Serving Roslyn, East Hills, Roslyn Estates, Roslyn Harbor, Roslyn Heights, Greenvale, Old Westbury and North Hills
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Friday, December 25, 2020
Vol. 8, No. 52
HEALTH, WELLNESS AND BEAUTY PAGES 19-22
STATE TO AID IN HACKING PROBE
NORTHWELL’S DOWLING TELLS LESSONS OF COVID-19
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Not enough funds for us: Local officials
S N O W - S LY N
Complaints over lack of money for municipalities, states in package BY R OB E RT PE L A E Z Local officials throughout Nassau County, Long Island and New York voiced approval for the passage of a second coronavirus stimulus package totaling $900 billion but were displeased with the lack of federal funding for state governments and local municipalities. On Monday night, Congress approved the nation’s second stimulus package to aid people in the ongoing fight against the coronavirus pandemic. The bill, which passed in the House 359-53 and in the Senate 92-6, was sent to President Donald Trump. On Tuesday night, Trump called the measure a disgrace and pressed Congress to increase direct payments to individuals. The measure calls for direct payments of $600 to adults and children, payments of $300 per week for workers receiving unemployment benefits through March 14 and $20 billion in Economic In-
jury Disaster Grants. But Trump said in a video that the amount of direct payments should be increased to $2,000 per person from “the ridiculously low $600,” while stopping short of an explicit veto threat. Before Trump made his remarks, U.S. Rep. Kathleen Rice (D-Garden City) said, “This agreement is far from perfect, but in this case, something is absolutely better than nothing and I am pleased we have finally passed new relief for our constituents and avoided a government shutdown after months of inaction by the Senate.” U.S. Rep. Tom Suozzi (D-Glen Cove), along with Rice, has been vocal about the need for bipartisan work to provide federal aid since the beginning of the pandemic. Suozzi is a member of the Problem Solvers’ Caucus, a group composed of members of Congress from both sides of the political aisle. Suozzi touted his and his Continued on Page 27
PHOTO BY DONNA LIEBOWITZ
Downtown Roslyn following a dusting of snow from Winter Storm Gail last week.
Where are U.K. travel restrictions?: Cuomo BY R OB E RT PELAEZ
United Kingdom after reports of a new coronavirus variant that health experts have said Gov. Andrew Cuomo criti- could potentially spread faster cized the federal government than others. Cuomo said six flights aron Sunday for not imposing travel restrictions from the rive at Kennedy International
Airport from the United Kingdom every day. With 120 countries already having imposed travel restrictions from the United Kingdom, Cuomo expressed displeasure with the Continued on Page 28
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The Roslyn Times, Friday, December 25, 2020
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Sillitti prepares for first term Will take over for retiring D’Urso BY R O S E W E L D ON
PHOTO COURTESY OF THE ROSLYN LANDMARK SOCIETY
The John Mackay III House at 2A Melby Lane in East Hills. The East Hills Planning Board rejected plans to demolish it at a meeting last week.
Board strikes down Mackay demolition Historic house to continue standing in East Hills BY R O S E W E L D ON After months of back and forth, the Village of East Hills Planning Board rejected an application to demolish buildings on and subdivide property housing a 91-year-old historical house at its meeting last week. The Mackay estate at 2A Melby Lane is owned by Steven and Wendy Shenfeld, who in 2017 sought to demolish the estate’s main house and split the property in half as part of a fourhouse subdivision. “The board concludes that the applicant, perhaps, has not shown that their proposed plan mitigates the significant impact attending to the demolition of the Mackay House,” Planning
Board President Steve Kafka said at the meeting. The board also concluded that there will be no significant environmental impact for a three-lot subdivision, a move considered an alternate plan by the applicants. Kafka added that if the applicants wanted to pursue it further, it would have to be brought to the village’s Board of Zoning Appeals. Made of stone and constructed in 1929, the house was originally built for John Mackay III, grandson of John Mackay, who was among the discoverers of the Comstock silver mines in the 1870s. His father was Clarence Mackay, owner of the 648acre Harbor Hill estate, which made up much of East Hills from
1902 to the 1940s. Harbor Hill was left to the youngest Mackay upon his father’s death in 1938, and the estate gradually fell into disrepair due to neglect and vandalism, according to the Roslyn Landmark Society. The property’s main mansion was demolished in 1947, and parts of the area were sold to real estate developers in the late 1950s and 1960s. Now the only remains of the Harbor Hill estate are the gate lodge, a water tower, a dairyman’s cottage, two pink marble copies of the classic Marley Horses statues, and the Melby Lane house. The Village of East Hills ordered an environmental imContinued on Page 28
In the past, state Assemblywoman-elect Gina Sillitti (D-Manorhaven) would be the person who photographed elected officials as they made public appearances or attended local events. On Dec. 12, at the Lakeville Estates Civic Association’s holiday car parade, it still felt right for her to do it. Sporting a fascinator with a wrapped present on her head, Sillitti snapped pictures of the area’s representatives, who donned suits and dresses. “I ended up taking pictures for some of the elected officials not even thinking about it,” Sillitti said in a phone interview. “It’s like, hey, I can take that photo. And at one point somebody was like, ‘Gina, would you like to come in the photo?’ I was just like, ‘Oh, that’s right!'” Come January, Sillitti will begin her first term as the state Assembly’s representative for the 16th District, which encompasses Great Neck, Port Washington, Manhasset, Roslyn Heights, North Hills, Flower Hill, Lake Success, Baxter Estates,
Manorhaven and Sands Point. It’s the latest event on a road that began last February, when Sillitti, a 20-year veteran of government service who had held jobs in the Nassau County Legislature, the Town of North Hempstead and at the Nassau County Board of Elections, was announced as the Democratic candidate for the seat, following two-term Assemblyman Anthony D’Urso’s (D-Port Washington) January announcement that he would be retiring. The COVID-19 pandemic did throw a wrench into the campaign’s initial plans, Sillitti said. “I had this whole grand plan of meeting everyone, knocking on all the doors and everybody knowing my face,” Sillitti said. “It was an interesting campaign season.” Nevertheless, she continued, hosting Zoom get-togethers and informational sessions for voters. Late in November, Sillitti was announced as the victor of her race, with over 35,000 votes against Republican candidate Ragini Srivastava’s 30,263. D’Urso himself was “very Continued on Page 27
PHOTO COURTESY OF GINA SILLITTI
State Assemblywoman-elect Gina Sillitti (D-Manorhaven) reacts to entering the state Assembly chamber for the first time as an elected official.
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ROSLYN TIMES (USPS#12080) is published weekly by Blank Slate Media LLC, 25 Red Ground Road, Roslyn Heights, NY, 11577, (516) 307-1045. The entire contents of this publication are copyright 2020. All rights reserved. The newspaper will not be liable for errors appearing in any advertising beyond the cost of the space occupied by the error. Periodicals Postage is paid at Williston Park, NY, POSTMASTER. Send address changes to the Roslyn Times, C/O Blank Slate Media LLC, 25 Red Ground Road, Roslyn Heights, NY, 11577.
The Roslyn Times, Friday, December 25, 2020
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Over 60 students test positive in 1 week 58 confirmed cases in N. Shore district, 36 in Roslyn schools, 43 in Mineola schools BY R OB E RT PELAEZ The number of students who have tested positive for the coronavirus in public schools across the North Shore has risen to more than 470 since the beginning of the pandemic, according to state Health Department figures. As of Tuesday, 472 students on the North Shore had tested positive since the beginning of the school year. The increase of 66 confirmed student cases is the third most over a one-week period since the school year began, according to state data. Public school districts that were analyzed included the Port Washington school district, Roslyn school district, Sewanhaka Central High School District, Mineola school district, East CHART BY ROBERT PELAEZ Williston school district, Floral Park-Bellerose school district, More than 470 students throughout North Shore public school districts had tested positive for the coronavirus as of Manhasset school district, New Hyde Park-Garden City Park Wednesday. school district, Herricks school The three school districts Sewanhaka, with 69. Hebrew Academy High School (2), all located on the Great district, North Shore school dis- with the most cases among stuAn additional 47 cases were (14), Silverstein Hebrew Acad- Neck peninsula. trict and Great Neck school dis- dents are Great Neck, with 77, found in North Shore Hebrew emy (6), and North Shore HeChaminade High School in trict. Port Washington, with 73, and Academy (25), North Shore brew Academy Middle School Continued on Page 36
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The Roslyn Times, Friday, December 25, 2020
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State offers support in hacking Anti-Semitic imagery on N. Shore Hebrew Academy website ‘repulsive’: Cuomo BY R OB E RT PELAEZ
Gov. Andrew Cuomo directed the state’s Division of Human Rights to provide support to the North Shore Hebrew Academy High School in Great Neck after hackers posted anti-Semitic images and Nazi propaganda on the school’s website last week. “This anti-Semitic attack is simply despicable, and the fact it came as the school community celebrated Hanukkah makes it even more repulsive,” Cuomo said Friday. “As we work with our partners on the local and national level to hold the perpetrators accountable, New York State will deploy resources to help the staff, parents, and students at North Shore Hebrew Academy in the aftermath of this senseless PHOTO COURTESY OF GOOGLE MAPS act.” Pictures and videos from StopAntisemitism.org, a non- Gov. Andrew Cuomo has directed a state agency to support an investigation into hackers posting anti-Semitic images and profit whose mission holds “an- Nazi propaganda on the North Shore Hebrew Academy website last week. tisemites accountable” and creates “consequences for bigoted Nazi soldiers marching in the mitic messages with slurs above were more pictures of Nazi sol- Camp.” a notification that the website diers holding up swastikas and The tab also featured a proactions” were posted on Dec. background. Screenshots of the website was under construction. In the referring to the school as the file on Adolf Hitler and outlined 14. The video features the home page of the school’s website with were then posted with anti-Se- website’s “About Us” tab, there “North Shore Concentration Continued on Page 27
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The Roslyn Times, Friday, December 25, 2020
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Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 25, 2020
Dowling warns against vaccine delays
Northwell CEO says ‘herd immunity’ may take six to nine months during Blank Slate forum BY R O S E W E L D ON COVID-19 vaccines might be available to the general public as late as July, Northwell Health CEO and President Michael Dowling said at a Blank Slate Media forum held via Zoom last Thursday. “By the time we [finish vaccinating] all health care workers and nursing homes, and other essential workers, we’re probably into February, March, April before we get to the general public,” Dowling said. He clarified later in the forum that “high risk” individuals and essential workers like police officers, firefighters and those working in transportation, among others, were scheduled to receive the vaccine around that time. “Before the so-called general public gets the vaccine it will probably be June, July,” Dowling said. He added that the crisis was being prolonged in the United States due to “so many people who refuse to wear a mask.” “The mask is the best treatment we have today, except for the vaccine itself,” Dowling said. “It is the single best treatment to begin to shut down and slow down the ex-
PHOTO BY JANELLE CLAUSEN
Northwell Health CEO and President Michael Dowling said at a Blank Slate Media forum that he expects the COVID-19 vaccine may be available to the general public as late as July 2021. pansion of COVID.” Both FDA-approved vaccines against the virus, the Pfizer vaccine, which Port Washington nurse Sandra Lindsay, director of critical care nursing at Long Island Jew-
Exp. 1/31/21
ish Medical Center in New Hyde Park, became the first American to receive last week, and the Moderna vaccine, will require two separate inoculations, Dowling said, though a one-dose vaccine currently in the
works from Johnson and Johnson “holds an awful lot of promise.” “If it gets approved, which we believe so, and it is made available, that will be the vaccine that we will be using, because it won’t require you to come back to get a second dose,” Dowling said. “You get it once, and you’re finished. But this whole process now is going to take, [and while] it’s good news, it’s fantastic news, it’s going to take many months to roll out.” The medical community is still trying to come to terms with how long a vaccine dose will be effective, he says. “There is no definitive agreement on how long the immunity is, but most people, including the people I talked to ... I’m not a clinician myself as you know, but I spend my life around them,” Dowling said, “most people will tell you that it is at least a year, could be two years, but it is quite conceivable that [the vaccine] may be required.” Another concern in vaccine rollout, he said, is that “an awful lot of people say that they’re unwilling about possibly taking the vaccine.” “Most polls said that 50 percent of the public are kind of wait and
see type of thing,” Dowling said. “My view of that is, the more people get vaccinated, the more we’re able to promote it we’ll be doing major communication campaigns over the next number of weeks and months to get to convince other people to take the vaccine.” Seventy percent of Americans will have to receive the vaccine before herd immunity can be considered, Dowling said. He added that the question of large gatherings is often reviewed by Northwell’s clinical leadership and by national coronavirus task force member Dr. Anthony Fauci. “Convincing people to get vaccinated would be the biggest task, and I think if we have to delay sports events and other large gatherings for a couple of more months, I think that’s just the choice we will have to make,” Dowling said. “I personally think you’ll be at the end of the summer before we can actually feel a little bit free, be a bit more flexible in opening up for large gatherings, sports events, et cetera. I think there can always be exceptions on this depending on the circumstance and the flexContinued on Page 34
Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 25, 2020
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No purchase necessary. Must be 18 years of age or older. Open to Not-for-Profit (501c3) organizations and residents in Queens and Nassau counties. Employees of Maspeth Federal Savings Bank and their immediate family members are not eligible. The winning organizations will be selected by an internal Maspeth Federal Savings Bank panel, and will be announced on January 8, 2021, on our website and social media. Winners will be contacted to discuss how to claim their award. Each winning organization will recommend two (2) charities in their communities that would benefit from a $500 grant to be funded by Maspeth Federal Savings Bank. Odds of winning dependent upon number of submissions received. The decision by the Maspeth Federal Savings Bank panel is final. No account opening or purchase is required to participate in the award donations. A 1099-Misc may be issued at year end; all applicable taxes and gratuities are the responsibility of the recipient. Offer may be withdrawn or amended without prior notice.
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Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 25, 2020
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The Roslyn Times, Friday, December 25, 2020
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A treatment for myopia in close view Garden City Park optometrist introduces novel method to treat nearsightedness BY R OB E RT PELAEZ
Dr. Alice Mann, an optometrist at Focal Point Optical in Garden City Park, is offering a solution for children who have myopia that had never been available before in her 32 years of serving the community. Myopia, more commonly known as nearsightedness, is the inability to see objects clearly at a distance. Myopia typically occurs during childhood when the eyeballs themselves are growing, which means the distance between the front of the eye and the retina in the back of the eye becomes longer. Myopia leads to blurry vision due to the light rays focusing at a point in front of the retina rather than directly on the surface. The condition can worsen over time or if the appropriate interventions are delayed. Mann said the number of people with myopia has risen from 25 percent in 1970 to 42 percent in 2020. Myopia, Mann said, can lead to an increased risk of retinal detachment, glau-
PHOTO COURTESY OF ALICE MANN
Dr. Alice Mann of Focal Point Optical is certified to fit children for contact lenses that can help decrease nearsightedness.
coma, myopic maculopathy, macular degeneration and early onset cataracts. To combat this, Focal Point Optical is offering specialized contact lenses, called MiSight soft lenses, for children who suffer from myopia. Mann said the lens is targeted to work for children ages 8 to 14. “The lens is a therapeutic type of soft contact lens, with a visual zone in the center and a treatment zone in the periphery,” Mann said. “It is the first and only FDA approved lens for myopia control.” Mann said she became certified to use the MiSight lenses during the coronavirus pandemic with a series of online courses. Focal Point started fitting them toward the end of the summer, Mann said. “We’re trying to make people more aware of this,” she said. “It’s very, very new and Coopervision, the company who created the lenses, has a consumer awareness program about the existence of these lenses. Until now, no one really knew how to treat this.”
Mann said a study was conducted on the effectiveness of the lens on children. According to Mann, the study showed that children who wore the lens have a 59 percent reduction in myopia compared with a placebo group. Studies also showed that a child with one parent who has myopia is 50 percent more likely to have it than not, 75 percent more if both parents have myopia, and still 25 percent at risk to get it if neither parent has it, Mann said. “I’m very encouraged by the three-year study,” Mann said. “It has showed that even children that switched from one lens to this one have good results. The lens itself is very safe, and there have been virtually no issues in terms of infections or irritations. It can only be a benefit to someone. It is a life-changing treatment to people who are bound to become nearsighted.” Mann said she normally wouldn’t feel fully confident prescribing contact lenses for 8-year-olds, but the results from Continued on Page 28
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10 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 25, 2020
NIFA OKs Nassau’s proposed budget Authority issues warning before approving $3.3B plan using state refinancing help BY R OB E RT PE L A E Z The Nassau Interim Finance Authority approved Nassau County’s $3.3 billion budget for 2021 but included a resolution that requires the county to develop a plan to combat deficits that are projected to “increase significantly” over the next four years due to the coronavirus pandemic. Authority officials met virtually last Thursday to discuss and ultimately approve the budget 4-1, with board member Paul Annunziato voting “no.” “This plan right now isn’t a plan. It lacks any initiatives to address those out-years,” Annunziato said. “In short, my conclusion of the county’s budget, it is nothing more than a plan that says, let’s delay and hope. Let’s hope sales tax skyrocket much greater than what we’ve projected.” The Legislature’s Republican majority previously approved a deal to allow the finance authority to refinance county debt as the county struggles with the ripple effects of the coronavirus pandemic. The county’s proposed $3.3 billion budget for 2021 calls for NIFA, which has overseen the county’s finances for the past two decades, to refinance $473 million in county debt, according to a county news release. Earlier in the year, a plan from Nassau County Executive Laura Curran, a Democrat, featured NIFA restructuring $435 million in debt over 30 years. Majority officials in the County Legislature said Curran agreed to reduce the bonds from 30 years to 15. The new agreement, according to the news release, will save taxpayers over $883 million over 15 years.
