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Thursday
Feb262015

Councilwoman Lynne Nowick Announces The Creation Of Animal Shelter Advisory Council 

LONG ISLAND’S FIRST ANIMAL SHELTER ADVISORY COUNCIL ESTABLISHED 

According to Socrates, the secret of change is to focus all your energy, not on fighting the old but, on building the new.  Councilwoman Lynne Nowick, appointed Liaison of behalf of the Smithtown Animal Shelter, firmly believes so.  An avid animal lover herself, Councilwoman Nowick decided to do something never before done in Suffolk County in an effort to enhance the quality of life for the approximately 700 homeless pets who pass through the doors of the shelter each year. 

 “Moving forward with the task of providing additional care to our animals and offering cost effective programs and services to our community, I have joined forces in a collaborative effort with Shelter Director George Beatty, and appointed animal welfare experts Lucille DeFina, Diane Madden and animal welfare attorney, Elizabeth Stein to work with us as our Animal Shelter Advisory Council.”

According to Nowick, what these experts bring to the table is an unquenchable thirst to increase shelter adoptions by ensuring that every single animal receives the best possible opportunity for adoption or rescue through creative and cost efficient means.  Their focus includes expanding the animals’ medical care both in the shelter and beyond as they also strive to expand the existing Smithtown Animal Shelter humane spay/neuter program for homeless free roaming cats.  Barely off the ground, a Veterinary Technician has been hired, preparations are taking place to launch a new website which will offer more extended exposure for pets, and the Town Board has approved a budget increase to expand the availability of wet food.  

Innovative policies and procedures are being reviewed and implemented, and plans are in the making to host both on and off-site adoption and spay/neuter events.  A donation account has been established and anyone interested in donating can send their donations to:

Smithtown Animal Shelter Donations, PO Box 9090, Smithtown, New York 11787

This will greatly benefit the shelter’s many homeless animals and provide animal lovers an opportunity to help.  Best of all, says Director Beatty, “we’re developing plans for a building renovation which will offer increased comfort for our pets, more exposure and, highlight their individuality while provide additional space for care and progressive programs.  The new shelter sign mounted to attract adopters is the first indication that changes are taking place, and certainly, when you appoint known experienced advocates dedicated to improving the quality of life for our animals, there will be many enhancements to come.”  According to Councilwoman Nowick, “we are counting on, not only their sincere support but their ideas and participation as well, as we expand our efforts to achieve our goal – the best municipal shelter in the County.  In the meantime, so many precious animals await their forever home, please stop by our shelter at 410 Middle County Road, Smithtown and welcome home a new friend.”

Monday
Feb232015

Assemblyman Fitzpatrick's Proposal to Rescind VLTs Is Met With Booing and Chanting "Build The Casino"

(click on photos to enlarge)

Assemblyman Michael Fitzpatrick hosted a press conference Monday morning at the State Building in Hauppauge. Mr. Fitzpatrick’s goal was to bring attention to his bill A.5187. The legislation calls for the rescission of authorization for 1,000 video lottery terminals (VLT) dedicated to Nassau and Suffolk Counties.  Joining Fitzpatrick and supporting his proposal was Legislator Robert Trotta (13LD) and residents from Westbury and Mastic, two communities selected to host VLT casinos. 

NYS Assemblyman Michael Fitzpatrick with Legislator Robert Trotta and residents of Westbury and Mastic.Mr. Fitzpatrick contends that the public was mislead by the wording of the referendum allowing for the expansion of VLTs. According to VLT advocates, the referendum was supported by 66 percent of voters in Brookhaven and 57 percent of voters in Suffolk County.

The public, according to Fitzpatrick, was seeking tax relief not increased gambling.

“When residents of Long Island called for much needed relief from burdensome taxes due to unfunded state mandated programs, Albany responded by issuing gambling licenses and authorizing video slot machines at traditional betting sites. However, gambling revenues have been much lower than expected,” said Fitzpatrick. “To bring about meaningful tax relief, Albany must reduce costs and stop spending, not create alternate revenue schemes like gambling. Furthermore, gambling brings a plethora of other problems to our community. This is not a trade-off we should be making. When voting on allowing up to seven casinos in Upstate New York, residents were unaware that even if they voted against the referendum both Nassau and Suffolk Counties would get 1,000 video lottery terminals apiece. Regardless of whether it passed or failed they would still be saddled with those terminals. A vote against the referendum was still a vote for the video lottery terminals.”

