____________________________________________________________________________________


 

 

 

 

Thursday
Mar272014

Smithtown Dish – small bites of foodie news 

Smithtown Dish – small bites of foodie news By Nancy Vallarella

The official dish of Smithtown is…LASAGNA. Earlier this month Newsday’s Peter M. Gianotti and Joan Reminick bestowed the honor of best lasagna on Long Island to ten area restaurants. Five of the ten are located in the Town of Smithtown. The winners are: Butera’s, Casa Rustica, Sal’s Ristorante, Spezia and The Trattoria. Congrats to all! Mangia Smithtown!

Villa Sorrento Restaurant and Caterer in Saint James has revamped their menu. In addition, Executive Chef Rob Mathews has come on board. Chef Mathews’s culinary background includes: Kitchen a Bistro (Saint James) and La Plage (Wading River).

Sundays with Myra – FREE COOKING CLASSES - The first Sunday of every month at Bloomingdale’s in Huntington at 1:00 & 2:30. Myra Naseem of Elegant Eating will demonstrate Passover and Easter treats for the class on April 6th.

Wednesday
Mar262014

Maureen Rossi - Making Nonprofit Radio News

Smithtown Matters Reporter Maureen Rossi made her Radio debut on Long Island’s new FM Talk Radio station 103.9 on Saturday.  Joined by Legislator Tom Cilmi and two experts from the mental health community, the show highlighted some pressing issues regarding Mental Health and the Heroin Epidemic on Long Island.  Those issues included budgetary challenges facing agencies that serve the mentally ill as well as obstacles to treatment for those trying to get clean from heroin.  

Flo Federman is host of the Saturday morning program called The Nonprofit Voice.  A consummate professional and well respected in the radio industry, she gained fame as the News Director and Morning Show Co-Host of the “Rick and Flo Show” on B-103 Radio. Tracy Carkner from the Federal of Organizations was also a guest on the 8-9 segment at the station housed in McArthur Airport.  Federal of Organizations is a multi-service, community-based social welfare agency.   They develop programs that are designed to meet the needs of special populations, such as people recovering from mental illness, the homeless, low-income seniors and at-risk children. For more than 35 years, Federation, a not-for-profit corporation, has been working to improve services to people with disabilities and their families through education, information and referral services, legislative action and program development.

Jennifer Colbert was also a guest and was representing EPIC. The Elderly Pharmaceutical Insurance Coverage (EPIC) program is a New York State program for seniors administered by the Department of Health. It helps more than 270,000 income-eligible seniors aged 65 and older to supplement their out-of-pocket Medicare Part D drug plan costs. Seniors can apply for EPIC at any time of the year and must be enrolled or eligible to be enrolled in a Medicare Part D drug plan to receive EPIC benefits and maintain coverage.  Colbert was very knowledgeable about The Affordable Care Act and how it will affect her constituents.  

Ron Gold is the producer of The Nonprofit Voice which, like the station, is in its infancy.   Gold is the President and CEO of Marketing Works.  Established in 2002, Gold brings his twenty years of marketing skills with connections to over 1,000 publications in the country.   In addition to be incredibly savvy about marketing he is also savvy about the radio business and was the General Manager at Walk FM. 

John Caracciolo is the President and CEO of JVC Media which runs the new and only Talk Radio station on LI on the FM dial.  “This station will not only serve as an information source, but will be a sounding board for issues that influence Long Island life, community and business. Nonprofit entities are a big part of that equation, so we’re very excited to have Marketing Works and ‘The Nonprofit Voice’ aboard,” he explained.

Rossi invited Cilmi to join her when two spots opened up just days before the show.  Legislator Tom Cilmi announced a Mental Health and Substance Abuse Task Force last month during a Republican Caucus.   No stranger to the station, Cilmi has been a guest a few times for various programs including The John Gomez segment.

Gold invited Rossi to return for a 20 minute segment to discuss the non-profit Kings Park in the kNOw that she heads and the heroin epidemic on Long Island.   “Please come back on April 26th, we’ll give you ½ the program to let our listeners know all about this epidemic,” said Gold.   Gold could be found outside the booth taking photos of the day’s guests while smiling.   Saturday’s show got a little heated during a commercial break off air when all three ladies went after Cilmi when he asked if parents were to blame for the heroin epidemic in Suffolk.  Carkner, Colbert and Rossi gave him an earful while the microphones were cold saying addiction is a mental illness and can’t be blamed on anyone.  They said there is no prototype; it can happen to anyone from any background.  The show was deemed a success by the all present; all the guest left the station with a smile and exchanged contact information.   For more information on the Nonprofit Voice check out:  www.nonprofitvoice.com  103.9 can be heard on the FM dial or from any digital device – you can listen live on their website:  www.linewsradio.com

