The Village Times Herald - August 18, 2022

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AVAILABLE FOR ROUTINE AND EMERGENCY VISITSVETERINARYCOMPREHENSIVECARE ©98720 STEVEN TEMPLETON, D.V.M. & ASSOCIATES WWW.ANIMALHEALTHWELLNESS.COM 150 Main Street East 631.751.2200Setauket Animal Health & Wellness Veterinary Office, PC Animal Health & Wellness Dr.welcomingWarmlyLabriolatooursta Vol. 47, No. 26 August 18, 2022 $1.00 SPACE RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBER ADDRESS The VILLAGE TIMES HERALD STONY BROOK • OLD FIELD • STRONG’S NECK • SETAUKET • EAST SETAUKET • SOUTH SETAUKET • POQUOTT • STONY BROOK UNIVERSITY tbrnewsmedia.com Inside Remembering O’Dwyer Founder of Stony Brook’s Virginia A. O’Dwyer Real Estate dies at 91 A5 Summer cruising Vintage car lovers filled the lawn of the Stony Brook Community Church Saturday, Aug. 13, to check out the vehicles on display during the 17th annual Vintage European Sports Car & Motorcycle Show. Photos by Rita J. Egan FocusHealthon

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BY AIDAN JOHNSON DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM

I was about 10 seconds away from spilling coffee on myself as an excuse to hide in the bathroom.Itseemed less painful than having to deal with the growing number of customers at the front door waiting for a table at a small restaurant in Port Jefferson village. However, I was their host and therefore it was my job to deal with them. It was definitely intimidating though, and it still is even now as a 19-yearold college student. I am just about to reach a year at the restaurant, but people can make me break into a cold sweat. Working as a restaurant host certainly has its fair share of fun moments, but it was becoming evident that this would not be one of them. Not one person at the front door looked happy to be standing there. This was understandable as it was a cold and miserable day. I put on a smile that managed to stretch out of my face mask and greeted them in an overly cheery tone, which didn’t seem to brighten anybody’s mood. The first couple seemed shocked when I told them the wait time. While they were unafraid to share what they thought of the long wait, they decided to put their names down anyway. However, what they thought 30 minutes was and what was actually 30 minutes differed dramatically. Every 10 minutes they would come in and ask why their table was not yet ready, until they uttered the words that no food service worker wants to hear: “May I speak to the manager?” After he came over and told them exactly what I had already said, they left in a huff, muttering to themselves as they walked out. What can be considered my most memorable encounter happened the very first day I worked there. It was a hot August day, and our small restaurant has a tendency to get rather steamy in the summertime. A family was sitting in the front, doing their best to enjoy their food, but soon found themselves disgruntled by the heat. They called me over and asked if I could turn up the air conditioning. I did my best to explain that it was, in fact, already working, but that was not what they wanted to hear. Naturally, they blamed me. The man that called me over had angrily told me that this was unacceptable due to the fact that there were women present. To this day, I wonder why it mattered that there were women present, but at least the man cared about his fellow family members. About six months into my time at the restaurant, I noticed a change in myself. I was having a hard time in college, and it was starting to impact other aspects of my life, including my job. I could feel a growing sense of annoyance, whether it be directed at my coworkers or the customers. It would only take someone asking me for ketchup for me to want to roll my eyes. However, I took a second to remember that people still deserve to enjoy their experience, that I cannot treat others the same way that I hate being treated myself. I would be doing a disservice to the restaurant if I were to paint it as a miseryfilled establishment. For one thing, I still willingly work there, and I am happy to do so. Every time I am there I have the opportunity to meet incredible people. There are plenty of patrons that can bring a genuine smile to my face just by walking in. We talk about personal details in our lives, ranging from birthdays to surgeries, and now some of them know as much information about me as my friends and family. As a matter of fact, I consider them to be a second family. My job at the Lower Port restaurant means a lot to me. I may have made mistakes while working there, but I have no regrets. While I will not stay there forever, I will always remember it fondly. Even though the hard times felt tough in the moment, at least they make for good stories.

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The Rev. Dr. Campbell, the new interim minister, said she took the scenic route to professional ministry. She, like Allen, started in the medical field where she was a nurse practitioner. She also worked as a business analyst in economics.

“But New York will always be home,” she said, adding she’s familiar with Long Island with a brother living in Valley Stream and friends on the Island. “I looked at this congregation, and it ticked off a lot of boxes for me and it looked interesting,” she said.

While the process is underway to find a permanent pastor, she said her job is to help the congregation to process their feelings about Allen leaving and be open about future changes.

The Rev. Margie Allen Allen said she decided to retire for a few reasons but mainly because she felt “the fellowship deserves somebody who is at the top of their energy.” The pastor added she felt things had changed, in general, regarding religious worship due to COVID-19. One factor is that live streaming and other technological advancements come into play. She said finding a new pastor will enable the congregation to find someone more technologically savvy.

Lutterbie said the Unitarian Universalist Association recommends two years with a transition minister. The process can take that long as a transition minister helps the congregation reflect on the past in the first year and, during the second, defines the congregation’s future directions. While defining its future in the second year, Lutterbie said, the fellowship will undertake the process of finding a new permanent minister.

Unitarian Universalists welcome interim minister as Allen retires

“I did not grow up with computers,” she said. “I’m not stupid about them, but I’m not also creative about them, because I don’t really know their maximum capacity.” She said now is a good time for change and feels a fresh, creative mind will help the congregation move forward. “I think that change can be a very energizing and engaging time for a congregation,” she said. Allen has been the minister of UUFSB since January 2013 after being the fellowship’s consulting minister for 2 1/2 years prior. Before serving in Stony Brook, she was an associate minister with the Unitarian Church in Westport, Connecticut, her first settled ministry. A native of southwest Virginia, she graduated from Bryn Mawr College after majoring in Greek language and literature. While she thought about going into ministry early on in life, she initially entered the health field working for more than two decades as a cardiac surgery intensive care nurse. She eventually studied theology at Meadville Lombard Theological School in Chicago. “I often say I went from open heart surgery to the spiritual type of open heart practice,” she said. Allen is married to the Rev. Dr. Linda Anderson, and the two moved to Stony Brook in 2010. Over time, the couple have developed an appreciation for what the area has to offer, especially Stony Brook University’s Staller Center. She said among the most memorable moments during her time with the Stony Brook congregation was when she cut down a pine tree in the yard. She made a maypole and tied ribbons on it, and the congregation conducted a weaving of the maypole for the first time. However, all of her memories aren’t good ones, as she remembers the fellowship’s Black Lives Matter sign being defaced a few years ago. She said the congregation weathered the storm, and the police department was helpful in the “I’msituation.so proud of the congregation,” she said. “I tried to work hard to show them and encourage them that this nation’s issues with racism have really risen to the top of what we need to work on.”

For the community, Allen said, “Connect, connect, connect. I just think we don’t have enough places and ways to get to know each other anymore. Go talk to your neighbors. Go greet people who moved into the neighborhood.”

