____________________________________________________________________________________


 

 

 

 

Sunday
Apr122015

Editorial - SC Republican Misleader Comes To Smithtown

Suffolk County Republican MISLEADER John J. LaValle comes to Smithtown -

On April 8, 2015 Councilman Ed Wehrheim held a fundraiser at the Watermill Caterers* in Smithtown. Mr. Wehrheim’s friends, family and allies attended showing their support for Councilman Wehrheim as he readies himself for his 2015 campaign for Town Councilman.  Kudos to Mr. Wehrheim.  The kumbaya moment included support for Councilman Creighton and Deanna Varricchio (Receiver of Taxes).  

Enter into the picture John J. LaValle, Chairman of the Suffolk County Republican Committee, AKA the Republican MISLEADER. LaValle came to the fundraiser in his official capacity as the benevolent leader of Suffolk County Republicans showing support for his buds Wehrheim & Creighton. 

Mr. LaValle earned his MISLEADER title due to the blatently erroneous emails he sent to County Republicans in the 2013 Primary. In the emails LaValle misrepresented who Smithtown’s Republicans designated as candidates in the Smithtown Republican Convention. In his email the MISLEADER replaced designated party candidate Patrick R. Vecchio with Councilman Robert Creighton and left off party designee Thomas McCarthy, mentioning only Kevin Malloy despite both being party designees. 

Smithtown Republicans didn’t buy into the LaValle email. They voted for Vecchio, McCarthy and Nowick who ousted party designee Malloy. Republicans voted against their party’s designee for legislator.

The result in 2013 was Team Vecchio won and Team LaValle lost. 

Message to Councilman Wehrheim, people have short memories when it comes to accomplishments but long memories when it comes to deceiving them. 

Editorial - John J. LaValle - Party Leader OR Party Cheater?

WRONG! Sloppy Or Deliberate? SC Republican Chair LaValle Sends Email Blast With Wrong Information 

Pat

*Wording was changed to reflect the name Watermill Caterers not Watermill Restaurant as originally posted.

Tuesday
Apr072015

American Association of University Women Promoting Equity And Education For Women

Members of the Smithtown Branch of the AAUW (American Association of University Women) volunteered on March 27, 2015 at Stony Brook University. They assisted with the ELECT-HER-CAMPUS-WOMEN-WIN training program which is supported by both the University and the AAUW.  The 35 college students who attended the event were involved in workshops which encouraged and trained them to build leadership skills in order to run for student elected offices and/or future elected positions in their communities. The participants were able to gain insight from speakers such as Assemb. Michaelle Solages, N.Y. State Assembly, District 22, who provided a motivating speech and question and answer session which encouraged the campus women to develop their skills in order to achieve their goals of winning elections.

Smithtown Branch of AAUWThe results of the 2014 ELECT-HER-CAMPUS-WOMEN-WIN training reveal that 78% of the participants who reported running for office won their elections and that 12% more students planned to run for political office after attending the ELECT-HER training.

The AAUW is the nation’s leading voice in promoting equity and education for women and girls. Since its founding in 1881, AAUW members have examined and taken positions on the fundamental issues of the day—educational, social, economic and political.

The Smithtown Branch of the AAUW is active in community outreach. Most recently the members were involved in collecting and donating much-needed supplies for the Suffolk County Coalition Against Domestic Violence. 

The Smithtown Branch also sponsors various “interest groups,” such as the Literature Group, the Great Decisions Interest Group, the Handicrafts Group, and the Mah Jongg Group.

To learn more about the American Association of University Women you can find it at  HYPERLINK “http://www.aauw.org” www.aauw.org. To find out about membership in the Smithtown Branch of the AAUW, contact Lois Netter, tel. 631-544-1133 or at  HYPERLINK “mailto:alnetter@aol.com” alnetter@aol.com

Thursday
Apr022015

Harvard Club Of LI Names Smithtown Resident Brian Belanger "Distinguished Teacher of 2015" 

Smithtown resident Brian Belanger a teacher at Syosset High School has been named a “Distinguished Teacher of 2015” by the Harvard Club of Long Island. 


