that it cannot be tolerated while also remaining under supervision of the school community, say, with additional counseling time or through a written personal reflection about the ramifications of their behavior, would create better outcomes than a day at home playing video games or watching TV. Schools are admittedly in a tough position in deciding how to handle punishments for students who used class time to make a statement on an issue they feel passionate about. More can be learned from, say, being assigned to research and report about civil rights protests in the 1960s. For the record, we are behind Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s (D) sentiments regarding districts’ reactions to the March 14 walkout. Yes, it’s against school rules in all districts to walk out of school in the middle of the day, but students experiencing a moment in time of solidarity and turning it into action is something worthwhile that educators should seize on as an opportunity for learning, not vegetating with a day off. “Peaceful expression of views on controversial issues that is not disruptive or threatening is a right that all students have in this country, and any attempts to stifle this speech violates the constitutional rights of students and faculty to free speech,” Cuomo said in a letter. “Threatening to discipline students for participating in the peaceful demonstrations is not only inappropriate, it is unconstitutional. Reports that schools may also discipline faculty are also highly concerning and would send a terrible message to our students.” Reports by parents and students claim districts like Rocky Point, among others, were suspending kids for participating in the national event. We urge those districts to view this as an opportunity for a teachable moment. These are unique times requiring unique responses.

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

Richard Esopa Miller Place

Delivering adult day health care to vets As a nation we have a responsibility to ensure our nation’s heroes have not only the tools they need on the battlefield but the care and benefits they have earned when they return home. That is why I introduced the Adult Day Health Care Act, which as of last week, has now been sent to President Trump for his signature following House and Senate passage. My proposal will provide access to adult day health care for disabled veterans who need extra assistance and special attention in their dayto-day lives. Whether it’s a Vietnam veteran affected by Agent Orange or an Iraq War veteran with a traumatic brain injury, veterans with a 70 percent or more service-connected disability rating often require significant assistance in order to carry out everyday tasks. Many times, the

burden falls on family members; some veterans may even need to reside in institutionalized facilities to receive the daily assistance of a trained medical professional. This type of financial and emotional burden is not what our nation’s heroes and families deserve. The Adult Day Health Care Act provides comprehensive medical and personal care combined with engaging social activities for the physically or cognitively impaired, as well as an array of therapies and counseling, all while maximizing independence and quality of life. This program is currently offered at only three state veterans homes in the country, one being the Long Island State Veterans Home in Stony Brook. This means that most veterans are unable to afford or access this quality care. My bill defines the adult day

health care program as a reimbursable treatment option through the Department of Veterans Affairs, which guarantees all severely disabled veterans are able to access the program at no cost, and helps expand the program to all 153 state veterans homes across the country. Our nation’s veterans and their dedicated families have sacrificed enough. This bill will give veterans the care they have earned while providing families with the support and relief they need to help their veteran loved ones to lead a fulfilling life, while keeping families together and strong. When our nation needed them, these veterans answered the call of duty. Now it’s our turn. It is our duty as Americans to help these brave and selfless heroes.

Lee Zeldin 1st District U.S. Rep.

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


MARCH 22, 2018 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A23

OPINION

Going around in circles

T

he following dialogue was inspired by an actual conversation. No friendships ended as a result of this interaction. Joe: That’s interesting. Aaron: What made it interesting? Joe: It held my interest. Aaron: That’s tautological. Joe: What does tautological mean? Aaron: It’s a kind of circular argument, like something is interesting because it held your interest. So, what’s interesting about what I said? Joe: No, you see, it’s not what By Daniel Dunaief you said, so much as the way you said it and, of course, the fact that it was, indeed, you who said it. Like, remember that time you said that our boss was having an affair with the man she kept insulting at work and then, lo and behold, she was?

D. None of the above

Aaron: Yes, I remember that was because she was having an affair with you. Joe: Oh, right. Good times. Aaron: Can you tell me how what I said interested you? Joe: But, first, did you read the latest thing about Donald Trump? Aaron: Which one? Joe: The one where he’s mad at the media and the media is reporting about stuff he says isn’t true. Aaron: You’re going to have to be more specific than that. Joe: You want specifics? How about Russia? Aaron: What about it? It’s a country. Joe: You’re funny. Aaron: Stop calling me funny and tell me what Trump and the media are disagreeing about. Joe: Are you angry? Aaron: I’m trying to have a conversation. Joe: Conversation. That’s interesting. Aaron: What’s interesting? Joe: It’s like the way you’re looking at me right now. You know what I mean? Aaron: Nope. Joe: You have your eyes open and

