Tuesday
Jun202017

***Silver Alert ***

Silver Alert

Suffolk County Police have issued a Silver Alert for a missing Patchogue woman who suffers from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder.

Janet Barra, 58, of 234 River Ave., Patchogue, was last seen on security footage on June 5th in Medford. Barra is a white female with olive skin, brown eyes and black hair. She is 5 feet 6 inches tall and weighs 210 pounds.

Anyone with information on Barra’s location is asked to call 911 or the Fifth Squad at 631-854-8552.

As a reminder, Silver Alert is a program implemented in Suffolk County that allows local law enforcement to share information with media outlets about individuals with special needs who have been reported missing.

 

Saturday
Jun172017

No Fish Story Caleb Smith 15th Annual Junior Fishing Tournament Sets Record

Record High for Junior Fishing Tournament

by Carole Paquette

Photos by Carol Tokosh and Michael d’Agostino (click on photos to enlarge)

 Winners in the morning group [from left] Mia McGivney, Angelina Saeiocca, Tommy LozadaWinners in the afternoon group [from left] Christopher Bellinger, Matthew Cira, Eric TrovitchThe fish in Willow Pond were biting at Caleb Smith State Park Preserve in Smithtown last weekend and as a result the Friends of Caleb Smith Preserve’s catch-and-release 15th annual Junior Fishing Tournament hit a record with a total of 259  fish caught by 30 anglers, ranging in age from five through twelve. All anglers caught at least three fish per person.

Winners of the morning session for those ages five to eight: Angelina Saeiocca, 5, from Bay Shore, won first prize for the most fish caught: 10; Thomas Lozada, 6, Massapequa Park, caught the largest pan fish, a 9-3/4-inch sunfish; Mia McGivney, 8, Rockville Center, caught the largest “other” fish, a 13-inch bass.

Winners in the afternoon session, for anglers ages nine through 12 were: Erik Trovitch, 12, from Smithtown, first prize for catching the most fish: 53; Matthew Cira, 9, Smithtown, caught the largest pan fish: a 10-inch sunfish; and Christopher Bellinger, 12, Smithtown, caught the largest “other” fish: a 14-1/2-inch bass.

For Eric Trovitch, who won first prize last year as well for catching 17 fish, the day began with immediate good fortune. 

“He caught a total of 53 fish, and that’s the truth! He threw in his line and caught a fish within a minute!” said Carol Tokosh, whose husband Tom was chairman of the tournament.

There were 19 anglers in the morning session who caught a total of 116 fish, and 11 in the afternoon session who caught a total of 143 fish. All participants received a free tee shirt and goodie bags. 

The Fisherman Magazine provided worms, bobbers, hooks and two rods for prizes.

Mia McGivney of Rockville Center catches the fish, then grandfather Roy Placet steps in.

Eric Trovitch and one of his 53 fish, a 14.75-inch bassMatthew Cira with his 10-inch sunfish Christopher Bellinger with his prize-winning bass
Tommy Lozada with his prize-winning sunfish.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

om Tokosh of Smithtown with junior angler Cooper Phillips, 10. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Saturday
Jun172017

Legislator Kennedy Proposes IR 1542 Opting Out Of Ride Sharing

 

Legislator Leslie Kennedy (R-Nesconset) held a press conference on Thursday, June 15 regarding her bill; Introductory Resolution 1542. This bill would temporarily opt out Suffolk County from ride sharing services, such as Uber and Lyft, until a loophole is closed by New York State. The present version of the bill allows certain level 1 registered sex offenders to be eligible as drivers for Uber, or Lyft, or any other ride sharing service.

According to New York State DCJS Upon release to the community following a conviction for a registerable offense, a sex offender is required to register with the Division of Criminal Justice Services. In order to determine the level of community notification and duration of registration, a hearing is held by the sentencing court. After examining the facts in a particular case, including, but not limited to, the use of force, weapons, alcohol or drugs, victim’s age, number of victims, assault or injury of the victim and relationship to the victim, the court makes a determination regarding the offender’s level of notification, commonly called the risk level. The risk level is based on the court’s assessment regarding whether a particular offender is likely to repeat the same or similar registerable offense and the danger the offender poses to the community. Because the risk level reflects factors unique to a particular sex offender, offenders convicted of the same offense may receive different risk levels. A level 1 indicates there is a low risk of a repeat offense.

