Tuesday
Mar202012

No Cell Tower For The Kings Park School District

There will not be a cell tower on the Kings Park School District property.  Addressing a packed gymnasium Board Of Education members were unanimous in their decision.  The audience responded with applause.

After receiving emails all week the Board anticipated a large audience at the meeting. They were not disappointed.  Many residents attended the meeting to express their concerns and angst at the district’s consideration of a proposal to enter into an agreement with Suffolk Wireless, LLC. 

The proposal allowed for the construction and operation of a cell tower on district property.  

Board members received emails from residents all week.  Mr. Motherway said he received one hundred emails and two phone calls urging a no vote on the proposal.  Other Board members concurred.

At the beginning of the meeting President of the Board, Mr. Motherway, announced that the agenda had been altered to allow the board to discuss the cell tower proposal as the first item on the agenda.  Mr. Motherway went on to explain that while the Board has a responsibility to explore options to relieve the economic pressures facing the district his opinion was that the district “not proceed.” Mr. Locascio, Ms. Barrett, Mr. Weber and Ms. Goldstein agreed. Ms. Goldstein, the last board member to speak, stated, “I will not be voting in any way other than to not go forward.” 

At this point item #5 on the agenda – Approval of Memorandum of Agreement with Suffolk Wireless, LLC was struck from the agenda. Again the audience applauded and that ended any discussion of the Kings Park School District’s exploration of generating revenue through receipts raised from a cell tower.  

Click here for cell tower article

Monday
Mar192012

It's Not Us - Rudy Massa Owner of Quick Stop - Smithtown

Rudy Massa - Owner of Quick StopIt is not us! That is the message Rudy Massa, owner of Gasoline Heaven and Quick Stop, wants people to know. It has been an endless morning of talking to people on the phone explaining that the Quick Stop he owns on Rte. 25 in Commack, Smithtown, is not the one identified by Suffolk County Police as having served alcohol to minors.  

The store identified by SCPD is located at 6077 Jericho Turnpike, Commack in Huntington.  

There was some confusion when the Commack Patch erroneously identified the Commack Quick Stop as being the one owned by Rudy Massa. The phone calls started and an employee of Massa’s took a look at the article, saw negative blogs about the store and Rudy decided to take action. 

According to Rudy, “The Commack Patch, after a conversation, immediately printed a retraction and removed the article. What I want people to know is that we have been in this community a long time we abide by the laws. Only two months ago there was a police operation in our area and we were identified by the police as having NOT sold alcohol to minors.  It has been a long morning and I am glad it’s over.”

 

Sunday
Mar182012

History of The Commack Volunteer Ambulance Corps

By Rita J. Egan

After the tragic loss of a child in 1964, local residents joined together to create the Commack Volunteer Ambulance Corps (CVAC).

Richard RafleRichard Rafle, one of the founding members, said up until the mid 1960s there was no ambulance service in the area. Many times a hearse owned by a local funeral parlor had to be used when an emergency occurred. When a child on a tricycle was hit by a developer’s truck, residents waited almost three hours for an ambulance and watched helplessly as the child died.

Even though she was only four years old, Doreen Murphy still remembers that day. After the tragedy her father, Hank Magnani, joined Rafle and other men in the community to develop an ambulance corps. The new volunteers began going door to door in the Commack Fire District to collect donations.

Murphy said she remembers the whole family getting involved with the fundraising efforts. On Wednesday nights her parents would pick up hamburgers at Buddy Burgers, located where Boston Market is today, and bring them to the first garage at Christ the King Church on Indian Head Road. She said the children would help the woman record the donations on index cards, and working together gave everyone a sense of community.

“I have wonderful memories of all that,” said Murphy.

Rafle said the ambulance corps became official in 1966 with their first call. In the first three months the volunteers answered 140 calls, according to a June 15, 1967 Long Islander article.