SCREENSHOT BY ROBERT PELAEZ
Members of the Nassau Interim Finance Authority’s Board of Directors approve the proposed $3.3 billion budget for Nassau County in 2021 on Thursday night. “This deal negotiated by the Majority will save Nassau taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars, and return money back to small-business owners and residents, where it belongs,“ Nassau County Presiding Officer Richard Nicolello (R-New Hyde Park) said. “The Majority will continue to stand up for Nassau residents, and fight to lower taxes for working-class families.” The deal also featured the creation of a “special revenue fund” to ensure that county operations will continue and will assist in paying back residents and businesses owed
tax refunds. The fund will consist of surplus monies in any line of the 2021 budget, according to officials. “That’s good because if sales tax does, in fact, exceed what had been proposed in the adopted budget, it will lessen the need for the county to seek bond authorization and funding authorization as a funding source to pay down the backlog which sits currently at approximately 231 million as of Dec. 31, 2019,” NIFA Executive Director Evan Cohen said Thursday. Despite the plan, which is projected to
save the county $435 million in the 2020, 2021 and 2022 fiscal years combined, the county still faces debt that is projected to balloon, according to October projections from the finance authority. The projections show Nassau County facing a $111.2 million deficit in 2021, $137.3 million in 2022, $285.7 million in 2023, and $359.7 million in 2024. “This is a budget that is being balanced based on the restructuring of existing NIFA and county debt that will provide more than $400 million in financial relief,” NIFA Chairman Adam Barsky said in a statement on Thursday. “By doing this we were able to avoid a massive property tax increase and cuts to critical services for those most in need. This remains a short-term extraordinary measure to address the unprecedented impact of the global pandemic. There still exists a longer-term structural imbalance that must be tackled sooner rather than later.” Cohen emphasized the point that despite the approval of this deal, the county still faces potential financial roadblocks, especially due to the unknown length and lingering effects of the coronavirus pandemic. “No one should be under the impression that the county is in smooth sailing from this point forward,” Cohen said. “In fact, the out-years present formidable fiscal headwinds, and the county should be urged to begin meaningful efforts to address the known mismatch in revenues and expenditures.” Efforts to reach county officials for further comment on the approval were unavailing.
Cohen’s gets highest rating in nursing BY R O S E W E L D ON
PHOTO COURTESY OF NORTHWELL HEALTH
Socially distanced, nurses and staff at Cohen Children’s Medical Center celebrate achieving Magnet status, the industry’s “gold medal” for nursing excellence.
For the second time in four years, Cohen Children’s Medical Center in New Hyde Park has achieved Magnet status, the gold standard in nursing excellence from the American Nurses Credentialing Center, making it the only children’s hospital in New York state to hold the designation. The Magnet recognition reflects the highest standards of nursing professionalism, collaboration, teamwork and delivery of superior patient care, distinguishing the 202-bed Cohen Children’s Medical Center as a premier destination for pediatric care in the region. Magnet status has been awarded to about 9 percent of hospitals worldwide, or approximately 547 hospitals. It is challenging for most hospitals to apply for Magnet recognition due to the ANCC’s demanding educational requirements of the chief nursing officer and other nurse leaders. For organizations that do meet the criteria, it is then necessary for them to benchmark themselves against other hospitals nationally and outperform those benchmarks.
The majority of these benchmarks are in nursing-related clinical indicators (such as falls, pressure ulcers, central line infections, and catheter-associated infections) and in nursing-related patient satisfaction scores (such as courtesy of nurses, the ability of staff to work as a team and sensitivity to personal needs or requests). Following that, a site visit from the ANCC occurs to determine whether the facility meets the stringent Magnet requirements. Cohen is one of eight Northwell Health hospitals to earn Magnet status. “Earning Magnet recognition the first time in 2016 was a milestone in the history of the hospital, validating the exemplary professionalism, dedication and compassion our nurses show every day in caring for children and their families,” said Dr. Charles Schleien, senior vice president and chair of pediatrics at Northwell Health, in a statement. “To achieve Magnet status a second time confirms the unwavering commitment of our nurses and nursing leadership, especially in the face of treating patients during a pandemic. Our nurses answered the Continued on Page 38
Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 25, 2020
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12 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 25, 2020
The Roslyn Times, Friday, December 25, 2020
RT
COMMUNITY NEWS
13
Honoring Wheatley’s Thanks, snowflakes best phys ed students at Herricks Middle The East Williston School District congratulated Wheatley seniors, Julianna Anteri and Steve Valles Quiroz, on their Outstanding Physical Education Student Award from the Nassau Zone of New York State Association for Health, Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance (NYS AHPERD)! On Monday, Dec. 7, Julianna and Steve were honored, during a virtual ceremony, along with other outstanding students from each 2021 graduating class from across Nassau County who met the required Physical Education Outstanding Student criteria for achievement. Great job Julianna and Steve!
Herricks Middle School acknowledged November’s theme of gratitude with a project called Full of FLAKES and Full of Thanks. Students and staff members took time to focus on what they are grateful for about the middle school, in-person or virtually, and their collective reflections resulted in a work of art. Colored popsicle sticks were provided to in-person and remote students as well as
Wheatley award winner Steve Valles Quiroz.
73 new members for National Honor Society The Wheatley School announced that, earlier this month, 73 students were inducted into Wheatley’s Chapter of the National Honor Society. Students inducted into the National Honor Society have met the requirements of the organization’s four pillars: Scholarship, Leadership, Character and Service. Although a live inperson ceremony could not be held, due to current COVID-19 restrictions, Wheatley’s National Honor Society co-advisors, Jason Craven and Caterina Fox, assembled a wonderful video induction. As part of this recorded induction ceremony, several of the current National Honor Society officers spoke about each pillar of the society. Arielle Rokhsar spoke about Scholarship, Aarushi Jain spoke about Leadership, Astha Sing spoke about Character and Anika Mittle spoke about Service. Manav Bansal served as the host of the evening. The Keynote Address was given by Ms. Tasneem Meghji, who has been active in the community and currently serves as a East Williston School District Board Trustee. Thank you to Mr.
staff members, and all were encouraged to write down something specific that they feel thankful for. They shared favorite parts of the school day, past experiences and much more. The completed sticks were assembled into snowflake shapes, and the finished products were displayed in one of the building’s hallways in a united showcase of gratitude and school pride.
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14 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 25, 2020
Opinion
OUR VIEWS
The virus next time and now
O
ne more startling fact about the coronavirus pandemic is that Northwell Health actually began preparing for it 20 years ago, according to Michael Dowling, the president and CEO of the health system. The hospital network, now the largest in New York state with 23 hospitals, 800 outpatient facilities and 72,000 employees, actually wasn’t preparing for COVID-19 20 years ago – just large-scale emergencies. In this case, the attack on the World Trade Center on 9/11. FBI special agent John O’Neil, then the head of a joint terrorism task force, was sounding the alarm about the lack of preparation by health systems for a large-scale attack in this country. In one presentation a year before 9/11, O’Neil flashed the picture of Osama bin Laden on a large screen and announced that the al Qaeda leader planned to attack the United States, Dowling recalled. O’Neil, who would leave the FBI and become head of security for the World Trade Center, died in the attack on 9/11. Northwell, in the meantime, had begun to build an emergency preparedness infrastructure headquartered in Great Neck. Perhaps more stunning than Northwell’s prescience in preparing for a coronavirus pandemic is the failure of this country to follow the lessons Northwell and other health providers learned in responding to the first wave of the pandemic that struck the United States in February. Dowling, who not only led Northwell in tackling a health threat that no one had seen in 100 years but helped Gov. Andrew
Cuomo guide New York state’s response, actually co-authored a book on it, “Leading Through a Pandemic.” In the book and an appearance at a Blank Slate Media town hall last Thursday, Dowling discussed the response of Northwell and other New York health care providers to COVID-19 and what was needed to rein in this pandemic. And, frighteningly, even more deadly viruses predicted for the future. Dowling’s recommendations included building an emergency management culture, committing to regulatory flexibility, addressing inequities in access to health care based on race and income, educating the public, protecting the physical and emotional health of the staff, increasing the focus on safety measures in congregate settings and reversing “America’s cultural disrespect for science.” The recommendations were based on Dowling’s experience in grappling with a coronavirus in its earliest days that health professionals had never experienced before with its ease of spread and its lethality. Doctors, nurses and other health professionals with years of experience would be confronted by a level of death and suffering they had not seen in hospitals before with room after room filled with COVID-19 patients silent but for the sound of ventilators pumping. The hospital staff did so despite fears for their own lives and those of their families. So far, the Northwell Health system has treated 101,000 COVID-19 patients, including 16,000 who were hospitalized, more than any other hospital system in the country.
BLANK SLATE MEDIA LLC
Editorial Cartoon
Thanks to an emergency order signed by Cuomo, Northwell and other health systems drastically altered the ways hospitals operate to permit the quick expansion of beds, moving patients from overcrowded hospitals to less crowded hospitals within a health network and outside a health network. The hospitals also adopted social distancing, the wearing of protective gear and better treatment for patients, who improved.A shutdown of the state reduced the spread. Eventually, in New York and other surrounding states, the rate of infections and death dropped. When Dowling’s book went to press in July, 4.5 million people in the countryhad been infected and 154,000 people had died. But as of Tuesday, the number of people infected exceeded 18 million and more than 320,000 had died. And some scientists now predict as many as 550,000 will die by spring – even with the introduction of vaccines. What went wrong? Why so many infections and deaths after so much was learned about the disease? When asked, Dowling picked his words carefully. We won’t. In what is perhaps the greatest failure in leadership in the history REPORTERS Rose Weldon, Robert Pelaez
of this country, President Donald Trump refused to lead the fight against the pandemic. Instead, he became its No. 1 source of disinformation. As shown in Bob Woodward’s book “Rage,” Trump knowingly downplayed the COVID-19 pandemic to the public, saying it was no worse than the flu, that it would go away quickly. In his book, Dowling discussed how Northwell was in touch with scientists inWuhan, China, thought to be the source of COVID-19, and Italy, the European country most severely impacted by COVID-19. Those scientists, Dowling said, shared what information they had in the early days of the pandemic. Asked if Northwell officials had heard anything from the federal government, Dowling said they had not. Trump just didn’t ignore the science of masks and social distancing, he made following it a partisan issue. He promoted bogus treatments at the expense of viable treatments. He conducted a presidential campaign that featured super-spreader events. Trump was aided and abetted by social media, Fox News and other like-minded news organizations as well as red-state governors following the lead of their president.
The proof of this malpractice can be seen as the virus has raged across the country this fall and winter – after Trump and others dismissed the second wave of infections predicted by scientists. There is no question that more Americans would be infected and die from a virus as deadly and easy to transmit as COVID-19. But tens of thousands of Americans would still be alive and many more would have avoided infection and its potential for long-term effects if the entire country had followed what scientists and health professionals like Dowling had advocated. And the pandemic is not even over. New York, like most other states, has seen a large spike in deaths and infections in recent months, but far less than what is being experienced in most places in the country. It is a frightening fact to consider that the devastation now taking place in other parts of the country is occurring months after they watched the devastation caused by COVID-19 in New York in the spring. Dowling, who was recently voted No. 2 on Modern Healthcare Continued on Page 34
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15
KREMER’S CORNER
Make Trump’s antics federal crimes
E
ach year the New York State Legislature passes thousands of bills, many of which become law. The new laws most often cover things like public safety, health, criminal acts and our election process. A large number of bills cover routine governmental needs like extending tax collections or granting pension rights. Occasionally, we hear of some new law and the first question that comes to mind is where did that come from? Quite a few of the bills passed in Washington or Albany have been pending for years and, thanks to some incident or media report, they miraculously come to life. Not every elected legislator is an original thinker and by luck a lawmaker comes up with a unique idea and it works its way into a proposal. It may not surprise you to learn that some unique change in the law came about because an interested voter wrote a letter to
their elected official suggesting the need for government action. During my 23 years in Albany, I was fortunate to have gotten a number of letters asking for legislative help and I had the desire to follow up. My favorite law that started out as a voter gripe was the Lemon Law. An unhappy constituent who bought a new car that was defective wrote begging for some consumer protection. After a battle royal with the big auto manufacturers, my Lemon Law bill passed both houses and was signed into law by Gov. Carey. Today, the Lemon Law now covers new and used dealer cars as well as leased cars. Since I am a registered voter and I pay my taxes, I have a few federal laws to propose that would affect present and future presidents. Let’s start with presidential pardons. Rather than wait until Mr. Trump’s final days in office, wouldn’t it be appropriate that all presidential par-
JERRY KREMER Kremer’s Corner
dons must be granted prior to Election Day if you are running for re-election? That way the voting public would know who will benefit from this extraordinary gift before they cast their ballots. It is a matter of law that sitting presidents cannot be charged with a crime. Special Counsel Robert Mueller declined to allege any presidential
crimes because of his belief that the president was immune from charges. President Trump has made it clear from time to time that “I could shoot someone in the middle of Fifth Avenue and no one could prosecute me.” Over these past few weeks, the president has threatened numerous public officials who didn’t support his claims that the election was rigged. I would suggest that any presidential threat against another public official involving the conduct of the election be subject to criminal prosecution. During the past month, President Trump has aggressively solicited moneys from millions of innocent citizens for his legal defense fund. It is estimated that those appeals have raised over $200 million. The president’s lawyers have lost 39 of the election challenges and it would appear that there are millions left that will go into a Trump discretionary
fund to be used at the whim of the owner. It would be appropriate to have a law which requires that any leftover defense funds must be returned to the donors under threat of prosecution. The COVID-19 pandemic has caused millions of Americans to shelter at home and avoid going to non-essential locations. Since mid-May the president has urged citizens to go about their business and ignore virus warnings. He has gone as far as to suggest that the public officials who have ordered mask mandates or quarantines be challenged by their neighbors. There are numerous reported cases of physical threats being made against officials doing their jobs. That conduct should be a federal crime with no immunity. There are dozens of other presidential missteps that I can think of that merit a change in the law. Please feel free to suggest a few of your own.
A LOOK ON THE LIGHTER SIDE
Here’s hoping 2021 will be a wonderful year
I
t’s time for one of my new favorite holiday traditions: the annual broadcast of “It’s A Wonderful Life,” starring Jimmy Stewart and Donna Reed in the black-and-white Frank Capra classic. I wasn’t always a fan. I had never even heard of this classic until I moved to New York city, after college. Here, it aired every year at Christmas — possibly because whoever held the copyright had let it lapse into the public domain, which meant the film was free for anyone to air — a lot. Still, the first time I really watched it, from start to finish, was because I had to. One of my first assignments, upon being hired for a WNET-TV Pledge period, was to supervise the film’s broadcast. Or actually, the film’s rebroadcast. As best I can now recall, the film was being rebroadcast in its entirety because someone had scrambled the reels and aired them in the wrong order the first time through. As I sat and watched the film in the darkened control room, I could see how some scrambling might have occurred. Soon after the movie starts, we are treated to scenes of idyllic-seeming Bedford Falls and the small-town life
led there by George Bailey (Jimmy Stewart) — sledding, saving his brother from mishap and singing “Buffalo Gals, Won’t You Come Out Tonight” as he falls in love with Mary Hatch (played by a radiant young Donna Reed). But (spoilers ahead!) Bailey’s life takes a dark turn and suddenly — or so it seems — we are plunged into a dismal world: There is no Bedford Falls at all, but just a rundown shantytown named “Potterville;” Mary Hatch never meets him; and Bailey’s own mother doesn’t recognize him. In short, we are suddenly looking at a completely different reality than what has gone before. Anyone previewing the reel change might reasonably conclude that they were about to make a big mistake! Of course, the discontinuity in this story is exactly the point. The central theme of the entire film was that just as George Bailey is about to take his own life, believing he’s done nothing good with it and wishing he’d never been born, an angel appears— the improbably-named Clarence — to change George Bailey’s mind. And the way Clarence does this with Bailey is to show him just what that world without him
JUDY EPSTEIN
A Look on the Lighter Side would really have been. His brother would die young and never live to serve in World War II where he saves a troopship of sailors. The local pharmacist, uncorrected by a young George Bailey, would mistakenly poison a sick child. Young Mary will become a spinster librarian (the least convincing of the parade of horribles) and her family
with George would never come to be. And the local banker, charging usurious rates, would plunge an entire neighborhood into poverty that would have become homeowners with George Bailey’s Savings & Loan. George Bailey must trudge through this hellscape until he realizes that his life has not only touched those of many others, but made theirs better. That’s when he decides that he wants to live and is returned to that life — as Angel Clarence finally earns his wings. Over the years, the movie grew on me. I decided it wasn’t really sappy at all. And once I thought about it, I realized that Angel Clarence’s demonstration of “the world without you, George” was simply a clever low-tech, faith-based way to show Bailey — and us — what science fiction folk would call an alternate reality. This year it all resonates for me much more deeply.