Opponents of Assemblyman Fitzpatrick’s proposalApproximately thirty opponents of Assemblyman Fitzpatrick’s bill were in the audience.  They booed, and chanted “build the casinos”. The crowd, mostly trade workers, were relentless in their argument that it should be the public’s will not the will of the two elected officials that determines the future of VLT casinos. 

In a conversation with Smithtown Matters, St. James resident Mario Mattera (buisness agent for Plumbers Union and Suffolk County Water Authority Board member) questioned Fitzpatrick’s priorities. He stated that Assemblyman Fitzpatrick should be focusing on bringing jobs to the county, not squashing a proposal that will bring construction jobs and 350 permanent positions. “If Assemblyman squashes this the monies will go upstate and we will not get anything. Local jobs for local people.” said Mattera.

Fitzpatrick pointed out the social problems associated with gambling stating, “this is an industry that depends on the problems and addiction of gamblers to succeed.” Legislator Trotta joined Fitzpatrick in his rejection of additional VLTs. Saying that there is nothing more that he would like than to see the tradesmen working, Trotta pointed to the real jeopardy he saw in letting this go through without local approval and without some hard fiscal data. “I don’t want to end up like Detroit, and quite honestly I know better than you …” Trotta was cut off by the audience who were booing loudly. Trotta continued to speak with the microphone, not a word could be heard.

Build the casino chants became “we’ll remember you in November.” 

Friday
Feb202015

Here Ye ! Here Ye! Let Smithtown's 350th Anniversary Celebration Begin

Logo created by Smithtown HSE Graduate Sabrina ShankarLiving history. March kicks off Smithtown’s 350th Anniversary celebration and you are invited to join in the merrymaking. Last year Supervisor Vecchio charged Town Historian Brad Harris with the task of preparing a celebration worthy of Smithtown’s Sesquarcentennial (350th Anniversary). And so he has!

In 2014 the Smithtown 350 Foundation was formed and planning began on a year-long birthday/anniversary celebration.

Town Supervisor Patrick Vecchio preparing for March 3, Town Board meeting350 years in existence means there is a lot of history to celebrate.The hope, according to Harris, is that residents will learn a little about the Town’s rich history and its growth. But, don’t think it is going to be boring because the committee not only wants residents to participate in the events they want everyone to have some fun as they become a part of Smithtown’s future history.  

Is Smithtown history repeating itself? Somewhat - most people know about the legend of Bull Smythe, the founder of Smithtown.  “Tradition says that he (Richard Smythe) purchased of the Indians as much land as he could ride around on a bull in a day, and, having a trained bull which he used as a horse, he started early, reached the valley between Smithtown and Huntington at noon, rested and took his lunch (thereby giving the valley the name of Bread and Cheese Hollow which it still retains), and completed the whole circuit of the township by nightfall – much to the astonishment of the natives.” Smithtown Historian Bradley Harris.

On Sunday, March 1, 2015 Smithtown residents will reenact the legend of RichardCouncilmen Creighton and Wehrheim Smythe 2015 style. Sunday morning, beginning at Town Hall at 6am participants will begin an Olympic style relay called the Bull Smythe Relay throughout the Town. Participants will carry a copy of the original 1665 patent. At the end of the 9 hour Bull Smythe relay the patent will be presented to Town Officials at Town Hall. A copy of the relay route and a list of sponsors for the relay can be found at Smithtown350foundation.org. Each mile sponsor contributed $250 to help fund Sesquarcentennial events.  The public is invited to cheer on the participants as they run/walk the Bull Smythe relay route.

1965 Time CapsuleTuesday, March 3, 2015 at 7pm the Smithtown Town Board will hold a historical meeting wearing historical garb and will read the Town’s patent. The reading  will be followed by the opening  of a time capsule that had been buried on the grounds of Town Hall in 1965 as part of Smithtown’s 300th Anniversary celebration.  The capsule has not been opened and its contents are unknown. The Town Board meeting will be held at the Smithtown Center for the Performing Arts, 2 East Main Street, Smithtown.  There is limited seating. The theater can accommodate 300 people who will be seated on a first come first served basis.

Thursday, March 5, 2015 there will be a Birthday Gala at Flowerfield in St. James.  The Gala begins at 6:30pm and includes dinning and dancing and much merriment.  Tickets for the Gala are priced at $125 pp.  Proceeds will go to fund Sesquarcentennial events. 

Become a part of Smithtown history. Join in the celebration!

For a schedule of planned events go to Smithtown350foundation.org

Tuesday
Feb172015

ANATOMY OF A SEQUEL - Who Really Wrote "To Kill A Mockingbird" And "Go Set A Watchman"?