Brian Belanger“Our awards honor teachers who transform lives,” explained Dr. Judith Esterquest, Harvard Club of Long Island Chair of the Distinguished Teacher Selection Committee. “Dedicated teachers like Mr. Belanger offer Long Island students deep expertise, extraordinary talents, and countless hours of devotion. By capturing the minds and imaginations of our children, preparing them for challenges that were unknown even a few decades ago — academic, social, political, cultural — these teachers shape our country’s future.”    
One of 14 teachers from across Long Island to receive this award — from across the 150 public school districts and private schools on Long Island — Mr. Belanger will be honored at the Harvard Club of Long Island’s annual University Relations Luncheon on April 26. Following the award ceremony, Alyssa A. Goodman, Professor of Astronomy at Harvard University, will highlight her work at the boundary of astrophysics and data visualization. Today’s scientific breakthroughs often depend on scientists employing visualization tools to gain insight and draw conclusions from tremendously large and diverse data sets. Professor Goodman’s lecture, entitled “Seeing Science,” will be structured as a historical saga, beginning with Galileo, and ending with how virtual reality and immersive tools are changing how we “see” stars forming and arteries hardening.


Mr. Belanger attended Syracuse University and received his graduate degree from Hofstra University. He worked on a lobster boat for 11 years before beginning his teaching career at Syosset High School, where he has worked for the last 29 years. He now teaches honors chemistry, remedial chemistry, and science research. One recent notable accomplishment was directly mentoring a project which was recognized as a Siemens Competition semifinalist in 2013. He estimates he has written about 800 student recommendation letters over the course of his career, including about 30 to Harvard College.


Married with three children, aged 12, 10, and 8, Mr. Belanger’s avocations include woodworking, gardening, guitar, and genealogy.


Karishma Minal Shah, a former Syosset High School student who is expected to graduate from Harvard College in May 2017, described Mr. Belanger as “a great research mentor” and “a fabulous teacher.” “I distinctly remember walking into my first class with him and receiving an 80-page bound book that contained the worksheets he had created and that we would need for the rest of the year to perform labs and review for exams. That day, he also performed fascinating experiments, which immediately sparked the students’ love for chemistry,” said Ms. Shah.


Added Ms. Shah, “With his organization, ability to engage the audience, and personality, he created a chemistry community that no other teacher could—that truly felt like a family. To this day, my friends and I in that class still interact and talk appreciatively about the fond memories we had shared.”
At the ceremony on April 26, the Harvard Club of Long Island will announce the Distinguished Teachers of 2015 who will also receive scholarships for a “Harvard experience” at the Harvard University campus in Cambridge, Mass. Past winners of the scholarships have enhanced their teaching by sampling some of the resources available to Harvard students. They have met with faculty; visited research laboratories, rare book archives, and specialty museums; and enjoyed visual and performance art. The scholarships are funded by contributions from Harvard alumni living on Long Island.


“We are proud to honor these teachers, whose efforts enable our Long Island students to thrive at top universities and to be upstanding citizens,” said Dr. Rhonda Berger, Harvard Club of Long Island President.
When Superintendent of Schools Dr. Thomas Rogers learned of this award, he commented, “Mr. Belanger is considered by his students and colleagues alike as the consummate classroom professional.”
“His impact on students lasts way beyond their years at Syosset High School,” Dr. Rogers continued.
Syosset High School Principal Giovanni Durante further noted, “Brian Belanger personifies hard work, dedication, and excellence in teaching.”

This year’s 14 Distinguished Teacher Award winners were nominated by current Harvard undergraduates and then selected by Harvard Club of Long Island board members. This year’s award winners teach biology, chemistry, earth science, English, history, International Baccalaureate, Latin, math, music, science research, and Spanish. The winners teach in the Baldwin, Bay Shore, Bellmore-Merrick, East Meadow, Island Trees, Jericho, Plainedge, Sachem, Sewanhaka, Syosset and Three Villages school districts, as well as St. Anthony’s High School and The Stony Brook School.

Prior winners of this award in the Syosset Central School District have included math teacher Arthur Kalish in 2005, biology teacher Stephen Wolfson in 2006, and history teacher Allison Noonan, who was named an honorary member of the Harvard Club of Long Island and awarded a fellowship for a “Harvard experience” in 2014.


