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VILLAGE TIMES HERALD
S TO N Y B R O O K • O L D F I E L D • S T R O N G’S N E C K • S E TAU K E T • E A S T S E TAU K E T • S O U T H S E TAU K E T • P O Q U OT T • S TO N Y B R O O K U N I V E R S I T Y
Vol. 44, No. 8
April 18, 2019
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What’s inside Unearthing local history
Poquott community dock almost complete, budget approved A3
SBU doctor works to develop treatment for drug-resistant fungus A9
Battlefield study to begin at Patriots Rock, Setauket Village Green Monday — A5
Gov. Cuomo discusses how state budget affects Long Island A10
Spring and New Beginnings: A photo essay by Anita Jo Lago
Also: 22nd annual Festival of One-Act Plays at T3, Easter Hoppenings, SBU Sports
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APRIL 18, 2019 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • PAGE A3
Village
Poquott prepares to unveil new community dock, approves budget BY RITA J. EGAN RITA@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Residents in the Village of Poquott will be able to enjoy a new community dock this summer. After years of debating and hammering out the details, the village’s dock will be completed in the next few weeks, according to Mayor Dee Parrish. “It feels great, and everybody is talking about it on Facebook and the Instagram page for the village and people are taking pictures,” Parrish said. “It’s that time of year where spring is in the air and people are excited, and I think a lot of residents are going to get use out of it this summer.” The dock, located in California Park at the end of Washington Street, had been discussed
by residents for nearly a decade, and while several protested the idea, the village board began seriously looking at building one a few years ago. The village took out a bond equaling $255,000 to help finance the dock construction. Officials said the village will begin paying off the bond in the end of this year, and the board approved taking the interest payment from the fund balance this year. Trustee Jeff Koppelson, who supported the idea of a dock for residents, said lately when he walks down to the beach, he sees people checking out its progress. He said he believes many residents will enjoy it, from fishermen to those who are just taking a leisurely walk. “I find it very gratifying, and I think for years to come it will be kind of a focal point of the village down there,” Koppelson said.
Budget
As the board began to look over its budget for 2019-20, it was first believed that the dock would create an extra $4 more per hundred in the budget, according to Parrish. However, once the numbers were crunched, the trustees announced at the April 11 village meeting that the budget increase for all village services is $3 more per hundred. The new budget of $552,969.17 is a 3% increase over last year and pierces the 2% tax cap. At the March village board meeting, Parrish, Koppelson and trustee Chris Schleider voted to authorize the board of trustees to exceed the 2% taxing increase limit, and at the April meeting, approved the 2019-20 budget. The budget includes $63,125 of dock
Poquott’s community dock, above, will be completed in time for summer. Below, the New York State Department of Transportation will fence in a stormwater retention pond outside of the village boundaries. Photo above by Gerard Romano; photo below by Maria Hoffman
expenses such as engineering fees, legal fees and construction costs.
Stormwater retention pond
The village was recently notified by the New York State Department of Transportation that it would attend to issues regarding a stormwater retention pond on Route 25A, right between Van Brunt Manor Road and Washington Street. Village officials brought the issue to the attention of the NYSDOT, which will be fencing in the pond. Richard Parrish, Poquott’s stormwater management officer, sent multiple letters to
the NYSDOT last year alerting the department of villagers’ complaints that the unfenced structure constructed of earthen walls and an earthen base could potentially collapse and cause a person or animal to fall in or become trapped. After a heavy rainfall, the structure can fill with up to four feet of water. The mayor said she was relieved that the NYSDOT was going to remedy the situation. “It won’t be such an eyesore, and also, I think a lot of residents worried that kids might play in it or someone may drown in it, so with a fence around it, it will eliminate that problem,” Parrish said.
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PAGE A4 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • APRIL 18, 2019
School News
Village
New thrift shop opens in Setauket
Ward Melville High School
BY RITA J. EGAN RITA@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
Ward Melville High School’s DECA team recently earned a number of awards during the state competition, and team members Katie Zhao, Dara Berman, Elizabeth Wang, Jessica Guo and Jade Eggleston are among those who qualified to compete at the national competition. Photo from Three Village Central School District
Business Class
As a result of their exceptional performance at the state level, 11 members of Ward Melville High School’s DECA team have qualified to compete in the national DECA competition in Orlando, Florida at the end of April. The entire team had an exceptional performance at the state level, with seven students placing in the top ten in their respective events. The district congratulates the entire team, along with adviser Ilene Littman, on their dedication and wishes those competing in nationals the best of luck.
Ward Melville’s National Qualifiers:
Diego Bennett — first place — Financial Literacy Promotion Project Elizabeth Wang — first place — Quick Service Restaurant Management Akshay Malhotra — second place — Principles of Hospitality and Tourism
Three Village Central School District Super honor
Three Village Central School District Superintendent of Schools Cheryl Pedisich was named an administrator service award honoree during the 18th annual SCOPE Education Services awards dinner. The award was presented in honor of Pedisich’s unwavering dedication to the school district and expertise. The evening’s honorees were chosen for recognition based on their exemplary contributions to the field of education and for embodying the night’s theme of “Shining Above the Rest” during the 2018-2019 school year.
Hannah Lu — third place — Restaurant and Food Service Management Ashley Zhang — fourth place — Hotel and Lodging Management Jade Eggleston and Jessica Guo — fifth place — Buying and Merchandising TEAM event Dara Berman and Katie Zhao — fifth place — Marketing Management TEAM event Leo Takemaru and Dale Yu — fifth place — Business Law and Ethics TEAM event
Top 10 in New York State Competition:
Elyas Masrour — Retail Merchandising Nancy Zhong — Principles of Finance Michael Bernstein — Business Services Marketing Jonathan Huang — Accounting Applications Eric Chung — Automotive Services Marketing Chelsea Pan and Eileen Whelan — Hospitality Services TEAM event
A bit of good can come out of a little shopping. On April 5, a new thrift store opened at 152 Main St. in the former Setauket United Methodist Church chapel building. Called II Acts, the store is managed by congregants Nancy Fogg and Diane Clausen. The Rev. Steven Kim said since the former tenant, the Church of the Nazarene, left last September, congregants had discussed possible uses for the chapel building, which initially was the first Jewish synagogue built on Long Island decades ago. Fogg put together a proposal and brought it to the church board of trustees. “The idea of turning it into a thrift shop had prevailed at the end of the day,” Kim said. “I believe it is what God has meant with it.” With net proceeds going to the church’s Missions and Outreach program, Kim said he envisions the shop becoming a community mission center in the future. Up until a few years ago, Fogg ran a consignment shop in the church called Rethreads Boutique, and she said she always wanted to open up a thrift shop but finding
appropriate retail space in the area was difficult. The thrift store sells jewelry, purses, small furniture, clothing, books, kitchenware, porcelain, knickknacks, children’s toys and more. The thrift store manager said church members donated many of the items and a lot of pieces also have come from her own and Clausen’s collections. As chair of the church’s Missions and Outreach, Fogg said the committee helps various organizations, including local nonprofits such as Three Village Meals on Wheels and Our Daily Bread Soup Kitchen at St. James R.C. Church in Setauket. She said the store is there to serve the community, and the first few weeks in business have been successful. “People are very excited to have a new thrift store in the area,” Fogg said. “They love dropping off stuff, and we love taking it.” II Acts thrift store is located at 152 Main St., East Setauket, directly across from Assemblyman Steve Englebright (D-Setauket)’s office. Business hours are Fridays and Saturdays from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. and additional days will be added in the future. Donations may be dropped off during business hours or by arrangement. Call 631364-9992 for more information.
Police
Man sought for armed robbery of East Setauket Subway
Suffolk County police are investigating an armed robbery that occurred in an East Setauket Subway April 15. Police said a man with a gun entered Subway, located at 18 Woods Corner Road, and demanded cash from an employee at around 7:15 p.m. The employee complied, and the man fled the scene. There were no injuries. Police are asking anyone with information on the robbery to contact Crime Stoppers anonymously at 800-220-TIPS (8477).
— Compiled by Kyle Barr
East Setauket Subway. File photo by Rita J. Egan
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APRIL 18, 2019 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • PAGE A5
Village
Search begins to unearth history at Setauket Village Green BY RITA J. EGAN RITA@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Archaeologists and historians are scheduled to explore the Setauket Village Green to see what they can unearth about Long Island’s Revolutionary War history. The Lamar Institute has begun a monthlong field research project titled The Struggle for Long Island: Expanding Revolutionary War Studies in New York funded by a $60,000 American Battlefield Protection Program grant from the National Park Service and $5,200 in contributions from Lamar. The Georgia-based nonprofit, which conducts archaeological research to advance public awareness, has organized historians, archaeologists, residents and City University of New York students to explore three military sites occupied by Loyalists on the North Shore during the Revolutionary War — the Setauket Village Green, Fort Slongo (now known as Fort Salonga) and Fort Franklin in Lloyd’s Neck. Barbara Russell, Town of Brookhaven historian and a Caroline Church of Brookhaven vestry member, said the project was presented to the church’s vestry last year for permission to access the site. “This is all quite exciting to have respected and qualified researchers from the Lamar Institute in and around our Village Green,” she said. “Historians always welcome further study, and I hope the community will come by and watch the process take place.” Field research began April 15 in Fort Salonga and will continue April 22 for a week
A reenactor reads the plaque on Patriots Rock. Photo from Three Village Community Trust
at the Village Green. This will be followed by more studies in Lloyd’s Neck during the week of April 29. While the team has been given permission to research Fort Slongo, which is on private property, property owners have not given permission to study Fort Franklin, which is also on privately owned land. Instead the team will only be able to do work on property that was once the battlefield. The project will focus on the North Shore areas where the Patriot attacks on the three forts led to their victory at Fort Salonga. Daniel Elliot, president of the Lamar Institute, said
the research would include ground penetrating radar survey, systematic controlled metal detection survey, small excavations of key targets, total station laser transit mapping,
drone-assisted aerial videography and laboratory analysis. The findings will enable the identification of battlefields and provide data regarding military strategies. The itinerary for Setauket includes searches of the Patriots Rock tract across from Frank Melville Memorial Park, Setauket Presbyterian Church property and the Village Green and the green and front parking area of Caroline Church of Brookhaven. Elliot said even though similar studies have been conducted in Georgia and South Carolina, this is the first one in New York and north of the Mason-Dixon Line. While not all the forts have a visible footprint like Fort Slongo, written accounts from those who fought and a map from the Culper spies will help guide them to their exact locations. “We’re trying to bring them back to life a little bit and increase public awareness of what’s out here,” Elliot said. The Battle of Fort Slongo, led by Benjamin Tallmadge, he said was a victory for the Patriots where an injured Elijah Churchill became the recipient of the first Badge of Military Merit, which became the VILLAGE GREEN CONTINUED ON A8
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PAGE A6 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • APRIL 18, 2019
Film Screening of the Sequel
Town
COMING TO SBU STALLER CENTER SUNDAY, JUNE 23, 2019 AT 7:30 PM AS TBR’S GIFT TO THE COMMUNITY ADMISSION IS FREE
Gerald Cohen during a 2010 interview with TBR News Media. Image from video by TBR News Media
Traitor is the thrilling sequel to the award-winning One Life to Give. Set during the end of the American Revolution, it chronicles the incredible true story of the capture of British spy Major John Andre by Culper spy master Benjamin Tallmadge. This riveting film brings to life the daring mission of a Setauket local to thwart a plot that surely would have marked defeat for the Continentals.
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Lawrence Aviation CEO ordered to pay millions by federal court Superfund cleanup operation goes into its 19th year
The former CEO of Lawrence Aviation in Port Jefferson, Gerald Cohen, has been ordered to pay $48 million in cleanup costs for the toxic underground plume caused by materials leached into the ground from the now-defunct airplane parts manufacturer. The U.S. Attorney’s office announced the charges April 15 after a district court judge e Story of Nathan Hale, in ThCentral Islip ruled Lawrence Aviation Benjamin Tallmadge Industries, Inc, a former & the Origin of The Culper Spies defense contractor that was based on Sheep Pasture Road, and its longtime owner and CEO, Gerald Cohen, were liable for environmental cleanup costs. “This case and the significant monetary penalties imposed by the court should serve as a warning to would-be polluters, including individuals, that this office and the [U.S. Environmental Protection Agency] will use every tool at their disposal to protect Long Island’s groundwater and to ensure that those responsible for contamination will foot the bill for cleanup costs,” said Richard Donoghue, the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York. The U.S. Attorney’s office detailed Cohen’s wrongdoing based on the court’s 37-page memorandum. In the early 1980s, after the Suffolk County Department of Health issued a series of recommendations for LAI to come into compliance with various pollution control laws, LAI used a front-end loader to crush 55-gallon drums containing hazardous substances, among more than 1,600 of such drums identified on the property, resulting in a massive discharge of waste directly onto the ground. Samples taken from those drums revealed impermissibly high levels of trichloroethylene, among other pollutants. Nearly two decades later, in 1999, testing performed by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation revealed contamination of groundwater and surface
water at the site. In a statement to the U.S. Attorney’s office, the regional EPA administrator said he was pleased with the court’s decision. “This judgment provides for the reimbursement of money spent on cleanup work and imposes penalties that act as a deterrent,” said EPA regional administrator Pete Lopez. “Our active engagement and work at this site will continue over the long term.” Various creditors have asserted claims against LAI and Cohen properties based on their respective liens. Those claims remain pending before the court. The 126-acre property was named a Superfund site in 2000 and was expected to take 20 years to complete the cleanup. The EPA’s cleanup of the site, now into its 19th year, has included a remedial investigation into the nature and scope of the contamination, various hazardous waste removal and stabilization activities, and the implementation and maintenance of two groundwater treatment systems designed to capture and treat contaminated groundwater, according to the U.S. Attorney’s office. The EPA’s activities at the LAI site have resulted in a decrease in the size of the groundwater TCE plume and the removal of more than 18,000 tons of soil contaminated with polychlorinated biphenyls, among other hazardous substances, including asbestos-containing materials. In 2008, Cohen and LAI pleaded guilty to violating the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, for storing hazardous wastes at the LAI facility without a permit issued by the EPA or New York State. Cohen was sentenced to a term of imprisonment of one year and a day, and supervised release of 36 months. He and LAI were ordered to pay restitution to the EPA of $105,816.