“My job is to help the congregation understand themselves better,” Campbell said. “To understand and to look at some things that maybe haven’t been looked at in a while, to answer and prepare for the future, and also to help them move past the fear of change.”

BY RITA J. EGAN RITA@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM

John Lutterbie, president of the board of trustees, said, “Rev. Margie is a fabulous preacher, intertwining spirituality with social justice. She strengthened our connections to Unitarian Universalism and the wider Long Island community. Two things that we value deeply are the way she enhanced communication within the fellowship and her deep concern for those in need of assistance. In the months before she retired, she prepared us beautifully for the changes to come. We are ready for change but will miss her terribly.”

A local fellowship said goodbye to a beloved pastor this week. This past Sunday, the Rev. Margie Allen spent her last official day as pastor of Unitarian Universalist Fellowship at Stony Brook. Until a new permanent minister is found, Pastor Madelyn Campbell, who recently arrived from Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, will serve as interim minister and officially started Monday, Aug. 15.

Pastor Madelyn Campbell

The search Pastors leave congregations entirely until a new one has the full attention of the congregation, Allen said. She and Campbell will not be part of the process of finding a new pastor even though they will be on hand if anyone on the committee needs to consult them.

She added the denomination as a whole is engaged in trying to create an environment that is actively trying to reverse white supremacy. Allen said the congregation has looked closely at how they run meetings, choose volunteers and how they invite people into their fellowship. “It starts in small communities and once we learn how to do it, it spreads out,” she said. Before she informed the whole congregation that she was retiring, Allen said she was focusing on Christmas story passages where the angels bring a message of fear not and all will be well. The passages inspired the message that she would like to leave the congregation. “It may not be what you think should happen or think will happen but don’t be afraid,” she said. “Open your hearts and your minds to things that are challenging. Say ‘yes’ and move forward. That would be my wish for the congregation.”

With the Rev. Margie Allen’s retirement, the congregation of Unitarian Universalist Fellowship at Stony Brook welcomes interim minister the Rev. Dr. Madelyn Campbell. Photos from Allen and Campbell

A widow whose husband passed away in 2013, she has raised nine children and has nine grandchildren. She and her husband have been foster parents, too. Campbell said her husband was supportive of the calling she felt toward ministry. “I had the call a long time ago, in fact, before we were married. It was something that I thought, ‘Well, I’ll do that when I retire. I’ll just put it on hold,’” she said. After she received her nurse practitioner degree, she said it was her husband’s turn to go back to graduate school, but he was undecided. In 2008, she said her calling was so loud that one day she felt a church sermon was directed at her. When she told her husband how she felt, he said, “You have a call and I don’t, so you should do this.” It was then she began to study for ministry. Initially, she didn’t plan to go into parish ministry and was planning on becoming a chaplain minister. She said her internship committee encouraged her to go into parish ministry, which she is happy she did. “I love parish ministry, and specifically transitional ministry. It’s so interesting,” she said. Campbell is a certified biblical storyteller through the Academy for Biblical Storytelling, and the only Unitarian Universalist who is one. She also holds a certificate in the arts and theology from Wesley Theological Seminary in Washington, D.C., where she earned her master’s in divinity in 2014 and doctorate in 2022.She has spent eight years in transitional ministries while studying, and Campbell said she also has opportunities to put her chaplaincy skills to use, including with the Civil Air Patrol. The pastor said in the past when choosing a fellowship, she tended to look at places on the coasts, especially since she spent most of her life on the East Coast. Campbell is from New York City, and she lived in Rockland County when she was younger as well as spent 33 years of her adulthood in Arlington, Virginia.

AUGUST 18, 2022 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • PAGE A3

Health

“Part of the reason they’re easing the restrictions is that the current strain that’s circulating is fairly non aggressive, there are not a lot of hospitalizations and there is not a lot of severe illnesses,” said Dr. Philip Nizza, chief of Infectious Disease at Mather Hospital and attending infectious disease physician at St. Charles Hospital.

PAGE A4 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • AUGUST 18, 2022

The CDC advises students, staff members and workers who were exposed to a person who tested positive for COVID-19 to wear face coverings for 10 days and to get tested, instead of urging them to quarantine. At the same time, the CDC is no longer suggesting that unvaccinated students get tested regularly in order to attend school.

Meanwhile, monkeypox continues to be a threat to the county, the state and the nation, as the availability of vaccines against the virus lags the need for shots. New York State continues to have the greatest number of cases of the virus, with close to 2,300 out of about 12,000 cases in the country, according to the CDC. Most of the New York State cases are in the city. The virus has affected men who have been intimate with other men, although the virus can spread through physical contact. Nizza described monkeypox as “generally a nonfatal infection with a high presentation rate amongst the undocumented high-risk groups,” he said. “I don’t think the general population needs to rush out and get the monkeypox vaccine, unless [you] are in a high risk group. Nizza doesn’t anticipate that the virus will spread at anywhere near the rate that COVID did. “There is a vaccine available, which is much different than COVID, which caught us unaware,” he added.

As of earlier this month, 38 mosquitoes had tested positive for the West Nile virus, including samples in Setauket and Port Jefferson Station.

West Nile virus

Amid the typical questions about returning to school, such as finding friends in their classes and navigating to the right room at the right time, students on Long Island and elsewhere are preparing for the third year of the pandemic while other health care concerns loom. As the summer enters its final weeks, health officials have found mosquitoes that have the West Nile virus, monkeypox has become a national health emergency, and Rockland County and New York City have reported cases of polio. With all those health concerns, however, medical officials emphasized numerous pieces of good news that they hope will provide less of a disruption to communities, parents, teachers and students. For starters, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention last week eased some COVID-19 restrictions. In the past two years, some students had switched back and forth from in-person to remote learning after a positive test.

BY DANIEL DUNAIEF DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM

When children go back to school this year, they will no longer have to quarantine when exposed to a person who tested positive for COVID-19. File photo by Rita J. Egan

CDC relaxes COVID-19 guidelines, doctors discuss other threats

The cases Nizza has seen in the hospitals are “very mild” and he hasn’t had an intensive care unit patient with a ventilator in well over a month.

Doctors cautioned people in higher risk groups, such as those who are immunocompromised, have chronic lung disease or are significantly overweight to be vigilant about their exposure to the SARSCoV2 virus, which causes COVID-19. As of earlier this week, Suffolk County reported a 7.8% positive test rate on a seven-day average using lab-reported PCR tests, which doesn’t include the rapid tests. At the same time, the number of positive cases on a seven-day average stood at 33.8 per 100,000, according to the New York State Department of Health. “If you’re not a high-risk patient the danger zone is lower,” said Nizza.