The dysfunctional hellscape, of course, is the world we are in right now — still stuck in a deadly pandemic, not even a vaccine in sight for most of us as the virus rages out of control. And things are only this bad because our leader abdicated his responsibility and made all the wrong choices every time there was a choice to be had. Fortunately, we have chosen a different future. Except for the small detail that he was picked by the American people and not heaven-sent, Joe Biden — thirdtime-lucky presidential candidate — will do nicely as my real-world version of the Angel Clarence. I believe that, in the upcoming year 2021, we can revive our faith in America and our faith in each other — and get back to a better reality. And I will never be happier to sing “Auld Lang Syne” and see the back of the year we’ve been through.
LETTERS POLICY Letters should be typed or neatly handwritten, and those longer than 750 words may be edited for brevity and clarity. All letters must include the writer’s name and phone number for verification. Anonymously sent letters will not be printed. Letters must be received by Monday noon to appear in the next week’s paper. All letters become the property of Blank Slate Media LLC and may be republished in any format. Letters can be e-mailed to news@theislandnow.com or mailed to Blank Slate Media, 25 Red Ground Road, East Hills, NY 11577.
16 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 25, 2020
E A R T H M AT T E R S
Is your sofa more toxic than lead?
T
hrough my recent work with the freshman class at Molloy College, I have been reading the back story about how the water in Flint, Mich., became contaminated with lead. It is actually a pretty familiar environmental justice story about politics, money and a vulnerable low-income community. The hero of this story is a young pediatrician who was determined to find out who was responsible for harming the brains of the children under her care —and to fix it! Her name is Dr. Mona Hanna-Attisha, and she documented her personal journey and the eventual change in the source of the water coming into Flint in her book, “What the Eyes Don’t See.” It is an inspiring read. Under the EPA’s Safe Drinking Water Act, the maximum contaminant level goal (MCLG) for lead is zero. EPA came to this determination on the best available science, which shows there is no safe level of exposure to lead. Testing in Flint indicated serious systemwide lead contamination in drinking water, which eventually showed up as alarmingly elevated blood lead levels in children. The levels of lead in the blood of American children have declined significantly since lead was removed from gasoline and paint, but many children are still exposed to the metal
in old paint chips, contaminated products imported from other countries and, yes, drinking water flowing through leaded pipes. Lead is a potent neurotoxin and early exposure to it may have lifelong consequences for cognitive function and behavior, including lowered I.Q. We have remediated lead exposures to a large extent through individual actions and even laws. But lead in water supply pipes continues to put families across the country at risk, including here on Long Island. The good thing is we know where to look for the problem and how to solve it. But that is not the case for flame retardant chemicals. Earlier this year, researchers reported that these chemicals surpassed lead as the biggest contributor to I.Q. loss and intellectual disability in children. The chemicals were also linked to cancer, hormone disruption, and reproductive and neurological harm. Global treaties have listed them as persistent organic pollutants, which means they do not break down into safer chemicals in the environment; they travel far from the source of release and are distributed around the globe; they build up in people and other animals and they are harmful to life, causing long-term rather than immediate harm. What? Why aren’t
PATTI WOOD Earth Matters
we – and especially pediatricians – aware of this risk? How are we exposed to flame retardants? Unlike lead, flame retardants are hard to find, even though they are present in many of the things we buy, especially for our children. And unlike lead, they are loosely regulated. Manufacturers do not need to prove that they are safe or even that they keep things from burning. Flame retardants are typically found in upholstered furniture foam and fabric, carpeting, clothing, baby products, strollers, plastic housings for electronics, cables, car seats and car interiors, tents, children’s fabric playhouses and play tunnels and foam blocks, to name just a few.
Flame retardant chemicals are unstable and they easily escape from treated products into household dust and air. We are exposed through inhalation, accidental ingestion and dermal contact, with children being more heavily impacted because of their natural hand-to-mouth behavior. Equally concerning is the fact that flame retardants bioaccumulate up the food chain through the environment and are found in high concentrations in animal foods, including dairy products, fish, poultry, meat and eggs. So, what is being done to remove these dangerous chemicals from consumer goods and our food supply? To date federal regulators have not banned their use, so even if a manufacturer stops using a particular flame retardant in a product, they often substitute a similar flame retardant chemical that scientists haven’t evaluated yet. This is a common industry practice when it comes to toxic chemicals used in the production of profitable goods – it is called regrettable or unfortunate substitution. In 2010, a joint statement was signed by over 150 esteemed toxicologists, researchers and medical doctors from around the world to call attention to brominated flame retardants (BFRs) and chlorinated flame retardants (CFRs) and the continu-
ing pattern of unfortunate substitution. The National Institutes of Health commented on the statement in a report saying, “Just as we have known for years that significant exposure to lead occurred via house dust, why has it taken us so long to understand that BFRs and CFRs, which are used in consumer products, also can escape their matrix into house, office, car, and airplane dust, and also will end up in people, the environment, and wildlife? Why do we not learn from the past?” To learn more about the risk of flame retardants, visit www.sixclasses.org. You can also do some detective work yourself, looking for labels that say “not flame retardant,” which you want, or “meets flame retardant standards,” which you do not want. Manufacturers are responding to consumer demand. For instance, IKEA has been using the Six Classes approach for years, phasing out harmful flame retardant chemicals before they are regulated and instead using techniques and materials with flame retardant properties, like wool, making their products safer for people and the environment. With a new administration in Washington and a new FDA and EPA, I hope we will see these harmful chemicals and many others removed from store shelves.
OUR TOWN
2020: This was the year that wasn’t
I
t is customary for journalists to do a year-end review in December to look back and summarize the high and low points of the year. Typically I like to refer back to the more magical moments of the year, but this year has not been magical. In fact, it’s been a year of horror. So let’s title this review “2020: That was the year that wasn’t.”1) The Impeachment Trial: In January, the nation was greeted with the impeachment trial of Donald Trump, always plenty of laughs. The trial revealed a newer form of psychological regression that made narcissism look healthy. As I listened to the managers’ and attorneys’ version of reality, it occurred to me that I was witnessing evidence of a schizophrenic process in the nation with the two sides having no ability to understand what the other was talking about. If this isn’t a psychotic process, it’s very close. This troubling form of splitting is usually only seen in psychotic patients, but now I’ve seen it expressed in the highest government chambers in America. The media likes to call this the new polarization, but this underestimates the gravity of this process. 2) The arrival of COVID: This story came in as a whimper in Febru-
ary but would simply not go away. Like a monstrous centipede with a thousand legs, it kept getting bigger and badder by the week. By the months of March and April we witnessed a global pandemic that sent fear into everyone person on the planet, thanks to the endless reporting of rising death counts and case numbers. It didn’t take more than a few days for the pandemic to be politicized, which made it impossible judge its danger or the best method to cope. We have seen a growing paranoia, a new post-COVID personality (anxiety-filled social withdrawal, boredom, alcoholism and despair), and some have learned how to boost one’s immune system. I have learned terms like Black Swan Event, Blursday, P.P.E., remote learning, superspreader, social distancing, hunkering down, quarantine and my favorite, contact tracing. Welcome to this Unbrave New World. 3) The economic shutdown: One of the many heinous outcomes of COVID is a global economic shutdown. The travel, tourist, hotel, restaurant, entertainment, sports, fitness and medical fields have all been devastated. I don’t know how the hotel, travel or restaurant businesses will survive and I’ve taken
DR. TOM FERRARO Our Town
to calling this The Great Pruning of 2020 where the bottom 15 percent of many industries will be gone by the end of 2021. As an example, and citing a stat that you may not have heard about yet, there has been a loss of about 10 percent of the medical field since physicians, who were already in trouble thanks to insurance companies, saw their practices shrink by 50 percent and so many decided to close shop and retire. 4) Rioting in the Street: It started in Minneapolis after the killing of George Floyd, but spread throughout the nation like a cancer. The BLM movement gained steamed and this led to the burning and destruction of buildings as well as fear in the sub-
urbs. The growing isolation, continued income inequality and endemic racial tensions formed a perfect storm which caused an explosion of violence throughout America. 5) Trapped at home: Since more than half the work force and the children are now working remotely from home, you see this insane problem of trying to find peace and quiet in order to work coupled with a child who is refusing to study. So now mothers (or fathers) are forced to be workers, parents and teachers all at the same time. 6) The insidious corporate squeeze: Since I’m lucky enough to be a psychoanalyst, I have an inside seat into the lives of a variety of professional people, including bankers, university administrators and athletes. I have begun to see a very nasty trend which is yet another legacy of COVID. As corporations, banks, universities and gyms all recognize the loss of profit, they are resorting to squeezing people out and thereby reducing payroll. This means that you are either getting fired or you remain in your job but now must pick up the work that your recently departed colleague was doing. When I hear the horror stories of anxiety, exhaustion, depression and shame
that these victims experience, it is very troubling indeed. And so this was the year that was not. It was not a year of fun, of growth, and it was not a year of success. It was not a year of peace or of calm or travel or fine dining. It was not a year for making new friends or holding onto old ones.It was however a good year for Google, Amazon, Microsoft and Facebook and for anyone who likes social media. One could say that anyone under the age of 35 is at an advantage since they grew up with computers and thus the thought of becoming a stay-athome cyborg brings a smile to their face. And in this case I would advise them to watch the documentary “The Human Dilemma,” a series of revealing interviews with some of the creators of Google and Facebook and who remarked just how powerful and influential their Artificial Intelligence super computers were. Their AIs may be responsible for all of our polarization, addictive consumerism, isolation and anomie.Just as the film “Contagion” was eerily predictive of this COVID pandemic, so the films like “The Terminator” and “AI” will be predictive of our next global crisis. So that was the year that wasn’t.
Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 25, 2020
17
VIEW POINT
Biden unveils dream team for climate change
W
e just passed the fifth anniversary of the United States leading the world and signing the historic Paris Climate Accord mere weeks since Trump officially pulled the U.S. out of it one day after the election on Nov. 4. For the first time, a presidential campaign has made the climate crisis a priority alongside the other historic crises facing the incoming Biden administration – public health, economy, racial justice – and assembled a brilliant, qualified and tested team to achieve its goals. This hasn’t just been a year of historic public health crisis, but historic wildfires, hurricanes, flooding and heatwaves, with proportionate damage to lives and livelihoods. Long after the pandemic, the climate crisis, with ramifications in terms of deaths from flood, fire, famine, drought, and disease as well as migrations of refugees escaping homelands rendered uninhabitable, will be a truly existential crisis. Meanwhile, Lame Duck Donald is racing the clock to do as much damage as he can before Biden can take back the reins of power: rushing to sell off public lands to oil and mining interests, overturn pollution standards,
erase the ability to apply Clean Air and Clean Water regulations and embed his climate destroyers and environmental rapists into government agencies. Rather than show a care for the 320,000 dead and 18 million infected with coronavirus, Trump’s obsession has been to overturn conservation standards on toilets and showerheads. There could not be a stronger contrast between Trump’s appointees – most who came out of the same special interests they were charged to regulate — and Biden’s, starting with nominating the first Native American (35 generations Pueblo) as secretary of the Interior, the agency which has controlled Indian affairs and broken treaties for 150 years. “As our country faces the impacts of climate change and environmental injustice, the Interior Department has a role to address these challenges,” the appointee, Congresswoman Deb Haaland, said. It’s not just moving the U.S. back to mitigating climate change and shifting the economic and social underpinnings to a sustainable future, but for the first time, instilling economic justice in policy. “We are going to ensure that the EPA is once again a strong partner for the states — not a roadblock,” said Biden’s nominee for
KAREN RUBIN View Point
Environmental Protection administrator, Michael Regan. “We will be driven by our conviction that every person in our great country has the right to clean air, clean water, and a healthier life no matter how much money they have in their pocket, the color of their skin, or what community they live in. We will move with urgency on climate change, protecting our drinking water, and enacting an environmental justice framework that empowers people in all communities. “But we also know that these challenges can’t be solved by regulation alone. And we know that environmental protection and economic prosperity are not mutually exclusive — they go hand-in-hand.
We need an all-hands-on-deck approach from industry to individuals, finding common ground to build back better for workers, for communities, for our economy, and for our planet,” Regan said. His nominee for secretary of energy, the former Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm, made it clear that climate action and environmental protection, rather than the “job killers” that the Republicans have charged, are also economic imperatives. “Today, in the midst of another harrowing crisis, clean energy remains one of the most promising economic growth sectors in the world. Over the next two decades, countries will invest trillions of dollars in electric cars, solar panels, wind turbines, and energy-efficient appliances and buildings. They’ll upgrade their electric grids using smart technology. Millions of goodpaying jobs will be created — but where will those jobs be? In China or other countries fighting toothand-nail to corner the clean energy market? Or here in America? The path to building back better starts with building and deploying those products here, stamping them Made in America, and exporting them around the world. We can win those jobs for American workers,” Granholm said.
Another appointee warned about the consequences of not addressing climate change. “I’m here today because climate change isn’t only a threat to the planet — it’s a threat to the health and well-being of people and the precious natural resources we depend on,” declared Gina McCarthy, the former EPA administrator who is being tapped for a new position of White House climate coordinator. “Defeating that threat is the fight of our lifetimes .The president-elect has put together the strongest climate plan ever raised to this level of leadership.” Biden made clear what his priorities will be: “The United States will rejoin the Paris Agreement on day one of my presidency” Biden said. “The Biden-Harris administration will increase the ambition of our domestic climate target and put the country on a sustainable path to achieve net-zero emissions no later than 2050. We’ll elevate the incredible work cities, states, and businesses have been doing to help reduce emissions and build a cleaner future. We’ll listen to and engage closely with the activists, including young people, who have continued to sound the alarm and demand change from those in Continued on Page 38
THE BACK ROAD
Donald Trump: The greatest grifter of all time
I
was only a Cub Scout for a short period of time in the 1950s. I never made it to Boy Scout. I did admire the kids I knew who ascended to Eagle Scout. It was clear from their uniforms: tan shirts and green sashes covered with merit badges, that they were high achievers. I was just not that disciplined as a kid. I preferred to play unsupervised in the street. All that I can recall about Scouts was wearing a blue uniform and cap, going to a neighbor friend’s basement and reciting this pledge: “On my honor, I will do my best to do my duty to God and my country and to obey the Scout Law; to help other people at all times; to keep myself physically strong, mentally awake, and morally straight.” The best thing about the uniform, was when I wore it to school. During the daily pledge of allegiance, I was authorized to salute the flag, as opposed to placing my hand over my heart. I thought that was pretty cool back in the day; which was before I had ever heard the word “nerd” spoken.
I forgot about my brief time in the Cub Scouts until recently, when I recalled some of the milestone events during President Trump’s tenure. If you recall, in year one he addressed the annual Boy Scout Jamboree in West Virginia and claimed that it was “the greatest speech that had ever been made to them.” It was a boast that the organization had to later deny when pressed. At one point in his speech Trump asked the mass gathering of Scouts and Scoutmasters, “By the way, what do you think the chances are that this incredible, massive, record-setting crowd is going to be shown on television tonight? One percent or zero?” He followed that up with, “By the way, just a question, did President Obama ever come to a jamboree?” Surely it is insight like this that inspired him to compare himself favorably to Abraham Lincoln. Although he was never a Boy Scout, what President Trump does have in common with the scouts is that he took a pledge too, actually an oath. His went like this: “I do
ANDREW MALEKOFF The Back Road
solemnly swear that I will faithfully execute the Office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States.” Many accomplished American men took the Boy Scout pledge, including astronaut Buzz Aldrin, baseball slugger Hank Aaron, news anchor Walter Cronkite, film director Steven Spielberg and civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. We all know that President
Trump has nothing in common with these men of achievement and character. And, because there is little left for him to betray in the oath he swore to in 2017, he matches up best with guys like Charles Ponzi and Bernard Madoff, despite the fact that he has easily eclipsed these world-class grifters. “On Tyranny,” author Timothy Snyder wrote, “To abandon facts is to abandon freedom. If nothing is true, then no one can criticize power, because there is no basis upon which to do so. If nothing is true then all is spectacle.” Snyder goes on to describe how truth dies in four modes: open hostility to verifiable reality, endless repetition of evidence-free mantras, magical thinking, and misplaced faith. Think about it; first Trump fooled just enough people into believing he was a competent businessman, which all verifiable facts disprove. Now, four years later we’ve discovered that no American bank will advance him a loan because he is a five-alarm credit risk. And, now he is successfully
fleecing hundreds of millions of hard-earned dollars from the same poor saps who faithfully voted for him. These true believers are emptying their pockets on text- and email-command, accompanied by the repeated incantation that the 2020 election was rigged, stolen. Meanwhile, the reality is that he decisively lost by an electoral margin that he, himself, labeled as a landslide when he won by the same edge in 2016. His supporters are so confused by his gaslighting that they actually believe (let this sink in) that their money is going to defend him against election fraud. In truth, their donations are going into Trump’s personal slush fund that he can use for debt service, golf fees, Mar-a-Lago renovations or food runs to McDonalds. Ponzi and Madoff have nothing on Trump. He is the most prolific grifter in history, bar none. He’s the greatest of all time. Andrew Malekoff is a New York State licensed clinical social worker
18 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 25, 2020
FROM THE DESK OF RICHARD NICOLELLO
Reaching a deal on the county’s 2021 budget
A
fter months of negotiations, the legislative majority has reached a deal with the Nassau Interim Finance Authority, and the Curran administration in connection with the proposed restructuring of county debt and the 2021 budget. The majority achieved its goals, including reducing the time within which county bonds have to be paid off, saving county taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars, and creating a special fund to repay residents and small businesses monies that the county owes them for tax refunds. Earlier this year the county executive proposed to
restructure $435 million in county debt over 30 years. The majority resisted the plan, which would have saddled county taxpayers hundreds of millions in unnecessary costs over the 30-year period. Faced with opposition from the majority, the county executive agreed to reduce the bonds from 30-year to 15-year bonds. The shorter term will save taxpayers more than $200 million. The administration also agreed to a provision that will allow the county to pay off the bonds during the 15year term. The county executive has agreed to the majority’s proposal
RICHARD NICOLELLO Presiding Officer
for a special revenue fund for monies beyond the administration’s es-
timates in the budget. The reserve fund will ensure that county operations will continue during the pandemic while dedicating increased sales tax revenues to paying tax refunds to residents and businesses incorrectly assessed by the county. The fund may also be used for unreimbursed COVID expenses. In sum, the majority has achieved the following:· Reduced the term of the borrowing from 30 years to 15 years, saving taxpayers more than $200 million over the course of the term of the bonds.· Created a mechanism allowing the county to pay off the bonds before 15 years.· Created a dedicated fund
to assist in paying back residents and businesses who are owed tax refunds. The deal the majority negotiated will ensure the county is able to financially recover from the financial impact of COVID-19, without straddling our children and grandchildren with hundreds of millions of dollars in debt. The majority’s special revenue fund will finally begin to repay tax monies incorrectly charged to small business owners and residents. The majority will continue to stand up for Nassau residents, and fight to lower taxes for our overburdened residents.