— Compiled by Kyle Barr
APRIL 18, 2019 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • PAGE A7
Education
3V Approves $215 million budget for 2019-20 BY ANDREA PALDY DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
The Three Village school board has approved a $215 million budget for the 201920 school year. The action, taken April 10, shows an increase of 2.51 percent from 2018-19, but Jeff Carlson, assistant superintendent of business services, said the upcoming school year’s budget stays within the 2.53 percent cap on the tax levy increase. Contractual salary increases, utilities and a 2 percent hike in insurance costs account for the increase, Carlson said, speaking at the district’s most recent school board meeting. He added that because of the cap, there is not much room to add a lot of new programs, but there are a few new initiatives of note for the upcoming year. One initiative is the addition of a musical theater class at Ward Melville High School. A sixth-grade guidance counselor will be another addition next year. The district’s five elementary schools will share the new guidance counselor. The most significant change next year is the addition of a tuition-based, half-day enrichment program to complement the district’s free prekindergarten. Beginning next year, the district will offer its preschool curriculum, which is currently offered only at Nassakeag Elementary School, at each of its five elementary schools.
The Three Village Central School District board members, above, approved the 2019-20 budget that residents will be able to vote on May 21. Photo from Three Village Central School District
Students who attend a morning or afternoon prekindergarten session will also be able to enroll in the enrichment program to extend the day. Students will receive enrichment in STEM, music, art and movement. The preschool, which has a cap of 200 students, already has 196 students enrolled for next year, Carlson said. There are more than
100 students signed up for the enrichment program, which costs $500 a month. The current enrollment means that the district will see more than $500,000 in revenue and that the enrichment program “more than pays for itself,” Carlson said. In addition to covering the cost of staffing the program, the tuition will also pay for the installation of age-appropriate
playgrounds at each of the elementary schools, officials have said. Carlson said that even with the additions, the district will stay within the tax cap without having to cut programs or services. Proposed staffing changes are a result of enrollment and course requests, he said. There is a potential reduction of two full-time equivalents at the elementary level and a reduction of two to three FTEs at the secondary level. Funding from the state — not including aid for capital projects — increased by about $287,000, he said. That is about $175,000 more than projected in the governor’s January budget proposal and represents a 0.8 percent increase over last year’s aid package. Carlson said the percentage was consistent with the average rate of increases over the past 11 years. The budget vote will take place Tuesday, May 21, at Ward Melville High School, R.C. Murphy Junior High and P.J. Gelinas Junior High. Voting was moved from the elementary schools two years ago because it is easier to secure voting areas to ensure student safety at the secondary schools, Carlson said. Residents zoned for Arrowhead, Minnesauke and Nassakeag elementary schools will vote at the high school. Those who are zoned for W.S. Mount Elementary School will vote at Murphy Junior High, and Setauket Elementary residents will vote at Gelinas Junior High.
Obituary
Death notice for former Setauket resident Oakes Ames brings back memories BY BARBARA WECKER DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM My husband and I moved to Setauket in 1964. Every day was a gift. The air smelled clean and fresh. The 20-acre alfalfa farm behind our house was alive with pheasant, quail, meadowlarks, red-winged blackbirds, hawks and many more species. Learning about the wildlife and walking daily on the surrounding beaches became of interest. Three children were born, and we were delighted to introduce them to our learning and safe environments. This was a special community. I was saddened to see the obituary of Oakes Ames in the Feb. 17 edition of The New York Times. He was a Harvard graduate and received his Ph.D. in experimental nuclear physics from Johns Hopkins University in 1957. He was chairman of the physics department at Stony Brook University and a resident of Setauket. He served as president of Connecticut College from 1974-1988 and, during that time, dedicated
himself to environmental work and research in energy conservation. He was the father of four children and the husband of Louise Kimball Ames. I met Louise Ames at a meeting I attended. I also met many wonderful people, including her husband, Oakes. This group was intent on establishing a learning center to have children and adults have hands-on experiences in learning about the environment. I was so impressed with their vigor, their purpose and their enthusiasm. Most of us were mothers with young children. We shared experiences and learned from each other. We had summer programs that taught children about the beach, geology, field succession, birds, bees and botany. Tree identification was heightened by the five senses with tastes, smells, visual recognition, touch and sound. Most of us were volunteers, but because of the richness of professionals in our community, many joined the effort. A barn was rented on Old Town Road to hold
meetings, have picnics and interact. My oldest daughter will never forget how we dressed her in a sheet painted with the colors and design of a rose-breasted grosbeak, while others guessed her identity. Learning was fun, and families became involved. We did teach and learn, canoe, hike, discover, explore and enjoy. Louise Ames was an inspirational leader who shared a vision with others who dove in with enthusiasm. The Environment Center of Setauket was organized in the early 1970s. It later joined with Sweetbriar in Smithtown to become the Environmental Centers of Setauket-Smithtown on Eckernkamp Drive in Smithtown. It is a wonderful place to take a walk and discover and to visit the butterfly house in the summer. Past experiences are treasures to remember. I am grateful for the efforts the Ames family invested into bringing awareness to our community’s resources while making learning fun. May Oakes Ames rest in peace. He and his wife made our special community a better place.
Oakes Ames Photo from The Linda Lear Center for Special Collections and Archives
PAGE A8 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • APRIL 18, 2019
Village
Nonagenarian shares lessons learned from his work with clocks BY SUSAN RISOLI DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
You don’t reach the age of 90 without learning a thing or two about living. For Setauket resident Marshall Irving, life is a bit like his favorite pastime of fixing antique clocks: value teamwork, be willing to listen and don’t forget to apply critical thinking when difficulties arise. “Figure out what is going on and what you can do about it to make it better,” Irving said recently in an interview at his home. “And
whether it’s a mechanical issue or something to do with people, bring an open mind about the problem you’re working on.” Irving is an antiquarian horologist — someone who restores and maintains antique timekeeping devices. The Ward Melville Heritage Organization relies on his skills to keep its tower clock and landmark eagle in good running order. WMHO president, Gloria Rocchio, called Irving “one of the Three Village area treasures, just like the eagle.” Irving has always been fascinated by the carved wooden eagle, which since 1941 has flapped its 10-foot wingspan from a vantage point atop the Stony Brook post office. “The Stony Brook eagle is the only one we know of in the world,” Irving said. He started working on the clock and the eagle 20 years ago. “When I first got involved, the eagle was in such bad shape, it was shaking the building,” he recalled. “I put in a chain drive and a new gearbox to drive its wings.” Back then he would climb up four flights of stairs to get to the big bird. “Then I made it, so we could work it out of a closet in the office by pushing buttons, rather than physically going up there,” he said. Irving was trained as a steamboat engineer at the Kings Point Merchant Marine Academy. He and his wife, Arline, moved to the Three Villages when he went to work at the Dayton T. Brown company. He also served as a naval intelligence officer, which he said “was kind
Marshall Irving, above, with his wife, Arline, recently celebrated his 90th birthday. Below, Irving poses with a clock that belonged to his grandfather. Photos by Susan Risoli
of fun.” The Irvings have four children, six grandchildren and two great-grandchildren with a third great-grandchild on the way. The Irvings’ home is filled with clocks, each playing a soft chorus of chimes that sound at different times with different notes. Hanging on the wall is “the first clock I got serious about fixing,” an 1860s Seth Thomas clock that was in Irving’s grandfather’s office at the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. The Mather House Museum in Port Jefferson has an antique clock collection that Irving restores and maintains. He runs a “clock school” there, where he teaches people how to restore antique clock mechanisms and finishes, and how to make the clocks look their best for public display. Irving said he teaches
his students that patience and teamwork are essential to diagnosing and treating the problems of these delicate clocks. “We have people come into our clock school and run out screaming because it doesn’t fit their mindset,” he said. “They don’t realize it takes years to learn these things.” He added, “I’ve been doing this for 50 years, and there are still things I’m learning, every day.” Irving said he will continue being an antiquarian horologist for his own pleasure and to spread the word about the beauty of aging clocks. “I enjoy talking to people about it, because the ability to do this is starting to die out,” he said. “A sad thing for me is that we don’t teach children how to tell time anymore from an analog dial on a clock.”
VILLAGE GREEN
relics aren’t found too deep in the ground, with most being around 4 to 6 inches deep. As for the Setauket battleground, Griffin said no one knows for sure where the fort walls were, and with ground radar, they may be able to determine its exact location. Griffin said he is looking forward to learning more about the sites and the forts, and he pointed out that the Loyalists who built them were Americans. “It’s really an American story,” he said. “Even though we think it was the British that were here, it’s really the Loyalist Americans who built these and tended to them, and the Patriots, who were also Americans, were the people who were attacking the posts, so it really is a very local story of Americans.” The project will be discussed at a future Three Village Community Trust Join the Conversation presentation with Elliott, Griffin and Sheldon Skaggs, assistant professor at City University of New York. Resulting interpretation also will be documented in a report available to the public on the Lamar Institute’s website, www. thelamarinstitute.org by September 2020.
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Purple Heart. “It’s one of the few success stories on the Island for the Americans during the war,” Elliot said. David Griffin, a local historian, has been collaborating on the project. An architect by trade, he’s the author of the book “Lost British Forts of Long Island.” He said there are plenty of lost stories and various interpretations of what happened on the Island when it comes to the Revolutionary War. The historian said with the use of underground radar and metal detectors, field researchers will be able to find artifacts such as iron musket balls and jacket buttons that will tell a lot more about who was shooting at whom and in what direction. The research will also help to see how many people were engaged, and the size of a musket ball can determine to which side it belonged. He said many times in cases like these,
APRIL 18, 2019 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • PAGE A9
Health
SBU’s Del Poeta battles drug-resistant fungus BY DANIEL DUNAIEF DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Maurizio Del Poeta, a professor in the Department of Molecular Genetics & Microbiology at Renaissance School of Medicine at Stony Brook University, works to combat potentially deadly fungal infections. Recently, several press reports have highlighted the prevalence in New York and New Jersey of Candida auris, which is resistant to drugs and can cause death. Through an email exchange, Del Poeta shared his perspective on this fungal infection and his efforts to develop a treatment. Are there multiple drug-resistant strains of numerous types of Candida? Yes, there are several species of Candida that are resistant to some antifungals. For instance, Candida lusitaniae is normally resistant to amphotericin B. Candida glabrata is normally resistant to fluconazole. There are over 20 species of Candida that can cause infection in humans. Most are sensitive to antifungals. C. auris is normally resistant to all antifungals. They are resistant for mainly two reasons: (1) the target/enzyme is genetically different and, thus, the drug does not recognize the target; thus it does not bind to the target; and thus it does not inhibit it; (2) the drug is pumped out by membrane transporters. C. auris is notorious for having multiple membrane transporters. I understand the damage from Candida is primarily among people who are immunocompromised. Is there a risk for those people who are also healthy? Healthy people should be fine. But who is really “healthy?” Because C. auris is spreading in hospitals and nursing homes, all patients in hospitals and nursing homes are at risk: some more (e.g., cancer patients, patients with an organ transplant, patients in ICU, patients taking corticosteroids) and some patients have less risk because they are more immunocompetent, but certainly those patients could get contaminated. What makes it so hard to eliminate Candida? Because (1) we are not used to and (2) because we still do not know which type of disinfectant is efficacious against C. auris … Unlike other Candida infections, which are generally thought to result from autoinfection from host flora, C. auris can be transmitted between patients … C. auris requires implementation of specific infection control measures, such as those used for control of [other infections] (e.g., private room and on contact precautions). Because C. auris can
Maurizio Del Poeta works in his lab. Photo from Stony Brook University
survive in plastic surfaces, floors, and door knobs for weeks, it is essential that infection control measurements be implemented in the health care settings. Does the work you’re doing offer hope, albeit in the earlier stages, for ways to treat and reduce the virulence of Candida? Yes, our new compounds are sensitive to C. auris in vitro against the C. auris clinical isolates that are resistant to current antifungals. We are currently testing their efficacy in vivo (animals). We are doing this in collaboration with the National Institutes of Health and the Health Science Center in San Antonio, Texas. Our compounds have different mechanism of action from the current antifungals, Given that the symptoms of a Candida infection — fever, weakness and aches — are so prevalent in other types of infections, are there ways to make a clinically differentiated diagnosis of Candida without taking a blood sample or conducting extensive analysis? Unfortunately, there are not. Diagnosis of C. auris can only be made using sophisticated tests. Normal phenotypic tests are not able to identify C. auris for certain. If we want to stop (or at least control) the epidemic, anyone with a Candida infection in a hospital setting should be treated as C. auris. Hospital trafficking of
nurses, doctors, visitors from and to patients with C. auris should be highly restricted. Nurses and doctors should not be allowed in cafeteria without changing gowns, particularly if they are taking care of a patient infected with C. auris and other common sense practices should be implemented; but, unfortunately, they are normally out of the window in the hospital settings … In the case of C. auris “isolating rooms” and “contact precautions” should be implemented. How does your treatment for Candida work? The class of compounds are “acylhydrazones.” They target the synthesis of fungal sphingolipids. Given what you know about the prevalence of Candida, particularly in New York, and the minimal information about the specific locations where hospitals have found Candida, what would you advise anyone who might be “at risk” for Candida to do if they had elective surgery scheduled? Elderly and immunocompromised people going to the hospital should be treated with “contact precautions.” No need for isolation unless positive for C. auris. Is C. auris the most virulent or problematic species of Candida confronting
public health professionals today? Not really. C. glabrata is also a nasty Candida strain. What makes C. auris difficult is the resistance to drugs. Do other species suffer through Candida infections as well? Although humans are the most known carriers and hosts for Candida infection, other animals can also get infected such as dogs, horses and cattle. Certain Candida species are used in food production. Candida utilis extracts are used in Asia as a “salt” instead of salt because these extracts are salty and do not cause hypertension. We actually have a collaboration with the Japanese company that makes these extracts. Candida krusei is used to ferment cacao during chocolate production. Whereas C. utilis is not a human pathogen, C. krusei actually is. How do you protect yourself, your office and your staff from the spread of the infection? We use biosafety label 2. My lab is certified to handle BSL2 organisms, such as C. auris. We use all sorts of protective gears and standard protective procedures to make sure lab personnel are protected and to make sure we keep the microbes inside the lab. Entrance to my lab is strictly prohibited to anyone that did not receive appropriate training.