ANATOMY OF A SEQUEL -By: Jeb Ladouceur

Who really wrote “To Kill a Mockingbird” and “Go Set a Watchman”? 

296 pages – Lippincott & Company – 304 pages – HarperCollins

In the mid-1950’s Nelle Harper Lee, childhood friend of Truman Capote, is generally thought to have written “Go Set a Watchman,” a down-to-earth novel suggested by the pair’s racially-torn hometown, Monroeville, Alabama.

Author Harper Lee at age eightyHaving moved to New York City at the age of 23, Lee, who preferred using the name ‘Harper’ (to avoid being called ‘Nellie,’ she claims) found a literary agent for her autobiographical tale centered on a 20-year-old woman living in fictional Maycomb, Alabama. Agent Eugene Winick placed the work with J.B. Lippincott & Company … the publishing house whose stable of writers included such notables as Oscar Wilde, Jack London, and Rudyard Kipling.

It was at Lippincott that the most pivotal event of Harper Lee’s young life came to pass when her editor, Tay Hohoff, became enamored of the charming flashbacks-to-childhood described by “Go Set a Watchman’s” adult narrator, ‘Scout Finch.’ Hohoff wisely suggested that Lee re-write the story, using the voice of 8-year-old ‘Scout’ exclusively.

Because she was an eager, unpublished novelist, Harper Lee acquiesced immediately, and in later years, noted improbably that the unanticipated acclaim accompanying the altered book’s release was, “…just about as frightening as the quick, merciful [rejection] I’d expected.” 

Lee’s friend, Truman Capote With “Go Set a Watchman’s” narration now assigned to a child, and after the book was welded into a cohesive unit, the revision was re-named “To Kill a Mockingbird,” and published in 1960. The following year it won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction, an honor that Nelle Lee’s friend and former neighbor Truman Capote … for all his self-promotion and giant-sized ego … never achieved, and of which he was openly envious.

The book was soon filmed, and more honors ensued … primarily in the form of three Academy Awards, and the same number of Golden Globes.

In recent weeks the so-called ‘long lost’ original manuscript of “Go Set a Watchman” appears to have been ‘found’ by late-blooming lawyer Tonja Carter, 49, who graduated from the University of Alabama law school at the unlikely age of 40. An aggressive and highly protective attorney, Carter soon initiated lawsuits against those whom she saw as infringers on Harper Lee’s copyrights and the interests of her sister, lawyer Alice Finch Lee (Alice died in 2014 at 103—and was replaced as legal counsel by Tonja). Carter is also said abruptly to have issued an unofficial ‘order of protection’ against at least one of Nelle’s longtime friends.

As for author Lee, though partially disabled and reclusive, she appears to be satisfied with both Carter’s role as ‘front man,’ and the assurances of HarperCollins publisher Jonathan Burnham (Lippincott was acquired by Harper & Row in 1978) that the newly unearthed “…Watchman” draft is genuine, and needs only “…minor copy-editing.” It will provide Lee with an advance, in the words of Publisher’s Weekly editor Gabe Habash, “…of well into seven figures.” (Copy-editing is the procedure that ensures the logical progression of written events: If something unfolds on Monday, for instance, and happens again two days later, it can hardly be said to have recurred, ‘on Friday!’).

Oscar-winning Gregory Peck played lawyer Atticus Finch in To Kill a Mockingbird, 1962. Mary Badham portrays the 8-year-old Scout Among interested Long Island readers, and moviegoers there seems to be strong sentiment for the view expressed recently in the Washington Post: that 8-year-old ‘Scout Finch’ is a character whose development has been, “…full and complete.” Said Post columnist Alexandra Petri, “That’s the ‘Scout’ I want to remember—safe, contained within the covers of ‘To Kill a Mockingbird.’”

Newsday Book Editor Tom Beer, however, is non-judgmental regarding the forthcoming book that will retain “Mockingbird’s” original title, “Go Set a Watchman.” While reporting with meticulous accuracy on the 88-year-old Harper Lee (who now resides in an assisted living facility in Monroeville), Beer adopts a wait-and-see attitude concerning the 304-page sequel, priced at $27.99, and due July 14 from HarperCollins.

In a feature article typically headlined, “‘TO KILL’ AGAIN,” The New York Post reported unequivocally last week that the assumed one-book-wonder, “Harper Lee did write another novel—a ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’ sequel that she actually penned before her famed prizewinner.”

There has been persistent speculation, however, that Lee’s childhood chum, Truman Capote, might actually be the more logical creator of the tale inspired by, and set in their humble hometown. 