The first ambulance used was an old Cadillac model that the volunteers needed to buy an engine for, according to Rafle. After a short period the group moved their ambulance from the Christ the King Church property to a potato barn on Veteran’s Highway where today we find Catz of Long Island. The garage remained at this location until the early 70s.

As for uniforms, Rafle said the volunteers would wear white jumpsuits that they ordered from a mail order company. Murphy also remembers those white jumpsuits and her father coming back from his first call covered in blood.

The August 31, 1967 Commack News reported that the company was waiting for its second ambulance at the time. The “disaster rig” was a 1967 Cadillac and would cost $15,000.

While not their original ambulance, CVAC still possesses a 1967 Cadillac. Assistant Chief Mike Hoddinott said the old ambulances could hold up to four patients and hooks on the roof of the car enabled two cots to hang. Rafle said the old ambulances didn’t leave much room for the crew.

In 1973 still located on Veteran’s Highway, the organization became a 24 hour residence crew, according to a June 14, 1973 Long Islander article. It made them the second on Long Island, and their number was 864-8484. Prior to this, residents would call the Suffolk County Police. In the article, then CVAC president Jack Cotter said it would save between five to ten minutes.

Volunteers were alerted of emergencies by phone in the early days, according to Rafle. He also said that once a volunteer was out on the road, the only way to stay in touch were CB radios.

Rafle, who spent a decade as an active member with the corps, said, “Every one of those calls you never forget.”

The former ambulance volunteer remembers many tragic scenes, but the one call that stands out most to him occurred on a New Year’s Day when a woman was in labor. In the ambulance ride, Rafle delivered twins who were premature. Later he was informed that both survived, and 20 years later he ran into the mother, who remembered him as the man who delivered her babies.

It was in September of 1974 when the volunteers finally broke ground at their current location on Burr Road, according to a September 19, 1974 Long Islander article. The property was given to CVAC from the Commack School District. According to Hoddinott, the structure has been added on through the decades. The front with a dispatcher’s office, crew lounge and kitchen is the original part of the building, while the meeting rooms, bunk rooms that sleep eight and two back bays were added after the 80s.

As the area’s needs grew, so did the need for up-to-date ambulances. Jamaica Savings Bank donated a fully-equipped 1976 Dodge van ambulance to CVAC, according to an April 24, 1976 L.I. Reporter article.

Chief C.W. Schwalbe said over the decades their fleet has grown to four ambulances, two first responder cars and four chief vehicles.

A youth group was started in the 80s and still exists today. According to Schwalbe, the group consists of 40 teenagers ranging from ages 14 through 18. At 15 members can dispatch calls and at 16 ride an ambulance. Through the decades many members of the youth group have gone on to volunteer with CVAC or work in the health field. Former volunteers also make up a support group where members help with filing and setting up for events.

The sense of community experienced in the past still remains with Rafle and Murphy. Rafle returned to CVAC as a member of the support group, while Murphy and her mom still go to the corps annual dinner.

A few years ago when Murphy’s father became ill before his death it was the Commack Volunteer Ambulance Corps that came to his home and brought the former volunteer to the hospital. For Murphy who cherishes those early years, knowing that CVAC was there for her father brought comfort. She said she felt as if everything came full circle for her father.

The ambulance corps now receives 3,500 to 4,000 calls a year, according to Schwalbe, and the volunteers are planning for their future. Covering the Commack Fire Department area, as well as parts of Hauppauge, Smithtown, Elwood and East Northport, CVAC is hoping to expand the garage’s bays and build another bunking area above them. Schwalbe said they also hope to renovate the electrical services and fix the pot holes in the parking lot.

With almost 50 years in the hamlet, the Commack Volunteer Ambulance Corps continues to remain a staple in the community.