PAGE A10 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • APRIL 18, 2019
State
Governor delivers Long Island budget to local crowd Cuomo lauds LIRR reform, hints at renewable energy initiatives BY DONNA DEEDY DONNA@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) unveiled April 11 his Long Island agenda to a crowd of some 400 politicians, business leaders, local residents and students at Stony Brook University’s Student Activities Center. It was one of two stops statewide, where the governor personally highlighted regional spending for a local community. Overall, the $175 billion fiscal year 2020 budget holds spending at 2 percent. “This year’s budget builds on our progress and our momentum on Long Island, and it includes $18 billion for Long Island — the largest amount of money the state has ever brought back to the region, and we’re proud of it,” Cuomo said. Nearly half of the revenue that Long Island receives goes toward school aid and Medicaid, $3.3 billion and $6.9 billion collectively, according to Freeman Klopott in New York State’s Division of the Budget. But the spending plan funds several bold initiatives, such as an overhaul of the MTA and Long Island Rail Road and the phase in of free public college tuition for qualified students. Long Island Association president and CEO Kevin Law, who had introduced the governor, suggests looking at the enacted budget as five distinct categories: taxes, infrastructure, economic development, environmental protection and quality of life issues, such as gun safety reform. On the tax front, Long Islanders, according to the governor’s report, pay some of the highest property tax bills in the United States. Over the last 20 years, Cuomo said, local property taxes rose twice as fast as the average income. “You can’t continue to raise taxes at an amount that is more than people are earning,” he said. His goal is to stabilize the tax base. On the federal level, the governor will continue to fight with other states the federal tax code, which last year limited taxpayers’ ability to deduct state and local taxes over $10,000 from their federal income tax returns. Long Island reportedly lost $2.2 billion. Otherwise, the governor considers his plan to be the most ambitious, aggressive and comprehensive agenda for Long Island ever. The budget’s regional development goals emphasize a commitment to Long Island’s research triangle: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Northwell Health, Stony Brook University and Brookhaven National Laboratory. The governor envisions the Island as New York’s potential economic equivalent
to California’s Silicon Valley. The objective is to bridge academic research with commercial opportunities. Some of the largest investments include $75 million for a medical engineering center at Stony Brook University, $25 million to Demerec Laboratory at Cold Spring Harbor, $12 million for a new college of veterinary medicine at Long Island University Post, $5 million in additional research investments at Stony Brook University and $200,000 cybersecurity center at Hofstra University. “Governor Cuomo’s presentation was uplifting,” said state Assemblyman Steve Englebright (D-Setauket). “It was also a preview of the future of Long Island as an indelibly important part of the state the governor and Legislature appreciate and are continuing to invest into.” Offshore wind initiatives will be announced in the spring, with a goal of providing 9,000 megawatts of wind power by 2035. As part of Cuomo’s New Green Deal, the state target is 100 percent clean energy by 2040.
Highlights of Gov. Cuomo’s 2019-20 budget for Long Islanders
Taxes: Permanently limits local tax spending to 2 percent annually. The 2 percent property tax cap, first implemented in 2012, has reportedly saved Long Island taxpayers $8.7 billion. Now that the property tax cap has become permanent, the governor reports that the average Suffolk taxpayer will save an estimated $58,000 over the next 10 years. The budget also supports the phase in of middle-class tax cuts. By 2025, under the reforms, middle-class filers will save up to 20 percent income tax rate and impact 6 million filers. Internet taxation: Requires internet purchases to charge sales tax to fairly compete with brick-and-mortar retail establishments. This reform is expected to raise sales tax revenue by $33 million for Suffolk County in 2019. LIRR reforms: Dedicates $2.5 billion to the Long Island Rail Road. $734 million will be used to purchase 202 new trains, $47 million will fund the Ronkonkoma train storage expansion project, which adds 11 tracks to the railyard. Another $264 million is allocated to reconfiguring and rebuilding the Jamaica station. An additional 17 stations will also be upgraded. A third track will be added between Hicksville and Floral Park to address bottlenecking. Many projects are already underway and expected to be completed by 2022. The new LIRR Moynihan Train Hall will
The New York State 2019-20-approved budget is reportedly among the toughest, according to Gov. Cuomo. Political divides, climate change and aging infrastructure complicate the mix. Big problems, he said, call for big solutions. Photo by Donna Deedy
become an alternative to Penn Station in New York City. It will be located in the old post office building. Construction is underway with completion targeted for the end of 2020. The cost is $2.5 billion with $600,000 million allocated for 2020. A new LIRR entrance at mid-block between 33rd Street and 7th Avenue will also be built at a price tag of $425 million. School aid: Increases school aid to $3.3 billion, a nearly 4 percent uplift. The 2020 budget includes a $48 million increase of foundation aid. College tuition: Funds tuition-free education in public colleges to qualified students, whose families earn less than $125,000 annually. The program annually benefits more than 26,100 full-time undergraduate residents on Long Island. The DREAM Act: Offers $27 million to fund higher education scholarships for undocumented children already living in New York state. Higher education infrastructure: Spends $34.3 million for maintenance and upgrades at SUNY higher education facilities on Long Island. Downtown revitalization: Awards Ronkonkoma Hub with $55 million for a downtown revitalization project. Nassau County will receive $40 million to transform a 70-acre parking lot surrounding Nassau
Coliseum into a residential/commercial downtown area with parkland, shopping and entertainment, where people can live and work. Hicksville, Westbury and Central Islip will also receive $10 million each to revitalize its downtowns. Roads and bridges: Among the initiatives, $33.6 million will be used toward the Robert Moses Causeway bridge. Safety will be enhanced with guardrails along Sunken Meadow Parkway for $4.7 million. The Van Wyck Expressway is also under expansion for improved access to JFK air terminals. Health care: Adds key provisions of the Affordable Care Act to state law, so health insurance is protected if Washington repeals the law. Plastic bag ban: Prohibits most single-use plastic bags provided by supermarkets and other retailers beginning in March 2020. Counties and cities can opt to charge 5 cents for paper bags. It is projected that 40 percent of revenue generated will fund local programs that purchase reusable bags for low- and fixed-income consumers. The other 60 percent will fund the state’s environmental protection projects. Food waste recycling program: $1.5 million will be allocated to establish a clean GOV. BUDGET CONTINUED ON A11
APRIL 18, 2019 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • PAGE A11
GOV. BUDGET
Continued from A10 energy, food waste recycling facility at Yaphank. Clean water initiatives: Awards Smithtown and Kings Park $40 million for installing sewer infrastructure. A shellfish hatchery at Flax Pond in Setauket will get an additional $4 million. The new budget offers $2 million to the Long Island Pine Barrens Commission and $5 million in grants to improve Suffolk County water supply. The Long Island South Shore Estuary will get $900,000, while Cornell Cooperative Extension will receive $500,000. The state will also fund another $100 million to clean up superfund sites such as the Grumman Plume in Bethpage. The state has banned offshore drilling to protect natural resources. Criminal justice reform: Ends cash bail for nonviolent felonies and misdemeanors. Mandates speedy trial to reduce pretrial detention. Requires that prosecutors and defendants share discoverable information in advance of trial. Gun safety: Includes one of the nation’s
From left, Stony Brook University President Dr. Samuel L. Stanley Jr., Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D), Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone (D). Photo from the governor’s office
first “red flag” laws. Passed in February 2019, the law enables the courts to seize firearms from people who show signs of violent behavior or pose a threat to themselves or others. The new
law, which takes effect later this year, also authorizes teachers and school professionals to request through the courts mental health evaluations for people who exhibit disturbed
behavior related to gun violence. Bans bump stocks. Extends background check waiting period for gun purchases. Anti-gang projects: Invests more than $45 million to stop MS-13 gang recruitment and improve youth opportunities. Opioid crisis: Allocates $25 million to fund 12 residential, 48 outpatient and five opioid treatment programs. The state also aims to remove insurance barriers for treatment. Tourism: Promotes state agricultural products with $515,000 allocated to operate Taste NY Market at the Long Island Welcome Center with satellite locations at Penn Station and East Meadow Farm in Nassau County. The PGA Championship next month and Long Island Fair in September, both at Bethpage, will also feature New York agricultural products. Agriculture: Continues support for the New York State Grown & Certified program to strengthen consumer confidence and assist farmers. Since 2016, the program has certified more than 2,386 farms. Voting: Sets aside $10 million to help counties pay for early voting. Employers must offer workers three hours of paid time off to vote on election day.
Local businesses react to new county plastics ban
Several businesses have already converted to renewable products BY DAVID LUCES DLUCES@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Come January next year, Suffolk residents will likely be slurping down their iced coffees using paper straws, instead of the usual plastic. As Suffolk lawmakers passed bills aimed at reducing plastic and polystyrene waste in the county April 9, food business owners will need to begin the process of adjusting to the new restrictions on plastic straws and polystyrene, more commonly known as Styrofoam, food service products. As per the new bill, food establishments would be required to provide straws and stirrers by request only, and they would have to be biodegradable — not plastic. For customers with a disability or medical condition, plastic straws will be made available by request. “The scale of the worldwide single-use plastics problem has become an ever-increasing threat to our environment and everything that relies on it, including human health,” said Legislator Kara Hahn (D-Setauket). “The plastics crisis is more urgent than people realize.” Some businesses in Suffolk County have already made the switch over to biodegradable options. Local’s Cafe in Port Jeff doesn’t use plastic straws and stirrers, and only uses paper goods, while Soul Brew in St. James said they switched over to paper goods at the end of last summer. Constantinos Drepaniotis, co-owner of the Setauket Village Diner, said he and others have advocated for the environment and said the bans are quite a big step in right direction. Drepaniotis’ diner hasn’t used Styrofoam food
service products for close to two years and has begun reaching out to vendors for plastic straw alternatives. He has considered distributing reusable straws to his customers as well. While the price of these alternatives has concerned business owners, the restaurant owner said it is business’ responsibility to be proactive and help in this environmental cause. The owner said he will not let the cost affect the business and it will adapt. The Styrofoam bill would bar businesses from using items such as cups, trays and containers that are made from polystyrene, as well as ban retail stores from selling those products. It will require businesses in the county to use biodegradable products, though the bill would exempt items used to store uncooked eggs, raw meat, seafood and poultry. Changes would take effect Jan. 1, 2020. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services classified styrene as a potential human carcinogen and, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, polystyrene manufacturing process is the fifth largest creator of hazardous waste in the United States. “[Styrene has] recently been upgraded from a possible carcinogen to a probable carcinogen — a cancer causing chemical,” Legislator Sarah Anker (D-Mount Sinai) said at a Feb. 13 press conference advocating for the bills. “Long Island has some of the highest cancer rates in the country.” An employee from Tiger Lily Café in Port Jefferson said she dislikes plastic straws and hopes the new ban will potentially get people to bring their own reusable straws, mentioning
Suffolk County Legislator Kara Hahn discusses how plastics are a threat to the environment. Photo from the Suffolk County Legislature Facebook page
that it is very expensive right now to purchase biodegradable alternatives, like paper straws. While acknowledging the ban would be good for the environment, she said the cost is something a lot of entrepreneurs will have to deal with. The employee also hopes as the demands for these paper goods increase eventually the prices will go down and manufacturers will make it more cost effective. Other businesses have been using alternatives to polystyrene containers. Setauket Pita House said it doesn’t use Styrofoam food containers and
currently uses aluminum foil containers. Officials also passed a third bill that would prohibit the sale of single-use plastic cups, utensils and beverage straws from county beaches and parks. Last month, the Legislature approved a companion bill that would replace existing water fountains with new ones designed to allow bottle filling at county facilities and countyowned parks that have water dispensers. The bills will now go to the county executive’s office to be signed into law.
SCSMC-PelvicFloorEvent-BEACON-FullPage-2_Layout 1 4/9/2019 1:01 PM Page 1
S PAGE A12 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • APRIL 18, 2019
Bladder or Stool Leakage? Inability to Go?