THE REAL DEAL
Ready for the ‘Great Reset’ with technocracy?
T
he Great Reset, considered to be the Fourth Industrial Revolution, is a created reform of “technocracy” (also referred to as “sustainable development”) that will transform all industry in every facet. It will affect everything from government, energy and finance, to food (our lifeline), healthcare, medicine, real estate — all aspects of life. Technocracy, according to Encyclopaedia Britannica, is a political philosophy that refers to government by technicians who are guided solely by the imperatives of their technology (Artificial Intelligence, robotics, computer chips, GPS tracking, WiFi, biometrics, etc.). The Great Reset’s biggest players will be in data collection, computer technology, telecommunications, weapons manufacturing, finance, pharmaceuticals, biotechnology and the food industry. According to Forbes magazine, technocracy is an economic system referred to as “stakeholder capitalism.” Promoters of the Great Reset are using the experience of COVID-19 to advance their plan. Klaus Schwab, founder of the World Economic Forum, in his book “Covid-19: The Great Reset” describes how the virus disrupted both economic and social infrastructure and “what changes will be needed to create a more inclusive, resilient and sustainable world going forward.” Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair says, “Covid-19 will usher in a world where insecurity and unpredictability constitute the new normal. Companies will digitalize faster, innovation will be spurred by the necessity of finding new
ways of working and cutting cost. Many things will not go back to the way they were. The impact of this, along with the huge hangover bill for dealing with the virus and the loss of economic activity, will be to produce a lot of hardship with the burden falling often on the most vulnerable.” The aim of the Great Reset is to fundamentally restructure the world’s economy and political relations on basically two assumptions. One: Every element of nature, every life form is a part of the global inventory, owned by globalist individuals. Two: Absolutely all the world’s inventory will need to be strictly accounted for in a central database, all readable by a scanner, and ID’ed and managed by AI (Artificial Intelligence) using the latest science. The goal is to count (scan), then efficiently control and manage absolutely all resources (and, yes, that includes people) with unprecedented digital precision. The Deep State puppet masters are implementing the plan using unequivocal genius via technology. As explained by journalist James Corbett, the Great Reset is a new social contract that will tie every person to it through an electronic ID linked to your bank account and health records, and a social credit ID that will connect to you and dictate every facet of your life. This global agenda includes tracking and monitoring, and ultimately controlling the world through digital surveillance. There won’t be a single aspect of human life left out of this plan. All this is sealed with surveillance of how we interact with our fellow human beings in general. Was everyone told to have no more than
GARY FELDMAN The Real Deal
10 family members at your Thanksgiving table? According to speculators, the Great Reset will be invoked by governments in a forceful manner without consent. Fear is used as a manipulation tool. And any time someone dissents, they will be accused of being “anti-science.” Any science that conflicts with the status quo is declared anti-science. With the Great Reset comes the endangerment of our right to privacy. In our 50 states, we have the Constitution that stands in the way of this violation, as of now. Are you paying attention and understanding the increasing and muscling attempts to sidestep, compromise and invalidate our Constitution? The intent is anti-humanity. The technocratic elite could ultimately hold the power over people’s assets, leaving all people with no ownership, no possessions. Think about the lyrics of John Lennon’s song, “Imagine.” “Imagine no possessions……. no countries…. no religion too.” Plan for Our Food under the Great Reset The Defender, a media platform by the Children’s Health De-
fense, points out that the architects of the Great Reset claim it will reduce food scarcity, hunger and disease, and even mitigate climate change. But a closer look at the corporations and think tanks that the World Economic Forum is partnering with to usher in this global transformation, suggests that the real motive is to tighten corporate control over the food system. The WEF insists the future of food and public health hinges on genetically modified organisms, lab-grown protein, pharmaceuticals, and industrial chemicals. As noted by Jeremy Loffredo of The Defender, the ultimate goal is to replace wholesome, nutritious foods with GMOS, lab-created. The proposed diet aims to reduce the meat and dairy intake of the global population by as much as 90 percennt, replacing it with foods, including cereals and oils that are made in a lab. Vandana Shiva, scholar, environmentalist, food sovereignty advocate and author, raises a harsh critique of this proposed diet, saying it is not about nutrition at all, but big business and its corporate takeover of the food system. “The Great Reset is about multinational corporate stakeholders at the World Economic Forum controlling as many elements of planetary life as they possibly can. From the digital data humans produce to each morsel of food we eat.” She says, “The Great Reset is about maintaining and empowering a corporate extraction machine and the private ownership of life.” Green New Deal: Part of the Great Reset The Green New Deal would expand, on a vast scale, the fed-
eral government’s control over how people produce and consume energy, harvest crops, raise livestock, build homes, drive cars and manufacture goods. In terms of the approach to methane, a Greenhouse Gas: Methane gas heats the environment. Farm animals expel this gas and will be slaughtered in the guise of reducing methane gas in the environment. The reality is that farm animals are fed genetically altered corn and soy, unnatural to their diets, forcing methane gas to be created in their systems. Humans expel methane gas as well. A high carbon tax will be placed on what will be left of meat. Then the population will be enticed to go along with the labcreated plant protein that simulates real meat. Almost all plant protein created in a lab must have a stem cell harvested from an animal in order to be grown synthetically (actually rendering such plant proteins non-vegetarian). Animals will be slaughtered to make way for this new synthetic meat. The End GameThe Great Reset, through Technocracy, is a method of totalitarian control of the environment and every being on the Planet. EQ (emotional intelligence) is the only way to understand the many layers of this agenda. Would you call the Great Reset a conspiracy theory or pure genius? Gary Feldman, innovator in the nutritional supplement retail field, is a researcher, health writer, nutrition educator, lecturer, and instructor in the Port Washington Union Free School District Continuing Education program. garyteach1@gmail. com Letters Continued on Page 24
A Blank Slate Media Special Section â&#x20AC;˘ December 25, 2020
20 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 25, 2020
Ask the Child Guidance Center experts In this new monthly column, therapists from North Shore Child & Family Guidance Center will be answering your questions on issues related to parenting, mental health and children’s well-being. To submit a question, email NSCFGCexperts@gmail.com. Question: We’ve recently been concerned that our teen daughter seems to be feeling more blue than usual. Her grades have been going down, and she wants to sleep all the time. When we ask her how she’s doing, she gets very emotional. Should we be worried? —Panicked Parents Dear Panicked Parents: The pandemic has created an enormous amount of anxiety
and sadness for all of us, including our kids. We’ve been dealing with this strange, new reality for eight months now, and there’s no clear answer as to when we will turn the corner and be back to our routines. The fact that your daughter is feeling stressed and sad isn’t surprising; in fact, studies indicate that these feelings are on the rise all over the country. Changes in sleep and eating patterns are common, as are struggles with the unusual school schedule. Kids are also worried that their loved ones may become ill. It’s crucial that you always keep the lines of communication open. As parents, we tend
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to jump in to try to “fix” what’s wrong, instead of realizing that sometimes, your child just needs you to listen and be empathetic, acknowledging their feelings and assuring them you are there for them. There are some things you can do to help your daughter, and yourselves, during this challenging time. Basics like eating healthy foods, exercising regularly, spending time outside in the fresh air and setting up a regular school and sleep routine can make a big difference. Of course, it’s important to look out for signs that your daughter’s issues might be more significant and require therapeutic intervention. Some warning signs: a continued drop in grades or refusal to go to school; withdrawing from friends and family; significant changes in weight, either losing or gaining; the inability to feel joy; increased anger; physical complaints like headaches or stomachaches; use of drugs or alcohol; and expressing thoughts of suicide or preoccupation with death. At North Shore Child & Family Guidance Center, we are seeing children and teens via remote therapy during this time, or in person when the situation calls for it. Don’t hesitate to call us at (516) 626-1971 for an evaluation. Question: My eight-year-old son is in school two days a week and home the other three doing remote learning. While he’s been on this schedule for over two months now, he still struggles at times. What can I do to help? —Port Washington Mom
Dear PW Mom: It’s common for kids of any age to have difficulty remaining focused on their remote schoolwork, since being at home offers up all sorts of temptations and distractions. While it can be hard for parents to manage their children’s classwork alongside their own work and other responsibilities, familiarize yourself with your son’s school schedule to ensure he attends online classes and doesn’t miss assignments. Another way to set him up for success is to create a small, quiet area where he can attend classes and do his homework. You can make it more appealing by personalizing the space with poster boards decorated with name tags, stickers and maybe some favorite photos. Here are a few more pointers for all parents: Encourage movement – build in time for exercise and movement before and during your child’s school activities.Reduce distractions including noise and visual clutter.Enlist your child in setting up a designated workspace that is comfortable.Give your child, and yourself, breaks during the day.Particularly for young children, give immediate positive feedback like a sticker or check mark on completed work to help with their motivation.Establish good and healthy routines in the home. Visit www.northshorechildguidance. org for more helpful information.
Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 25, 2020
Family caregiver resolutions for 2021 Today, a record 53 million people in the U.S. are providing care for older loved ones. Caregiving brings with it many emotional rewards. But caregiving can be physically and emotionally demanding. Caregivers are stressed as they struggle to balance caregiving tasks with their work and other family responsibilities. They lose sleep worrying about the quality of care they’re providing. It’s no wonder! Today’s family caregivers are asked to perform medical tasks “that would make a nursing student tremble,” noted AARP vice president Susan Reinhart. The pandemic of 2020 has increased caregivers’ workload considerably. An October 2020 poll from The Associated PressNORC Center for Public Affairs Research showed that family caregivers now are providing 36 percent more care than a year ago, trying to keep their senior loved ones both safe and socially connected—this on top of working from home, and perhaps supervising their children’s school days. “Juggling all these tasks can lead to what’s called caregiver burnout,” says Gregg Balbera, president of Right at Home Nassau Suffolk. “This is a sense of exhaustion when a caregiver feels drained of time and energy, coupled with feelings of anxiety and guilt. Caregiver burnout can lead
to serious depression, and raises the caregiver’s own risk of heart disease, diabetes, dementia and early death.” If you are a family caregiver, make caring for yourself a top goal. “Remember that if you don’t take care of yourself, you will be a less effective caregiver for your loved one,” says Balbera. Balbera offers some great suggestions to add to your list of 2021 New Year’s resolutions: #1 “I will build some ‘me time’ into my schedule.” Caregivers often tell themselves that they don’t have time to do things they enjoy, to visit with friends, or just to relax for a while. But respite is vital so you can recharge your emotional batteries. #2 “I’ll get enough exercise and eat a healthy diet.” Studies show family caregivers often neglect the basics of a healthy lifestyle. But you endanger your own health if you live on fast food and your lifestyle is busy, yet largely sedentary. #3 “I’ll keep current with my own healthcare.” Though they might spend a great deal of time managing their loved one’s doctor appointments and medications, caregivers seldom have the same diligence about their own healthcare. When was your last checkup? Continued on Page 22
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22 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 25, 2020
Family caregiver resolutions for 2021 Continued from Page 21 #4 “I’ll learn more about my loved one’s health condition and what I can expect in the future.” Uncertainty and fear of the unknown can stress us out. Getting a handle on your loved one’s situation lets you plan ahead, with fewer surprises that could catch you off guard. #5 “I’ll connect with others who understand.” Many caregivers hesitate to discuss what they’re going through. But it’s so important to express your feelings. If it doesn’t feel safe to share with family and friends, join a caregiver support group— either in person or, more likely these days, online.
#6 “I’ll seek professional counseling.” A counselor can help you sort through your feelings and provide tools for navigating the complicated emotions of family caregiving. Choose a therapist who is familiar with caregiver issues and dynamics. #7 “I’ll set boundaries.” As a loved one’s care needs increase, family caregivers often find themselves spending more and more time and head space on those needs. This is understandable when a beloved family member needs us! But you may need to say no sometimes. #8 “I won’t let ‘old business’ dominate.” Often the tables turn as loved ones
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age, and we’re providing rather than receiving care. Yet who can push our buttons better than mom or dad, a sibling, or our spouse? Focus on the tasks at hand. This is an area where your support group or counselor can be of great help. #9 “I’ll practice self-compassion.” Feelings of guilt are gasoline on the fire of caregiver burnout. Cut yourself some slack. Replace that critical voice inside your head with the same kind of caring empathy you would offer a dear friend. #10 “I’ll get help!” Maybe you have a wry smile on your face at this point. “Those are lovely resolutions,” you might be saying. “But who has time for that? I’m a family caregiver!” You don’t need to go it alone. It’s time to get help, and there are resources to which you might turn: Talk to your family. Be open about the many things you do to support your loved one. “Other family members might be unaware of the load, especially if they live at a distance,” reports Balbera. “They might be glad to help by spending time with your loved one while you take some well-earned time to yourself, by assisting financially, or by helping you locate support services.” Bring in professional care. During 2020, professional in-home care became an even more attractive solution for supporting the well-being of seniors. Professional in-home caregivers take over many of the typical tasks of family caregivers, such as hygiene care, assistance with man-
aging healthcare appointments and medications, light housekeeping and laundry, meal preparation … whatever tasks need doing. They provide respite care so you can take a break, even go on vacation. “Hire through an agency that has stepped up to today’s challenges,” says Balbera. Balbera reports that Right at Home caregivers are always trained to reduce the risk of illness. They follow local and national guidelines on curtailing the spread of COVID-19. Right at Home has a task force devoted to keeping owners and caregivers up to date with the latest recommendations during this rapidly changing situation. “As families work hard to keep the most vulnerable family members safe at this time, having trained professionals on the team is a tremendous stress-buster.” Submitted by Right at Home of Nassau Suffolk, a locally owned and operated franchise office of Right at Home, Inc., serving the communities Centerport, Cold Spring Hills, Commack, Dix Hills, East Northport, East Setauket, Greenlawn, Halesite, Hauppauge, Huntington, Kings Park, Lake Grove, Lloyd Harbor, Melville, Nesconset, Old Bethpage, Plainview, St. James, Smithtown, Stony Brook, West Hills and Woodbury. For more information, contact Right at Home Nassau Suffolk at www.rightathomeli.com, 516.719.5999/631.352.0022 or by email at gregg@rightathomeli.com
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Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 25, 2020
Nassau orchestra to play at Museum of Art BY R O S E WELDON Visitors to the Nassau County Museum of Art in Roslyn will be greeted with chamber music from members of the Massapequa Philharmonic for the foreseeable future. The collaboration was developed by David Bernard, the Philharmonic’s music director, and Charles Riley, the museum’s director, after the COVID-19 pandemic affected both organizations. Bernard said that at the outset of the pandemic, the philharmonic had to cancel concerts and other performances. “Because of the restrictions from COVID that happened, pretty much everything on Long Island was closed down,” Bernard said in a phone interview. “You couldn’t even have outdoor concerts at that time. You couldn’t do anything.” A Great Neck native,
PHOTO COURTESY OF DAVID BERNARD
The Massapequa Philharmonic plays in an atrium of the Nassau County Museum of Art in East Hills. Bernard remembered his time in the Great Neck Symphony as a young man, where the symphony would often perform at the art museum. “I thought, wouldn’t it be great to bring this back?” Bernard said. He reached out to Riley with the idea. “It took me about eight seconds to reply to that
email,” Riley said in a phone interview. The orchestra held rehearsals and played a concert on the museum’s grounds in a tented area, Bernard said, and the idea met with success. “The patrons of the museum who were there to see exhibits would wander Continued on Page 34
Your Downsizing and Relocation Specialist.