Suffolk County Health Commissioner Dr. Gregson Pigott recommended that people minimize outdoor activities between dusk and dawn, make sure windows and doors have screens and, at places where mosquitoes are active, wear shoes and socks and long

pants and long sleeved shirts. As of late last week, Mather and St. Charles didn’t have any reported cases of West Nile virus. The people who are especially vulnerable include the elderly and anyone on drugs that suppress their immune systems. Polio Health officials in Rockland County and New York City reported two cases of people with polio. This disease, which spreads from contact with infected feces, has been largely eradicated after the widespread use of an effective vaccine. “Most people have their children vaccinated as a part of a routine series,” Nizza said. “It’s a much lower risk.”

Dr. Susan Donelan, medical director of the Healthcare Epidemiology Department at Stony Brook Medicine, suggested that the shift in the CDC guidance likely reflects the reality that non-pharmaceutical mitigation measures are of more limited use in an era when opportunities exist to receive effective vaccines, which are well tolerated, and safe therapeutics have become a tool to manage those people who are acutely affected. “The shift now appears to be focused on self-assessment of risk [for self, close family members or others who may be adversely impacted if infected] and thus individual risk mitigation,” Donelan explained in an email. Still, Nizza, among other health care providers in Suffolk County, urged people to continue to receive vaccinations and to stay up to date with their boosters. Nizza suggested that a new booster, which could provide protection against the infectious Ba.5 omicron strain that has become the dominant variant in the county and in the United States, could be a “game changer.”

Monkeypox

The virus was first detected in birds and mosquitoes in Suffolk County in 1999. People who contract the virus typically experience mild or no symptoms. In a small number of cases, people can have high fever, headaches, stiff necks and may have vision loss, numbness and even paralysis. Symptoms can last several weeks and the neurological effects can be permanent. The CDC recommends people use insect repellent to reduce the chance of getting bitten by a mosquito that harbors the virus. Additionally, reducing any standing water around the outside of the house cuts back on the opportunity for these virus-bearing insects to breed.

The doctor urged people to remain vigilant about other threats that might come this fall, particularly the flu. With masks and social distancing, the incidence of the flu declined over the last few years. As people return to work and school on a full time basis, the chance for the spread of a problematic strain rises. “The flu is always bound to rear its head in the fall and winter months,” Nizza said, as he reminded people to get their shots and to continue to wash their hands before eating. Even if people feel healthy and are in low risk groups, they can and should help others the way they might lend a hand to their neighbors after a storm. “We have to protect those who have a high risk of mortality,” Nizza said. “We need herd compassion, to protect those who can’t protect themselves.”

His mother worked until Daniel Gale Sotheby’s acquired the company. While she had received offers throughout the years, it wasn’t until Daniel Gale came along that she felt confident selling. “She waited for the right company to come along,” he said, adding that she felt the company held similar values as her business. The son said her agents were like family to her, and in all those years only two agents left — but returned to work for her. When she sold the company to Daniel Gale, he said she wanted to make the right decision for her agents. The son said his mother always balanced a career with family. “She in her own way thought that anyone could do anything if they put effort into it,” he said. “She was very dedicated, honest and fair with anyone she worked with.”

in need of our services.

We are a

serving all

—Michael O’Dwyer Virginia O’Dwyer was the founder of Virginia A. O’Dwyer Real Estate that was located across the street from the Stony Brook train station. Photos from the O’Dwyer family

and parts of adjacent communities since 1983. • Give our number to your

BY RITA J. EGAN RITA@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Virginia A. O’Dwyer died at the age of 91 on Aug. 13. She was the founder of Virginia A. O’Dwyer Real Estate, located across the street from the Stony Brook train station. Many in the Three Village area remember the company’s sign featuring the colonial pineapple logo, a symbol of hospitality and friendship. The building still stands today, filled with several agents who worked with Virginia years after Daniel Gale Sotheby’s International Realty acquired the business in 2014. Virginia was married to William O’Dwyer and a mother of five when she returned to work in the 1960s, according to her son Michael O’Dwyer. He said his mother wanted to buy his father a boat, and her first job was with the real estate company L.C. Clarke in Stony Brook. “She always had a love for real estate,” he said. “She found her niche.” It was 1970 when she started her own company.Michael O’Dwyer said when his mother applied for a loan, the bank asked where her husband was, and she said, “Excuse me.” “She was one of the first women to get a loan solely in her name in Suffolk County,” he said.Her son, who is also a real estate agent and was his mother’s business partner, said he learned a lot from her over the“Oneyears. thing I learned is that it’s not always the highest offer that gets the house,” he said. “It’s the best offer. There’s always a lot of terms and ways you can help your buyer to get their offer presented better.”

relatives or

• volunteer non-profit community-based organization of Stony Brook, Setauket, East Setauket, Port Jefferson, Port Jefferson Station friends, neighbors

Virginia O’Dwyer, prominent 3V real estate broker, dies at 91

AUGUST 18, 2022 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • PAGE A5 Volunteers are needed Consider joining the ranks of our volunteers. It takes approximately 2 hours or less of your time one day per week. We welcome donations We rely on donations and do not receive funding through any government agency. THREE VILLAGE MEALS ON WHEELS Three Village Meals On Wheels 216 Christian Ave. P.O. Box 853 Stony Brook, 3villagemealsonwheels.org3villagemow@gmail.com631-689-7070NY©100300 Are You Homebound? • Our clients are homebound, chronically ill, convalescing from surgery or illness that prevents them from preparing their own meals. • 2 meals are delivered at mid-day, Monday through Friday to the homes of our clients.

In addition to real estate, he said his mother loved antiques and collected religious art. She left the art collection to Hope House Ministries in Port Jefferson, which she always felt was a worthwhile cause. Her son said in addition to collecting antiques and art, his mother also enjoyed traveling. “She had a lot of energy,” he said. “She got energy from other people. I think she truly loved what she did. She loved her family, and she loved her business.”Virginia and her husband were married for 58 years before his passing in 2008. She was born in Mineola on Dec. 14, 1930, to Rita “Dorita Court” Haeger, an opera singer. “She was quite a character, so I think my mom got a lot of her chutzpah from her,” Michael O’Dwyer said, adding his mother was very dedicated to his grandmother. Virginia and her husband first lived in Westbury before moving to Nissequogue in 1963. About 15 or 16 years ago, the couple moved to Stony Brook village and restored a 200-year-old home, according to her son. Virginia is survived by her children Maureen (James) Riley, William Jr. (Marguerite), Daniel (Bessie) and Michael. Son John preceded her in death. She also leaves behind 15 grandchildren and 18 greatgrandchildren.AfuneralMass was held on Wednesday, Aug. 17, at Saints Philip and James R.C. Church in St. James. Interment was at Oak Hill Cemetery in Stony Brook. In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations in Virginia’s memory be made to Hope House Ministries, Attention: Development Department, P.O. Box 358, Port Jefferson, NY 11777. ‘She always had a love for real estate. She found her niche.’

■ Walmart on Middle Country Road in Centereach reported that a known male shoplifter allegedly stole two Splatterball toy guns valued at $192 and a Magma hoverboard worth $144.