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Complimentary Q&A Dinner Tuesday, April 30, 2019 6:30 PM - 8:30 PM Stonebridge Golf Links & Country Club Smithtown, New York
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This is a limited space engagement. RSVP required. Call (631) 870-3444 by April 22, 2019.
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APRIL 18, 2019 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • PAGE A13
Sports
Go to tbrnewsmedia.com for more sports photos
Ward Melville 12 Central Islip 2
Patriots cruise to a 12-2 victory BY BILL LANDON DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM The Ward Melville baseball team let its bats do the talking in a League I matchup against the Central Islip Musketeers where the Patriots cruised to a 12-2 victory April 15. The Patriots scored two runs in the opening inning, four in the second and two more in the third before plating four more in the fourth to put the game away. Third baseman Brady Doran, bottom left, was 2-2 at the plate with a pair of doubles and scored three times. Second
baseman Matt Maurer, above right, was 2-4 and batted in four. Pitcher Chris Vivenzio, bottom center, got the win fanning 10 batters, allowing one hit. Also, pictured, above left, James Merlino holds up at second base, and bottom right, designated hitter Max Nielson rounds third base on his way home. The win, the first of a three-game series against the Musketeers, put the Patriots as of April 15 at 3-1 in the division and 5-1 overall for second place behind Patchogue-Medford. On April 16 the Patriots won 11-0 against Central Islip.
Photos by Bill Landon
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PAGE A14 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • APRIL 18, 2019
LEGALS Notice of formation of Collective Clothing Boutique, LLC. Arts of Org. filed with Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 2/4/2019. 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: 248 Main Street Setauket, NY, 11733. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. 399 3/14 6x vth Notice of formation of Zaragoza LLC. Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York SSNY on 2/11/2019. Office location: Suffolk. SSNY is designated for service of process. SSNY shall mail copy of any process served against the LLC 12 Park Lane, Middle Island, NY 11953. Purpose: any lawful purpose. 448 3/28 6x vth NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING, BUDGET VOTE AND ELECTION OF THE THREE VILLAGE CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT TOWNS OF BROOKHAVEN AND SMITHTOWN, SUFFOLK COUNTY, NEW YORK NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that a public hearing of the qualified voters of the Three Village Central School District of Brookhaven and Smithtown, Suffolk County, New York will be held in the cafeteria at Murphy Junior High School, 351 Oxhead Road, Stony Brook, New York, in said District on Wednesday, May 8, 2019 at 7:30 p.m., for the transaction of business as authorized by the Education Law, including the following items: 1. To present to the voters a detailed statement (proposed budget) of the amount of money, which will be required for the 2019-2020 fiscal year. 2. To discuss all the items hereinafter set forth to be voted upon by voting machines at the Budget Vote and Election to be held on Tuesday, May 21, 2019. To transact such other business as may properly come
To Place A Legal Notice
Email: legals@tbrnewsmedia.com before the meeting pursuant to the Education Law of the State of New York and acts amendatory thereto. A copy of the proposed budget shall be made available, upon request, to residents of the school district beginning May 1, 2019 during regular business hours at the Office of the District Clerk, North Country Administration Center, 100 Suffolk Avenue, Stony Brook, New York. AND FURTHER NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that Section 495 of the Real Property Tax Law, requires the School District to attach to its proposed budget an exemption report. Said exemption report, which will also become part of the final budget, will show how the total assessed value of the final assessment roll used in the budgetary process is exempt from taxation, list every type of exemption granted by statutory authority, and show the cumulative impact of each type of exemption, the cumulative amount expected to be received as payments in lieu of taxes (PILOT) and the cumulative impact of all exemptions granted. In addition, said exemption report shall be posted on any bulletin board maintained by the District for public notices and on any website maintained by the District. AND FURTHER NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that said Budget Vote and Election will be held at said Election Districts indicated below on Tuesday, May 21, 2019 between the hours of 6:00 a.m. and 9:00 p.m., at which time the polls will be opened to vote by voting machine and all persons who are qualified to vote and shall have registered as provided in this Notice, may vote on the following items:
tion Districts have been established in the Three Village Central School District. The boundaries of the Election Districts are coterminous with the attendance zones of the elementary schools in the District, as adopted by resolution of the Board of Education, are as follows: Election District 1: Arrowhead Elementary School, 62 Arrowhead Lane, East Setauket, NY Election District 2: Minnesauke Elementary School, 21 Highgate Drive, East Setauket, NY Election District 3: William Sidney Mount Elementary School, 50 Dean Lane, Stony Brook, NY Election District 4: Nassakeag Elementary School, 490 Pond Path, Setauket, NY Election District 5: Setauket Elementary School, 134 Main Street, Setauket, NY and the place in each election district for voting shall be as follows: Election District 1: Ward Melville High School, 380 Old Town Road, East Setauket, NY Election District 2: Ward Melville High School, 380 Old Town Road, East Setauket, NY Election District 3: R. C. Murphy Junior High School, 351 Oxhead Road, Stony Brook NY Election District 4: Ward Melville High School, 380 Old Town Road, East Setauket, NY Election District 5: P. J. Gelinas Junior High School, 25 Mud Road, Setauket NY
2. To elect (2) members of the Board of Education for a three year term commencing July 1, 2019 and expiring on June 30, 2022.
AND FURTHER NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that a copy of the statement of the amount of money which will be required to fund the School District’s budget for 2019-2020, exclusive of public monies, may be obtained on the District’s website and by any resident of the District during business hours beginning May 1, 2019 except Saturday, Sunday or holidays, at the North Country Administration Center, 100 Suffolk Avenue, Stony Brook, New York, and at each of the following locations:
AND FURTHER NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that Elec-
Arrowhead Elementary School, East Setauket
1. To adopt the annual budget of the School District for the fiscal year 2019-2020 and to authorize the requisite portion thereof to be raised by taxation on the taxable property of the District.
Minnesauke Elementary School, East Setauket William Sidney Mount Elementary School, Stony Brook Nassakeag Elementary School, Setauket Setauket Elementary School, Setauket Paul J. Gelinas Junior High School, Setauket Robert J. Cushman Murphy Junior High School, Stony Brook Ward Melville High School, East Setauket AND FURTHER NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that petitions nominating candidates for the office of member of the Board of Education shall be filed with the Clerk of said School District at her office at the North Country Administration Center, 100 Suffolk Avenue, Stony Brook, New York, not later than April 22, 2019 between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Vacancies on the Board of Education are not considered separate, specific offices; candidates run at large. Nominating petitions shall not describe any specific vacancy upon the Board for which the candidate is nominated; must be directed to the Clerk of the District; must be signed by at least 38 qualified voters of the District (38 representing 2% of the number of voters who voted in the previous annual election); must state the name and residence of each signer, and; must state the name and residence of the candidate. AND FURTHER NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that applications for absentee ballots will be obtainable during school business hours from the District Clerk beginning April 8, 2019; completed applications must be received by the District Clerk at least seven (7) days before the election if the ballot is to be mailed to the voter, or the day before the election, if the ballot is to be delivered personally to the voter. Absentee ballots must be received by the District Clerk not later than 5:00 p.m. on Tuesday, May 21, 2019. A list of persons to whom absentee ballots are issued will be available for inspection to qualified voters of the District in the office of the District Clerk on Tuesday, May 14, 2019 between the hours of 9:00 a.m. to
11:30 a.m. and 2:15 p.m. to 3:15 p.m., on weekdays, and each day prior to the day set for the annual election, except Sunday, on Saturday between the hours of 9:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m., and during polling hours on May 21, 2019, the day set for the election. Any qualified voter may, upon examination of such list, file a written challenge of the qualifications as a voter of any person whose name appears on such list, stating the reasons for such challenge. Any such written challenge shall be transmitted by the District Clerk or a designee of the Board of Education to the inspectors of election on election day. AND FURTHER NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that personal registration of voters is required either pursuant to §2014 of the Education Law or pursuant to Article 5 of the Election Law. If a voter has heretofore registered pursuant to §2014 of the Education Law and has voted at an annual or special district meeting within the last four (4) calendar years, he or she is eligible to vote at this election; if a voter is registered and eligible to vote under Article 5 of the Election Law, he or she is also eligible to vote at this election. All other persons who wish to vote must register. The Board of Registration will meet for the purpose of conducting a continuous registration of all qualified voters of the District pursuant to §2014 of the Education Law at the Office of the District Clerk at the North Country Administration Center, 100 Suffolk Avenue, Stony Brook, New York between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m. prevailing time, on weekdays, to add any additional names to the Register to be used at the aforesaid election, at which times any person will be entitled to have his or her name placed on such Register, provided that at such meeting of the Board of Registration he or she is known or proven to the satisfaction of said Board of Registration to be then or thereafter entitled to vote at such election for which the register is prepared. The last day to register shall be May 10, 2019. The register so prepared pursuant to §2014 of the Education Law will be filed in the Office of the Dis-
trict Clerk at the North Country Administration Center, 100 Suffolk Avenue, Stony Brook, New York, and will be open for inspection by any qualified voter of the District beginning on Thursday, May 16, 2019, between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 3:30 p.m., prevailing time, on weekdays, and each day prior to the day set for the election, except Sunday, and on Saturday, May 18, 2019 from 9:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m., and at the polling place on the day of the vote. AND FURTHER NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that pursuant to §2014 of the Education Law of the State of New York, the Board of Registration will meet on Tuesday, May 21, 2019 between the hours of 6:00 a.m. and 9:00 p.m., at the designated election sites to prepare the Register of the School District to be used at the election to be held in 2020, and any special district meetings that may be held after the preparation of said Register, at which time any person will be entitled to have his or her name placed on such Register provided that at such meeting of said Board of Registration he or she is known or proven to the satisfaction of such Board of Registration to be then or thereafter entitled to vote at the school election for which said Register is prepared, or any special district meeting held after May 21, 2019. AND FURTHER NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that pursuant to a rule adopted by the Board of Education in accordance with §2035 of the Education Law, any referenda or propositions to amend the budget, or otherwise to be submitted for voting at said election, must be filed with the District Clerk of the Board of Education at the North Country Administration Center, 100 Suffolk Avenue, Stony Brook, New York, 60 days prior to the vote, must be typed or printed in the English language; must be directed to the Clerk of the School District; must be signed by at least 96 qualified voters (96 representing 5% of the number of voters who voted in the previous annual election) of the District; and must state the name of each signer. However, the School Board will not enterLEGALS con’t on pg. 15
APRIL 18, 2019 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • PAGE A15
LEGALS LEGALS con’t from pg. 14 tain any petition to place before the voters any proposition the purpose of which is not within the powers of the voters to determine, which is unlawful, or any proposition which fails to include a specific appropriation where the expenditure of monies is required by the proposition, or where other valid reason exists for excluding the proposition from the ballot. Dated: Setauket, New York March 13, 2019 Kathleen Sampogna District Clerk Three Village Central School District Towns of Brookhaven and Smithtown Suffolk County, New York 462 4/4 4x vth AVISO DE AUDIENCIA PÚBLICA, VOTO DE PRESUPUESTO Y ELECCIÓN DEL DISTRITO ESCOLAR CENTRAL DE TRES PUEBLOS A LAS CIUDADES DE BROOKHAVEN Y SMITHTOWN, CONDADO DE SUFFOLK, NUEVA YORK AVISO que una audición pública de los votantes calificados del Distrito Escolar Central de Three Village de Brookhaven y Smithtown, el condado de Suffolk, Nueva York se llevará a cabo en la cafetería de RC Murphy Junior High School, 351 Oxhead Road, Stony Brook, Nueva York, el miércoles 8 de mayo de 2019 a la hora 19:30, para la transacción de negocios según autorizado por la Ley de Educación, incluidos los siguientes artículos: 1. Presentar a los votantes una declaración detallada (presupuesto propuesto) de la cantidad de dinero, que se requerirá para el año fiscal 2019-2020. 2. Para discutir todos los elementos que se detallan a continuación para ser votados por las máquinas de votación en la Votación de Presupuesto y Elección que se llevará a cabo el martes 21 de mayo de 2019. Para tramitar cualquier otro asunto que pueda surgir antes de la reunión de con-
To Place A Legal Notice
