Friday
Nov042016

UCP Celebrates Halloween With Trunk-Or-Treat Event

 

The Children’s Center at UCP of Long Island Hosts Trunk-or-Treat for Children with Disabilities

Commack, NY – The Children’s Center at UCP of Long Island hosted its 3rd annual Trunk-or-Treat Halloween event. Students, dressed in adorable costumes, chose from an array of Halloween candy displayed in festive trunks decorated for Halloween.

“This event is so important to our students because due to their physical limitations they may not be able to trick-or-treat within their own communities,” said Principal Sherri Glazer. “Our students are able to trunk or treat in a safe environment.”

The event also included a pumpkin decorating contest and a Halloween Sensory Carnival, in which students were able to see and touch different Halloween themed objects to help aid in their sensory needs. “It was a great afternoon for all of the students,” Glazer said.

The Children’s Center is in the forefront of Early Intervention, Preschool, and School Age programming, serving over 70 infants and children with disabilities. The Center uses specialty programs such as a feeding program - Food Exploration and Sensory Techniques (F.E.A.S.T.) and assistive technology services. The school continues to introduce new and innovative programs designed to meet the needs of children with disabilities and their families.

For over 65 years, UCP of Long Island has been committed to advancing the independence, productivity, and full citizenship of people with disabilities by creating Life Without Limits. UCP of Long Island provides programs and services to children and adults with disabilities.  The Children’s Center at UCP of Long Island offers early intervention, preschool and school aged programs.  The agency provides Adult Day services which include Day Treatment, Day Habilitation and Respite programs, and job training and placement services.  In addition, UCP of Long Island has 31 residences and a 12-unit apartment complex in Suffolk County for individuals with disabilities. 

 

Wednesday
Nov022016

SUFFOLK CLOSEUP - Smithtown Pols Unimpressed With Bellone Budget

SUFFOLK CLOSEUP 

By Karl Grossman

The top fiscal watchdogs in Suffolk County government are critical of County Executive Steve Bellone’s recommended $2.96 billion county budget for 2017.

Town of Smithtown people figure deeply in this.

“It is constructed so poorly and so tenuously,” declares County Comptroller John M. Kennedy, Jr. of Nesconset in Smithtown. “It is fraught with peril. It is not unlike what we see to the west of us,” he said, referring to the financial mess that Nassau County government has been in for years resulting in New York State imposing a Finance Authority to oversee county fiscal matters. 

“It’s as if,” said Mr. Kennedy, “he [Bellone[ is standing on the 12th floor” of the county’s H. Lee Dennison Building, where the county executive has his offices, “with a megaphone calling on the state to ‘take us over.’”

As one example, Mr. Kennedy cites Mr. Bellone’s desire to borrow $60 million over two years to pay retiring police for what is called SCAT—unused sick and vacation time. “You begin to bond out for operating expenses and you’re done,” said the comptroller. “This is a fundamental: you can’t bond an operating expense.”

 “The most basic responsibility and obligation of a county executive is to assemble and submit a balanced budget to the legislature for consideration and adoption,” said Mr. Kennedy. 

“He has failed to meet that most fundamental obligation.” 

Mr. Kennedy, Suffolk government’s chief fiscal officer, is an attorney with a master’s degree in business administration with a concentration in capital budgeting from Adelphi University. He was a member of the Suffolk Legislature for a decade his district composed of a  large part of Smithtown. He previously worked in the county clerk’s office. He knows Suffolk government well. He was elected comptroller in 2014 and took office last year.

Also critical of Mr. Bellone’s recommended budget is the Budget Review Office of the Suffolk Legislature. It was established after creation of the legislature in 1970 as a Suffolk version of the federal government’s non-partisan Government Accountability Office. 

Its director is Robert Lipp of St. James in Smithtown. He has a doctorate in economics from Stony Brook University. The Budget Review Office’s 18 members are among the busiest people in Suffolk government.

Its 235-page report on the Bellone proposed budget (available on the Budget Review Office’s website) also points to “issuing debt to pay for operating expenses” referring to the Bellone SCAT scheme.  Among other issues, it cites the shifting to later payment or “deferring expenses” of benefits the county has agreed to pay police. It raises the plan for “borrowing from the NYS [New York State] Retirement system.” It speaks of the county “relying on one shots”—sale of buildings or land that can’t be repeated.

“Our concern here is that we may be reaching a point where these types of funding measures may no longer be available at needed levels,” says the Budget Review Office.

A big bind is that Suffolk County government has been relying more and more on the sales tax for revenue. Before1969, when Suffolk County government instituted a sales tax, it was financed largely from the property tax and fees. Now, as the Budget Review Office report states, the “sales tax is Suffolk County’s single largest source of revenue.” Mr. Bellone’s budget, it continues, calls for $59.4% of the county’s General Fund to come from the sales tax in 2017.

“Despite its importance as a revenue source to the County,” it says, “the volatile nature of sales tax collections…greatly complicates the County’s budgeting process.”