■ A vehicle parked in the driveway of a residence on Joline Road in Port Jefferson Station was broken into on Aug. 8. Two wallets containing driver’s licenses were stolen.

■ A resident on University Drive in Rocky Point reported that his car was broken into on Aug. 9. Assorted tools, karate apparel, headphones and cash were stolen.

■ CVS on Middle Country Road in Centereach reported two shoplifters on Aug. 9. A man and a woman allegedly loaded a shopping cart with Tide detergent, diapers and paper towels before fleeing the store. The items were valued at approximately $300.

Port Jefferson Station

■ A resident on Jayne Blvd. in Port Jefferson Station reported that someone entered her vehicle on Aug. 8 and stole cash, a cellphone, license and credit cards.

■ Macy’s at the Smith Haven Mall in Lake Grove reported a petit larceny on Aug. 13. A man and a woman allegedly stole miscellaneous clothing items worth approximately $930.

■ Catalytic converters were stolen from a 2004 Acura TSX parked on Mitchell Drive and a 2005 Honda Accord parked in the driveway of a residence on Sound Beach Blvd. in Sound Beach on Aug. 8.

■ Walmart on Nesconset Highway in East Setauket reported two shoplifters on Aug. 11. Two women allegedly stole cleaning supplies, jewelry and clothing valued around $300.

— COMPILED BY HEIDI SUTTON

■ A 2021 Toyota Corolla was reported stolen from the driveway of a residence on Sheppard Lane in Stony Brook on Aug. 8. The owner was not sure if the car, which was valued at $15,000, had been locked.

■ Over 50 bags of used clothing were stolen from the PAL clothing donation bin in the Stop & Shop parking lot on Route 25A in Rocky Point on Aug. 2. The items were estimated to be worth $900.

Rocky Point

Setauket

■ A woman dining at Mario’s Restaurant on Route 25A in Setauket on Aug. 12 discovered that someone had removed a cellphone, wallet and phone charger from her vehicle. Sound Beach

■ Catalytic converters were stolen from a 2001 Honda Accord on Mahogany Road, a 2001 Honda Accord on Rock Hall Lane and a 2002 Honda Accord on Soundway Drive in Sound Beach on Aug. 7.

Stony Brook

Lake Grove

PAGE A6 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • AUGUST 18, 2022 Local businesses and restaurants need your support more than ever. Whether you visit stores, get delivery or shop online, keep your spending local and keep your community healthy. Newspapers are LOCAL. We are dedicated to keeping you informed, safe and connected and care about the issues that are important to our neighbors, our schools and our businesses. When you support your local newspaper, you support your community. SUPPORT LOCAL SUPPORT YOUR NEWSPAPER SUBSCRIBE TODAY America’s Newspapers is a national association supporting journalism and healthy newspapers in our local communities. Find out more at www.newspapers.org or follow us on Twitter @newspapersorg or on Facebook @americasnewspapers. Local businesses and restaurants need your support more than ever. Whether you visit stores, get delivery or shop online, keep your spending local and keep your community healthy. Newspapers are LOCAL. We are dedicated to keeping you informed, safe and connected and care about the issues that are important to our neighbors, our schools and our businesses. When you support your local newspaper, you support your community. SUPPORT LOCAL SUPPORT YOUR NEWSPAPER SUBSCRIBE TODAY America’s Newspapers is a national association supporting journalism and healthy newspapers in our local communities. Find out more at www.newspapers.org or follow us on Twitter @newspapersorg or on Facebook @americasnewspapers. MAKE CHECKS PAYABLE TO: TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA, P.O. BOX 707, SETAUKET, NY 11733 Please allow 4-6 weeks to start delivery and for any changes. EXCELLENCE. WE MAKE AN ISSUE OF IT EVERY WEEK.  The Village TIMES HERALD  The Village BEACON RECORD  The Port TIMES RECORD  The TIMES of Smithtown  The TIMES of Huntington & Northports  The TIMES of Middle Country SELECT COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER Out of County, additional $15 year. Use this form to mail your subscription or call 631–751–7744 or online at tbrnewsmedia.com 1 YEAR $5900 2 YEARS $9900 3 YEARS $11900 SELECT LENGTH OF SUBSCRIPTION StateAddressName Zip Phone Email Subscribe Now,Print,Digital&Mobile andSaveMoney Newsstandsoff ©87980 Centereach

■ Two motorcycles, a Suzuki DR200 and a KTM Duke 200, were stolen from a parking lot at Suffolk County Community College on College Road in Selden on Aug. 7.

■ A resident on Sanford Lane in Stony Brook reported that someone entered his unlocked car on Aug. 9 and stole a wallet from the center console.

Walmart on Middle Country Road in Centereach called the police on Aug. 12 to report that a man allegedly stole $563 worth of assorted groceries along with a Roku Express valued at $145. East Setauket

■ A resident on Magnolia Drive in Rocky Point reported that someone entered his vehicle on Aug. 9 and stole power tools, hand tools and backpack. Selden ■ Rite Aid on Middle Country Road in Selden reported two shoplifters on Aug. 9. A man and a woman allegedly loaded a shopping cart with paper towels, diapers and baby formula valued at approximately $300 before fleeing the store.

The following incidents have been reported by Suffolk County Police: Suffolk County Crime Stoppers offers a cash reward for information that leads to an arrest. Anyone with information about these incidents can contact Suffolk County Crime Stoppers to submit an anonymous tip by calling 1-800-220-TIPS.

■ Uncle Giuseppe’s Marketplace on Route 112 in Port Jefferson Station reported that a man allegedly filled a shopping cart with $250 worth of assorted beer and fled the store without paying on Aug. 12.

(Three Village Historical Society exhibit SPIES!) The British attack on American forces was described by Sir William Howe, British commander. “ … the British, with Colonel Donop’s corps of Chasseurs and Hessian Grenadiers, disembarked near Utrecht on Long Island without opposition, the whole being landed, with 40 pieces of cannon, in two hours and a half, under the direction of Commodore HothamLieutenant-General Clinton commanding the first division of troops. … The general learning … that the Rebels had not occupied the [Jamaica] pass, detached a battalion of Light-infantry to secure it; and advancing with his corps … possessed [Brooklyn] Heights … the attack … by the main body of the Army … was commenced by the Light-infantry and Light-Dragoons upon large bodies of the Rebels … had they been permitted to go on, it is my opinion they would have carried the redoubt; but … I would not risk the loss that might have been sustained in the assault, and ordered them back.” (Long Island as America, A Documentary History — pages 75-78) The next day British and Hessian troops pressed the attack on American lines and won the day. As detailed by Sir William Howe, “The force of the enemy … was not less, from the best account I have had, than ten thousand men … Their loss is computed at about three thousand three hundred killed, wounded, prisoners, and drowned, with five field-pieces and one howizer taken. In the evening of the 27th, the Army encamped in front of the enemy’s works. On the 28th, at night, broke ground six hundred yards from a redoubt upon their left, and on the 29th, at night, the Rebels evacuated their entrenchments … with the utmost silence … At daybreak on the 30th, their flight was discovered.”

