Monday
Oct172016

Demolition Continues At Nissequogue River State Park

Demolition (PhaseII) continues at the Nissequogue River State Park (NRSP). The work is expected to be completed by July 2017. In addition to the demolition of six buildings the project includes rehab of two buidlings the construction of a picnic pavilion,pathways and garden areas. Funding for the demolition comes from the $29 million that NYS Senator John Flanagan secured for the NRSP in 2006/07.

The demolition is taking place in one of the most scenic areas of the park. (click on photos to enlarge).

 

 

View from NRSP overlooking the Nissequogue River 

 

 

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Saturday
Oct152016

Two Arrests Made In Nissequogue Home Burglary

Suffolk County Police today arrested two men for burglarizing a Nissequogue home and then setting the victim’s vehicle on fire last month.

Two masked men armed with shotguns entered a Nissequogue home on September 26 at approximately 8 a.m. and demanded cash and valuables from the homeowners. The men stole assorted jewelry, electronics, and a 2006 Lexus. The two victims inside the home were not injured. The men fled in the Lexus and set it on fire at the Lake Ronkonkoma County Park approximately 30 minutes after leaving the house.

After an extensive investigation by Fourth Squad and Arson Squad detectives, Louis Martini, 21, and Anthony Hlatky-Mupo, 21, both of Selden were arrested separately in Selden this morning. Both were charged with Burglary 1st Degree and Arson 3rd Degree. They will be held overnight at the Fourth Precinct and are scheduled to be arraigned at First District Court in Central Islip on October 15.

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

 

Thursday
Oct132016

SUFFOLK CLOSEUP - Suffolk County's "Dirty Sewage Secret"

SUFFOLK CLOSEUP

By Karl Grossman

Suffolk County government for years delayed considering advanced wastewater treatment systems—to be installed at homes and featuring new technologies that reduce nitrogen discharges to a fraction of what traditional cesspools put out. Nitrogen discharges are considered a major cause of the brown and red tides and other algal blooms that have wreaked havoc in the bays and other water bodies of Suffolk. 

Nearby states among them New Jersey, Massachusetts, Maryland and Rhode lsland have embraced the systems. They constitute a breakthrough in wastewater disposal.

In recent times, Suffolk government has finally moved toward accepting the systems. 

At the request of County Executive Steve Bellone, the Suffolk Legislature this summer authorized a change in the county’s sanitary code to legalize the systems here. This came after the Bellone administration embarked on a “Septic Demonstration Pilot Program” under which a variety of  advanced systems were installed for free at initially 19 homes in Suffolk to be monitored by the county to see how they worked.

In heralding the undertaking this summer, as 20 more homes were added, Mr. Bellone said: “The first phase of the septic demonstration project has been extremely successful as we received tremendous feedback from our residents who are currently participating in the program and from industry experts.” (The homeowners chosen were selected through a lottery and are located in all 10 towns of Suffolk.)

But is the county moving as strongly as it should in the endeavor?

Kevin McAllister, founder and president of the organization Defend H20, has long been a critic of Suffolk government’s lack of movement on the advanced systems.

“I don’t agree with going slow with approving the new systems,” says Mr. McAllister. . “The county has been dragging its feet since 2005 on this.” Indeed, he said that in 2011 county officials “were invited to attend a seminar on advanced systems that I hosted with Brookhaven Town Supervisor Ed Romaine and Islip Councilwoman Trish Bergin. They declined to attend.” (Steve Levy was county executive then.)

Of the recent actions, “I can’t get too excited about baby steps.”

He complains that for the Bellone administration “sewering is the primary interest,” to increase population density with sewers hoping this would “promote economic development.” He finds great fault in the standard set by the county for the advanced systems in the amended sanitary code—19 milligrams per liter of nitrogen in the wastewater discharged. “They can do better,” says Mr. McAllister. Some of the systems are capable of reducing nitrogen to five milligrams per liter “and lower.” Thus the Suffolk standard is, in Mr. Allister’s view, “a half measure towards efforts to reduce nitrogen. “It’s more about public appearance.”