Warm Wishes For a Happy and Safe Holiday Season.
Jeffrey Stone
Licensed Real Estate Salesperson O 516.627.2800 | M 917.741.8294 jeffrey.stone@elliman.com
© 2020 DOUGLAS ELLIMAN REAL ESTATE. EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY.
110 WALT WHITMAN ROAD, HUNTINGTON STATION, NY 11746. 631.549.7401.
23
24 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 25, 2020
READERS WRITE
Trump set the stage for Russian hack
W
ith the massive hack of our government by Russia, the treachery of the Current Occupant of the White House becomes more clear every day. After the CO has spent the last 3 1/2 years at war with our intelligence com-
munity, hollowing out our ability to thwart just this type of attack by firing and chasing from the agencies the “best and the brightest” and most experienced personnel, is this total hack of the federal government any surprise? The CO did nothing less than invite
this massive hack of our government. While lying to the American people about the threat of this horrific Trumplican pandemic that disabled us, he left us vulnerable to this hack, which represents perhaps the worst intelligence failure in American history.
Russian leader Vladimir Putin holds the mortgage on the life of this miserable cur, and this is just another payment. Shame on the misfit cur in the White House and shame on his Trumplican enablers! Eric Cashdan Sands Point
The left ignores basic gun facts about crime
T
he following is in response to Karen Rubin’s Dec.18, 2020 View Point, “Biden must Tackle gun reform in first 100 days. Now that the progressives and Marxists tied the hands of law enforcement under the guise of police reform and implemented policies such as cashless bail, they want to make it almost impossible for law-abiding citizens to protect their families and property from the criminal elements of society and their enablers in government. Progressives and Marxists do this while intentionally ignoring the following inconvenient facts: Political Editors: 90 percent of Guns Used in Crime Obtained Illegally — The Patriot Post.“ A DOJ report finds that the vast majority of guns used in criminal activity were obtained illegally.” Significantly, Guns.com notes, “When it came to retail sources such as gun shows, flea markets, firearm stores, and pawn shops, only about 10 percent said they were able to obtain their weapons from such outlets through purchases or trades. Of those, the majority reported that a background check was conducted as part of the sale, although in many cases they
did not purchase it under their own name.” And, in fact, “only about 1 percent of prisoners who used a firearm during their crime had obtained it through a retail sale. “These latest statistics prove once again that the problem of preventing criminals from obtaining firearms is not solved via the creation of more laws that limit the ability of law-abiding Americans to purchase a firearm.” Source and Use of Firearms Involved in Crimes: Survey of Prison Inmates, 2016 (Bureau of Justice)“An estimated 287,400 prisoners had possessed a firearm during their offense. Among these, more than half (56 percent) had either stolen it (6 percent), found it at the scene of the crime (7 percent), or obtained it off the street or from the underground market (43 percent). Most of the remainder (25 percent) had obtained it from a family member or friend, or as a gift. Seven percent had purchased it under their own name from a licensed firearm dealer.” Homicide is a “devastating plague” on black communities, and it is time we stop ignoring it | COMMENTARY — Baltimore Sun“Many African-American communities are under siege by black gun-toting terrorists. Chil-
dren cannot play in their yards and the elderly can no longer sit on their porches. At a recent town hall, a young black woman could not understand why her brother’s killer had still remained free on the street awaiting trial for a previous gun violation. Many of the people accused of murder in the city frequently have existing gun violations. This is a cycle that must be broken. Now is the time to reconcile, Black pride, civil liberties and civil rights with the need for safe black communities.“‘How Did We Not Know?’ Gun Owners Confront a Suicide Epidemic — The New York Times (nytimes.com) “The toll of self-inflicted gun deaths has led to an unusual alliance between suicide-prevention advocates and gun-rights proponents. Gun violence kills about 40,000 Americans each year, but while public attention has focused on mass shootings, murders and accidental gun deaths, these account for little more than onethird of the nation’s firearms fatalities. The majority of gun deaths are suicides — and just over half of suicides involve guns. According to national health statistics, 24,432 Americans used guns to kill themselves in 2018, up from 19,392 in 2010. If anyone from the North Shore needs
proof of the failure of Progressive/Marxistinspired police and bail reforms, they have to look no further than NYC. New York City Shootings Surpass 2019 Year-End Totals, City Leaders Demand Community Help (newsweek.com) “According to the latest data from the NYPD, July’s crime figures reveal similar findings, with the number of murder, burglary and gun violence victims soaring compared to last year.In July 2020, there were 244 shootings in New York, a 177 percent increase from the 88 which occurred last July. The number of people murdered increased by more than half to 54, while the number of burglaries increased from 989 last year to 1,297 in July 2020. The number of auto thefts also increased 53 percent from 583 to 892.”In conclusion, fraudulent president elect Beijing Biden could not tackle his puppy dog let alone gun reform. Walter J. Jaworski New Hyde Park Editors’ note: Joseph Biden won the 2020 presidential election, which was certified by the Electoral College last week, with 7 million more votes than the tally for President Donald Trump.
Better days are within reach. Remain careful
A
s we approach the end of a year that words can’t begin to describe, there is finally a light at the end of the tunnel. Over the next few weeks the first Americans will be vaccinated and the nightmare that has been the coronavirus pandemic will enter its final chapter. However, with positivity rates and hospitalizations on the rise locally, we need to play our part to limit the impact that the virus will have over these next few months. The pandemic has taken an enormous toll on our community. Across Nassau County nearly 2,300 people have passed away. Thousands more have fallen ill, with many suffering from long-term consequences from COVID that are not yet fully understood. Businesses and those employed in sectors impacted by economic fallout caused by the virus have taken severe financial hits. All of us continue to struggle as we remain isolated from friends and loved ones and yearn for things to just go back to “normal.” We do have some very good news, however. Leading American pharmaceutical companies Pfizer and Moderna have developed vaccines in record time. Even better, the vaccines developed by Pfizer and AstraZeneca have shown initial success rates of over 90 percent, far exceeding prior expectations shared by the FDA and other relevant ex-
perts. This will mean that a successful distribution plan can end the pandemic once and for all, and avoid a scenario where COVID continues to spread for an untold period of time as many have feared. Nevertheless, the course that the next few months will take remains very much in flux. Nassau County’s positivity rate increased significantly over the past few weeks and is now hovering around 5 percent. This requires all of us to remain diligent. For one, all of us individually need to do what it takes to avoid further spikes and lockdowns. This means avoiding large indoor gatherings, wearing masks in public places where social distancing is not an option, and complying with CDC recommended quarantine periods if you come in contact with someone who has tested positive for the virus. None of these things are easy, but they are worthwhile and are the least we can do to support first responders and businesses that are struggling to stay open. We have all heard the testimonials of healthcare professionals describing the horrors that ravaged our hospitals this past spring. Many of us now tragically know those who have passed or have lost loved ones. We also walk down our streets and see closed storefronts. As a resident of Great Neck Plaza, it is heart-wrenching to see res-
taurants on Middle Neck Road struggling and mainstays like the Squire movie theater close after nearly a century in business. These things are difficult to swallow. However, remaining resolute and engaging in responsible practices as individuals and safely supporting local businesses can make a tangible impact over these next few months for those who need it. In addition to sensible individual conduct, we can also benefit from good government policy. Our elected officials within the Town of North Hempstead have done just this. Longstanding initiatives like Project Independence have been retrofitted. This has included the expansion of online programming to bring activities into the homes of residents and has made outdoor activities safe by adjusting walking hours on town beaches or waiving fees for transportation services to limit in-person contacts. Town officials have also championed the Lift Up Local program to help local restaurants and retail establishments utilize outdoor space to help alleviate the strain imposed by the limits on indoor capacity. On the national scale, another relief package remains elusive. Democrats and Republicans remain deadlocked, fighting over the extent of aid to be extended to state and local governments and liability waivers for
businesses. The need for state and local aid is sorely needed in our communities. Of special concern should be the health of the public transit system and the connection of areas like Great Neck, New Hyde Park, Port Washington and Mineola to New York City. The LIRR was facing fiscal troubles before this crisis and with ridership down precipitously this last year, difficult decisions will need to be made without support from the federal government. The ease of access to the city is one of our greatest assets and we will suffer long-term consequences if a comprehensive relief package cannot provide the necessary funds to our public transit system. All of this is to say that what happens over the next few months will be crucial to how we emerge from the pandemic. All of us need to act responsibly to limit the spread of the virus. If we do the right thing, we can save lives and help our local businesses stay open. Good government policy also matters as big decisions and challenges still remain. We should all be grateful that better days are within reach. However, to truly show our gratitude, we must remain vigilant to ensure we limit the hardships that are still before us. Peter Fishkind Great Neck Plaza Letters Continued on Page 29
Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 25, 2020
Business&RealEstate
25
Adding value, comfort to your home I would like to take this time to wish all my readers a very safe, healthy and happy holiday season and a more safer, healthier, happier and potentially more “getting back to normal” and lucrative New Year in 2021.I have visited so many homes over the years providing suggestions, ideas and solutions to what the particular homeowner could and should do to improve and add value to their home. Everyone has different needs and wants and everyone’s tastes are always varied and sometimes very unusual, eclectic or even way far out in left field. There are also those whose tastes are very artistic and very personal. However, this will almost always take away from the appeal and value of a home when it comes to selling. I use an analogy that some like vanilla, some like chocolate and some like butter pecan and then there are those that like rocky road and banana cherry split chip. So there are those that like things standardized without too much pizzazz, nothing too fancy. Then I will walk into a home and notice one wall that just projects itself out like it’s saying, “look at me.” Those bright red, blue, green or a specific or customized and outrageous vivid and glossy color makes the room really pop! The decorations, colors and design add a variety and personal touch and feeling to each and every home. However, due to its personal nature, these aren’t the specific things that will add true value and benefit to the home now or when selling. However, it will create and satisfy what the owners want their home layout and environment to look and feel like by imputing their specific visions, tastes and whims. What does add value and benefit to your home are the “no brainer” most crucial and important items like updated or gutrenovated kitchens, bathrooms and family rooms and/or finished basements, as well as roofs, windows and utility upgrades (heat, electric and oil to gas conversions and CAC split units). However since the COVID-19 Pandemic raised its’ ugly head back in March of this year creating our current “new norm” has added to the mix, a new demand (mentioned in a previous column) and need by purchasers for home “office space” specifically for both
the kids who are schooling mostly online as well as for parents who are working from home. Many of us are no longer traveling to our offices and may never go back, depending on the specific job, position or business and the reduction and/or elimination of the COVID-19 virus. In many ways the bright side of your situation is the huge sums of money and time that have been conserved and saved over the last 10 months in traveling, transportation costs (train, gas and car wear and tear and repairs). Greater production has been enabled from those working externally. The World Economic Forum and Summit Oct. 20-23 expressed and discussed the following information:• The number of employees permanently working remotely globally is set to double in 2021, according to a new survey by a U.S. technology research firm.• According to their results, the percentage of permanent remote workers will rise from 16.4 percent to 34 percent.• This would have ramifications in areas from retail to real estate.• Here is the link to read more in depth info: https:// www.weforum.org/events/thejobs-reset-summit-2020 My professional opinion and belief is that more and more fami-
PHILIP A. RAICES Real Estate Watch
lies will focus their attention about and within the home. Working at home is and will be a priority. However being comfortable like never before will also be a major point of interest and technology will continue to play a major role in creating a more alluring, educational, interactive and fun environment. Until vaccines are widely distributed and the vast majority of the population is inoculated, living and playing in and around the home will be a focal point. Besides an area for office space, family rooms and/or finished basements will no longer be an option, but a necessity, it will be a value-added benefit to a majority of those fami-
lies who will demand and search for. Although humans are by nature social creatures, the COVID-19 pandemic has forced many and enabled others to pivot, to figure out and pursue another path and deal with and get use to a different alternate reality of coping with our “new norm.” Being happy while being comfortable and somewhat satisfied with one’s surroundings will be tantamount in dealing with the lack of social interaction. For sure it isn’t a healthy situation for so many, especially when you have all of a sudden gone from a successful business or job to having it all disappear overnight. Here is a very helpful link to help you deal with stress and its’ related symptoms: https://www. stress.org/2020/12I have been advising my clients to take up and focus a greater amount of time on their families as well as existing hobbies or try something new e.g. checkers, chess, scrabble, crossword puzzles, hangman, mad lips or any game(s) that might be interesting and challenging. Moreover, the need for the aforementioned family rooms and/or finished basements. The COVID-19 infection rates will continue to soar locally, do-
mestically and around the globe, during the next 3-6 months. Your home will more and more of a cherished bastion, a fortress and destination for greater security, comfort and healthier surroundings for a house is not a home until it is lived in. As we stay within our homes, next spring the garden will be a sanctuary and a source for a release from stress, frustration and sadness by taking one’s mind off our current insidious Covid-19 Pandemic. As the days and months pass, we will emerge from the frigid and snowy winter months, like hibernating bears, yearning for the fresh air of spring and the warmth of the summer sun. Philip A. Raices is the owner/ Broker of Turn Key Real Estate at 3 Grace Ave Suite 180 in Great Neck. He has 39 years of experience in the Real Estate industry and has earned designations as a Graduate of the Realtor Institute (G.R.I.) and also as a Certified International Property Specialist (C.I.P.S). For a “FREE” 15 minute consultation, a value analysis of your home, or to answer any of your questions or concerns he can be reached by cell: (516) 647-4289 or by email: Phil@TurnKeyRealEstate.Com
26 The Roslyn Times, Friday, December 25, 2020
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Recent Real Estate Sales in
Roslyn
21 Knoll Lane, Roslyn Heights
34 Shepherd Lane, Roslyn Heights
5 bd, 3 ba, 3,584 sqft, Sold on: 10/6/20, Sold Price: $1,235,000 Type: Single Family, Schools: East Williston
3 bd, 3 ba, 2,757 sqft, Sold on: 10/5/20, Sold Price: $995,000 Type: Single Family, Schools: East Williston
128 Browers Lane, Roslyn Heights
50 Lambert Street, Roslyn Heights
3 bd, 2 ba, 1,900 sqft, Sold on: 9/29/20, Sold Price: $731,000 Type: Single Family, Schools: Herricks
3 bd, 2 ba, 2,009 sqft, Sold on: 9/20/20, Sold Price: $870,000 Type: Single Family, Schools: Roslyn
Editorâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s note: Homes shown here were recently sold in Roslyn by a variety of real estate agencies. This information about the home and the photos were obtained through the Zillow.com. The homes are presented solely based on the fact that they were recently sold in Roslyn and are believed by Blank Slate Media to be of interest to our readers.
Happy Holidays from all of us at the Wheatley Plaza Office. Thank you for your support throughout 2020. Wheatley Plaza Office | 516.626.7600 342 Wheatley Plaza, Greenvale, NY | danielgale.com Each office is independently owned and operated.