. We soon landed in Brooklyn … marched up the ascent from the ferry, to the plain. We now began to meet the wounded men, another sight I was unacquainted with, some with broken arms, some with broken legs, and some with broken heads. The sight of these a little daunted me, and made me think of home, but the sight and thought vanished together.” During the following day, Martin noted that the battles were often fought within sight of his unengaged regiment. The next day, as he wrote, “We were soon called upon to fall in and proceed … Just at dusk, I, with one or two others of our company, went off to a barn, about half a mile distant, with intent to get some straw to lodge upon, the ground and leaves being drenched in water, and we as wet as they … When I arrived [back at the regiment] the men were all paraded to march off the ground … We were strictly enjoined not to speak, or even cough, while on the march. All orders were given from officer to officer, and communicated to the men in whispers. What such secrecy could mean we could not devine. We marched on, however, until we arrived at the ferry, where we immediately embarked on board the batteaux, and were conveyed safely to New-York.” Memoir — Joseph Plumb Martin Thus began Washington’s miraculous escape, the evacuation of troops from Long Island under the very noses of the British. It continued all night and into the next morning when a thick fog gave cover as the last of the soldiers were transported across the East River to Manhattan. Setauket’s Benjamin Tallmadge, also in his first engagement with the British, wrote in his autobiography a graphic account of the retreat after the battle. “On the evening of the 29th, by 10 o’clock the troops began to retire from the line in such a manner that no chasm was made in the lines ... General Washington took his station at the ferry, and superintended the embarkation of the troops. It was one of the most anxious, busy nights that I ever recollect, and being the third in which hardly any of us had closed our eyes in sleep, we were all greatly fatigued ... When I stepped into one of the last boats ... I left my horse tied to a post at the ferry ... The troops having now all safely reached New York, and the fog continuing as thick as ever, I began to think of my favorite horse, and requested leave to return and bring him off. Having obtained permission, I called for a crew of volunteers to go with me, and guiding the boat myself, I obtained my horse and got off some distance into the river before the enemy appeared in Brooklyn. As soon as they reached the ferry we were saluted merrily from their musketry, and finally by their field pieces; but we returned in safety.”

Remembering the 246th Anniversary of the Battle

CloseHistoryatHand

Beverly C. Tyler is a Three Village Historical Society historian and author of books available from the society at 93 North Country Road, Setauket. For more information, call 631-7513730. or visit www.tvhs.org.

AUGUST 18, 2022 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • PAGE A7 ©98710 631-751–5534 1371 Rte. 25A, E. Setauket, NY (Three Village Shopping Schwabs2ndwind@aol.comPlaza) Come on in, or order online @ www.Schwabs2ndwind.com We carry a full line of Men’s and Women’s Hokas

Martin’s account is the singular most important recollection by an ordinary soldier telling the story of the Revolutionary War from the bottom up. Martin was in New York City with his regiment in June of 1776. In August, following the British attack, he wrote, “… the regiment was ordered to LongIsland, the British having landed in force there.

Battle of Long Island engraving, 1874, from painting by Alonzo Chappel on display at Three Village Historical Society exhibit SPIES!

BY BEVERLY C. TYLER DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM

“The first major battle in the American Revolution following the Declaration of Independence was fought [beginning on August 27th] 1776 on the western part of Long Island in Brooklyn. This proved to be the largest battle of the entire war. It resulted in a devastating loss for General Washington. His army was vastly outnumbered. Many of his farmer-soldiers had no bayonets, little ammunition, and almost no training. They were fighting the most experienced, strongest and best-equipped army in the world.”

General Howe’s estimate of American killed, wounded and captured is more than double the current estimate. By not pressing the attack, General Howe allowed time for the retreating American troops to regroup and eventually escape back to Manhattan. During the attack, General Washington sent additional troops from Manhattan to Brooklyn, including 15-yearold Private Joseph Plumb Martin, a native of Connecticut who would, years later, write a detailed story of his seven years in the army.

Much of the Battle of Brooklyn was fought across what is now Green-Wood Cemetery’s grounds. For years, the Old Stone House, as pictured in Alonzo Chappel’s painting, has partnered with Green-Wood to commemorate this important historic event on their grounds. For more information, see the list of events for Battle Week Aug. 20 through Aug. 28 at: org/event/battle-week-8-20-8-28/2022-08-20/.theoldstonehouse.

of Brooklyn, Long Island

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Brookhaven Highway Department completes $1.5M Setauket

Paving Project

Brookhaven Town Highway Superintendent Daniel Losquadro (R) and Councilmember Jonathan Kornreich (D-Stony Brook) have announced the completion of a 19-road, $1.4-million paving project in a neighborhood just north of New York State Route 347 and west of Old Town Road in Setauket. Prior to paving, crews completed concrete improvements, inspecting all area drains and repairing and replacing damaged concrete curbing, sidewalk and aprons. Roadways resurfaced include: Atlas Street, Bellewood Avenue, Branch Lane, Bud Court, Cabin Lane, Campsite Lane, Deer Lane, Fireside Lane, Game Court, Game Lane, Herd Lane, Lodge Lane, Longhorn Lane, Mayflower Lane, Pak Court, Rack Lane, Stalker Lane, Tenpoint Lane, and Twig Lane. The total cost for this paving project was approximately $1.5 million. “The roadways in this neighborhood had significantly deteriorated over the years,” Losquadro said. “Many had been on our High Priority list, and I was happy to include them in this year’s paving budget. Residents, motorists, pedestrians and bicyclists can now enjoy smoother and safer roadways.” Kornreich said, “Many of the calls that we get in our office are related to safety concerns created by potholes and deteriorating roads. Thank you Superintendent Losquadro and the employees in the Highway Department who work hard to keep the roads navigable and safe for the residents who live and travel the area.” Brookhaven Town Highway Superintendent Daniel Losquadro and Councilmember Jonathan Kornreich announce recent road improvements. Photo from Town of Brookhaven andSTUARTB.YALOWITZ,