Level 2 and level 3 sex offenders are prohibited by state law from being Uber and Lyft drivers.

According to Politifact “The law requires ride-hailing companies to perform a background check on prospective drivers. They have to check New York’s Sex Offender Registry and the National Sex Offender Public Registry.

Those who are on the national registry are barred from ever driving for ride-hailing companies. But not all registered sex offenders are on it. New York state’s Level 2 and Level 3 offenders are listed on the national registry, and they remain on it for life. So they will never be able to drive for the companies.

New York state’s Level 1 offenders are not on the national registry. And, state law does not allow information about Level 1 sex offenders to be posted online. Federal agencies have access to the information but state law blocks it from being posted on the national registry.

That does not mean all Level 1 sex offenders can drive for the ride-hailing companies. Level 1 offenders must wait seven years after their release from jail or prison before they are allowed to drive. If the offenders are not incarcerated, the seven-year waiting period starts when they are convicted, according to state law.” 

Legislator Kennedy was joined at her press conference by Laura Ahearn, Executive Director of Parents for Megan’s Law, Ed Flood who was representing Assemblyman Dean Murray, Robert Cunningham of Suffolk TLC, as well as Legislators William Spencer, Kevin McCaffrey, and Tom Cilmi.

Laura Ahearn said that the “State law in its current form leaves women and children vulnerable to being driven around by licensed TNC drivers who are also registered sex offenders convicted of forcible violent sexual attacks against both women and children.  We are confident that state lawmakers will continue to work together to correct this dangerous situation immediately.”  

Kennedy’s bill has support from State Lawmakers such as Assemblyman Dean Murray who has said, “I applaud Legislator Kennedy’s Bill to put the brakes on accepting Uber and Lyft until this very dangerous loophole is closed. I am working hard with my colleagues in Albany to close this as soon as possible.”

And Senator Tom Croci who said “I have always been supportive of ride-sharing services such as of Uber and Lyft, and I recognize its importance as a transportation alternative. My NYS Senate colleagues and I are currently working with members of the Assembly on legislation to close this dangerous loophole. It is our hope that we will do so before the 2017 State Legislative session comes to a close next week.  I applaud S.C. Legislator Leslie Kennedy on her interim bill to keep Suffolk County residents safe until we can complete our work in Albany.”

“Uber and Lyft provide a very good service,” said Legislator Kennedy “But we need to make sure that our residents are safe while using these ride sharing services. I am confident that lawmakers in Albany will resolve this oversight, but until then we must opt out of ride sharing services.”

 

Thursday
Jun152017

SUFFOLK CLOSEUP - Remembering Charles Raebeck

SUFFOLK CLOSEUP

By Karl Grossman

Charles Raebeck (photo The East Hampton Star)Charles Raebeck was a major figure in fighting for the environment of Suffolk County. He led Suffolk for Safe Energy, an early group battling the plans of the Long Island Lighting Company to build seven to eleven nuclear power plants in Suffolk. He and his wife Audrey were integral in saving the first professionally-staffed local environmental group in the nation, the Group for America’s South Fork. They became co-directors and brought stability to the Group.

Dr. Raebeck was my favorite professor. Indeed, he was the greatest professor I have ever known (and I’ve been in academia for nearly 40 years myself as a professor of journalism).

Last week, a “celebration” of the life of Dr. Raebeck was held at Peconic Landing, the retirement community in Greenport, where he and his wife Audrey have been happily living. I went with noted artist Dan Welden, on whom Dr. Raebeck also had a large impact. Dan and I were students at Adelphi-Suffolk College (Dan, originally from Babylon, was class president). With about 200 students and 15 faculty in its first years, in a former pubic school building—“Old 88”—in Sayville, it was small “and people got to know each other well,” recounted Dan as we drove.  It later became Dowling College in Oakdale which sadly shut down last year. I took every class given by Dr. Raebeck, a professor of educational psychology. 