The Roslyn Times, Friday, December 25, 2020
RT
27
Not enough funds for us: local officials Continued from Page 1 colleagues’ work in the caucus, which has now resulted in more federal aid to the American people, especially those who own local businesses. “Without the Problem Solvers, it is unlikely we would have gotten this far and I will not stop working until we get the relief our state and local governments need,” Suozzi said. “This bill will provide new direct payments to individuals and families, expanded unemployment insurance, and provide new resources to help small businesses that are struggling to stay afloat,” Rice said. Gov. Andrew Cuomo was blunt with his displeasure regarding a lack of state and local aid from the federal government but touted the work of U.S. Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY) and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi for their efforts. “They were in an impossible situation because you have Senator McConPHOTO BY ROBERT PELAEZ nell who still takes the position that you should bankrupt the states,” Cuomo said, U.S. Rep. Tom Suozzi (D-Glen Cove) said he was “devastated” that state referring to Majority Leader Mitch McCoand local governments were not provided federal funding from the recently nnell of Kentucky. “The National Governors Association sent a letter to Congress approved $900 billion stimulus package in response to the coronavirus panasking for $500 billion in state and local demic. assistance. Do you know what we got in ing provided with financial aid. Curran said. “The need for relief has nevthis bill? Zero.” “The new stimulus deal is a very good er been greater. Nassau County was the Other officials were also displeased with state and local governments not be- start,” Nassau County Executive Laura epicenter of a once-in-a-century crisis,
When Ms. Sillitti goes to Albany Continued from Page 2 supportive” of her campaign, Sillitti said. “I’ve known Tony and his wife Maria for many years,” Sillitti said. “And we have a very good relationship, and I speak with him often. I know his staff very well, I speak with them often. And the transition has been fairly smooth. We were so lucky to have him.” Last week, Sillitti attended freshman orientation for new representatives, which involved visiting her Albany office, taking her official photo, and entering the Assembly chamber for the first time, among other things. “It felt like a crash course in government,” Sillitti said with a laugh. “Like trying
to get as much information as you can into your brain, before the big test. It was exciting, and it was challenging. I met some of my new colleagues, they were, they were all as enthusiastic as I was, which was really great.” Sillitti’s work for the foreseeable future will be “100 percent virtual,” she said, but she intends to start on the ground. “My understanding is, as of right now it’s going to be virtual,” Sillitti said. “But that being said, I want to be in Albany, at least in the beginning, if we continue to be virtual. The reason is, I really want to see how everything operates. I want the staff up there to get to know me, and I want to get to know them, and just really kind of
see how the wheels turn upstate.” “I’ll be Zooming in my office is my understanding,” she added. From all outward appearances, Silletti’s freshman term will be dominated by the COVID-19 pandemic, and she said that the rising case numbers in New York are “scary.” “We’re talking again about flattening the curve, we’re hearing that term again, which is scary,” Sillitti said. “The numbers are climbing every day.” It is crucial, she said, that funding for critical services like schools, hospitals, fire departments, and police departments remains intact during the pandemic. “We’re still waiting to see what the fed-
State offers aid in hacking Continued from Page 4 “field trips” the students would take to Auschwitz. The post said that students would have to “walk into an SS office and declare themselves as Jews,” and listed the deadline for the application as “January 1945.” Cuomo said the Division of Human Rights will conduct a virtual forum with the school’s community on a date that will be determined by the North Shore Hebrew Academy. The forum will go over the state’s human rights laws, information on how the state handles cybercrimes
and attacks, legal protections against bias crimes, and give resources and advice on how parents can discuss the incident with their children, according to Cuomo. “By deploying these resources, we are sending a message loud and clear that hate has no place in our state — online or in-person — and that New York will always support and protect those targeted for crimes based on who they are or what they believe,” Cuomo said. The school’s headmaster, Daniel Vitow, was not available for comment, but told the New York Post last week that
school officials were “aware of the situation and are actively working with law enforcement.” Officials from the Nassau County Police Department confirmed they are investigating but did not provide any additional information. A spokesperson said the county police are assisting Lake Success police in the investigation. Lake Success police referred calls to the county Police Department, according to Newsday. Officials have also announced that the FBI was aiding the investigation.
and I will continue to advocate for the prioritization of emergency aid for state and local governments in the next relief bill.” “Unfortunately, [the new package] does not provide enough resources for state and local governments who are also in desperate need of relief,” Rice said. “Our communities will need further federal assistance as we continue to combat this virus, and I will keep fighting for the resources Long Island needs to recover when Congress returns in the New Year.” “I’m absolutely devastated that state and local aid is not included in this package because it will have such a negative effect on my state, and the counties, cities, towns and villages I represent,” Suozzi said. “I recognize, however, that too many people are suffering right now and there are many other important provisions in this compromise that will help Long Islanders and New Yorkers. We cannot let perfect be the enemy of the good.” Suozzi has recently been more vocal on the need for federal funding to states such as New York, which pay far more to the federal government than they receive. From 2015 to 2019, Suozzi said, New York sent $116 billion more to the federal government than it got back. Over the same period, Kentucky received $148 billion and South Carolina received $87 billion more than they contributed to Washington. eral government is going to be doing at the state and local levels,” she said. “Sales tax, in general, is at an all-time low, gas taxes are down, you don’t even think about how much the local government gets in gas tax, since we’re not going anywhere right now with a lot of things done virtually.” But, she added, New Yorkers now know what’s required of them to flatten the curve. “Before, we were kind of caught off guard, caught out of nowhere,” Sillitti said. “Now we know the enemy. We just really have to make good choices, and, unfortunately, those good choices mean postponing those family gatherings that we wanted so desperately for the holidays. It’s this price that we have to pay to keep the economy going. Nobody wants to see a shutdown again, obviously, it would be devastating. And then just, the basics of life and death. Staying home and being socially distant is the most patriotic thing we can do right now to help America, to save our economy and save our neighbors.” Closer to home, Sillitti said the 16th District’s Port Washington office will remain intact, as will the phone numbers. “I really want to be very, very accessible to people,” Sillitti said. “I don’t want people to feel weird about calling. Some people are like, ‘No, I’ll figure it out for myself, or I’ll go online.’ Don’t. That’s what we’re here for. And even if it’s not a state issue, I’d be happy to forward your inquiry over to the appropriate people. “So I really want to be a place where people can feel comfortable calling, where they know who I am, and where they don’t be afraid to call. These are tough times. And this is the job of government, to help people during these tough times. And I want to be able to help.”
28 The Roslyn Times, Friday, December 25, 2020
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10K on North Shore have tested positive Continued from Page 1 federal government not following in others’ footsteps. “One hundred twenty countries demand that before you get on a flight in the U.K. to come to their country, you have to have tested negative,” Cuomo said. “The United States does not require it. As I mentioned before, other countries are just banning people coming from the U.K. We have about six flights a day coming in from the U.K. and we have done absolutely nothing. Now, to me this is reprehensible because this is what happened in the spring.” British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the new variant is around 70 percent more transmissible. Cuomo then announced on Monday that Virgin, Delta and British Airways all agreed that they will test people before they get on a flight from the U.K. to New York. “The people who now fly into New York will be negative, but we’ll have flights into Chicago, we’ll have flights into other parts of the country and then those people can get on flights and come back to New York or infect other states,” Cuomo said. “This whole notion that any one state can protect itself was foolish from the beginning. New York has one of the lowest infection rates in the United States, but that doesn’t stop the virus from coming in from other states.” The travel restrictions come at a time when more than 10,000 people on the North Shore have tested positive for the coronavirus since the beginning of the pandemic in mid-March as of Monday night. The figures were the most up-to-date ones that the Nassau County Department of Health provided on Wednesday. More than 2,000 people on the Great Neck peninsula had tested positive for the virus as of Sunday, according to county
CHART BY ROBERT PELAEZ
More than 10,000 people throughout the North Shore had tested positive for the coronavirus since the beginning of the pandemic as of Wednesday, according to figures from the Nassau County Department of Health. figures, which continues to lead the areas analyzed. The Village of Great Neck’s 627 coronavirus cases were the most throughout the peninsula, followed by the Village of Kings Point’s 436 and the Village of Great Neck Plaza’s 369. After the Village of Lake Success saw an increase of 17 cases over the past week, a total of five of the peninsula’s nine villages had over 100 recorded cases as of Wednesday. The Port Washington area’s 964 cases account for almost 10 percent of the North Shore’s positive tests. More than 200 people in the Village of Manorhaven
had tested positive for the virus, according to county figures. The New Hyde Park area accounted for 2,078 of the North Shore’s cases, with North New Hyde Park having the third most confirmed positives, 777, out of any analyzed area. The villages of Floral Park, with 626 cases, and New Hyde Park, with 508 cases, were also among the top seven villages or unincorporated town areas in terms of positive tests, according to Health Department statistics. Municipalities and unincorporated areas that stretch into more than one North
Mackay demolition struck down Continued from Page 2 pact study on the project in 2017, and took control of the estate’s gatehouse in November of that year. Residents, environmentalists and local historians subsequently voiced strong opposition to the property’s demolition at Planning Board hearings.
The Roslyn Landmark Society, a group that was among those protesting the demolition, said in a statement that it “applaud[ed] the action of the Village of East Hills Planning Board and supported “prudent and feasible alternatives that retain the building.” “I believe, with many others, that
when you acquire something historic, whether it is a painting, an automobile or a home, you are a custodian of history with a duty to care for it, preserve it, protect it and never destroy it,” society President Howard Kroplick said in a statement.
Treatment within her sights Continued from Page 9 patients have been very positive. Mann also said the lenses can result in heightened peripheral vision, better self-esteem, and makes patients more ideal candidates for Lasik surgery later on. “Aside from parental support, the child has to be able to handle the lens,”
Mann said. “They have to fit into a certain category, they can’t have a lot of astigmatisms, since it’s not made for that.” As far as general recommendations go, Mann said people should generally follow the 20/20/20 rule. Every 20 minutes while looking at a computer or television screen, look at something 20 feet
away for about 20 seconds. “The eyes get stuck in this close focus looking at a screen,” Mann said. For more information on the lenses or to schedule an appointment, people are encouraged to call Focal Point Optical at 516-746-3836 and visit the office at 2453 Jericho Turnpike in Garden City Park.
Shore area such as Flower Hill, Herricks, Albertson, Garden City Park, Searingtown and North Hills were counted separately and accounted for 1,358 cases, according to county statistics. The Village of Mineola saw the highest increase of cases over the one-week period with nearly 100 new cases. Mineola’s 916 cases and Garden City’s 798 cases accounted for 1,714 of the 2,093 cases in the area that also takes in the Willistons. Manhasset, which has remained comparatively low since the beginning of the pandemic, had 639 cases, with around half coming from town-governed areas. It is the only analyzed area with fewer than 700 cases. The Village of Roslyn’s 194 cases may not seem high compared with other North Shore areas, but the cases per 1,000 residents, 68.02, is one of the highest rates in Nassau County, according to Health Department figures. Despite this, the village has seen one of the lowest one-month increases of any analyzed municipality, with fewer than 30 new confirmed cases since Nov. 11, according to county statistics. A total of 77,968 Nassau County residents had tested positive for the virus as of Wednesday, and 2,337 had died since the pandemic began. More than 500 Nassau residents remained hospitalized due to the virus, with 60 in intensive care units and 35 on ventilators, according to county figures. The county’s sevenday positivity rate was 5.7 percent as of Wednesday. Throughout New York, more than 871,000 people had tested positive for the coronavirus as of Wednesday, according to state figures. Of that total, more than 36,000 people had died. In New York City, 392,000 people had contracted the virus, and 24,768 had died.
Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 25, 2020
Holi-days and sugar cookies This is how we celebrate holi-days, I found. Baking sugar cookies in festive shapes, foods that comfort, spirits and laughs. But the sun rises and cries for a different kind of sweetness and fullness on these days. To forgo righteous and judgement and right-way thinking. To look for the light of the fire of those without homes, to stand in a house of wor-ship and declare that love is love, to walk along a border-line and to feel what should be— health, safety and promise for all. The stars shine on the evenings of holi-days, the moon still hangs, sadly, but brightly for the lonely, and in the dark spaces in the sky where there is nothingness, there is room to imagine what these days can be for— a present wrapped in hope for the most vulnerable among us, the dreamers, the defeated, songs for those lost and found in stigma, merriment for the heart. Before those sugar cookies burn, I open the oven, take them out, and see what they really mean to-day. Diana Poulos Lutz
A poem for 2020 Sore, meek, feeling weak. A solution we tried to seek. Frustration, Examination, Vaccination, Elation. We are now over the hump… all thanks to President Trump. He’s constantly working and trying his best, without a moment of rest. From one of many millions in a grateful nation, we admire your devotion. But after election day we discovered a new disease, when the numbers just didn’t jive. Votes poured in from the dead and alive. There is TB disease. There is Color Blindness. TB – Trump votes turned into Biden votes. Color Blindness – Red states turned Blue after mysterious glitches when touching selected switches. Ballots were also found in ditches. Certain poll watchers are told to leave since counting is complete, so now is the time to begin the big cheat. A selected group remains who help get the big gains. Out come the ballots from under the table, without any scrutiny from news on the cable. People voting in multiple states with ballots lacking proper signatures or dates. Ballots possibly printed in other states and countries of unknown amount, put into the uncontrolled illegal count. Led by Obama, Clinton, Schiff, Nadler, Pelosi, Schumer, and others, all of them unethical political brothers. It began with our “friends” – China, Russia, North Korea, & Iran, just to name a few. With friends like these who needs enemies? In spite of all threats, Go President Trump! Fight on! You are the #1 Patriot! Yitzchak M. Pipik Port Washington
Letters Continued on Page 38
PROFESSIONAL GUIDE ▼ ATTORNEY ▼
COMPUTER / TECH SUPPORT ▼
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Dr. Ann Marie D’Angelo, PMHCNS-BC Doctor of Nursing Practice
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ENGLISH • ACT • SAT al Reading ic it r C ★ Also ONLINE ★ Writing Tutoring ★ Grammar ★ Essays
LYNNE: 516-625-3314
30 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 25, 2020
BUYER’S GUIDE ▼ ANTIQUES
BATHROOMS AND KITCHENS
CARPENTRY
$$ Top Cash Paid $$
EXPERT BATHROOM REPAIRS
!"##$#%&'()*+,&'-./#$*.%
HIGH END ANTIQUES HIGH CASH PAiD Oil Paintings, Mid-Century Accessories 1950s/60s, Porcelain, Costume Jewelry, Sterling Silver, Gold, Furniture, Objects of Art, etc. • 1 Pc.or entire estates • Premium prices paid for Tiffany, Damaged Quality Pieces Meissen Porcelain, Bronzes, Marble, etc. also
wanted
CALL JOSEPH OR RUTH
718-598-3045 or 516-270-2128 Family Business for over 40 years
AntiqueAssets.com
Crown Molding Window Molding Base Molding Picture Frame Molding
Lic# H0454870000
Specializing in bathroom repairs & leaks • Mold problems. • Shower pan leak experts • Tile repair • Sheetrock • Plastering • Painting • Plumbing Repairs • Grouting NO JOB TOO BIG OR SMALL “Old Fashioned Craftsmanship”
Office: 516-933-6508
• Cell: 516-263-6774
Lic # H3700460000
You’re Just One Phone Call Away From a Clean Home or Office!! Thorough and Professional home and office cleaning at affordable rates. COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL Customized Services • Excellent References Call for a free estimate
Anna Klimas 516-360-8340 Polish cleaning lady
4klimas@gmail.com
PLACE YOUR AD
CUSTOM FRAMING
ADVERTISE WITH US!
JACK’S CUSTOM FRAMING Over 30 Years in Business We can frame anything!
Elegant Touch Remodeling “Quality Construction with a Personal Touch” Deal direct with owner - Serving li over 25 years
Call for Idea session or FREE ESTIMATE ANDREW COHEN 631-867-6557 nehoc23@gmail.com
All Types of Home Improvements Free Estimates • Free design service extensions • Kitchens dormers • bathrooms decks • siding
631.281.7033 Licence #H18H2680000
COMPUTER REPAIR
MASTER CLEANING A Complete Home Service by Reliable Professionals
• Homes • Apts. • Offices • Carpet Cleaning • Window Wash • Floors Stripped & Waxed • Move In Move Out • Attics • Garages • Basements • Rubbish Removal • Pressure Cleaning • All Cleaning Supplies Included • Construction Cleanups Commercial & Residential
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• Screen Fix • Computer Repairs • Onsite Service • Tutoring • VHS to DVD
516.472.0500
www.ComputerRepairForce.com 33 Great Neck Rd. Ste. #5 2nd Floor, Great Neck Open 7 Days • Patient & Friendly
DEMOLITION AND JUNK REMOVAL
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AMBIANCE
• Kitchen Installations • Furniture Assembly • Finish Carpentry • Minor Electrical & Plumbing 28 YEAR GC RESIDENT
HOURS: Tuesday - Saturday 10-5 @jacks_custom_framing jackmccullough@me.com
Nehoc’s Organizing & Handyman Services
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516-775-9495 92 Covert Ave., Stewart Manor
HOME IMPROVEMENT
• • • •
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Quality Care & Workmanship Thousands of frames to choose from
HOME IMPROVEMENT
INSURED
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CLEANING
CLEANING
CHIMNEY SPECIALISTS
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New Doors Old Plaster Removed New Drywall Installed Rotted Wood Replaced
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Buying and Selling over 40 Years / Member New England Appraisers Association
Chimneykinginc.com
and&01234235
Lic & Ins H18E2170000
Call BOB 516-741-2154
• We Remove Or Demo Anything & Everything • Entire contents of home and/or office • We clean it up and take it away Residential - Commercial Bonded Insured / Free Estimates
STRONG ARM CONTRACTING, INC.
516-538-1125
HOME IMPROVEMENT
LAMPS FIXED $ 65 In Home Service Handy Howard 646-996-7628
Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 25, 2020
31
BUYER’S GUIDE ▼ HOME IMPROVEMENT
15-YEAR RESIDENTIAL WARRANTY POLYUREA NOT EPOXY đ 4X STRONGER THAN EPOXY đ NO HOT TIRE PICK-UP! đ WON’T CHIP OR PEEL đ EASY TO CLEAN đ INDOOR/OUTDOOR
ONE DAY FLOORS đ GARAGE FLOORS đ LAUNDRY ROOMS đ PATIOS đ WALKWAYS đ RECREATION ROOMS đ BASEMENTS đ SERVICE AREAS đ OFFICES đ SCHOOLS đ SHOWROOMS đ RESTROOMS đ PRODUCTION AREAS đ VETERINARY CLINICS
516.676.8469 iPaintFloors.com CONCRETE COATINGS
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ISA
est. 1978
Interior and Exterior • Plaster/Spackle Light Carpentry • Decorative Moldings Power Washing www.MpaintingCo.com
516-328-7499 Licensed & Insured
WINDOW REPAIRS
631-385-7975
WINDOW REPAIRS & RESTORATIONS
Outdated Hardware • Skylights •Andersen Sashes • New Storm Windows • Wood Windows • Chain/Rope Repairs • Falling Windows • Fogged Panes • Mechanical Repairs • Wood Repairs
ALL BRANDS
WWW.SKYCLEARWINDOW.COM Call Mr. Fagan • 32 Years Experience Lic. # H080600000 Nassau
ALL PHASES OF RUBBISH REMOVAL & DEMOLITION
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MASONRY FREE ESTIMATES LOU: 516 850-4886
FAMILY OWNED & OPERATED
DRIVEWAYS & PARKING LOTS RETAINING WALLS FOUNDATIONS DRYWELL WATER DRAINAGE WATER PROOFING
SIDEWALKS PATIOS / PAVERS BRICK / BLOCK BLUE STONE STEPS / STOOPS BELGIUM BLOCK CULTURED STONE
Contracting LLC
LIC: #H2219010000
MOVING
Long Island and New York State Specialists
• Residential • Commercial • Piano & Organ Experts • Boxes Available FREE ESTIMATES www.ajmoving.com
516-741-2657
114 Jericho Tpke. Mineola, NY 11501
To place your ad, call 516.307.1045 or fax 516.307.1046
PAINTING, POWERWASHING
MOVING & STORAGE INC.