Further, there is “no mandate for using the systems” in new installations or the replacement of old ones. “The county would make that voluntary.”

“This is why I’m trying to get the towns to adopt their own local laws which mandate the installation of advanced systems in new installations or when a cesspool is replaced, and also to establish more stringent standards than Suffolk County has,” says Mr. McAllister.

This is compounded by what he calls the county’s “dirty sewage secret” on the commercial side of the wastewater equation. The county allows “grandfathering” in the replacement of wastewater systems at commercial sites. The county is charged with enforcing a state standard of 10 milligrams per liter of nitrogen in discharges at commercial sites. But “Suffolk officials have turned a blind eye.” He cites as an example a 1960s-era motel on 2.8 acres on the waterfront replaced by a 23-unit condominium complex. But the “redevelopment was allowed without requiring advanced wastewater treatment.” He says there are numerous other examples of this county’s “grandfathering.”

Vanessa Baird-Streeter, a spokesperson for Mr. Bellone, emphasizes that the 19 milligrams of nitrogen per liter standard “can be changed” based on the county’s pilot project that’s underway. “The point of the pilot program is to insure that we are getting the best results—and determining which technologies will provide that,” she said. As to mandating installation of the advanced wastewater treatment systems, because of their cost, the Bellone administration has been “looking for funding mechanisms that can assist homeowners” in installing them. They can carry a cost of $25,000.

Mr. Bellone in April proposed a referendum this year on a surcharge to water bills for customers of the Suffolk County Water Authority and other water providers—$1 for every 1,000 gallons used—to help fund clean water efforts. This could have provided funds for installation of the advanced wastewater treatment systems. Mr. Bellone dropped the plan, however, in the face of resistance from state lawmakers concerned that the $73 million estimated to be raised annually would be used for other purposes by cash-strapped Suffolk government. Hs administration seeks to revisit it in 2017.

In eastern Suffolk, passage of the referenda to be on the ballots in the five East End towns next month allowing Community Preservation Fund monies (raised by a 2% transfer tax on real estate transactions) to be applied through 2050 to clean water projects would help finance the installation of the systems by homeowners.

 

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
Oct062016

SUFFOLK CLOSEUP - SC Budget "Elephant In The Room"

SUFFOLK CLOSEUP

By Karl Grossman

It’s a record-high budget recommended for Suffolk County government for 2017 by County Executive Steve Bellone—$2.96 billion, 1.5% higher than this year’s. 

Mr. Bellone says the budget is “tight but fair.”

A critic of the Bellone administration’s financial management, Suffolk Legislator Rob Trotta of Fort Salonga, whose district includes a good portion of the Town of Smithtown, says: “Suffolk County’s financial situation is a sinking ship.”

Under Mr. Bellone’s recommended budget there would be no property tax increase countywide but a 3.6% jump in the taxes in county police district. The district is comprised of the five western Suffolk towns except for villages that have retained their own police departments. For an “average” household in the district now paying $1,164 yearly for county police services, this would add $43.

There would be new and increased fees. Among new fees would be a mortgage filing fee of $300, and nonprofit organizations given funding by the county will be charged a new 1% “surcharge” as an “administrative fee.” Also, a county “administrative fee” on traffic tickets for moving violations would be doubled to $60.

And, the county executive would be “authorized, directed and empowered to institute parking fees at LIRR stations where the county has an ownership,” and for the Department of Fire, Rescue and Emergency Services to “increase fees for fire and safety inspections currently performed at public schools and school districts.” Further, the county executive would be “authorized, directed and empowered to increase such other fees and fines to offset increased administrative expenses as is appropriate and necessary.”