Email: legals@tbrnewsmedia.com formidad con la Ley de Educación del Estado de Nueva York y los actos de enmienda a la misma. Una copia del presupuesto propuesto estará disponible, a solicitud para los residentes del distrito escolar a partir del 1 de mayo de 2019 durante las horas de oficina en la Oficina del Secretario del Distrito, North Country Administration Center, 100 Suffolk Avenue, Stony Brook, Nueva York Y SE HA DADO UN AVISO ADICIONAL, que la Sección 495 de la Ley del Impuesto sobre Bienes Inmuebles, requiere que el Distrito Escolar adjunte a su presupuesto propuesto un informe de exención. Dicho informe de exención, que también formará parte del presupuesto final, mostrará cómo el valor evaluado total de la tirada de evaluación final utilizada en el proceso presupuestario está exento de impuestos, enumera todos los tipos de exenciones otorgadas por la autoridad estatutaria y muestra los resultados acumulados. el impacto de cada tipo de exención, la cantidad acumulada que se espera recibir como pagos en lugar de impuestos (PILOT) y el impacto acumulativo de todas las exenciones otorgadas. Además, dicho informe de exención se publicará en cualquier tablón de anuncios mantenido por el Distrito para avisos públicos y en cualquier sitio web mantenido por el Distrito. Y SE HA DADO UN AVISO ADICIONAL que dicha votación de presupuesto y elección se llevará a cabo en dichos distritos electorales indicados a continuación el martes 21 de mayo de 2019 entre las horas 18:00 y 21:00, momento en el cual se abrirán las urnas para votar con la máquina de votación y todas las personas calificadas para votar y que se hayan registrado según lo dispuesto en este Aviso, pueden votar sobre los siguientes elementos: 1. Adoptar el presupuesto anual del Distrito Escolar para el año fiscal 2019-2020 y autorizar que la porción requerida del mismo se aumente mediante impuestos sobre la propiedad sujeta a impuestos del Distrito. 2. Para elegir (2) miembros
de la Junta de Educación por un período de tres años que comienza el 1 de julio de 2019 y vence el 30 de junio de 2022. Y SE HA DADO UN AVISO ADICIONAL, que se han establecido distritos electorales en el Distrito Escolar Central de Three Village. Los límites de los Distritos Electorales coinciden con las zonas de asistencia de las escuelas primarias en el Distrito, según se adoptó por resolución de la Junta de Educación, que son las siguientes: Elección Distrito 1: Arrowhead Elementary School, 62 Arrowhead Lane, East Setauket, NY Elección Distrito 2: Minnesauke Elementary School, 21 Highgate Drive, East Setauket, NY Elección Distrito 3: William Sidney Mount Elementary School, 50 Dean Lane, Stony Brook, NY Elección Distrito 4: Escuela Primaria Nassakeag, 490 Pond Path, Setauket, NY Elección Distrito 5: Escuela Primaria Setauket, 134 Main Street, Setauket, NY y el lugar en cada distrito electoral para la votación será el siguiente: Distrito Electoral 1: Ward Melville High School, 380 Old Town Road, East Setauket, NY Distrito Electoral 2: Ward Melville High School, 380 Old Town Road, East Setauket, NY Distrito Electoral 3: RC Murphy Junior High School, 351 Oxhead Road, Stony Brook NY Distrito Electoral 4: Ward Melville High School, 380 Old Town Road, East Setauket, NY Distrito Electoral 5: PJ Gelinas Junior High School, 25 Mud Road, Setauket NY Y ADEMÁS SE OTORGA UN AVISO, que se puede obtener una copia de la declaración del monto de dinero que se requerirá para financiar el presupuesto del Distrito Escolar para 2019-2020, sin incluir el dinero público, en el sitio web del Distrito y por cualquier residente del Distrito entre las horas de ofici-
na a partir del 1 de mayo de 2019, excepto los sábados, domingos o feriados, en el Centro de Administración de North Country, 100 Suffolk Avenue, Stony Brook, Nueva York, y en cada una de las siguientes: Escuela Primaria Arrowhead, East Setauket Escuela Primaria Minnesauke, East Setauket Escuela Primaria William Sidney Mount, Stony Brook Escuela Primaria Nassakeag, Setauket Escuela Primaria Setauket, Setauket Escuela Secundaria Paul J. Gelinas, Setauket Escuela Secundaria Robert J. Cushman Murphy, Stony Brook Escuela Secundaria Ward Melville, East Setauket Y SE HA PRESENTADO UN AVISO ADICIONAL, que las solicitudes de nominación de candidatos para el cargo de miembro de la Junta de Educación se presentarán ante el Secretario de dicho Distrito Escolar en su oficina en el Centro de Administración de North Country, 100 Suffolk Avenue, Stony Brook, Nueva York, no más tarde del 22 de abril de 2019 entre las horas 9:00 y 17:00. Las vacantes en la Junta de Educación no se consideran oficinas separadas y específicas; los candidatos se ejecutan en general las peticiones de nominación no deben describir ninguna vacante específica en la Junta para la cual se nominó al candidato; debe ser dirigido al Secretario del Distrito; debe estar firmado por al menos 38 votantes calificados del Distrito (38 representan el 2% del número de votantes que votaron en la elección anual anterior); debe indicar el nombre y la residencia de cada firmante, y; Debe indicar el nombre y la residencia del candidato. Y SE HA DADO UN AVISO ADICIONAL, que las solicitudes de boletas de voto en ausencia se podrán obtener durante las horas de oficina del Secretario del Distrito a partir del 8 de abril de 2019; las solicitudes completadas deben ser recibidas por el Secretario del Distrito al menos siete (7) días antes de la elección si la boleta se envía por correo al votante, o el día antes de la elección, si la boleta se entrega person-
almente al votante. Las boletas de votación en ausencia deben ser recibidas por el Secretario del Distrito a más tardar a la hora 17:00 del martes 21 de mayo de 2019. Una lista de las personas a quienes se emiten las boletas de votación en ausencia estará disponible para la inspección de los votantes calificados del Distrito en la oficina del Secretario del Distrito el martes 14 de mayo de 2019 entre las horas de 9:00 a 11:30 y 14:15 a 15:15, los días de semana, y cada día antes del día establecido para la elección anual, excepto los domingos, los sábados entre las horas 9:00 y 11:00, y durante las horas de votación el 21 mayo 2019, el día fijado para la elección. Cualquier votante calificado puede, después de examinar dicha lista, presentar una impugnación por escrito de las calificaciones como votante de cualquier persona cuyo nombre aparezca en dicha lista, indicando los motivos de dicha impugnación. Cualquier desafío escrito de este tipo deberá ser transmitido por el Secretario del Distrito o una persona designada por la Junta de Educación a los inspectores de elecciones el día de la elección. Y SE HA DADO UN AVISO ADICIONAL, que se requiere el registro personal de los votantes, ya sea de conformidad con la §2014 de la Ley de Educación o el Artículo 5 de la Ley de Elecciones. Si un votante se ha registrado hasta ahora de conformidad con la §2014 de la Ley de educación y ha votado en una reunión anual o especial del distrito dentro de los últimos cuatro (4) años calendario, es elegible para votar en esta elección; Si un votante está registrado y es elegible para votar conforme al Artículo 5 de la Ley de Elecciones, él o ella también es elegible para votar en esta elección. Todas las demás personas que deseen votar deben registrarse. La Junta de Registro se reunirá con el propósito de llevar a cabo un registro continuo de todos los votantes calificados del Distrito de conformidad con la §2014 de la Ley de Educación en la Oficina del Secretario del Distrito en el Centro de Administración de North Country,
100 Suffolk Avenue, Stony Brook, Nueva York entre las horas de 9:00 y 14:00, hora de apertura, los días hábiles, para agregar cualquier nombre adicional al Registro que se usará en la elección antes mencionada, en el momento en que cualquier persona tendrá derecho a tener su nombre colocado en dicho Registro, siempre que en dicha reunión de la Junta de Registro se le conozca o se demuestre a satisfacción de dicha Junta de Registro que tendrá derecho a votar en esa elección para la cual está preparado el registro. El último día para inscribirse será el 10 de mayo de 2019. El registro preparado de conformidad con la §2014 de la Ley de Educación se archivará en la Oficina del Secretario del Distrito en el Centro de Administración de North Country, 100 Suffolk Avenue, Stony Brook, Nueva York , y estará abierto para inspección por cualquier votante calificado del Distrito a partir del jueves 16 de mayo de 2019, entre las 9:00 y 14:30, hora del día, los días hábiles y todos los días antes del día programado para la elección, excepto los domingos, y el sábado 18 de mayo de 2019 de las horas 9:00 a 11:00 de la mañana, y en el lugar de votación el día de la votación. Y SE LE PRESENTA AVISO ADICIONAL, que de conformidad con la §2014 de la Ley de Educación del Estado de Nueva York, la Junta de Inscripción se reunirá el martes 21 de mayo de 2019 entre las horas 6:00 y 21:00 en los sitios de elección designados para preparar el Registro del Distrito Escolar que se utilizará en la elección que se celebrará en 2020, y cualquier reunión especial del distrito que pueda celebrarse después de la preparación de dicho Registro, momento en el que cualquier persona tendrá derecho a hacer que se coloque su nombre en dicho Registro siempre que, en dicha reunión de dicha Junta de Inscripción, se conozca o se demuestre a su satisfacción que dicha Junta de Inscripción tenga derecho a votar en la elección escolar para la cual se inscribió está preparado, o cualquier reunión especial del distrito celebrada después del 21 de LEGALS con’t on pg. 16
PAGE A16 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • APRIL 18, 2019
LEGALS LEGALS con’t from pg. 15 mayo de 2019. Y ADEMÁS, SE OTORGA EL AVISO de que, de conformidad con una norma adoptada por la Junta de Educación de conformidad con la §2035 de la Ley de Educación, cualquier referéndum o propuesta para enmendar el presupuesto, o de lo contrario se presentará para votar en dicha elección, debe ser presentado al Secretario de Distrito de la Junta de Educación en el Centro de Administración de North Country, 100 Suffolk Avenue, Stony Brook, Nueva York, 60 días antes de la votación, debe escribirse o imprimirse en el idioma inglés; debe ser dirigido al Secretario del Distrito Escolar; debe estar firmado por al menos 96 votantes calificados (96 que representan el 5% del número de votantes que votaron en la elección anual anterior) del Distrito; y debe indicar el nombre de cada firmante. Sin embargo, la Junta Escolar no aceptará ninguna petición para presentar ante los votantes cualquier propuesta cuyo propósito no esté dentro de los poderes de los votantes para determinar, lo cual es ilegal, o cualquier propuesta que no incluya una asignación específica donde el gasto del dinero es requerido por la proposición, o cuando exista otra razón válida
To Place A Legal Notice
Email: legals@tbrnewsmedia.com para excluir la proposición de la boleta electoral. Fecha: Setauket, Nueva York , 13 de marzo de 2019. Kathleen Sampogna Secretaria del Distrito Three Village Central School District Ciudades de Brookhaven y Smithtown Condado de Suffolk, Nueva York 463 4/4 4x vth NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT: SUFFOLK COUNTY. OCEAN II, LLC, Pltf. vs. ELIZABETH A. MATHEW A/K/A ELIZABETH MATHEW, et al, Defts. Index #066471/14. Pursuant to judgment of foreclosure and sale dated March 5, 2019, I will sell at public auction at Brookhaven Town Hall, One Independence Hill, Farmingville, NY on May 16, 2019 at 9:15 a.m. prem. k/a 21 Main Street, East Setauket, NY a/k/a District 0200, Section 131.00, Block 04.00, Lot 003.000. Said property beginning at a point on the easterly side of North County Rd. and the northwesterly corner of land now or formerly of Rexford L. and Dorothy M. Heinz; Running thence NE along the said easterly side of North Country Rd. 32.41 ft. to a point;
Thence SE, 172.57 ft. to a point; Thence NE, 100.25 ft. to a point; Thence SE along lands now or formerly of Harriet Helbig, 393.97 ft. to a point; Thence SW, 128.57 ft. to a point; Thence NW along lands now or formerly of Rexford L. and Dorothy M. Heinz, William Squires and John P. and Paula R. Hongren, 480.82 ft. to a point; Thence NW along said land now or formerly of Rexford L. and Dorothy M. Heinz, 43.60 ft.; Thence NW again along said land now or formerly of Rexford L. and Dorothy M. Heinz, 58.31 ft. to the easterly side of North Country Rd. the point or place of beginning. Approx. amt. of judgment is $865,053.67 plus costs and interest. Sold subject to terms and conditions of filed judgment and terms of sale. CHRISTOPHER HAHN, Referee. DRUCKMAN LAW GROUP, PLLC, Attys. for Pltf., 242 Drexel Ave., Westbury, NY. File No. 35740 #96760 469 4/11 4x vth NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT: SUFFOLK COUNTY. THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON FKA THE BANK OF NEW YORK, AS TRUSTEE FOR THE CERTIFICATEHOLDERS CWABS, INC., ASSET-BACKED CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2005-14,
Pltf. vs. MICHAELANGELO ACCARDO, et al, Defts. Index #12361/2012. Pursuant to judgment of foreclosure and sale dated Apr. 19, 2016, I will sell at public auction at the Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville, NY on May 23, 2019 at 8:45 a.m. prem. k/a 43 Mercury Ave., East Patchogue, NY 11772 a/k/a Section 898.00, Block 02.00, Lot 098.000, District 0200. Approx. amt. of judgment is $597,830.91 plus costs and interest. Sold subject to terms and conditions of filed judgment and terms of sale. DAVID HOWARD BESSO, Referee. FRENKEL LAMBERT WEISS WEISMAN & GORDON, LLP, Attys. for Pltf., 53 Gibson St., Bay Shore, NY 11706. File No. 34674 #96871 525 4/18 4x vth NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS TOWN OF BROOKHAVEN PURSUANT TO THE PROVISIONS OF ARTICLE IV, SEC. 85-55 (B) OF THE BUILDING ZONE ORDINANCE OF THE TOWN OF BROOKHAVEN, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS WILL HOLD A WORKSESSION ON APRIL 22, 2019 (BZA CONFER-
ENCE ROOM – 1ST FLOOR) AT 3:00 P.M. AND A PUBLIC HEARING ON WEDNESDAY, APRIL 24, 2019 (2ND FLOOR AUDITORIUM) COMMENCING AT 2:00 P.M. AT ONE INDEPENDENCE HILL, FARMINGVILLE, N.Y. AND IN ACCORDANCE WITH OPEN MEETINGS LAW, SAID PUBLIC HEARING WILL BE LIVE STREAMED OVER THE INTERNET AT http:// b r o o k h a v e n t o w n n y. i g m 2 . com/Citizens/Default.aspx, TO CONSIDER THE FOLLOWING:
PUBLIC NOTICE VILLAGE OF POQUOTT COUNTY OF SUFFOLK NOTICE OF VILLAGE ELECTION – CORRECTION OF POSITIONS The Incorporated Village of Poquott will hold general elections on Tuesday June 18, 2019 for the following positions; 2 Village Board Trustees for a term of two years
VILLAGE TIMES HERALD
1 Village Justice for a term of four years
17. Serota Brooktown I & II LLC, 70 East Sunrise Hwy., Valley Stream, NY. Location: Northwest corner Nesconset Hwy. & Hallock Rd., Stony Brook. Applicant requests height variances for proposed 29’10” high, 147 sq. ft. wall sign on east elevation (18’ high, 80 sq. ft. permitted) & for proposed 22’6” high, 116 sq. ft. wall sign on west elevation (18’ high, 36 sq. ft. permitted). (0200 43900 0200 002001)
Anyone interested in running for these positions may obtain Independent nominating Petitions at the office of the Village Clerk, 45 Birchwood Avenue, Village of Poquott during normal office hours Mon- Thurs 9 A.M to 3 P.M. By order of the Board of Trustees, Joseph Newfield Village Clerk April 10, 2019
CASES WILL BE HEARD AT THE DISCRETION OF THE BOARD.