Bob Cat Service
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FULLY INSURED
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• INTERIOR / EXTERIOR • B. Moore Paints • Power Washing • Dustless Sanding Vacuum System • Taping • Spackling • Plaster Removed • New Drywall
516-884-4016 Lic# H0454870000
TREE SERVICE
PAINTING & WALLPAPER
516-385-3132 New Hyde Park
JUNK REMOVAL
HOME IMPROVEMENT
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516-466-9220
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FAMILY OWNED & OPERATED
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nassau
32 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 25, 2020
COMMUNITY CLASSIFIEDS To advertise here call:516.307.1045
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Tuesday 11:00am: Classified Advertising Tuesday 1:00pm: Legal Notices/ Name Changes Friday 5:00pm Buyers’s Guide Error Responsibility All ads placed by telephone are read back for verification of copy context. In the event of an error of Blank Slate Media LLC we are not responsible for the first incorrect insertion. We assume no responsiblity for an error in and beyond the cost of the ad. Cancellation Policy Ads must be cancelled the Monday before the first Thursday publication. All cancellations must be received in writing by fax at: 516.307.1046 Any verbal cancellations must be approved by a supervisor. There are no refunds on cancelled advertising. An advertising credit only will be issued.
• Great Neck News • Williston Times • New Hyde Park Herald Courier • Manhasset Times • Roslyn Times • Port Washington Times • Garden City News • Bethpage Newsgram • Jericho Syosset News Journal • Mid Island Times • Syosset Advance
EMPLOYMENT
EMPLOYMENT
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
NASSAU COUNTY NEEDS CERTIFIED HHA’S, COMPANIONS AND HOMEMAKERS. ★★★ HIRING IMMEDIATELY★★★ “A Special thank you to all the Nurse Aides and all who Save Lives.”
EVENTS
Help Wanted $18.50 P/H NYC$16 P/H LI$13.50 P/H UPSTATE NY! If you need care from your relative, friend or neighbor and you have Medicaid, they may be eligible to start taking care of you as a personal assistant under NYS Medicaid CDPA program. No Certificates needed. Phone: 347-713-3553
COVID-19 TESTING AVAILABLE COVID-19 PCR Nasal Swab and /or ANTIBODY testing Mon, Wed & Fri in Floral Park Doctor’s Office without wait or lines. Scheduled by appointment. 516-488-1414
SITUATION WANTED
MARKETPLACE
MATURE LADY SEEKS employment as CNA. Home health aide, very reliable, hard working, willing to do background checks, 15 yrs nursing home experience. Please call 516-410-1892 or 917-244-3714
CAREER TRAINING COMPUTER & IT TRAINING program! Train ONLINE to get the skills to become a Computer & Help Desk Professional now! Now offering a $10,000 scholarship for qualified applicants. Call CTI for details! (844) 947-0192 (M-F 8am-6pm ET) TRAIN AT HOME TO DO MEDICAL BILLING Become a Medical Office Professional online at CTI! Get trained, certified & ready to work in months! Call 855-543-6440 (M-F 8am-6pm ET)
ANNOUNCEMENTS HEARING AIDS!! Buy one/get one FREE! High-quality rechargeable Nano hearing aids priced 90% less then competitors. Nearly invisible! 45 day money back guarantee! 833-448-0751 Recently Diagnosed w/Lung Cancer or Mesothelioma? Exposed to Asbestos Pre-1080 at Work or Navy? You may be entitled to a significant cash award! Smoking history ok! 888-912-3150
ADOPTION ADOPTION Single woman looking to build her family by adoption. Any ethnicity welcome, expenses paid. Please call 347-470-5228 or my attorney:800-582-3678 for information.
TOP CASH PAID: ESTATE CONTENTSALL OBJECTS OF ART JEWELRY, ETC. Please call 718-598-3045 or 516-270-2128 www.antiqueassets.com
PET SERVICES
718-850-3400
ELDER CAREExperienced woman seeks position to care for the elderly live in or live out. Certified HHA & certified child care. Excellent references. Please call 516-800-6442
LOOKING TO BUY! Estates, Oriental items, Gold, Silver, Costume Jewelry, Dishes, Flatware, Watches, Clothing, Old Photos, Coins, Stamps, Records, Toys, Action Figures, Comics, Art and Furniture. Immediae Cash Paid Call George 917-775-3048 or 718-386-1104
PETS
• Competitive Pay Rate • Flexible Scheduling • All Shifts & Locations available
CNA/ HHA/ COMPANION AVAILABLE Experienced male or female aide available to take care of your loved one full time or part time 6hrs, 12hrs, 24hrs. Please call 516-688-9251
WANTED TO BUY
A.T. STEWART EXCHANGE CONSIGNMENT SHOP 516-7468900 Antiques-Furniture-JewelrySilver-Mirrors-Lamps-Artwork Come to Consign & Stay to Shop Visit... Our Shop 109 Eleventh St. Garden City Tues-Fri 10-4 (Wed till 6) Saturday 12-4 Our Website tgchs.org Our Online Store stores. myresaleweb.com/ at-stewartexchange Items to Consign? Email photos (with sizing info) to: store@ atstewartexchange.org All proceeds benefit The Garden City Historical Society Like us on Facebook & Instagram INVITED ESTATE SALES BY TRACY JORDAN is doing VIRTUAL TAG SALES and ONLINE AUCTIONS now! Sell the contents of an entire house or sell just a few things! You can host your own sale on invitedsales.com and Facebook and Instagram or we can do it for you. We can photograph, advertise and handle the winning pickups for you within a week! Don’t worry about your closing date, we can get your house ready on time! We are a one stop service for all your needs when you are moving or selling a property! Selling, donating, discarding and cleaning out services can be done to meet your time frame with minimal stress. Contact info@invitedsales.com for more information or call 516-279-6378 to schedule a consultation or receive more information.Visit us at www.invitedsales.com for a listing of our upcoming Virtual Tag Sales and Weekly Auctions!
AUCTIONS Cool Old Stuff in Glen Cove Vintage Shop. WINNER OF BEST OF NORTH SHORE 2020. GREAT PRICED items for Boat and Home. See ALL online: Wilsonsdrydock. com. For info / appt Please call 516-662-2821
WANTED TO BUY I BUY OLD AMERICAN MOTORCYCLES Up to 1999. Call Dan 516-639-1027
CHERYL’S PET SITTING SERVICE Dependable pet sitter will walk and feed your precious pet while you work or travel. Also available to board small dogs. Many excellent references. Call 516-971-3242
AUTOMOTIVE
AUTOS WANTED
JUNK CARS BOUGHT Auto Wrecking Frank & Sons
516-997-5736 AUTO BUYERS! We visit you. Highest cash paid. Or donate, tax deduct + cash. DMV#1303199. Please call Luke 516-VAN-CARS OR 516-297-2277 Drive out Breast Cancer: Donate a car today! The benefits of donating your car or boat: Fast Free Pickup 24hr response Tax deductionEasy to do! Call 24/7: 855-905-4755
SERVICE DIRECTORY
SERVICES JACK’S CUSTOM FRAMING We can frame anything! Quality Care & Workmanship Thousands of frames to choose from!! Over 30 years in business! 92 Covert Ave, Stewart Manor 516-775-9495 PROFESSIONAL HOME ORGANIZER Need help decluttering? Organizing? Garden City resident who has a passion for organizing household items; toys, clothes, kitchens, garages, attics, basements. References available Call Liz Annese 917-679-5553 SUNFLOWER FINE ART GALLERIES MIRRORS PICTURE FRAMING Paintings Art/Photo Restoration Printing, Hanging Services Shadowboxes, Smiles 6 A Terminal Road West Hempstead, NY 11552 www.sunflowerfineart.com @SunflowerArtGuy 516-747-7406
ATTORNEY STEPHANIE A. D’ANGELO, ESQ. Elder Law, Wills & Trusts Asset Preservation, Estate Planning, Probate & Estate Administration/Litigation 901 Stewart Ave, Ste 230 Garden City, NY 11530 516-222-1122 www.dangelolawassociates.com
SHARE YOUR JOB OFFERS CALL NOW: 516.307.1045
REAL ESTATE FOR RENT
REAL ESTATE FOR RENT
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Dowling warns against vaccine delays Continued from Page 6 ibility, but I think for the next six, seven, eight, nine months we have to be very, very careful.” The executive also said that the health of Northwell’s employees was closely monitored. “Probably the safest place to be right now is in a hospital because everybody is doing the right thing,” Dowling said. “We
do test every employee who comes into the hospital, we check temperature. And we check to see whether there were any signs of ill health. If we know that an employee has been in contact, or close contact with anybody that might have a risk of having COVID they have to be quarantined for up to 14 days. Right now we have probably about 500 employees that are out, either because they have the virus or they’re be-
ing quarantined because they were close to somebody with the virus.” He also touted the work of the system’s medical staff through the pandemic and recalled the fear felt in March. “When you’re dealing with the unknown, it’s difficult,” he said. “There was a lot of fear, there was a lot of trepidation. Some people got sick at the beginning, [some] staff, and we were the first
to require all staff wear masks. We were the first health system to do that. And that was a good thing because we had an experience at one of our emergency rooms and our clinical leadership said, ‘We just have to have everybody mask. This is too dangerous.’ ... But I will say, though, that despite that trepidation, and that fear, the staff and what they did was absolutely extraordinary.”
The coronavirus next time and now Continued from Page 14 magazine’s list of 100 most influential people in health care, said he expected it would take six to nine months before 75 to 80 percent of the public is vaccinated – the percentage of people needed to create a herd immunity to allow for a return to
what will have to pass for normalcy. Northwell has been tasked by Cuomo to lead the vaccination efforts on Long Island. One of its hospitals, Long Island Jewish Medical Center in New Hyde Park, was fittingly the place where the first vaccine
in the country was administeredlast week before a national audience. And an emergency care nurse from Port Washington via the island of Jamaica who works at the hospital was the first person to receive the vaccine. But those efforts will fall short unless
enough New Yorkers follow the science and get vaccinated when it is their time. And we all will not be safe from future pandemics until we follow the guidelines and science as prescribed by Dowling and other highly respectedhealth professionals.
Philharmonic musicians to play at Museum of Art Continued from Page 23 by and stop for a few minutes and listen,” Bernard said. “They loved having live music. The desire for live music has increased, I think, during this pandemic, and we figured out a way to have this, within the safety guidelines of the state and the CDC, without an audience, but distanced and everything.” Riley said patrons later brought lawn chairs to watch and listen to the orchestra rehearse. “Some people were just inside the building, looking through the windows and
listening to the orchestra and people were in tears,” he said. “They were so deeply moved, especially by the Mozart they played. It wasn’t formal, it was obviously very safe. But it was so natural, almost like a magnet. You could just see people being drawn to the building, being drawn to the music. And time and again, they’ve come to me and said how much it meant for them to have the music there.” Now, the orchestra and museum are teaming up again, this time to provide chamber music indoors. Principal perform-
ers from the orchestra will be stationed inside, with their songs able to waft throughout the halls of the place itself, in a program called Music at the Museum. “We’re bringing smaller groups to the museum to play chamber music of varying sizes,” Bernard said. “We had a wind quintet and a brass quintet, tubas, and we have plans for many more of those ensembles to come. And the audience is essentially those who are viewing the exhibits. It’s a beautiful synergy.” The museum is open Tuesday to Sun-
day from 11 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. Riley added that once the pandemic has passed, he has bigger plans for their collaboration, including open-air concerts on the museum’s lawns. “I would only put the most wonderful quality of art on our walls, so too, I would only want to have a really, really brilliant orchestra on the property as well,” Riley said. “So in that regard, major international art on the walls and a major sculpture on the grounds, and now the sound of a great orchestra. And this is only the beginning.”
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Over 60 students test positive in 1 week Continued from Page 3 Mineola also had 31 positive cases as of Wednesday, an increase of two over the past week. Saint Maryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Elementary School in Manhasset had six cases and Saint Maryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s High School had four as of Wednesday. EďŹ&#x20AC;orts to reach representatives from the private schools were unavailing. In Port Washington, Guggenheim Elementary School spent last week learning remotely due to understaďŹ&#x192;ng, according to Superintendent Michael Hynes. The school districtâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s increase of 13 cases was the second most for any district over the past week. The Mineola school district had
the most with 14 new cases. In a letter sent to parents and community members, and posted to Facebook by the Guggenheim Home School Association, Hynes said that what was â&#x20AC;&#x153;happening across Long Island regarding the increase in people testing positive for COVID-19 is now directly impacting our district.â&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x153;An increasing number of our staďŹ&#x20AC; members have either tested positive, or have been identified as close contacts in out-of-school scenarios, and have been ordered to quarantine,â&#x20AC;? Hynes wrote. â&#x20AC;&#x153;With an additional three staďŹ&#x20AC; members who have tested COVID-19 positive, we have close to 20 percent of Guggenheimâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
staďŹ&#x20AC; needing to quarantine. Unfortunately, even with the several additional staďŹ&#x20AC; members hired this summer, this is resulting in the district being understaďŹ&#x20AC;ed at Guggenheim Elementary School.â&#x20AC;? In Sewanhaka, 55 of the 69 total positive student cases were on-site, while the rest were oďŹ&#x20AC;site, according to state figures. The North Shore school district, with 58, the Mineola school district, with 56, the Manhasset school district with 43, and the Roslyn school district, with 36, were the only other districts with 30 or more confirmed student cases. The East Williston and Herricks districts combined
for 43 student cases, with East Williston having 22 and Herricks having 21, five of which were new cases. Despite being surrounded by areas with a high number of confirmed cases outside the classroom, schools in the New Hyde Park-Garden City Park and Floral Park-Bellerose school districts had a combined 17 cases. New Hyde Park-Garden City Park had 11 cases, while Floral Park-Bellerose had six. For more information on how school districts and their schools are faring with the coronavirus, visit https://schoolcovidreportcard.health.ny.gov/#/home.
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37
COMMUNITY NEWS
Elliman Realtor Hoffman to speak at Beth-El Bacchus honored Realtor Christopher Bacchus of Douglas Elliman Real Estate in New Hyde Park has been named 2020 REALTOR of the Year by the Long Island Board of REALTORS. The award was presented at the Association’s annual Installation and Awards Ceremony held virtually on Dec. 1. Bacchus was recognized for his dedicated service and contributions to the Association, the community and the real estate industry. Bacchus launched his career as a real estate salesperson in 2014 with Douglas Elliman Real Estate. Two years later, Bacchus earned his Associate Broker License. He continued on with his professional development by earning the Accredited Buyers Representative designation and Commercial and Investment Real Estate Certification. The latter allowed him to add commercial real estate to his roster and expand upon his services to clients. In 2020, Bacchus joined the leadership team at Douglas Elliman and now manages the newly built de novo branch in New Hyde Park. His primary focus is applying his expert skillset in leading and coaching, to develop his team to excellence in professionalism and customer service in real estate. In his first year of business and the years that followed, Bacchus ranked in the top eight percentile of Douglas Elliman and was awarded Chairman Circle Gold.He is consistently recognized as a Top Producer for Douglas Elliman. Bacchus’ passion for making a difference is the driving force behind everything he does and the most vital aspect of his career. He has served LIBOR since 2015, when he joined his first two committees, public relations and legislative. Since then, Bacchus has served on several committees and
as a director for the Northeast Queens Chapter. He was recently appointed to serve as a committee member for the National Association of REALTORS in 2021. Bacchus also serves as a board director for both LIBOR and the New York State Association of REALTORS. In 2016, Bacchus was awarded “20 Under 40 Rising Stars in Real Estate” by LIBOR’s Young Professionals Network, a division of NAR. The program recognizes the best of the real estate industry’s young leaders and overall well-rounded REALTORS. Bacchus became President of the YPN in 2020, and will serve in this role through 2021. In what has proven to be a challenging year, Bacchus has led his peers to continued business success through the COVID 19 pandemic. Bacchus has a Bachelor of Science in Finance, and worked as a leader in Banking and Lending for some of the nation’s most prominent banking institutions, prior to his career in real estate. “As a born leader, Christopher Bacchus has helped many of his colleagues navigate the changing terrain in the real estate industry during this unprecedented year,” said LIBOR President Matthew Arnold. “His passion for the betterment of the industry and community makes him truly deserving of this award.” The REALTOR® Salesperson of the YEAR award recognizes professionals who have made proven contributions to the REALTOR® association and real estate industry through both personal and professional achievement and outstanding volunteerism. To be considered for the recognition, a salesperson must meet criteria including being a Long Island Board of REALTORS® member for three years or more, and playing a significant role in the association and its board.