Wednesday
Mar262014

Op Ed - Macellaro for Supervisor

Macellaro for Supervisor

By Maureen Rossi

Richard MacellaroRichard Macellaro is a Democrat who ran for one of two empty seats on the Town Board in November.   Last week, he addressed a lengthy letter to community leaders and the press with his proposed idea to establish the Smithtown Planning and Development Association (SPADA).   The grandfather who lives in Kings Park hails from Brooklyn where he was extremely active in Community Planning.   His plan comes on the heels of Councilman Thomas McCarthy’s proposal for a new Task Force to mitigate the zoning issues, primary zoning infractions in the Old Northport Road industrial area.

However Macellaro says a one-issue Task Force is not the answer.  What he is proposing for SPADA is gathering community and business leaders to come together to work on a host of issues and problems facing the township of Smithtown.   He feels like this new association should be void of all elected officials.   What the consummate community activist has laid out is impressive at the very least.  It includes many facets of government and has enormous merit.  

He feels it’s imperative that the community be involved in the planning process.   Makes sense right?  However, that’s already happening, there are several very well oiled civic groups that work hard to make sure development is done in the proper geographic areas.

Macellaro quotes Benjamin Franklin:  “If you fail to plan, you are planning to fail.”    So it makes sense that following that quote, SPADA calls for a Master Plan.  Does Smithtown have a Master Plan?  If so where is Smithtown’s Master Plan?  Despite the call for such by many Civic groups, The Smithtown Chamber of Commerce and many community leaders, Smithtown finds itself without one.  We find ourselves without one for a very long time.   Councilman Thomas McCarthy informed me during the last election that we did not need a Master Plan because the town was already built out.   I disagree, many people disagree.  Marcellaro disagrees.

SPADA would also have a say in and work on the following issues: 

RE-DEVELOP TOWN PARKS

SMART GROWTH PLANNING

LOCAL GOVERNMENT

TOWN BUDGET PARTICIPATION

OTHER GOVERNMENTAL JURISDICATIONS

LOCAL TAX COLLECTION

GOVERNMENT COMPLEXES

BIG BOX STORES AND INDUSTRY

REVITIALIZE SMALL BUSINESSES

TAX INCENTIVES AND ABATEMENTS

MODERNIZE ZONING CODES & REGULATIONS

INFRASTRUCTURE IMPROVEMENTS

BUILD AFFORDABLE WORKFORCE HOUSING

YOUNG FAMILES ACTIVITIES

YOUTH ACTIVITES AND DRUG PREVENTION/COUNCILING

PROMOTE & EXPAND ASSETS, RESOURCES

Macellaro offers himself up quite generously to be the facilitator or coordinator of what he calls a noble venture.    When I look at this list, this Herculean list of things that need to be done in Smithtown, all I can think of is that we already have a Park’s Department, A Planning Board,  a Tax Assessor, A Building Department, A Zoning Board, A Youth Bureau, a Drug Prevention Agency and they all have a squadron of clerical workers and department employees. 

In addition we have an elected Town Board who has staff at their disposal.   We already pay these people a lot of money to do what Marcellaro is calling for his proposed new organization to do.  

Why don’t we have a Master Plan?  Why are the vast majority of businesses in the Kings Park Industrial Area out of compliance with regard to zoning?   Why aren’t our governmental leaders meeting with Smart Growth experts like Eric Alexander of Vision Long Island; why aren’t they touring other areas on Long Island where Smart Growth has been implemented?     INACTION,  STAGNATION,  APATHY.  

In the fall of 2013, two of the three candidates running for Supervisor called for change, much of the same change Macellaro is proposing for his SPADA.   Those same two candidates met with Smart Growth leaders, they toured Long Island neighborhoods where it is successfully being implemented.  However, one leader, the one who won the race – called for Status Quo.  He said everything was fine the way it is.      

Macellaro’s Report is impressive and comprehensive.   It reads like a list of work Smithtown taxpayers expect our local government to do.  I have my own quote by Arnold Toynbee for Marcellaro and our elected officials:    Apathy can be overcome by enthusiasm, and enthusiasm can only be aroused by two things: first, an ideal, with takes the imagination by storm, and second, a definite intelligible plan for carrying that ideal into practice.

 

Monday
Mar242014

Theater Review “Dial M for Murder”

Theater Review - “Dial M for Murder” - Produced by: Smithtown Center for the Performing Arts - Reviewed by: Jeb Ladouceur

“Dial M for Murder” is one of those cute titles that is never used in the context of the play itself. The probable explanation is that the drama, originally written for a mass British television audience, premiered on the small screen in 1952, and like everything else sold on television, even then, the irrelevance of its name was considered of no consequence.