Harvard College has received 37,303 applications from the US and abroad for the Class of 2019 (almost 700 from Long Island) and will accept about 5%. “Over the past 20 years, Harvard has accepted students from more than two-thirds of the public, private, parochial, and charter high schools on Long Island,” remarked Carolyn Hughes, who chairs the Harvard Club of Long Island’s Schools & Scholarships Committee, which ensures that every Long Island applicant to Harvard gets a personal alumni interview. Mrs. Hughes noted that 70% of Harvard undergraduates receive financial aid, based exclusively on need, with Harvard providing above $180 million in scholarship aid this year.

Thursday
Apr022015

Caleb Smith State Park And Preserve - History and Namesake


Event Reveals Interesting Anecdotes About Caleb Smith

    George Washington in the park? What is the history of the road? Caleb, a thorn in whose side? Did he run Cathy Ballthe gauntlet? Why was he robbed?
    These are some of the anecdotes that will be part of an inside look at the history of Smithtown’s Caleb Smith State Park Preserve on Sunday, April 19 at 1 p.m. at the Preserve on Jericho Turnpike in Smithtown. The free event will be presented by Friends of Caleb Smith Preserve. Pre-registration is required by calling 265-1054.
    Cathy Ball, supervising librarian of the Long Island Room at the Smithtown Library, will speak and illustrate, with some artifacts, historical stories about the 543-acre preserve and the families of Caleb Smith. The original house, which is located on the Preserve, was built in 1753 by Caleb Smith - a great-grandson of Smithtown’s founder Richard Smythe - and his father Daniel Smith II.
    “I have been thinking a lot about Caleb, his children and grandchildren, and the history of the park and the roads within the park and their purpose in earlier times,” said Mrs. Ball, noting that she will discuss the effects of the Revolutionary War on Caleb Smith and his family. Also, their life, the mills, and the property’s subsequent history as the Wyandanch Club before becoming a state park and preserve.
    Since 2004, Ms. Ball, a resident of Setauket, has worked in the Smithtown Library’s Long Island Room, which contains 8,000 books and 200 boxes of documents, including original manuscripts from the 17th century. Working alongside local historian and archivist Caren Zatyk, Ms. Ball conducts programs and exhibits supplemented with the archives. Currently they are working with the New York State Department of Transportation on the development of pocket parks for cyclists along Route 347 in Smithtown, providing information and  historical photo displays for each park that will depict the history of that particular area. The Long Island Room brings in a “continual stream of researchers and authors from long distance researching family and local history” Mrs. Ball said.


Wednesday
Apr012015

Arraignment - "Not Guilty" Plea For Smithtown's Highway Superintendent

Smithtown Highway Superintendent Glenn Jorgensen was arraigned this morning in district court.  The 63 year-old Jorgensen entered a “not guilty” plea to all four felony charges and a misdemeanor charge.  According to Suffolk County District Attorney, “The Highway Superintendent of Smithtown is charged with tampering with public records, falsifying business records, filing false records, official misconduct and grand larceny.”

According to the DA, Jorgensen allegedly directed the altering of road construction reports to conceal his approval of paving of at least eight Smithtown streets in freezing temperatures last November. The contractor identified as doing the paving is Suffolk Asphalt Corporation of Selden. 

There are clear standards written by the DOT that prevent paving in freezing temperatures that were not followed. ““State Department of Transportation construction standards dictate asphalt must not be applied to a road surface in freezing temperatures; and in fact, the town’s own engineer has said repaving in freezing weather would result in the asphalt falling apart,” District Attorney Spota said.  “The repaving of a residential street doesn’t happen that often and when it does, residents are paying for a job done correctly, not a faulty repaving that will soon need pothole repair work.” 

“The misdemeanor grand larceny charge Jorgensen faces alleges the Superintendent stole work order for the improper repaving and took the official documents home.  District Attorney Detectives found the records in Jorgensen’s Hope Place residence, in his bedroom, under his bed.” statement issued by District Attorney Tom Spota.