542 4/18 1x vth
PAUL M. DE CHANCE CHAIRMAN 539 4/18 1x vth
We Are The Official Newspaper Designated To Publish Legal Notices For:
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BILL LANDON
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Broadway star Megan Hilty • Sat Oct 20 Comedy ensemble in Celebrity Autobiography • Sat Oct 27
Be Entertained
STALLER CENTER FOR THE ARTS STONY BROOK UNIVERSITY
COMPLETE SEASON AT stallercenter.com • (631) 632-ARTS [2787]
Miller Place, Port Jeff kids battling cancer spend day as SCPD officers — story A4
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• High blood sugar during pregnancy risks • Fighting fall allergies • Promote healthy weight starting with lunch • Wireless technology and hearing • Confusing mammogram guidelines • Sleep problems and menopause
New transportation service prepared to rollout in Northport Village A5
The VILLAGE BEACON RECORD
Vol. 34, No. 10
A SUPPLEMENT TO TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA • OCTOBER 4, 2018
OCTOBER IS BREAST CANCER AWARENESS MONTH
A11
HUNTINGTON • HUNTINGTON BAY • GREENLAWN • HALESITE • LLOYD HARBOR • COLD SPRING HARBOR • NORTHPORT • FORT SALONGA • EAST NORTHPORT • ASHAROKEN • EATON’S NECK • CENTERPORT
Finding a new home
About a dozen animals adopted thanks to Sound Beach Civic Association’s sixth pet adoption event, which was renamed this year to honor a fallen friend of the event
A8
Women’s EXPO returns to Centereach library Also: Paint Port Pink celebrates 4th year, SBU Sports, Photo of the Week, ‘Mary Poppins Jr.’ flies into Smithtown
B1
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S TO N Y B R O O K • O L D F I E L D • S T R O N G’S N E C K • S E TAU K E T • E A S T S E TAU K E T • S O U T H S E TAU K E T • P O Q U OT T • S TO N Y B R O O K U N I V E R S I T Y
Vol. 43, No. 30
September 20, 2018
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Local college students assist in Puerto Rico SBU, SCCC students share their experiences helping hurricane victims
A5
Celebrating history
‘The Addams Family’ opens at Theatre Three Also: ‘Man of La Mancha’ heads to the Engeman, ‘Hook’s Tale’ reviewed, highlights from Culper Spy Day
B1
Call us at 631-751-7744 ext. 127 if you need to publish a legal notice!
Water quality study causing conerns for researchers Harmful algae blooms are threatening marine life in water bodies across the North Shore, according to researchers from SBU, with some alarming new signs in 2018 data.
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THE TIMES Hu n t i n g t o n , No r t h p o r t & Ea s t No r t h p o r t
SARA-MEGAN WALSH
Rocky Point Union Free School District Selden Fire District Setauket Fire District Shoreham-Wading River Central School District Smithtown Fire District Sound Beach Fire District St. James Fire District Stony Brook Fire District Ready to Suffolk County Community College serve Terryville Fire District The Smithtown Library Three Village Central School District
©159618
• • • • • • • • • • • •
©159613
Middle Country Central School District Middle Country Public Library Miller Place Fire District Miller Place Union Free School District Mount Sinai Fire District Mount Sinai Union Free School District Northport - East Northport Public Library Northport - East Northport Union Free School District North Shore Public Library Port Jefferson Fire District Port Jefferson Free Library Port Jefferson School District Rocky Point Fire District
ANTHONY WHITE
• • • • • • • • • • • • •
164277
The County of Suffolk The Town of Brookhaven Brookhaven Comsewogue Union Free School District Centereach Fire District Comsewogue Public Library Harborfields Central School District Harborfields Public Library Huntington Union Free School District Incorporated Village of Old Field Incorporated Village of Poquott Incorporated Village of Port Jefferson Incorporated Village of Belle Terre Incorporated Village of Shoreham
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• • • • • • • • • • • • •
Annual Culper Spy Day held in Three Village area — photos B29
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Enjoy the read! If you’re receiving The Village Times Herald for the first time, please consider this an introduction and an invitation to explore what’s inside our newspaper. Our professional staff works hard to bring you information
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Publisher Leah Dunaief
Animal Health & Wellness Veterinary Office, PC
©159610
AVAILABLE FOR ROUTINE COMPREHENSIVE AND EMERGENCY VISITS VETERINARY CARE STEVEN TEMPLETON, D.V.M. 150 Main Street OPEN TINA TING, D.V.M. East Setauket 7 DAYS 631.751.2200 www.animalhealthwellness.com
APRIL 18, 2019 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • PAGE A17
From Cold Spring Harbor to Wading River – TBR NEWS MEDIA • Six Papers...Plus Our Website...One Price
CLASSIFIEDS 631.331.1154 or 631.751.7663 • www.tbrnewsmedia.com
Garage Sales ADVERTISE YOUR GARAGE SALE! $29 for 20 words, $ .40 each additional word. --------------------------$5 extra if you would like to put a frame around the ad and bold some words. We also offer a highlighted gray background for an additional $5. ---------------------------2 free signs are available, if you would like to stop by. THRIFT STORE Open Fridays and Saturdays starting April 19th and 20th, 9am-3pm. 152 Main Street, Setauket, across from Engelbright’s office. 631-364-9992
Automobiles/Trucks Vans/Rec Vehicles SUPPORT THE LONG ISLAND MUSEUM! Donate your vehicle, running or not, for a tax deduction. Free towing. 800-868-6004 or charity-cardonations.com.
DONATE YOUR CAR TO WHEELS FOR WISHES Benefiting Make-A-Wish. We offer free towing and your donation is 100% tax deductible. Call 631-317-2014 Today!
Auto Services ***AAA*** AUTO BUYERS $Highe$t Cas$h Paid$. All Years/Conditions! We visit you! Or Donate, Tax Deduct Ca$h. OMV 10 #1303199. Call Luke, 516-VAN-CARS, 516-297-2277
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Lost & Found FOUND FORD KEY FOB on Port Jefferson Beach, Friday, April 5th. Email: reclass459@aol.com
Adopted from us 11 years ago,  Sammy has only known a loving home - one that  should have b een his forever home. But when a new family member developed allergies ,he was returned to us. Sammy is a cool cat who loves to be petted. Now he waits for a new family who will give him lots  of cuddles.
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Novenas PRAYER TO THE BLESSED VIRGIN (Never Known To Fail) Oh, most beautiful flower of Mt. Carmel, fruitful vine, splendor of heaven, blessed mother of the Son of God, immaculate virgin, assist me in my necessity. Oh star of the sea, help me & show me here in, you are my mother. Oh Holy Mary, Mother of God, Queen of Heaven and Earth, I humbly beseech you from the bottom of my heart to succor me in this necessity There are none who can withstand your power. Oh show me herein you are my mother. Oh Mary conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee. (3 times). Oh Holy Mary, I place this cause in your hands. (3 times). Holy Spirit, you who solve all problems, light all roads so that I can obtain my goals. You gave me the divine gift to forgive and forget all evil against me, and that in all instances of my life, you are with me. I want in this short prayer to thank you for all things as you confirm once again that I never want to be separated from you in eternal glory. Thank you for your mercy toward me and mine. H.K. The person must say this prayer 3 consecutive days. The request will be granted. This prayer must be published after the favor has been granted.
Pets/Pet Services TENDER LOVING PET CARE, LLC. Pet Sitting Services. When you need to leave town, why disrupt your pet’s routine. Let your pets enjoy the comforts of home while receiving TLC from a PSI Certified professional Pet Sitter. Experienced, reliable. Ins/Bonded. 631-675-1938 tenderlovingpetcarellc.com
Financial Services 70 YEARS OLD, KIDS ARE grown. Still need your life insurance? Or is a big LIFE SETTLEMENT CASH PAYOUT smarter? Call Benefit Advance 1-844-348-5810
Schools/Instruction/ Tutoring PIANO LESSONS AWARD-WINNING CONCERT PIANIST Now accepting new students. All levels. NYSSMA preparation. Your home or my studio. Call evenings. 631-789-9387 COLLEGE COUNSELING SERVICES Need Help with the College Application Process? Call now to secure direction and guidance from start to finish with the applications, essay/supplementals and even your resume! References available. Call Joann: 631-338-9558 MKS College Consulting Application and essay assistance from initial review through submission. Guiding middle and high school students and their families since 2007. mstr11777@aol.com 631-455-6638 PIANO - GUITAR - BASS All levels and styles. Many local references. Recommended by area schools. Tony Mann, 631-473-3443 TUTOR ALGEBRA I, ALGEBRA II, GEOMETRY, PRE-CALCULUS, SPANISH, BIOLOGY. SAT/ACT. Experienced, Ivy League Graduate. Gary, 631-471-0986. TUTOR: CHEMISTRY, LIVING ENVIRONMENT AND EARTH SCIENCE. 30 years experienced teacher. Michelle, 631-495-8813 Port Jefferson, Smithtown and Three Village Area.
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Finds Under 50 2 CAST IRON RADIATORS 6’, used, need 2 people to lift, $10. 516-521-0060. ANTIQUE WICKER ARM CHAIR, $45.00. 631-473-0066 CAMPING TENT, new, 2 person, all season, $35. Call 631-928-1296 COFFEE URN w/liquid level viewer. Holds 55 (6 oz.) cups. 2.5 gallons. Used for clean tea water but has a coffee basket and post, $20. 631-689-1568 FREE GOLF CAGE. GOOD CONDITION. 631-751-1714 JUICERATOR; Acme Supreme by Waring. Excellent condition. $49, originally over $400. 631-941-3835 MAXIM ELECTRIC BARBECUE BROILER Dishwasher safe, stainless steel, in box. Brand New, Model EB-7, $45. 631-673-6730. Cannot take texts PUSH REEL LAWN MOWER 14�’ 4 blade, New condition, $20. 631-751-8369 WOOD CHIPPER, $35. 631-689-1316, 516-521-0060.
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PAGE A18 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • APRIL 18, 2019
WE ARE:
CONTACT US:
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The Village TIMES HERALD The Village BEACON RECORD The Port TIMES RECORD The TIMES of Smithtown The TIMES of Middle Country The TIMES of Huntington, Northport & East Northport tbrnewsmedia.com
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The Classifieds Section is published by TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA every Thursday. Leah S. Dunaief, Publisher, Ellen P. Segal, Classifieds Director.We welcome your comments and ads. TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA will not be responsible for errors after the first week’s insertion. Please check your ad carefully. • Statewide or Regional Classifieds also available - Reach more than 7 million readers in New York’s community newspapers. Line ads 25 words : Long Island region $69 - $129 – New York City region $289 - $499 – Central region $29 - $59 – Western region $59 - $99 - Capital region $59 - $99 – all regions $389 - $689 words. $10 each additional word. Call for display ad rates.
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APRIL 18, 2019 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • PAGE A19
E M PL OY M E N T / C A R E E R S
PET BATHER & DRYER Needed for busy grooming shop in Wading River. References and Experience required. For Appointment 631-929-7387
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ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT recruitment for high volume outpatient office Tuesdays 7:30 am to 6 pm Fridays 7:30 am to 7:30 pm Email resume to: threevillageallergyandasthma@gmail.com
Phone 631.675.6474 to follow up Three Village Allergy & Asthma, PLLC 3771 Nesconset Hwy., Ste 105 | South Setauket, NY 11720
Event Planner
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local clerical help.
wanted to work with our local newspapers creating community-friendly offerings. This is a fun job for the right person!
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Please contact us at (631) 751-7744 or desk@tbrnewsmedia.com
Fax resume to: 631-675-1888
Rocky Point UFSD AVAILABLE OPENINGS:
Part-Time Custodian - 10-Month Position Weekends (2) 7.5 hr. shifts. Hourly Salary $12.00 Substitute Registered Nurses - $28.00 per hour Substitute Licensed Security - $18.30 per hour Substitute Custodians - $15.00 per hour Substitute Groundskeepers - $15.00 per hour Substitute Maintenance Mechanics - $18.86 per hour Substitute Food Service Workers - $12.00 per hour Substitute Teachers - All Areas - $125/Daily/$150 Daily for Preferred Subs Please submit a letter of interest and completed RPUFSD non-instructional application to Dr. Scott O’Brien, Interim Assistant Superintendent, Rocky Point UFSD, 90 Rocky Point-Yaphank Road, Rocky Point, NY 11778 EOE - Visit rockypointschools.org for more information.