Prof. Wayne Flynt, Auburn UniversityRetired professor Wayne Flynt of Auburn University, himself a Pulitzer Prize nominee, disputes the theory. He has told NPR News that Capote, in a 1959 letter to his aunt, stated he had seen Lee’s novel and liked it very much. Moreover, nowhere in that letter does the author of “In Cold Blood,” (the book for which Harper Lee contributed considerable research, by the way) claim any involvement with Lee’s book … though Capote almost certainly was sufficiently gifted to have assumed her writing style if he so chose.

Obviously, many principals in this 50-year-old sequence of events have died, retired, or been replaced in their business functions—as in the case of attorney Alice Finch Lee who was supplanted by Tonja Carter. For these reasons, and because author Harper Lee is such a private person (oddly, she has steadfastly refused to speak whenever publicly feted), resolution of any skepticism surrounding Lee and her Pulitzer will likely be left to language scholars. They, rather than historians, are probably better equipped to investigate and analyze the matter.

Lee’s reticence is a key reason why the sudden appearance of “Go Set a Watchman” is considered such a tantalizing development in literary circles.

In any event, and in many ways, the mystery that has grown up around the iconic “…Mockingbird” and now “…Watchman,” is becoming as interesting as anything Lee or Capote (or the unlikely duo in concert) could have composed for our collective edification.

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Award-winning writer, Jeb Ladouceur is the author of ten novels, and his theater and book reviews appear in several major L.I. publications. In his current thriller, HARVEST, an American military doctor is seized by a gang of organ traffickers in The Balkans, and ordered to perform illegal surgeries. Ladouceur’s tenth novel THE QUANTUM SYNDROME, suggested by the Atlanta child killings of the 80’s, is due in mid-April.

 

Sunday
Feb152015

Smithtown Has A New Town Comptroller Donald Musgnug

Donald MusgnugTown Board members, in a rare sign of unanimity, appointed Donald Musgnug to the position of Smithtown Town Comptroller on Tuesday, February 10.  The position has been vacant since former comptroller Louis Necroto left at the end of January. Mr.Musgnug’s appointment became effective on February 10 (pending a medical exam and drug test) and ends on December 31, 2015. He will receive a $100,000 salary. 

The new comptroller is a certified public accountant with a background that includes auditing the Town of Smithtown. He has a long history in government having served as a councilman in the Town of Huntington from 1994- 1997. Prior to serving as councilman he was the chief financial officer for the Suffolk County Regional Off-Track Betting Corporation from 1984- 1990. He started his career in Manhattan before taking a position at Ernst & Young, had a solo practice in Pt. Jefferson for ten years before merging with Peare & Heller Financial Services. He eventually took a position with the Hauppauge based Fuoco Group. 

According to the NYS Comptroller Tom DiNapoli’s  guide for local officials, “… a comptroller takes over certain duties that otherwise would be the responsibility of the town board and town clerk. These duties include auditing, allowing or rejecting claims; preparing abstracts; and filing claims and other related functions. The duties of a town comptroller also include auditing the books and records of town officers and employees who received or disbursed moneys during the fiscal year (Town Law, Section 34). The town board may also take action to confer certain other duties upon the town comptroller, such as being the accounting officer for the town.”

Supervisor Vecchio was not at the Tuesday meeting to cast his vote; however, Mr. Musgnug told Smithtown Matters that he had a phone conversation with the Supervisor prior to the Tuesday meeting.  The new comptroller was invited by Councilman McCarthy  to speak to board members prior to the vote on his appointment.  Mr.Musgnug used the opportunity to thank the board for their support “..I look forward to being a steady hand at the helm and working with each and every board member and the Cheif Financial Officer the Supervisor. If their is anything I can do as we go along do not hesitate to ask.”

Asked by Councilwoman Nowick to talk about his vision. Mr. Musgnug said, “My vision , I have significant things to learn. I will meet with the deputy comptroller and other members of the department and other department heads, keep the momentum going that the previous comptroller Louis Necroto started, strengthening internal controls and keeping an eye on expenditures….”

Town Councilman Ed Wehrheim questioned Mr. Musgnug about his familiarity with the work Louis Necroto was doing before he left.  “I think Lou Necroto was a good thinker and an honest man and I think he provided very professional judgement for the town. I did speak with him about several of the issues and I am supportive of the initiiatives he has enumerated to me.” said Donald Musgnug. 

Councilmembers offered the new comptroller support and encouragement. A smiling Mr. Musgnug went to work.