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Davis Funeral Homes CENTEREACH, PORT JEFFERSON STATION, MILLER PLACE *Funeral Service Assistants * Receptionists * Pallbearers * Drivers* *Cleaning/Maintenance * Funeral Directors * Preneed Counselors* Flexible per-diem scheduling for both the day, evening & weekend www.sci.jobs to APPLY today! These positions interact directly with client families during their time of need and are responsible for creating and maintaining a premier level of service. This is the opportunity to join our Dignity Memorial team which received the Best Places to Work Certification since 2017!©100930 Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154EMPLOYMENT/CAREERS 631-751-7663FORADVERTISERESULTS FILL000060 SCIENTIFICEXTERMINATING SERVICESlet’sallstaysafe, ecologicalprotection,ticks,ants, mosquitoes,termites, NaturalOrganicproducts631265-5252- SEEDISPLAYAD FORMOREINFORMATION. REACTPESTCONTROLINC. Wasps,YellowJacketsNesting inyourhome!Protectyourhome beforethosepeskynestsare built. 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VincentAlfano631-707-1228 RepairsFurniture/Restoration/ FINESANDING& REFINISHING WoodFloorInstallations CraigAliperti,WoodFloorsLLC. Allworkdonebyowner. 30yearsexperience. Lic.#47595-H/Insured. 631-875-5856 Floor Services/Sales SMITHPOINTFENCE. DEERPROBLEM?WECAN HELP!Wood,PVC,ChainLink, Stockade.Freeestimates. Nowoffering12monthinterest freefinancing. Commercial/Residential. 70JayneBlvd.,PJS.Lic.37690H/Ins.631-743-9797 www.smithpointfence.com. Fences WIREMAN/CABLEMANFlat TVsmounted,Phone,TVs& Computerwiringinstalled& serviced,camera&stereos, HDTVAntennas,FREETV www.davewireman.com CallDave516-433-WIRE(9473) 631-667-WIRE(9473)orText 516-353-1118 NEVERPAYFORCOVERED HOMEREPAIRSAGAIN,CompleteCareHomeWarranty,Coversallmajorsystemsandappliances.30dayriskfree.$200.00 OFF+2FREEMonths, 866-440-6501 LAMPSFIXED,$65. 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PAGE A14 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • AUGUST 18, 2022 Appear in all 6 of our papers for 1 price! Receive a Free 20 word line ad under our service column listings! Call Our Classifieds Advertising Department 631–331–1154 or 631–751–7663 Place your Display Ad in one of our Service Directories for 26 weeks & get 4 weeks FREE Bonus! Check out our Internet site: tbrnewsmedia.com & find your ads! ADVERTISE YOUR BUSINESS FROM HUNTINGTON TO WADING RIVER ©101466 ©98630 If you see www.reactpestcontrol.com631-689-1421Callthis,us. Specializing in all phases of fencing: Wood • PVC • Chain Link • Stockade Now offering 12 month interest-free financing FREECOMMERCIAL/ESTIMATESRESIDENTIALOVER 40 EXPERIENCEYEARS DEER PROBLEM? WE CAN HELP. LocationNew 70 Jayne Blvd., Port Jeff Station (631) 743-9797 ©101910 Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154HOME SERVICES ALL PURPOSE LANDSCAPING Tree ExterminatingSpraying Ticks • Mosquitoes • Caterpillars Termites • Carpenter Ants Inchworms • Gypsy Moths Ants • Bees • All Other allpurposeexterminating.com631.924.4099PestsINSURED (Lic.LICENSED#46456-H)$1000 OFF With This Coupon! ©101090 T A 101150 ©96540 534 North Country Rd., St. James, NY 11780 www.scientificext.com Find us Facebookon View Our Work ThreeVillagePowerWashing.comat 631-678-7313 Protect Your Investment & Freshen Up Your: Insured Home Gazebo Fence Outside Furniture Decks Porches Garage Doors Patio Etc.Shed ©95760 Specializing in Paver Restoration

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Editorial As citizens of a free nation, we have the right to make our voices heard at the ballot box. This coming Tuesday, Aug. 23, we will cast our votes for congressional and state senatorial primary elections. But democracy doesn’t end when we leave the polling place. In fact, that is only where it starts.Recently, TBR News Media has witnessed a flurry of popular energy within our coverage area. Look no further than Port Jefferson Station/Terryville to learn what democracy looks like while in motion. Since the inception of councilmanic districts in the Town of Brookhaven in 2002, Port Jefferson Station/Terryville has fallen within Council District 1. However, two maps on the Brookhaven Redistricting Committee’s website propose dividing that community across separate council districts. For three weeks running, the people of the united hamlet of Port Jefferson Station/ Terryville have turned out in numbers, eager to keep their community intact under a single council district. In the face of uncertainty, the Greater Comsewogue community has stood up to power, spoken out and may make a difference. While the redistricting process remains ongoing, Port Jefferson Station/Terryville has illustrated the power of a united public. Through their mobilized efforts, the people have demonstrated what democracy can and shouldPoliticiansbe. are in office to carry out the will of the people. When they defy the popular will in favor of their own agendas, it is the right and obligation of the people to correct course. Though democracy may die in darkness, it shines brightest when ordinary citizens light the way. In their moment of history, the people of Port Jefferson Station/Terryville remind us that there is no greater force in nature than a united people. Communities across Long Island should learn from this example. Through their actions, we uncover the formula for positive change in our own communities. If we all take a page out of their playbook, then there is no end to what we can achieve together. The redistricting commission and Town Board should take careful note of the wishes of We the People.

WRITE TO US … We welcome your letters. They should be no longer than 400 words and may be edited for length, libel, style and good taste. We do not publish anonymous letters. Please include a phone number and address for confirmation. Email letters to: rita@tbrnewsmedia.com or mail them to TBR News Media, P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733 threats some idiot dismissing and mocking their heartache of this law, here’s a quick lesson. clear made own agenda. This trial is proof positive that the defiance Amendment be looking Cartoon by Kyle kylehorneart.comHorne:@kylehorneart

Stefanie Werner East Setauket

First Amendment doesn’t cover everything As another legal battle involving a sycophant of the former president, Donald Trump (R), finally comes to an end, the reality of the First Amendment continues to elude many right-wingers. Conspiracy theorist Alex Jones was ordered to pay a total of $49.3 million to the parents of a Sandy Hook Elementary School student who was gunned down in the horrific massacre on Dec. 14, 2012. This is a mere pittance, as they sought $150 million in their defamation lawsuit brought in response to Jones’ despicable claim on his Austin, Texas-based broadcast and Infowars website that the mass shooting was a government hoax to force gun control. This loathsome individual spewed disgusting lies claiming that the nation’s second deadliest school shooting, in which 20 children and six adults were murdered, was faked by the government to take away Americans’ guns. This led to years of harassment and death threats against Sandy Hook families by his ignorant followers. Although this legal battle has come to an end, it is not enough. These families have not only mourned their lost loved ones for nearly 10 years, but they have had to contend with some idiot dismissing and mocking their heartache on live air. And sadly, the First Amendment crew has begun to crow about how this is the United States, and we have the freedom to say whatever we want. Um, no, no we don’t. For the naysayers, who are clearly unfamiliar with the limitations of this law, here’s a quick lesson. Speech is in no way protected when it is used to defame, incite or promote imminent violence or lawless actions. Just as individuals are not permitted to scream “fire!” in a crowded movie theater or “bomb!” on an airplane — the clear and present danger clause — they are also not free to claim that mass murders were simply made up for the government’s own agenda. This trial is proof positive that the defiance of our First Amendment restrictions will not be tolerated, and contemptible people will be held accountable. The United States continues its stagnation as a seeping cesspool of conspiracy theories, obstruction and complete disregard for democratic values and empathic compassion. Americans need to take a good hard look at ourselves and remember that the world is looking even harder. What has happened to us? When did it become permissible to denigrate the slaughters of innocents for political gain and “celebrity” status? Stop the insanity now, honor those lost and ensure the safety of those still with us.