From BBC Television, this oh-so-English murder thriller with the catchy name moved to the West End in London (England’s theatrical equivalent of the Great White Way), thence stateside to Broadway, all in the same year.

Though the show was reasonably well-received on stage both here and abroad, it really found its niche in 1954 when Warner Brothers and the great Alfred Hitchcock picked it up and adapted the nail-biter for the American screen. With Ray Milland, Grace Kelly, and Robert Cummings in the lead roles and John Williams (not the composer) performing as the Chief inspector, “Dial M” was destined to be a hit.

This well-traveled drama, scheduled to run thru March 30 at the Performing Arts Center, Main Street, Smithtown, is actually an inverted detective story…or open mystery. That is to say, it reveals early on, the circumstances of the crime and its originator. Accordingly, the show has no whodunit element; the plot simply revolves around how the perpetrator, whose identity we know from the outset, will finally be exposed.

On the SPAC stage, the lovely Regina Schneider plays wealthy Margot Wendice, who’s had a previous fling with visiting TV mystery writer Max Halliday (acted with appropriately rising intensity by Steve Corbellini). Margot’s tennis bum husband Tony Wendice (Mark T. Cahill) never seems to have enough cash and he hires sappy Captain Lesgate (Eugene Dailey) to strangle his rich wife. Of course, the inevitable British policeman (Frank Russo playing Inspector Hubbard) shows up, puts two and two together in Peter Falk ‘Columbo’ fashion…and that’s that.

Essentially, this play belongs to Tony, whose lean figure and facial expressions are reminiscent of Lee Marvin or Vincent Price. From beginning to end Mark Cahill commands our attention, and during last weekend’s matinee performance the audience practically hissed at his every Iago-like move.

It would have been easy for Schneider, with her high-fashion figure and movements, to lend too much sophistication to the naive Margot, but to her credit she avoids that, and turns in a convincing interpretation of bad guy Tony’s confused and loving wife. Credit Director William B. Kahn for keeping his five actors in character throughout. He thus presides over a satisfying, well-paced drama.

In this presentation of “Dial M for Murder” costumer Ronald R. Green III met every requirement concerning early fifties garb, from Margot’s stunning cocktail dress, to Inspector Hubbard’s banal argyle sweater. The serviceable set worked well, and Chris Creevy’s lighting was masterfully done, especially during the attempted murder scene at midnight.

It must be said that, ‘open mystery’ or not, these inverted detective stories always contain an element of surprise. Accordingly, the more widely performed and better-known a play is, the less likely one is to be stunned by anything that happens along the way. This is especially true of Hitchcock-style dramas. Like Columbo or Sherlock Holmes episodes, they probably should come with warning labels…advising viewers not to reveal the twist that ultimately does the bad guy in.

_______________________________________________________________

Award-winning Smithtown writer Jeb Ladouceur is the author of eight novels, and his theater reviews appear in several major L.I. publications. In Ladouceur’s next thriller, “Harvest” due in late summer, an American doctor is forced to perform illegal surgeries for a gang of vital organ traffickers in The Balkans.

Monday
Mar242014

Get Involved Be A Part Of Smithtown's Historic 350th Anniversary Celebration

Town Historian Bradley Harris speaks with Smithtown School District History teachersWe want everyone involved in Smithtown’s 350th Anniversary celebration, especially our young people!  That was the message Town Historian Bradley Harris delivered to Smithtown SD History teachers on Friday.  Brad Harris was invited by Director of Social Studies Michael Chlystun to speak with teachers and to brainstorm about ways to get students involved in Smithown’s 350th Anniversary celebration. 

Brad is hopeful that students will realize that Smithtown’s history is relevant,  captivating and can be fun.  “Each of the hamlets throughout the Town has a unique and interesting history. We want to share that history.” said Brad.   

Brad Harris discussed the planning for Smithtown’s 350th Anniversary Celebration at Commack- Kings Park Rotary Club meeting. Rotary Pres. Dr. Phil Facquet and Brad Harris The Sesquarcentennial Committee is in the process of planning an anniversary celebration.  The creation of a time capsule,  a parade, an Olympic style run around the perimeter of the Town and a fireworks display are only a few of the activities being discussed. Students have submitted literary pieces from which two will be selected to be included in the time capsule. The committee is looking to high school students to create a logo for the celebration. There will be plenty of ways for residents of every age to participate.

Putting together an event like this is challenging. The planning committee is working on events and will soon begin fundraising. For now Brad Harris is focusing on getting the message out .  To learn more about the 350th Anniversary celebration contact the historical society at 631-265-6768.