Speaking about his father at the celebration, Barry Raebeck said: “Charlie had the common touch as much as anyone I’ve ever known. He was a friend to everyone he knew, and completely uninterested in rank or social status. I remember being annoyed as a boy when he declined using ‘Dr.’ as a preface to his name, me feeling that he deserved the title. But he didn’t want to separate himself from the postman, or the gas station attendant, the bartender…the fisherman, or the garbage man. He truly did not consider himself superior in any way.”

“I, however, do consider him superior in many ways. He was superior in his drive to make the world a better place—in terms of our environment, our education system, our social justice, and our political direction….Charlie marched for civil rights—in the 1950s and the 60s and the 70s….He took us, as kids, to see Martin Luther King, he took us to Washington, he kindled a tremendous sense of the right cause—be if for the poor, the dispossessed, the war torn, the oppressed, the people who most needed defending.” He “was compassionate, persevering, fearless, informed, resilient and friendly to a fault…And also whimsical, clever, spontaneous, and entirely unique….One of a kind indeed,” said Barry, himself an educator with a doctorate.

Daughter Wendy, an author, described Dr. Raebeck as a “great” person, always “selfless” and “optimistic….He gave us all wise counsel and seemed to have a second sense, his own recipe for life….Dad was always way ahead of his time.” He was deeply committed to environmental preservation when virtually no one “understood [environmental] stewardship.” She said “Dad truly loved life,” and he explained that as an only child he did not have siblings as friends—“so early on I made life my friend.” She said family members called him “Steds” for his steadiness. 

Indeed, Dr. Raebeck was extraordinarily steady. I vividly recall him, now more than 50 years later, in front of our class, sporting a casual flannel plaid shirt, resembling actor Lloyd Bridges, calmly, clearly, steadily teaching. 

Another son, Shelby (Skip), also an educator, said his dad “loved thinking, loved ideas.”

Charlie’s stepson Christopher Kelley said he “always urged us to challenge authority.” Mr. Kelley, a partner in the law firm originally founded by the late Tom Twomey and Steve Latham, which was heavily involved in anti-nuclear work, noted how Charlie and Audrey (who also was an education professor at Dowling) were arrested in a demonstration at the Shoreham nuclear power plant site. Grassroots efforts were important in stopping it from operating. Charlie “taught us about the absurdity of war and human conflict,” he said.

Many others spoke including Mr. Latham who talked about Dr. Raebeck’s “love of this place, love of the environment” and his dedication to keeping Suffolk “free of nuclear power plants.”

Another former student of Dr. Raebeck’s, Dr. Paul Moschetta, now a psychotherapist, called him a “beautiful guy” and shared: “Charlie was the first sane adult to focus a beam in my direction.” He described Charlie and Audrey as a “miracle couple” and said the weekly gatherings they held for years at their home have continued “and the spirit of Charlie and Audrey pulse through them.”

I also spoke and told of having known no greater person in my life.

Charlie died at 95 after a life full of accomplishment and good work. He leaves Audrey, five children and two step-children—Chris and David Kelley, the corruption-fighting former United States Attorney—along with many students whom he deeply inspired. 

Karl Grossman is a veteran investigative reporter and columnist, the winner of numerous awards for his work and a member of the L.I. Journalism Hall of Fame. He is a professor of journalism at SUNY/College at Old Westbury and the author of six books.

Thursday
Jun082017

SUFFOLK CLOSEUP - "The Cuomo Tax Screws Long Islanders"

SUFFOLK CLOSEUP

By Karl Grossman

Father Bill Brisotti of Our Lady of Miraculous Medal parish in Wyandanch.In front of a truck with a giant screw on it, emblazoned with the words “The Cuomo Tax Screws Long Islanders” and below “Stop Cuomo Tax, No Nuclear Bailout,” protesters of Governor Andrew Cuomo’s program of charging ratepayers, businesses, school districts, county, city, town and village governments and other entities, $7.6 billion to keep four nuclear plants upstate running gathered last week in Hauppaauge.