Let liberty lead

You scream, I scream, we all scream for ice cream. Take a day off from worrying about cholesterol, triglycerides and your weight. Treat yourself, beat the heat and humidity by going to your favorite local ice cream parlor and Thursday, Aug. 25, is National Banana Split Day. It was invented by 23-yearold apprentice pharmacist David Evans Strickler at his Latrobe, Pennsylvania, store’s soda fountain in 1904. The cost for this tasty treat was 10 cents which was twice the price of any other ice cream sundae. Why not have an all ice cream dinner? Enjoy a couple of scopes of your favorite ice cream. It should be properly served in a long dish sometimes called a boat. The banana is cut in half lengthwise with three scopes of ice cream in between. Tradition has scoops of vanilla, chocolate and strawberry but many substitute other flavors. Add some hot fudge, whipped cream, crushed nuts, maraschino cherries and other toppings. It will put a smile on your face and bring back childhood memories of when you frequented Jahn’s ice cream parlor or another LarryGreatPennerNeck

PAGE A18 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • AUGUST 18, 2022

Letters to the Editor

make it better. Opinion TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA We welcome letters, photographs, comments and story ideas. Send your items to P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733 or email rita@tbrnewsmedia.com. Times Beacon Record Newspapers are published every Thursday. Subscription $59/year • 631-751-7744 www.tbrnewsmedia.com • Contents copyright 2022 EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Leah S. Dunaief GENERAL MANAGER Johness Kuisel MANAGING EDITOR Rita J. Egan EDITOR Rita J. Egan LEISURE EDITOR Heidi Sutton COPY EDITOR John Broven ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Kathleen Gobos ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES Elizabeth Bongiorno Robin Lemkin Larry MinnieStahlYancey ART AND DIRECTORPRODUCTION Beth Heller Mason PRODUCTION Janet SharonFortunaNicholson CLASSIFIEDS DIRECTOR & SUBSCRIPTIONS MANAGER Sheila Murray BUSINESS MANAGER Sandi Gross CIRCULATION MANAGER Courtney Biondo INTERNET STRATEGY DIRECTOR Rob Alfano SPECIAL PROJECTS MANAGER Kathryn Mandracchia 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021

of

D.

above

I have been at baseball games where parents are at their worst when their children don’t perform as they (the parents) would like. One parent, who coached with me when his child was around 11 years old, screamed at him for not swinging at a called third strike. The other kids on the bench looked horrified, while the child sat off by himself at the corner of the bench. The error didn’t happen between the lines. It happened on the bench when the father made a potential learning experience uncomfortable.Changeandgrowth can be painful. Parents, teachers and friends shouldn’t compound the discomfort. I definitely live in a glass house. When I evaluate my parenting skills, I recognize deficiencies and have tried to improve. I have told my children that I recognize that I made mistakes when I’ve said the wrong thing to Maybe,them.before the new academic year begins, it’d help to have a conversation with our kids about the role they would like us to play. This may turn into something of a negotiation, as interactions with children often are, but at least we can have an idea before we repeat patterns that may not work for our children, of what they’d prefer.

Better

The show went on to win an Emmy in 2016. It was my sister’s good luck to have two parents who recognized her as a fully entitled member of our family and tried to give her every advantage that existed then, which were very few. When the principal of the elementary school that I attended refused to accept her into first grade, my mother asked for the “Dick & Jane” series with which first graders were taught to read and patiently worked with my sister at home for many hours a day. Eventually, Maxine could proudly read that primer. She could also do simple arithmetic, adding and subtracting, and she was very verbal. In fact, that was the only difficult part of life with Maxine. She talked constantly and in a loud voice, as if she were on one side of a telephone conversation. Only two things could make her quiet down: music and baseball. Maxine would sit quietly in the back of the room while I took piano lessons from a teacher who came to the apartment. After he left and I got up, she would slide onto the piano stool and play the melodies of the different pieces I had gone over with the teacher. We’re talking here Bach, Czerny and Mendelsohn. She also adored music that she would hear on the radio, especially show tunes that she could sing. And sing she did, in a Jimmy Durante voice. One of her favorites was “Oklahoma!” Also, she loved to listen to baseball games on the radio and watch them played on our Sunday outings with our dad to Central Park. I don’t know if she followed the intricacies of the game, but she knew when to cheer and probably loved being part of the crowd. Megan Bomgaars loved going to school and was a cheerleader in high school. My sister also attended a school in Brooklyn that was operated by Catholic Services. A bus would pick her up, along with my mother, each day and drive them to Brooklyn. Incidentally, my mother never let her out of her sight. My parents protected Maxine from a world that could not always be kind and safe. But for Megan, a person who incidentally has Down syndrome, today society learns from her. S. DUNAIEF with Down syndrome. They help

Year AfterNewspapersWinningAward-Year

The world is a better place for those

AUGUST 18, 2022 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • PAGE A19

Have you seen images of the Greek gods on Mt. Sure,Olympus?someofthem looked like they were having fun, like Dionysus, while others were out hunting or frolicking, annoying their spouses and causing all kinds of havoc on the Earth below.But when they weren’t getting ready for an intractable war with each other or with the Titans, they seemedPerfectionbored. wasn’t all that inspirational, peaceful or enjoyable. Maybe the Greeks knew a thing or two about perfection. Maybe we shouldn’t crave or want perfection from our kids, particularly on the verge of the new academic year. Mistakes provide an opportunity to learn, while adversity also offers a chance to grow and develop resilience. Failing, striking out, falling down, biting our lips or tongue, saying the wrong thing at the wrong time, and getting a question or two wrong on a test provide opportunities to learn. Your kids and mine are bound to get something wrong. The question doesn’t need to be a reflexive, “why did you get that wrong?” The better question is: “how will you respond to that moment?”