your eyebrows are up, like you’re expecting me to say something interesting, when, you know, you’re the one who always says interesting things. I read interesting things. This morning, I read something compelling about Trump and the media. Aaron: OK, let’s go with that. What was compelling about it? Joe: It was just, you know, well, maybe you wouldn’t think it’s compelling and maybe you knew it already, which means I probably don’t have to tell you. Aaron: I want to talk about something. Joe: We are talking about something. We’re talking about me and you and this weather. You know what I’m saying? Aaron: Not really. Joe: The weather is all around us, right? And, it’s all around everyone else. Except that, when people are somewhere else, the weather around them isn’t the same as it is here. So, to experience weather, you really have to be here. Aaron: Right, uh huh. Go on. Joe: Now you’re looking at me differently. You’re frowning. You need to

laugh more often. That’s your problem. Aaron: I don’t have a problem. I’m trying to have a conversation. Joe: About what? Aaron: Well, a few minutes ago, you said what I said was interesting and I’ve been waiting patiently to find out what you thought was interesting about it. Joe: Oh. Let me think. I’m going to replay the entire conversation in my head and then I’ll let you know. Aaron: Right, sure. Joe: No, really. Was it before or after the conversation about the weather? Aaron: Before. Joe: See, I was listening. I remembered that we talked about the weather. Aaron: You weren’t listening to me. You were listening to you. You brought up the weather. Joe: Right, OK, I have a confession to make. I wasn’t listening to what you said all that closely, but I know it was interesting. Aaron: What part? Do you remember any of the conversation? Joe: Not really. I have to go. It’s been nice chatting with you.

TBR News Media video post goes viral amid concern for our children

A

man at a March 14 PTA meeting in a high school in Rocky Point, New York, confronts a student in the aisle and holds a knife over his head. The pocket knife is closed and the man is trying to make a point about the need for security on behalf of the students in the school, including his two daughters. It is a heart-stopping moment, and the video was By Leah S. Dunaief provided to TBR News Media by a senior student named Jo Herman. We ran the video, along with the story of the meeting, on our website, Facebook page and YouTube. Such is the world we live in and the concern of parents around the nation that, to date,

Between you and me

the Facebook video post has been seen by more than 11.3 million viewers. The total reach for all our Facebook posts last week was in excess of 17 million. That’s 17 MILLION plus, about the same as the entire population of the Netherlands. In addition, there have been many thousands of shares and comments on our Facebook page and our website. These numbers were supplied to us by Facebook Insights, the dashboard of Facebook and the most authentic source. If ever we needed evidence of this world we are living in today, and the heartfelt concern of parents throughout the United States, here it is. Could there be any parents who feel untouched by the concern for the safety of their children in the schools? Children have become the latest targets of an assassin’s gun. These are not jihadists doing the killing. These are not ideologues carrying out the murders. These are our own citizens, in many cases children

themselves, who are able to procure weapons and turn them on their teachers and classmates. Those 11 million viewers and all the rest of the parents, grandparents, siblings, relatives and friends of children who haven’t seen this video are no less terrified at the tragedies that have already been perpetrated and the violence that may yet come. What is to be done? There are many reactions. Our children have realized their political clout and called for action with their walkouts and 17 moments of silence. Politicians in various states have proposed legislation, even passed legislation in one state, Florida, to try to gain control of this madness. The state is being sued for doing so, and the president offers words. Consider this. A puppy dies on an airplane and within 48 hours, there is legislation passed to attempt to prevent such an unhappy event from happening again. How many more youngsters and adults must die before we can get

EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Leah S. Dunaief GENERAL MANAGER We welcome letters, photographs, comments and story ideas. Send your items to P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733 or email desiree@tbrnewsmedia.com. Johness Kuisel MANAGING EDITOR Times Beacon Record Newspapers are published every Thursday. Desirée Keegan Subscription $49/year • 631-751-7744 EDITOR www.tbrnewsmedia.com • Contents copyright 2017 Desirée Keegan

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our arms around this horror? Social media can be great. It can be a miracle thread that connects us, informs us, unites us. It can also be a misery, as governments around the world are realizing. Facebook has been corrupted by its inability to prevent personal information from being stolen by nefarious thieves. But it has delivered a loud and clear message with the frenzy of response to a single incident in a small town on Long Island: The population is frightened, more frightened than by any attacks made against us by foreign nations or religious fanatics in the past. This threat is inside our defenses and until now seemingly unstoppable. Yes, we need gun control. Yes, we need mental health services. Yes, we need greater vigilance. Yes, we need protection. We need all of that and more. Most of all, we need leadership, not contention, because this is a moment that is shaking our republic in its heart.

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PAGE A24 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • MARCH 22, 2018

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