Today “oil prices continue to negatively impact sales tax receipts,” says the Budget Review Office. “Sales of goods and services on the internet have also contributed to lost sales tax revenue for the county.”

“How are we able to provide services at needed levels when facing a structural deficit that is far in excess of $100 million in each of the past several years?” it asks, regarding how Suffolk government has been finding itself in a financial hole annually. 

Mr. Bellone, a former Babylon Town supervisor, who took office as county executive in 2012, insists his 2017 recommended budget (1.5% higher than this year’s) is “tight but fair.”

He emphasizes in his budget narrative the reduction of more than 1,000 jobs in the county’s workforce. But Mr. Kennedy says many of these are “low-pay employees” while, for instance, of the 86 employees in the county’s Department of Economic Development, “many of them are getting six-figure salaries….Wherever they can plug in another hack, they will.”

The Suffolk Legislature will vote on changes in Mr. Bellone’s recommended budget at a meeting in Riverhead this coming Wednesday, November 9. The county executive can veto changes and the legislature can try to override his vetoes at a meeting on November 22 in Hauppauge. In December “warrants” are sent out—the basis for your tax bill.  

There is sharp protest about the budget already among some legislators. Legislator Rob Trotta of Fort Salonga in Smithtown has said: “Suffolk County’s financial situation is a sinking ship.”

 

Wednesday
Nov022016

Hauppauge's Top Ten Students Class Of 2017

HAUPPAUGE HIGH SCHOOL IS PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE

THE CLASS OF 2017 TOP TEN STUDENTS

Front row (l to r): Rebecca Ann Proscia, Rachel Black, Eunice Chung Kim, Lindsay Blank and Angela Marie Musco. Back row (l to r): Hauppauge High School Principal Christine O’Connor, Kevin Robert Michels, Lucas James Shea, Catherine Grace Murphy, Margaret Balcom, Emma Rose Olivo, Zi Meng (Bill) Yang and Hauppauge School District Superintendent of Schools Dr. Dennis O’Hara.(Hauppauge, New York) – Hauppauge High School is proud to announce the Valedictorian and Salutatorian and to congratulate the top ten students in the Class of 2017 for their outstanding academic achievements. They are:

Valedictorian: Angela Marie Musco

Salutatorian: Rachel Black

Margaret Balcom

Eunice Chung Kim

Zi Meng (Bill) Yang

Emma Rose Olivo

Catherine Grace Murphy

Lucas James Shea

Lindsay Blank

Rebecca Ann Proscia

Kevin Robert Michels

“These talented young women and men have demonstrated an unwavering commitment to their education,” stated Hauppauge High School Principal Christine O’Connor. “The entire Hauppauge School District community is honored to congratulate them and their families on this outstanding recognition and wishes them every success as they continue their pursuit of academic excellence going forward.”

 

 

Tuesday
Nov012016

Commack Man With 17 Convictions Arrested For Committing Lewd Act In Public

Suffolk County Police today arrested a man for committing a lewd act in public in Huntington Station last week.

Frank LombardiA female employee at Saks 5th Ave was walking to her car on October 28, at approximately 6:15 p.m., when a man gestured for her to come over to his car. As the woman approached the vehicle in the parking lot of the Walt Whitman Mall, located at 160 Walt Whitman Rd., she observed him masturbating.  The woman ran to her car and the suspect fled.

Following an investigation, Second Squad detectives arrested Frank Lombardi at the intersection of Manor Road and Woods Court, Elwood, today at approximately 5:15 p.m. Lombardi has 17 previous convictions for Public Lewdness dating back to 1994.  Lombardi has been driving a 2011 black Lincoln Town car and a 1999 grey Mercury Sable.

Lombardi, 48, of Commack, was charged with Public Lewdness. He will be held overnight at the Second Precinct and is scheduled to be arraigned at First District Court in Central Islip on November 2.

Anyone with information is asked to call the Suffolk County Police Second Squad at 631-854-8252.

 

A criminal charge is an accusation. A defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty.

Thursday
Oct272016

Kings Park Students Go All-State At NYSSMA

 

All State Music Selections

Back Row: (Standing L to R) Dr. Timothy Eagen-Superintendent, Mr. Ryan Flatt-Advisor, Mr. Vinny Tunkel-Advisor, Connor Brannigan, Mr. Paul Eger-Advisor, Derrick Kempster, Mr. Lino Bracco-KPHS Principal, Jack Hogan, Mr. Jon Nowak-Advisor Front Row: (Sitting L to R) Matthew Hoffmann, Felicity Doddato, Maxwell Freyre, Luke Bergaglio, Sabrina Holsborg 

The All-State selection “process” begins with the solo being evaluated by a NYSSMA Certified All-State adjudicator.  These All-State adjudicators are responsible for evaluating every All-State solo of the same instrument or voice part.  At the conclusion of the festival, the All-State adjudicators create a rank ordered proficiency list of all students being recommended.  We are ecstatic to report that seven students and one alternate from Kings Park High School have been selected to attend this year’s festival.  This amount of students selected is a “first” in the history of our music program.