It took me a long time to ask my daughter what she’d like me to say in response to moments of adversity. Letting our children make every decision won’t always lead to the best outcome. They might, for example, prefer to eat cookies for breakfast and cake for dinner. Giving them a chance, however, to suggest ways we can do exactly what we’re trying to accomplish, by supporting them, encouraging them, and helping them improve, may create a better and healthier dynamic for them. The pursuit of perfection is tiring and is bound to lead to disappointment. Chasing ways to be better, however, and seeing growth opportunities can be rewarding. We as parents made countless mistakes when we were our children’s age. We can’t prevent them from making mistakes. While we might also share stories about the discomfort brought on by our errors, we can’t even prevent them from doing the same stupid, inappropriate, ill-advised and awkward things we did, no matter how much we plead with them to learn from us. What made those Greek gods so compelling were the stories of their imperfections. I’m not sure they learned from their mistakes, but, as the Greek chorus suggests in tragedies, maybe we can. None the BY DANIEL DUNAIEF is preferable to perfect

youBetweenandme BY LEAH

“Born to Sparkle” is a book written, to my surprise, by a young woman with Down syndrome. The rest of the book title is “A Story About Achieving Your Dreams.” A review of the book appears in our Arts and Lifestyles section on page B23 in this issue, and it tells a heartwarming story about the author, Megan Bomgaars, who is 29 and lives in Denver. In the words of our reviewer, Melissa Arnold, the book “teaches kids that all of us are unique and have something special to share with the world, and if you dream big and work hard, you can achieveWhyanything.”amIsurprised? Because my sister, who was two years younger than I, also was born with Down syndrome, and like Megan, on Thanksgiving Day but 50 years earlier in 1942. While she was clever and wonderful in many ways, Maxine could never have written a book, in part because she would never have been imagined to do so. What a difference that half-century makes. There is a broad spectrum of Down diagnoses, and Maxine was pronounced “profoundly retarded,” which surely limited expectations for her life. While Megan’s motto is, “Don’t Limit Me!”, and she has become a motivational speaker and the owner of a business, the professionals who examined my sister Maxine told my parents to institutionalize her “because she won’t live very long anyway with that condition.” She lived to be 65. It was my sister’s bad luck to be born five decades earlier, when mental retardation was considered a stigma for a family, and the response to such a birth was to hide the innocent person. Megan Bomgaars, by comparison, shared her life’s story on television with six others in the A&E docuseries “Born This Way.”

“There are people who truly believe that all politicians get into office and then they serve themselves or they serve their parties, and I don’t want that to continue,” she said. “I want all elected officials to stand up and make decisions and show their allegiance to their constituents and not their party.”

Romaine also discussed the criteria that he will use to evaluate the proposed maps, saying that he favors a map that offers fewer “splits” of communities of interest. “As supervisor, I’m going to tell you, I’m going to be looking for a map with less splits,” he said. “Your comments were very helpful. We’re looking for less splits.” Referring to his colleagues on the Town Board, the supervisor added, “I think they’ll sit down and they’ll take all the comments that you said … and they will consider all of them.”

TOWN

For the second consecutive week, the Port Jeffersonsolidarity,displaycommunityStation/Terryvillegaveastrongofcommunitythistime during a public meeting at Brookhaven Town Hall on Thursday, Aug. 11. Joined by neighbors from around the township, residents spoke out against two proposed maps for the redistricting of Brookhaven Town Council. If approved, the proposed maps would make significant changes to the existing boundaries of Council Districts 1 and 2, severing large chunks of Port Jefferson Station from Terryville and cutting Mount Sinai in half. Public comments Logan Mazer, a Coram resident, has proposed an alternative to the maps on the redistricting committee’s website. He told the Town Board that the only two districts requiring change are Districts 2 and 6 — the former being underpopulated and the latter being overpopulated. Because the two districts share a border, Mazer proposed the simple transfer of territory from District 6 into District 2 to correct the population imbalance. The map of least change “doesn’t really change the political alignment … it doesn’t produce any gerrymandered districts and it protects communities of interest that are being carved up in these new maps for no discernable reason,” Mazer said. Throughout the evening, Mazer’s map received favorable reactions from those in attendance. Among the supporters of the Mazer map is Lou Antoniello, a member of the Port Jefferson Station/Terryville Civic Association, who considered the draft proposal a way to transfer the burden of costs and maintenance into District 1. “They showed that there was a portion of Mount Sinai — a beautiful section down by Cedar Beach and the surrounding community — which is a high-maintenance area for Mount Sinai that would be swapped out for the relatively self-sufficient area of Terryville,” he said. “I am here tonight to tell you that I don’t think that map is a map that should be voted on.”

Paul Sagliocca, also a member of PJSTCA, shared the historic neglect of PJS/Terryville. He said that recently, the community has begun to counteract that narrative, introducing a Shakespeare in the Park event at the Chamber Train Car Park and building momentum for positive changes to the area. Sagliocca asked that the board not impede the development of the area by dividing community members across political boundaries. “It is on the up — we do not need to be divided,” he said. “I would really wish that when it comes time to vote, that Port Jeff Station/Terryville stays in one solid community within District 1.”

Francis Gibbons, a Port Jefferson Station resident and member of the PJSTCA, said the redistricting process has diminished the public’s faith in its institutions. “Why are we continuing with this farce?” he asked. “I believe disenfranchisement brings with it a lack of political faith in our system. When you have a lack of faith, after time it brings civilCommunitywar.” members were joined by allies from the village of Port Jefferson.

Also attending was Port Jeff Village trustee Rebecca Kassay. Speaking on her own behalf, Kassay told the Town Board that plans to divide Port Jefferson Station/ Terryville would impair the village’s own efforts to revitalize its uptown areas. Citing her history of coordinating with the PJS/T chamber of commerce and the civic association, the village trustee said, “To see the work slowed at all by political lines, by having these two communities needing to go to two different councilmembers, that would surely slow down the work and the progress of the area at large.” Kassay also described how a breakdown in procedure can alienate ordinary citizens from the political process, leading to cynicism and distrust of their elected officials.

Supervisor’s reply Following the public comments, Brookhaven Town Supervisor Ed Romaine (R) responded to those in attendance. He thanked the residents for coming out and for expressing their opinions. The supervisor affirmed his trust in the Town Board to listen carefully to constituent concerns.

The following meeting of the Brookhaven Redistricting Committee was held Tuesday, Aug. 16, at Comsewogue Public Library. For more on this meeting, visit tbrnewsmedia.com.

PAGE A20 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • AUGUST 18, 2022 BY RAYMOND JANIS EDITOR1@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM

Joan Nickeson, a Terryville resident and community liaison for the Port Jefferson Station/Terryville Chamber of Commerce, discussed the phenomenon of cracking, a practice in political redistricting that dilutes the voting power of an area by distributing its population across districts. “It is unconscionable that you would crack our high school from the rest of its district, and crack neighbor from neighbor, and actually cleave members of the chamber of commerce from the chamber of Local residents petition Brookhaven Town Council over redistricting concerns

Bruce Miller, a former trustee of Port Jefferson Village, criticized the process. He considered the multiple cancellations of public hearings in CD1 as a way to silence theMillerpublic.also suggested that the proposed maps fail to advance the interests of the town. “Just leaving Mount Sinai and Port Jefferson Station and Terryville the way they are seems to be a more appropriate strategy,” he said. “All this straining, all these machinations, result in small gains but are a bad look that angers the public needlessly.”

Photo from Brookhaven Town website commerce office,” she said. Addressing the board, she added, “I want you to remember to keep [the] 11776 [zip code] together when you go to vote.”

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