The community is invited to join Temple Beth-El of Great Neck for a special virtual Shabbat service with guest speaker Anat Hoffman on Saturday, Jan. 9, at 10 a.m. Hoffman has spoken at Temple Beth-El many times, always inspiring attendees, as she touches upon a vast array of subjects affecting Israeli society today, including gender discrimination, Israel diaspora relations, Jewish hate groups, the status of non-Othodox Jews, LGBTQ equity and Arab-Israeli collaboration, especially now in the face of challenges presented by the COVID-19 pandemic. The Israeli activist has served as executive director of the Israel Religious Action Center (IRAC) since 2002. Her position places her at the forefront of the effort to advance religious pluralism in the State of Israel. As IRAC’s executive director, Hoffman has fought (and won) recognition of Reform and Conservative conversions by the state; and led the struggle against gender segregation in the public domain, including on public buses, airplanes and a national radio station. In her teens, she was Israel’s swimming champion, where she learned to
Israeli activist Anat Hoffman will speak at Temple Beth-El of Great Neck on Saturday, Jan. 9, at 10 a.m. dive headfirst into the deep end. This has given her the strength to carry out her work both in the past and today. For more than three decades, Hoffman has led Women of the Wall in its struggle toward gender equality at the Western Wall, the holiest site of the Jewish faith. She also served on Jerusalem’s city council for 14 years, heading the opposition. In this role, she pushed relentlessly for equality and tolerance in a city run by the powerful Orthodox block. She was selected as Person of the Year by Haaretz in 2013
and chosen as one of the 50 most influential Jews by the Jerusalem Post in 2014. Globes named her as one of Israel’s top women activists in 2018. Hoffman earned her bachelor’s degree in Psychology from UCLA and her master’s degree in Psychology from Bar-Ilan University. She is a mother of three, has one grandchild and lives with her partner in Jerusalem. Temple Beth-El is Great Neck’s oldest synagogue, which celebrated its 90th anniversary last year. Learn more at www. tbegreatneck.org or by calling 516-487-0900.
Recycling program unveiled The Town of North Hempstead has announced a new recycling program designed to properly dispose of No. 5 plastics. Starting in 2021, residents may bring any No. 5 plastic items to the town’s residential drop off at 999 West Shore Road, Port Washington for no charge between 7:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. on Sundays when the resident rop-off is operating. “Preserving our environment for future generations is so im-
portant,” said North Hempstead Town Supervisor Judi Bosworth. “No. 5 plastics include items such as yogurt cups, shampoo bottles, and more. They are hard and heat resistant and can result in contamination of recyclables. We are thrilled to be able to offer this program for residents to help reduce their waste and to keep these plastics out of our landfills.” Since No. 5 plastics are made of polypropylene, they
cannot be combined with other household plastic recyclables. No. 5 plastics must be separated from Nos. 1 and 2 plastic and must be cleaned prior to bringing them to the Resident Dropoff. Residents can identify items that are made with No. 5 plastics by looking for a chasing arrow symbol with a “5” located in the center. For more information on the program, please call 311 or 516869-6311.
Nassau Bar collects toys for area nonprofit This year for the Holidays, the Nassau County Bar Association held a toy drive for New Hour for Women and Children LI, a nonprofit organization that provides meaningful support to current and formerly incarcerated women, their children and families.
Toys were donated by NCBA Members and staff and were picked up this afternoon by New Hour LI. We are so proud to lend a helping-hand to our community during these difficult times and brighten the holidays for the children.
New Hour for Women and Children LI and Nassau County Bar Association
38 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 25, 2020
READERS WRITE
DOT pick Buttigieg purely a political choice
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resident-elect Joseph Biden’s selection of Pete Buttigieg, the former South Bend, Ind., mayor and 2020 Democratic Party primary rival, as the next Department of Transportation secretary was disappointing. USDOT has 55,000 employees and a budget of $71.4 billion, It is comprised of the Federal Aviation, Highway, Transit, Motor Carriers, Maritime and National Highway Traffic Safety Administrations along with the St. Lawrence Seaway Development Corporation and its own Office of Inspector General. Buttigieg ran a city of 100,000 with 1,143 employees, an annual budget of $358 million and a 66-bus transit system with 10,000 daily riders.
There are hundreds of better qualified city and state DOT commissioners, Transit Agency presidents and others who have significant experience in many of these units within USDOT. Many spent years managing thousands of employees and budgets in the billions. They would have stood head and shoulders above Buttigieg in their ability to hit the ground running such a complex agency as USDOT. It appears that Biden is a disciple of the same old Washington, inside the Beltway practices. He who has the gold rules. Reward those who have been politically loyal such as Buttigieg, who dropped out of the Democratic primary, at a key moment, to assist Biden in becoming the front runner.
Quid pro quo is alive and well in the incoming White House. It is business as usual at the expense of taxpayers. Larry Penner Great Neck (Larry Penner is a transportation advocate, historian and writer who previously worked for the Federal Transit Administration Region 2 NY Office. This included the review, approval and oversight for billions of dollars in grants to the MTA which funded LIRR, Metro North, NYC Transit, MTA Bus capital projects and programs along with 30 other transit operators in NY & NJ) .
Watch your language in criticizing Trump, Zeldin
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t’s time for readers like Eric Cashdan to put aside the terms “racist” and “fascist” for anyone engaged in support of President Trump. This is not the platform to discuss their extremely
dangerous overuse. Hurling such epithets as an expression of some readers’ relentless and irrational hatred of Trump reduces the power of those words. It negates the realities of those who did suffer under
Nazi rule or experience true racism today. For the record, Congressman Lee Zeldin is working for all of Long Island. He recently fought and won a power grab over the use of Plum Island near the East
End, surely a benefit for the entire community. Susan Buckler Great Neck
Biden silent on plans to fix the economy
I
would like to respond to a reader’s letter in the Dec. 18 issued titled “Biden’s impossible task as president.” I think the writer clearly missed a few things. First, the writer quotes the genius of David Letterman saying that Obama “was handed a store that had been shuttered for eight years” to then further conclude that “now Mr. Biden is handed a store that has been trashed and the shelves stripped bare,” all due to Trump. What is quite amazing to me is he uses such an analogy to disparage Trump, yet completely ignores the reality that months of riots and looting by Black Lives Matter and Antifa in fact did trash stores and strip the shelves bare literally. I guess the late-night talk shows missed that, too.
Then he goes on to predict that by March 1 the Murdoch press could possibly “lay any failure of the economy on Democratic policies.” I would ask if the writer actually lives in New York State or near New York City. We have a Democratic governor and mayor, both of whose disastrous policies have destroyed the economy of the state and the city, and killed thousands, or do we assume that’s all on Trump, too. Either way it is again completely ignored by the writer. This writer then states that “Mr. Biden will inherit a broken economy and traumatized population, with the expectation of miracles to fix, etc…..”. However, all I heard from Mr. Biden during his campaign was that “Trump has no plan for the economy and no plan for COVID” but
vote for Mr. Biden because he has a plan to fix it. Well, where is that plan, Mr. Biden? Why would one of your supporters write to a newspaper looking for miracles when Biden supposedly has a great plan? Makes no sense to me. Maybe it’s time for Mr. Biden and his supporters to explain his plan to fix the economy and address COVID, or are we supposed to just go with the Cuomo “kill all the elderly plan” or maybe the de Blasio “destroy all small businesses plan.” Perhaps it’s time to stop being so divisive and put forth reasonable solutions rather than calling for miracles and pointing to others. The writer also makes a reference to Mitch McConnell doing “everything possible to sand-
bag the economy…” and “having no qualms of doing it again… all at the cost of the welfare of the American people.” On this point I agree and have no confidence that the virtually all-in Congress have but their own interests in mind and not that of the American people. However, the writer does not mention anything about the connections of the Biden family to the Chinese Communist Party. I would think if you find Mitch McConnell’s actions “at a cost to the American people,” then surely Joe Biden and his family’s connections to China should be even more concerning and at least worth the writer’s mention. Thomas Dreyer Floral Park
Biden unveils dream team for climate change Continued from Page 17 power. And we’ll do all of this knowing that we have before us an enormous economic opportunity to create jobs and prosperity at home and export clean American-made products around the world, harnessing our climate ambition in a way that is good for American workers and the U.S. economy.”
Introducing his Climate and Environment dream team, Biden said, “When we think about climate change, we think ‘jobs .’.. A key plank of our Build Back Better economic plan is building a modern, climate-resilient infrastructure and clean energy future. We can put millions of Americans to work modernizing water, transportation, and en-
ergy infrastructure to withstand the impacts of extreme weather. When we think about renewable energy, we see American manufacturing, American workers, racing to lead the global market. We see farmers making American agriculture first in the world to achieve net-zero emissions and gaining new sources of income in the process. We see the small
businesses and master electricians designing and installing innovative, energy-conserving buildings and homes. This will reduce electricity consumption and save hundreds of thousands of dollars a year in energy costs.” Biden added, “These aren’t pie-in-thesky dreams. These are concrete, actionable solutions. And this team will get them done.”
Cohen Children’s Center nurses honored nationally Continued from Page 10 call to bravely care for patients no matter the sacrifice. I continue to be enormously grateful to them while we battle the second surge of the virus in New York.” Margaret Duffy, the hospital’s chief nursing officer, oversees more than 700 nurses, who care for about 170,000 pediat-
ric patients every year in the hospital and in ambulatory settings. “Magnet is not just an award, it is a culture of excellence we have created to deliver the highest quality care to our patients,” Duffy said. “With this accomplishment, our patients and families are assured we are committed to always striving for the highest level of health care delivery.”
As the hospital’s executive director and former chief nurse executive, Carolyn Quinn knows the extraordinary amount of effort it takes at all levels of the hospital to achieve and maintain Magnet status. “The Magnet process brings every nursing department of the hospital together and relationships are strengthened with other disciplines throughout the facility. This
teamwork and commitment translates, and truly raises the bar for patient care,” Quinn said. “This national nursing honor is a testament to the talent, energy and passion of our frontline staff who are driving optimum outcomes and the best patient experience.” The Magnet status will remain valid for four years. After that, the hospital will reapply to meet the ANCC criteria.
The Roslyn Times, Friday, December 25, 2020
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39
COMMUNITY NEWS
Cradle of Aviation goes back in time This December break (Dec. 26 – Jan. 3). the Cradle of Aviation Museum is going back in time to celebrate the best of the eighties with the return of its popular Arcade Age Exhibit, celebration of the 50th Anniversary of Top Gun’s F-14, and a celebration of the 35th anniversary of Back to the Future with a Deloreon and movie memorabilia. ARCADE AGE EXHIBIT Back by Popular Demand Not only can you play the arcade classics, but the exhibit tells the story of video arcade games; from the pioneers in the early 40s and 50s to the golden age in the late 70s and early 80s to its crash, revival and ultimate decline in the 90s. The exhibit tells the story of the creative and innovative people who
explored groundbreaking technologies, the games that sprung from their ingenuity and a culture that was shaped by their developments . complete with over 50 unforgettable playable favorites like Ms. Pac-Man, Galaga, Space Invaders, Centipede, Donkey Kong and more. $10 per admission The Arcade Age Exhibit will have three 90-minute sessions at 11:00 am, 1:00 pm, and 3:00 pm.-Masks required-Gloves required (and supplied)-Limited entry to maintain social distanceMachines are cleaned in between each session TOP GUN’s F-14 TURNS 50! December 2020 marks the 50th anniversary of the first flight of the F-14 Tomcat, one of the most iconic American fighter planes,
also known for its leading role in the Top Gun movie franchise. Visitors can view a robust F-14 collection with a full-size aircraft and two F-14 cockpits, nose and flight suits and for this special exhibit, never-before-seen artifacts taken out of storage such as concept models and photographs. During December break, kids can join educators to examine its famous cartoon logo and the hidden messages it contains about the airplane and then have the opportunity to make their own logos. This ten-minute presentation and take-home activity will take place every hour from 12-4. Catch the exhibit and activity just in time before the release of Top Gun 2: Maverick in Summer 2021. Free with Museum Admission
BACK TO THE CRADLE The beloved sci-fi, time-traveling movie, Back to the Future turns 35 in 2020. What better time and way to go back to a period of great pop culture, music, and movies, then to see and take photos with a DeLorean and Back to the Future memorabilia on display at the museum for December break only. Free with Museum Admission “We’re thrilled to go back in time and celebrate the 80’s by putting a spotlight on two iconic films, Top Gun and Back to the Future. Combine that with the return of our very popular Arcade Age Exhibit and you have the perfect way to say good-bye to the year 2020 and a perfect way to spend the day at the Cradle.”- An-
drew Parton, President, Cradle of Aviation Museum and Education Center Museum Admission $16.00 for Adults; $14.00 for Child/Senior. Museum visitors can also get a combo museum admission and planetarium/theater show rate of $21.00 for adults and $19 for Child/Senior. Arcade Age Exhibit Admission: $10.00 The Cradle of Aviation Museum & Education Center is over 150,000 square feet and home to over 75 planes and spacecraft representing over 100 years of aviation history and Long Island’s only Giant Screen Dome Theater. The museum is located on Museum Row, Charles Lindbergh Blvd., in Garden City. Call (516) 572-4111 or visit www.cradleofaviation.org
Temple Beth Sholom celebrates Hanukkah BY HANNA HAREL AND SHARON SOLOMON Temple Beth Sholom of Roslyn, New York, under the direction of Sharon Solomon, Religious School Director and Grant Coordinator Hanna Harel is in our second year of an inter-generational indepth partnership with the seniors at the Atria on Roslyn Harbor. This is all made possible by a grant with the Legacy Heritage Better Together Program. Our first year’s monthly engagement components were centered on the theme of technology. “As you teach, you learn” (Midrash Tehillim). We wanted to bring our senior friends “up to date”! Chanukah is the holiday of miracles. It is the story of a small,
Temple Beth Shalom Hanukkah Concert featuring songs by Shir Soul and dedicated to our buddies at The Atria on Roslyn Harbor outnumbered heroic band of Jewish fighters, the Maccabees, who defend their right to religious freedom. They fight and win against the mighty Greek army and send them out of Israel. Miracle 1. When the Maccabees return
victoriously to their temple, They find it destroyed. They find a small, sealed kosher jar of oil. It is enough oil to light the eternal light for one day. As history tells us, it burned for eight straight days. Miracle 2. We have witnessed what this
program has done for our seventh grade students and the Atria seniors. It has produced miracles! They have become “buddies”! Where once TBS students were able to be on site at the Atria to do programming, students now communicate with their senior friends through written journals that are exchanged weekly. Yes the unheard of, Miracle 1, the students and seniors have become pen pals! The seniors have taught them that the “old fashioned” paper and pen trick comes in quite handy! Students are quite impressed with their senior friends, as they have “Zoomed” together to prepare “turkey challahs and chocolate babkas with the aid of a professional baker. Robyn Huber, senior “buddy” ofRyder Weinberg a seventh-grade student at the synagogue, recently attended his
Bar Mitzvah on “Zoom”.Seniors can learn technology from our students! Miracle 2 To honor our new friends at the Atria on Roslyn Harbor, they were invited on Zoom to our TBS Outdoor Chanukah Lighting Ceremony and Concert program. We dedicated a song to the seniors and staff of this treasured community at the event.Temple Beth Sholom is grateful for this grant that has allowed ourstudents to experience this worthwhile initiative.We salute the staff, directors and our partner at the Atria on Roslyn Harbor, Senior Engage Life Director, Meagan Devine Collazo for opening the doors to a successful joint bond between seniors and youth. This miraculous program has fostered friendships, shared wisdom and joy, all in the spirit of giving back…”mitzvot” as Jews would say.
NSTV present at historic inoculation On Monday, Dec. 14, NSTVLong Island was proud to support Northwell Health in filming and streaming the historic Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 Vaccination given to Sandra Lindsay, Northwell Health ICU nurse at LIJ Medical Center in Queens. Lindsay was the first American to receive the vaccination, administered by Michelle Chester, DNP with Michael Dowl-
ing, CEO and Northwell Health president watching as history was being made by science. Gov. Andrew Cuomo was present via live streaming, and everyone marveled at Ms. Lindsay’s trust in science. Check out our Facebook page: NSTV – Long Island, YouTube: NSTV Long Island, Instagram: NSTV Long Island and Twitter: NSTV Long Island.
Erica Bradley, NSTV-Long Island executive director, attends the first vaccination shot in the country at Northwell Health.
Mike Peters gets the streaming connection for Gov. Cuomo’s commentary.
40 The Roslyn Times, Friday, December 25, 2020
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