©103366
Professional phone and computer skills. Knowledge of surgical billing a plus. Data entry, insurance, verification and precertification.
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ROCKY POINT UFSD AVAILABLE OPENINGS P/T Custodian 10 mth position Substitute Registered Nurse Substitute Licensed Security Substitute Groundskeepers Substitute Maintenance Mechanics, Substitute Food Service Workers and Substitute Teachers. Please see ad in Employment Display for complete details
420 Rte. 25A Rocky Point, NY
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for weekday and weekend shifts. Holidays are a must. All ages and skill levels may apply.
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NISSEQUOGUE GOLF CLUB Hiring Grill room manager, wait staff, Bartenders & Maintenance Help. Weekday & weekend shifts. E-mail resume or contact information to: johno@mnissequoguegolf.com Please see Employment Display for Complete Details
Welcome customers with a smile while assisting them with plant sales, garden questions and design ideas. Help clean & maintain sales yard. Friday, Saturday & Sunday
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CLASSIFIEDS CLASSIFIEDS
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MEDICAL/SURGICAL OFFICE STAFF P/T. Professional phone and computer skills. Knowledge of surgical billing a plus. Data entry, insurance, verification and precertification. Fax resume to: 631-675-1888
CLASSIFIEDS
Knowledge of annuals, perennials & nursery stock.
BARTENDERS/ WAITSTAFF BUFFET SERVERS/ KITCHEN HELP NEEDED
©103315
GARDEN CENTER ASSISTANT KNOWLEDGE OF ANNUALS, Perennials, Nursery Stock. Welcome customers with a smile, while assisting them with plant sales, garden questions and design ideas. Help clean and maintain sales yard. Fri./Sat./Sun. Mt. Sinai 631-474-9225 Fax resume: 631-828-6634
LIMOUSINE COMPANY, located in East Northport, is looking for local clerical help. Evenings/Weekends. $13./hour. For more info, please call 631-266-1411
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EXCELLENT SALES OPPORTUNITY for GOOD COMMUNICATOR at Award Winning News Media Group’s North Shore Market and Beyond. Earn salary & commission selling working on exciting Historical Multimedia Projects & Supplements. Call Kathryn at 631-751-7744 or email resume to: kjm@tbrnewspapers.com TBR NEWSMEDIA
JOB OPPORTUNITY: $18 P/H NYC * $15 P/H LI *$14.50 P/H Upstate NY If you currently care for your relatives or friends who have Medicaid or Medicare, you may be eligible to start working for them as a personal assistant. No Certificates needed. (347)462-2610 (347)565-6200
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BARTENDERS/WAITSTAFF/BUFFET SERVERS/KITCHEN HELP NEEDED p/t, weekends required, reliable and responsible, will train, apply in person Majestic Gardens 420 Rte 25A Rocky Point, NY
THE CORN WAGON LLC Lancaster PA needs 5 temp farmworkers 6/5/19-12/5/19. Use post hole digger to erect and repair farm fence. Cultivate row crops such as tomatoes, sweet corn,broccoli, cauliflower, peppers, zucchini, eggplant. Irrigate Till soil w/hand tools, farm field & shed sanitation, staking and trellising req’d crops. Freq stooping and walking. Heavy lifting to 50lbs. 7am-2pm M-F and 5 hrs Sat. No cost for tools, supplies & equip. Free housing provided if outside commuting area. 3/4 average of 35hr/wk guaranteed. Transportation & subsistence expense to job paid to eligible worker when 50% of work period completed or earlier if appropriate. No ed training or exp req’d $13.15hr. Report to nearest NY/SWA or fax 717-772-5478 reJO#12921929
HOLIDAY INN EXPRESS IN STONY BROOK is looking for happy, energetic people. Front desk agent, night audit, maintenance, F/T, P/T available. If you are interested, please call 631-473-8000, or email Charlie@stonybrookny. hiexpress.com
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ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT Three Village Allergy & Asthma Outpatient Office. Tuesdays 7:30am to 6pm and Fridays 7:30am to 7:30pm. Email resume to: threevillageallergyand asthma@gmail.com For complete details see our ad in the Employment Section
GARDEN CENTER ASSISTANT
Help Wanted
©103268
PUBLISHER’S EMPLOYMENT NOTICE: All employment advertising in this newspaper is subject to section 296 of the human rights law which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, creed, national origin, disability, marital status, sex, age or arrest conviction record or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination. Title 29, U.S. Code Chap 630, excludes the Federal Gov’t. from the age discrimination provisions. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for employment which is in violation of the law. Our readers are informed that employment offerings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
Help Wanted
101872
Help Wanted
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
PAGE A20 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • APRIL 18, 2019
E M PL OY M E N T / C A R E E R S
HELP WANTED SPECIAL!
Excellent Sales Opportunity for Good Communicator at Award-Winning News Media Group’s North Shore Market and Beyond
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Cleaning COME HOME TO A CLEAN HOUSE! Attention to detail is OUR PRIORITY. Excellent References. Serving the Three Village Area. Call Jacquie at 347-840-0890
Decks DECKS pre-season special Creative designs our speciality, composite decking available. Call for FREE estimate. Macco Construction Corp 1-800-528-2494
Clean-Ups LET STEVE DO IT Clean-ups, yards, basements, whole house, painting, tree work, local moving and anything else. Totally overwhelmed? Call Steve @ 631-745-2598, leave message.
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Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154 Electricians 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
Fences SMITHPOINT FENCE. EARLY BIRD VINYL FENCE SALE! 10% off installatiion. Wood, PVC, Chain Link, Stockade. Free estimates. Now offering 12 month interest free financing. Commercial/Residential. 70 Jayne Blvd., PJS. Lic.37690-H/Ins. 631-743-9797 www.smithpointfence.com.
Floor Services/Sales FINE SANDING & REFINISHING Wood Floor Installations Craig Aliperti, Wood Floors LLC. All work done by owner. 26 years experience. Lic.#47595-H/Insured. 631-875-5856
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Gardening/Design Architecture DOWN THE GARDEN PATH *Garden Rooms *Focal Point Gardens. Designed and Maintained JUST FOR YOU. Create a “splash” of color w/perennials or Patio Pots. Marsha, 631-689-8140 or cell# 516-314-1489
Handyman Services
Housesitting Services TRAVELING? Need someone to check on your home? Contact Tender Loving Pet Care, LLC. We’re more than just pets. Insured/Bonded. 631-675-1938
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
Home Improvement AFFORDABLE NEW SIDING! Beautify your home. Save on monthly energy bills with beautiful NEW SIDING from 1800 remodel 18 months no interest. Restrictions apply. 855-773-1675
Interior Decorating/ Design TRISTATE CUSTOM WINDOW TREATMENTS. Blinds, Shades, Draperies, Shutters, Motorization, Measure and Installation. FREE SHOP AT HOME SERVICE 165 Middle Country Rd, Middle Island, NY 11953 Office: 631-448-8497 Mobile: 631-978-8158 Lic. #58820-H/Insured
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.
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BATHROOM RENOVATIONS EASY ONE DAY updates! We specialize in safe bathing. Grab bars, no slip flooring and seated showers. Call for a free in-home consultation: 888-657-9488
APRIL 18, 2019 â&#x20AC;˘ THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD â&#x20AC;˘ PAGE A21
SERV ICES Home Improvement *BluStar Construction* The North Shoreâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Most Trusted Renovation Experts. 631-751-0751 Suffolk Lic. #48714-H, Ins. See Our Display Ad CREATIVE DESIGN CERAMIC TILE AND BATH bathrooms, kitchens from design to completion, serving Suffolk County for 32 years, shop at home services, contractor direct pricing on all materials, Office 631-588-1345, Mobile 631-682-2290 www.creativedesignhomeremodeling.com LAMPS FIXED, $65. In Home Service!! Handy Howard. My cell 646-996-7628 LONG HILL CARPENTRY 40 years experience All phases of home improvement. Old & Historic Restorations. Lic.#H22336/Ins. 631-751-1764 longhill7511764@aol.com
Lawn & Landscaping PRIVACY HEDGES - SPRING BLOWOUT SALE. 5ft Leyland, Cypress or Green Giant Arborvitae, now only, $49 each. (6 ft only $89). FREE installation/FREE delivery. Limited Supply! Order Now: 802-922-6947. www.discounttreefarm.com SWAN COVE LANDSCAPING Lawn Maintenance, Clean-ups, Shrub/Tree Pruning, Removals. Landscape Design/Installation, Ponds/Waterfalls, Stone Walls. Firewood. Free estimates. Lic/Ins.631-689-8089
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Masonry CARL BONGIORNO LANDSCAPE/MASON CONTRACTOR All phases Masonry Work:Stone Walls, Patios, Poolscapes. All phases of Landscaping Design. Theme Gardens. Residential & Commercial. Lic/Ins. 631-928-2110
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
LONG ISLAND PAVING AND MASONRY Driveways, patios, walkways, stoops, asphalt paving, parking lots & more. Free written estimates. Lic/Ins. 631-943-5252
VREELAND LANDSCAPING Lawn maintenance $30/up. Fertilizing/thatching/complete lawn re-seeding, aeration and renovation. 30 years experience. Three Village, Mt. Sinai, Port Jefferson. Bill, 631-331-0002
Miscellaneous A PLACE FOR MOM has helped over a million families find senior living. Our trusted, local advisors help find solutions to your unique needs at no cost to you. Call: 1-800-404-8852
Landscape Materials
CEMETERY PLOTS FOR SALE New Montefiore Cemetery, Pinelawn, NY. Section 5, Block 2, Row 3, Plots 5 & 6. $1300 each. Barbara 817-738-2485. email babsander@aol.com.
SCREENED TOP SOIL Mulch, compost, decorative and driveway stone, concrete pavers, sand/block/portland. Fertilizer and seed. JOS. M. TROFFA MATERIALS CORP. 631-928-4665, www.troffa.com
DIRECTV & AT&T 155 channels & 1000s of shows/movies on Demand. (w/SELECT Package). AT&T Internet 99 percent reliability. Unlimited texts to 120 countries w/AT&T Wireless. Call 4 Free quote, 1-888-534-6918
Legal Services 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.