There would be the elimination of some county services including the public health home visiting nurse services program, smoking cessation program and the “ShotSpotter” program that is used by police to detect gunshots as far as a mile away to more quickly respond. Dropping the visiting nurse program is seen as saving $1.5 million, cutting the smoking cessation program $500,000, and eliminating the “SpotSpotter” program $390,000.

The Suffolk Legislature can amend the recommended budget. The executive can veto its changes and the legislature can override vetoes. 

Mr. Bellone in his narrative in the budget document blames the county government’s financial problems on lower sales tax receipts because of lower gasoline prices. “Stagnant sales tax revenues have continued to negatively impact the budget,” he says. “Sales tax revenues, the largest single revenue sources for Suffolk County, has experienced several years of below-average growth…Sales tax revenues continue to be impacted by lower prices at the pump.” 

Has bad financial stewardship by Suffolk government also contributed to the situation?  

For years there have been county legislators who have pointed to this. Among them were Legislator Joseph Rizzo of Islip Terrace who voted no on expenditure after expenditure even if he was a minority of one and similarly frugal Legislator Tony Bullock of East Hampton who each Thanksgiving announced his “Stuffed Turkey Awards” for cases of waste in Suffolk government.

These days, Legislator Trotta is a leading critic of the financial conduct of the county government administration. “If you told me two-and-a-half years ago it was so screwed up, I wouldn’t believe it,” Mr. Trotta said last week referring to when he became a Suffolk County legislator after being a Suffolk Police officer for 25 years, most of these as a detective. “It’s bizarre, really.”

The fiscal “elephant in the room,” said Mr. Trotta, “is the 28% pay increase in an eight-year contract” agreed to by the Bellone administration.  “I don’t blame the [police] unions. Their job was to get the most for their members.” But now increased annual pay hikes in the contract “are kicking in, sales tax revenue is flat” and the Bellone administration is “in a hole” and desperate. 

Mr. Bellone in his budget narrative defends his administration’s financial stewardship. He says “we have created new recurring sources of revenue, limited hiring, cut expenditures, and significantly reduced the size of county government. Suffolk government currently is the smallest it has been since 1993, and is nearly 1,300 positions less than the day I took office.”

As to the county’s financial situation, Mr. Bellone says the “only long-term solution is to invest in economic development.” Will that work? This is a big reason why Mr. Bellone has been pushing for sewering in Suffolk—to encourage development which he sees as bringing a financial shot-in-the-arm. Cesspools on which much of Suffolk is dependent—some 30% of Suffolk is sewered—limit commercial and housing development. But neighboring Nassau County is 90% sewered, has become heavily developed, Nassau’s property taxes are much higher than Suffolk’s and its government has been in financial shambles for years. That has resulted, since 2000, in the imposition of a Nassau County Interim Finance Authority, its seven members appointed by state officials, with the power in Nassau to “monitor and oversee the county’s finances.”

Mr. Trotta says a similar state oversight authority is now necessary in Suffolk.

 

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.

Wednesday
Oct052016

Kenya-Smithtown Soccer Connection

Smithtown’s donation has special connection 

Thanks to the help of a former teacher, Smithtown Central School District recently donated gently used soccer uniforms and soccer balls to the Hope Children’s Home in Kenya. 

Larry Hohler, who taught social studies in the Smithtown Central School District from 1966 to 1999, delivered the donations to the orphanage to which he has a special connection. While teaching in Smithtown, Hohler received a sabbatical to travel and teach in East Africa. He stayed in touch with one of his former students, Joseph Kirima, who now serves as director of Hope Children’s Home. 

When the AIDs pandemic hit in the 1990s, many children lost their parents and were forced to live on the streets. Hohler and Kirima helped fundraise in the U.S. and Africa and opened the Hope Children’s Home in 2005. Since then, 90 children have been provided with housing and other goods thanks to generous donors such as Smithtown Central School District. 

Photo Caption: Smithtown Central School District recently donated gently used soccer uniforms and soccer balls to a Hope Children’s Home in Kenya. 

Photo courtesy of Smithtown Central School District