In a statement he asked be read at the demonstration, State Assemblyman Fred W. Thiele, Jr. said: “Every ratepayer in the State of New York is now feeling the effects of the nuclear bailout through increases in their monthly utility bills….I remain committed to press hard against this subsidy…Further, we must look into whether or not there are better policies that would provide New York with the energy it needs while meeting the Clean Energy Standard of 50% renewable energy by 2030.  Long Islanders deserve nothing less.”

Speaker after speaker at the protest decried the program which began on April 1 that has added an average $2 a month “surcharge” to the bill of every electric ratepayer in New York State and is to continue for 12 years. There were repeated calls for Mr. Cuomo not to continue the program and, if he doesn’t do that, for the State Legislature to step in and stop it. Mr. Thiele is a main figure in the State Assembly involved in that endeavor.

Mr. Cuomo has argued that the four nuclear plants—FitzPatrick, Nine Mile Point 1 and Two and Ginna—all owned by the Chicago-based Exelon Corporation, remain open because of the jobs they provide. This is despite, when it came to the other nuclear plants in New York State, Indian Point 1 and 2 just north of New York City, Mr. Cuomo working with environmental groups last year forged an agreement for them to close and workers at them retrained through the state in renewable energy such as solar and wind.

At the demonstration, held last Wednesday, May 31 in the parking area for the Suffolk Legislature Building, Blair Horner, executive director the New York Public Research Interest Group, explained that beyond the average $2 a month “surcharge” on the bills of individual ratepayers, the Cuomo program involves hefty business and institutional charges—that will be passed on. With a set of charts, he cited charges totaling millions for school districts, counties, cities, towns and villages and such entities as the MTA. 

Father Bill Brisotti, pastor of Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal parish in Wyandanch, who was active in the battle to prevent the Shoreham nuclear power plant from going into operation and the Long Island Lighting Company from building additional nuclear power plants, said, “Now more than ever we must be good stewards of our most precious gift, the Earth. That means embracing renewable sources of energy and not handing over $7.6 billion to a nuclear power company that won’t help us reach our environmental goals.” The priest called the Cuomo surcharge program “unwise, unjust” and “short-sighted.”

Gail Payne of Centerport, nuclear issues chair for the Sierra Club Long Island, spoke of not only the cost but the danger of the plants, several of which are similar to the GE plants that melted down and exploded at Fukushima. They are all a little over 300 miles from Long Island. The energy emphasis today, she said, must be on safe, clean technologies such as solar and wind power—far better than nuclear power in terms of “economics, the environment and jobs.”

Dr. Heidi Hutner, director of Sustainability Studies and associate dean of the School of Atmospheric and Marine Sciences at Stony Brook University, described the upstate nuclear plants as ”aging, old technology” and said it makes “no sense” to keep them going with the availability of less expensive and far safer solar and wind technology. Furthermore, said Dr. Hutner, nuclear power plants generate nuclear waste that remains deadly for “tens of thousands of years….We’re dealing with the future—our children,” she declared.

Scott Lewis of North Sea, who has campaigned for the election of Long Island Power Authority trustees, said the Cuomo surcharge showed the importance of electing those who run LIPA and “all power companies” in the state so there would be “the impact of the public in making energy decisions.” (The original design for LIPA was elected trustees, but Mr. Cuomo’s father, Mario, when he was governor, scuttled that, switching to having trustees appointed, most by the governor and also the State Assembly speaker and Senate majority leader.)

Eric Weltman, senior organizer of Food & Water Watch, said the $7.6 billion nuclear bail-out program “could have been conceived by Trump.” He said “we’re here to send a message to Governor Cuomo: we don’t want it.” The “future of energy,” said Mr. Waltman, is in “capturing” the energy of the wind and “harvesting abundant solar power.”

Among the signs held by protesters: “We Are The Clean Energy Revolution.’

Karl Grossman is a veteran investigative reporter and columnist, the winner of numerous awards for his work and a member of the L.I. Journalism Hall of Fame. He is a professor of journalism at SUNY/College at Old Westbury and the author of six books.