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Oil Burner Services DADâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S OIL SERVICE Family Owned & Operated Radiant Heat, Hot Water Heaters, Boiler Installations, Baseboard, Oil Tanks, Seasonal Startups. Installations and Repairs. Call now and save 10% off any new installation or upgrade! 631-828-6959
Painting/Spackling/ Wallpaper ALL PRO PAINTING INTERIOR/EXTERIOR Power Washing, Staining, Wallpaper Removal. Free estimates. Lic/Ins #19604HI 631-696-8150. Nick BOBâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S PAINTING SERVICE 25 Years Experience. Interior/Exterior Painting, Spackling, Staining, Wallpaper Removal, Staining & Deck Restoration Power Washing. Free Estimates. Lic/Ins. #17981. 631-744-8859 COUNTY-WIDE PAINTING INTERIOR/EXTERIOR Painting/Staining. Quality workmanship. Living and Serving Three Village Area for over 30 years. Lic#37153-H. 631-751-8280 EDâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S PAINTING INTERIOR/EXTERIOR Wallpaper removal, spackling, sheetrock repair. Over 25 years experience. Commercial/Residential Reasonable rates. 631-704-7547
Painting/Spackling/ Wallpaper LaROTONDA PAINTING & DESIGN Interior/exterior, sheetrock repairs, taping/spackling, wallpaper removal, Faux, decorative finishings. Free estimates. Lic.#53278-H/Ins. Ross LaRotonda 631-689-5998 WORTH PAINTING â&#x20AC;&#x153;PAINTING WITH PRIDEâ&#x20AC;? Interiors/exteriors. Faux finishes, power-washing, wallpaper removal, sheetrocktape/spackling, carpentry/trimwork. Lead paint certified. References. Free estimates. Lic./Ins. SINCE 1989 Ryan Southworth, 631-331-5556
Power Washing WORKING & LIVING IN THE THREE VILLAGES FOR 30 YEARS. Owner does the work, guarantees satisfaction. COUNTY-WIDE, Lic/Ins. 37153-H, 631-751-8280
Roofing/Siding JOSEPH BONVENTRE CONSTRUCTION Roofing, siding, windows, decks, repairs. Quality work, guaranteed. Owner operated. Over 25 years experience. Lic/Ins. #55301-H. Call or Text 631-428-6791
Tree Work 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, water-view work, sun-trimming, elevating, pool areas, storm thinning, large tree removal, stump grinding. Wood chips. Lic#18902HI. Free estimates. 631-246-5377 CLOVIS OUTDOOR SERVICES LTD. Expert Tree Removal AND Pruning. Landscape Design and maintenance, Edible Gardens, Plant Healthcare, Exterior Lighting. 631-751-4880 clovisoutdoors@gmail.com 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 WHITNEY TREE ALL PHASES OF TREE WORK 631-744-1527 Free estimates, pruning, tree removal, stump grinding, land clearing. Lic.#63174H/Insured
TV Services/Sales EARTHLINK HIGH SPEED Internet. As Low As $14.95/mth (for the first 3 months.) Reliable High Speed Fiber Optic Technology. Stream Videos, Music and More! Call Earthlink Today 1-855-970-1623
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PAGE A22 â&#x20AC;¢ THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD â&#x20AC;¢ APRIL 18, 2019
HOME SERV ICES
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154 PAGE F
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PAGE A24 â&#x20AC;˘ THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD â&#x20AC;˘ APRIL 18, 2019
HOME SERV ICES
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154 PAGE A
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APRIL 18, 2019 â&#x20AC;˘ THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD â&#x20AC;˘ PAGE A25
R E A L ESTATE SEBASTIAN, FLORIDA (East Coast) Beach Cove is an Age Restricted. Community where friends are easily made. Sebastian is an â&#x20AC;&#x153;Old Floridaâ&#x20AC;? fishing village with a quaint atmosphere yet excellent medical facilities, shopping and restaurants. Direct flights from Newark to Vero Beach. New manufactured homes from $114,900. 772-581-0080 www.beach-cove.com
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Rentals
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PAGE A26 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • APRIL 18, 2019
Opinion
Letters to the editor
Reform school taxes
Dear friends and followers of the Elaine DiMasi 2018 Congressional campaign in New York: With excitement and also sadness, I would like to let you know that I am leaving our Long Island community for a new job in California. Specifically, I will be joining the leadership team for a $358M upgrade project at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. After more than 20 years as a scientist and project leader in the national laboratory system, I am delighted to be joining terrific people and ready to return to the work I know best. Yet, this means saying farewell to so many of the wonderful connections I’ve made in our community here and to the chance of public service in elected office. My political mission in the future will be to help other scientists do an even
Editorial
Suffolk County homeowners pay some of the highest property taxes in the nation, with a typical bill estimated at $8,926. In New York City, the average property tax bill is $4,822 and across the United States it’s $3,018. Those are New York State’s numbers. It’s clear to everyone that the property tax burden has become unbearable on Long Island. It’s driving people away, impacting family budgets, and for homes that bear above average taxes, home values are plummeting. Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) said during an April 11 budget presentation at Stony Brook University that he recognizes the problem. He’s made it law that schools and communities in the state must limit budget increases to 2 percent. It will help … to a degree. He and other states have joined hands to lobby the president and congressional leaders to reinstate the state and local tax reduction write-off for federal income taxes. A bipartisan bill was introduced this week by U.S. Rep. Lee Zeldin (R-Shirley) to reinstate the deduction. If it passes, that will also help … to a degree. But these measures are merely band-aid solutions to a larger, chronic problem: income inequality. The tax burden has shifted from corporations and the wealthy to middle and lower classes. If state leaders want to help Long Island residents make ends meet, major changes need to take place, mainly in the way primary education is funded. Property taxes are largely used to fund local school districts. Local control is good, but the disparities from one community to the next indicate the problem. A simple Google search shows that in Southampton, for example, a six-bedroom home, built in 2006 that sits on 1.73 acres, is on the market for $2.6 million, with taxes totaling $6,458. In Kings Park, a two-bedroom home, built in 1960, situated on 0.13 of an acre, lists for $265,000, but incurs more property taxes: $7,056. New York needs a better system. In his budget speech, Cuomo got it right when he said if you don’t have it, you can’t pay for it. But governor has curiously not stepped in to help the Town of Huntington, which is facing legal proceedings with LIPA and National Grid. LIPA and National Grid want to reduce the tax burden on the Northport power plant by 90%. LIPA is a state entity created in 1997, when the state bailed out LILCO and its failed Shoreham nuclear project. Since then, LIPA has been reimbursing National Grid for its power plant’s property taxes. This case most dramatically impacts the Northport-East Northport School District and the 35,000 residents who live there. A Boston Globe article from 2014 reports that National Grid’s CEO saw a 50% salary increase from $5 million to $7.8 that year. That was just four years after LIPA and National Grid filed its tax certiorari case against the Town of Huntington.. Long Island taxpayers need major reform to alleviate and more equitably distribute the property tax burden.
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 rita@tbrnewsmedia.com or mail them to The Village Times Herald, P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733.
A goodbye to primary supporters and LI better job of running for office than my team and I were able to do. The voice and perspective of a trained scientist can do a world of good as part of a diverse legislative body. At the same time, a scientist often works at state and federal institutions, prohibiting a campaign. Scientists often do not hold jobs suitable for part-time hours or for repeated lengthy work stops. These obstacles can be overcome. And I have quite a few things to say about how our strategy should differ from the advice offered to candidates from other walks of life. To begin this mission, my team is preparing a video based on a talk invited by the Graduate Student Women in Science and Engineering at Stony Brook University last November. This video will be posted soon at www.elainedimasi.
com. The website will remain online to archive past and future news. You can always click the Contact button to reach me. Even now I have a backlog of messages to respond to, but please know that I read them all. I’m happy to take calls from my friends in the press, too. Before my dog Cozy and I make our drive across the country, please feel welcome to meet up at our VERY informal going-away party. We’ll be enjoying snacks and conversation — amid a chaos of packed boxes — at my home in Ronkonkoma, Saturday, April 20 beginning at 3 p.m. See www. elainedimasi.com/events for details. Thanks again from the bottom of my heart for all you do. Elaine DiMasi Former District 1 congressional primary candidate
More to blame in Yemen bombing The blame-America-first crowd is alive and well, this time in the person of Myrna Lee Gordon and her pacifist friends in the North Country Peace Group. [TBR News Media newspapers letter March 28.] The United States, we are told, shares the blame for the deaths of 40 children in Yemen, because Saudi Arabia used a bomb manufactured by Lockheed Martin to destroy the bus in which they were riding. No criticism, of course, is directed toward the Saudis, their government or their flight crews. No one claims that the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia is an ideal partner in this troubled world. The recent assassination of Jamal Khashoggi in the Saudi embassy in Turkey was a terrible and unforgivable crime, for which no one has yet been held accountable. Fifteen of the 19 September 11 hijackers were citizens of Saudi Arabia. The Saudi record with respect to human rights is deplorable and is condoned by no American citizen. And yet, despite these extremely disturbing shortcomings, which no one seeks to minimize, our government has found it necessary to form an alliance with
Saudi Arabia, because it is in our best interest as a nation to do so. The prime reason for this decision is to reinforce the balance of power in the Middle East, in which the nation of Iran is our leading adversary. Such an alliance is not without precedent. In World War II, for example, our allies included the Soviet Union, with whom we formed a coalition because we had a common purpose in defeating Nazi Germany and the Third Reich, in spite of the atrocities committed by Joseph Stalin with the intentional starvation of millions of Ukrainian civilians. President Franklin Roosevelt was correct in 1940 when he asserted that the United States was the “arsenal of democracy.” Today, Saudi Arabia is clearly not a democracy. The Saudis are, however, our military allies, and it is in our best national interest to see to it that they, along with our greatest Middle Eastern ally, Israel, maintain the strongest possible military presence in that troubled part of the world. Pursuant to this objective, we provide substantial military assistance to both of these countries. Part of this
support includes a number of laserguided MK82 bombs, manufactured by Lockheed Martin. These weapons are designed to be delivered to their intended targets with pinpoint precision, as was clearly demonstrated during our successful actions against ISIS, the Islamist terrorist organization that has now been defeated. It is unfortunate that one of these weapons was misused by another country, with tragic results. It is also unfortunate that the pacifists among us miss no opportunity to denigrate the armed forces of the United States, along with its commander in chief, President Donald Trump (R), our fine congressional representative, Lee Zeldin (R-Shirley), and a leading member of the arsenal of democracy, the great Lockheed Martin Corp. It would be wonderful indeed if the North Country Peace Group would express some degree of appreciation on behalf of the lives of potential victims of Iran, ISIS and other terrorist groups that we have saved, but that would surely be too much to ask. George Altemose Setauket
The opinions of columnists and letter writers are their own. They do not speak for the newspaper.
APRIL 18, 2019 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • PAGE A27
Opinion
The equivalent of a literary eye roll
W
hen we want to use a pronoun to refer to a deity, we use a capital letter out of respect, so that even if we’re writing about His will, we use the capital “H” in the middle of a sentence. For some, of course, the capital letter could also represent a female deity, as in, I thought I would get the job, but, apparently, She had other D. None plans for me. That’s so wonof the above derfully deferential BY DANIEL DUNAIEF that it shows that only supreme beings merit such grammatical greatness. But what about all the people we can’t
stand, whose ideas are ruining our day or, gasp, our country? We have long used symbols or faux letters, like an asterisk (*) to take the place of a letter or words we all know, so that we might write, “What the **** was he thinking when he cut me off for a parking spot at the supermarket?” Nowadays, though, I think the politics of personal animus requires more than a few letter abbreviation or a casual dismissal. We need the equivalent of a literary eye roll, which can show a level of antipathy and disrespect befitting the lack of humanity, the utter depravity or the absolute inanity that defines someone’s actions or words that make us grind our teeth or snarl in frustration. How about a super lower-case first letter of a pronoun, to make it clear that we don’t just disagree with someone, but we find that person so frustrating, evil, despicable, irritating and/ or ridiculous that the person doesn’t merit a customary human pronoun? Perhaps we need
a symbol that does the graffiti equivalent of writing that person’s name and spray painting an “X” or a thumbs-down sign over it. Instead of referring to the person people either love, hate or love to hate, as he or him, we could use a diminutive placeholder for the personal pronoun, like *e seems poised to start another war to satisfy his ego, or *is idea so completely lacked substance that it’s hard to argue with *im when *e hasn’t read any intelligence reports. On the other side, we might see a nemesis as unworthy of a typical pronoun, arguing that *he is preventing this great country from marching forward or *er ideas seem rooted in the word “no.” But, of course, this doesn’t have to be limited to the power elite in Washington, D.C. It can refer to anyone, allowing us to alter the personal pronoun in a way that underscores our distaste for the idea, the person, or *is or *er actions.
Let’s say we’re watching a Little League game and a mother, father, grandparent or just random fan comes by and heckles an umpire. That seems so utterly absurd that, in the retelling, we might want to point out how *is words set the wrong example, or *he made me throw up in my mouth. When we’re tapping out a text message to our friends, we might share our disgust that *he had the nerve to ask me if *er choice to date my best friend was OK. We might realize that this person seemed eager to train *er dog to use my lawn as a bathroom or that *e was telling me how to live my life when *e apparently has no idea how to live *is. These super lower-case pronouns can allow us to vent in code to our family and friends. We might suggest that *e is driving me crazy. If *e actually read the email or text, *e might have no idea that the subject of this diminutive pronoun is, in fact, *im.
‘The British are coming! The British are coming!’ Not really. Listen, my children, and you shall hear Of the midnight ride of Paul Revere, On the eighteenth of April in Seventy-Five: Hardly a man is now alive Who remembers that famous day and year. So begins Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride,” about the famous midnight gallop that happened 244 years ago. The poem was first published in The Atlantic Monthly on January 1861, and I dutifully learned the first lines as a young student. As a result, every April Between 18 I think of Paul you and me Revere. Who, exactly BY LEAH S. DUNAIEF was Paul Revere? I know that he was a talented silversmith because I have seen some of his work, starting with teapots and
engravings, at antique shows. I also assumed that Revere was an ardent colonialist, hanging out with the likes of Samuel Adams and John Hancock, to whom he rode through the night in Concord to warn them of imminent capture by the British troops. That was about it until I did a little research, and here is what I found. Revere was born in Boston on either Dec. 21, 1734, or Jan. 1, 1735, depending on different calendar conversions. That still makes him 40 years old that famous night. His father was Apollos Rivoire, a French Huguenot immigrant who had come on his own at the age of 13 to the New World and eventually married Deborah Hitchborn, the Boston-born daughter of an artisan and wharf-owning family (whose last name was also spelled Hichborn and Hitchbourn). Revere, the third of 12 children, attended school from age 7 through 13 and then learned the silversmithing trade. He was married twice, having been widowed in 1773 and remarried that same year, which means he was little more than a newlywed the night of the ride. In addition to his work with silver, Revere did some dentistry to augment his income. He participated in the Boston Tea Party, during
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which Bostonians threw tea into Boston Harbor from the holds of ships anchored there to protest against parliamentary taxation without representation. The colonists were increasingly angered by severe taxes imposed on them by their mother country to help repay the considerable debt Britain had incurred from fighting the French and Indian War. Revere, as a rider for Boston’s Committee on Safety, had devised a system of signals with lanterns to communicate the whereabouts of the British soldiers. Hence that night, the message was, “One, if by land, two, if by sea.” In a sense, Revere was Boston’s first media man. With others, he was aware that the British troops might shortly be on the move because on April 16, 1775, he rode out to Concord, Massachusetts, to urge the patriots there to move their military stores to a different location. On the night of April 18, Dr. Joseph Warren told Revere and William Dawes that the king’s troops were about to embark in boats from Boston to go to Cambridge, and from there to Lexington and Concord by road that night. Revere borrowed a swift mare named Brown
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Beauty, and waited on the far bank of the Charles River for the signal from the steeple of the Old North Church. Revere and Dawes made the ride from different locations should one of them be blocked from leaving Boston. Revere, however, had the benefit of a distinguished publicist, Longfellow, who honored him accordingly. Also left out of the story was Dr. Samuel Prescott, who rode on to Concord after Revere was captured by a British patrol in Lexington. Revere soon escaped, while Dawes lost his horse and had to walk back to Lexington. But Prescott made it through to carry the warning. Revere and the others surely did not yell, “The British are coming!” despite tales to the contrary. They were, in the final analysis, all British. They probably said, “The redcoats are coming!” and they surely didn’t yell since British troops were stationed throughout the countryside. Such is the mystique of history. But “that famous day and year,” we know from ensuing battles, is true and to be celebrated this day.
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PAGE A28 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • APRIL 18, 2019
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