 

 

Saturday
Mar172012

Women's History Month - Angela Merkel - Making History

Angela Merkel -photo from wikipedia

German stateswoman and chancellor (2005– ). Born July 17, 1954 in Hamburg, Germany. The daughter of a Lutheran pastor and teacher, Merkel grew up in a rural area north of Berlin in the then German Democratic Republic. She studied physics at the University of Leipzig, earning a doctorate in 1978, and later worked as a chemist at the Central Institute for Physical Chemistry, Academy of Sciences (1978–1990).

In 1990 she joined the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) political party and soon after was appointed to Helmut Kohl’s cabinet as minister for women and youth. Following his defeat in the 1998 general election, she was named Secretary-General of the CDU. She was chosen party leader in 2000 and ran unsuccessfully for chancellor in 2002. In the 2005 election she narrowly defeated Chancellor Gerhard Schröder, winning by just three seats, and after the CDU agreed a coalition deal with the Social Democrats (SPD), she was declared Germany’s first female chancellor. Merkel is also the first former citizen of the German Democratic Republic to lead the reunited Germany and the first woman to lead Germany since it became a modern nation-state in 1871. (bio.truestory)

 

Friday
Mar162012

Kings Park -What's Going Up And What Should Be Coming Down ?

By Chad Kushins

March 14, 2012

 

Site Of Proposed Cell Tower - photo by Jennifer M. KleiAt the March 13th regular meeting of the Kings Park Civic Association, residents and local activists alike gathered to discuss various community topics currently addressing the Town of Smithtown.  Highlights from the meeting, which was held in Kings Park High School’s Community Room, follow:

Proposed Cell Tower on Kings Park School Property

Announced last month, Suffolk Wireless Communications approached the Kings Park School District with the construction of a proposed cell phone tower, which would be erected at the district’s administration building on Lawrence Road.  Amid an outpouring of community members against the project, the tower itself could yield the district up to $90,000 for the first year that all tower slots are filled and an additional three percent compounded every following year of the 30-year agreement – according to Suffolk Wireless.  As the Board of Education continues to contemplate whether to allow the company to build the 125-foot monopole, those in attendance for Tuesday’s Kings Park Civic meeting stressed their concerns.

The district learned the tower, which could house up to six antennae for wireless carriers inside the pole, would be located just east of the driveway for the building on Lawrence Road.  Until now, the board was considering three separate spots on the administration building property for the monopole.  Now, however, the final proposal sees the tower – along with the necessary wires, cabinets, and other equipment – slated to be installed on the property of New Discovery, a child center located inside the building that has already announced that it will not be renewing its lease next year. 

According to the Kings Park Board Of Education (BOE), New Discovery’s income couldn’t meet the financial needs to compensate its staff, leading to its closure; at a meeting of the Kings Park School District last week, Suffolk Wireless’ representatives explained that the Kings Park location was chosen because it does not interfere with the day-to-day operations at the administration building, as well as to maximize unused land on the property.

If approved, the Kings Park School District would evenly split revenue with Suffolk Wireless an expected $7,500 per month for the district if all of the tower’s five slots of are leased to separate cell phone service providers, $90,000 in annual revenue.

In order to move forward, a series of steps would need to take place between the district and the communications company, beginning with the district’s requirement to file with the State Education Department, which issues permits for all school district construction.  Next, they would have to comply with a State Environmental Quality Review to determine additional safety concerns.

If the school board agrees to go forward with the project, construction would begin in October of this year with an expected completion date of January 2013.  They are expected to vote on whether to approve the go ahead for a SEQRA review at next month’s meeting.

Blighted Home Pushed for Demolition

Hightower Homes - Photo by Jennifer M. KleiWith the developer of two blighted, uninhabited Smithtown homes currently in prison, the Kings Park Civic Association is continuing its pursuit to either have the eyesores completed and put up for sale – or demolished once and for all. 

Last month, the Kings Park Civic Association sent a letter to the Town of Smithtown, urging them to take action with the properties at 79 and 81 West Main Street, on which the two defunct houses are located, officially labeled the “Hightower” homes.   According to both Civic Association President Sean Lehmann and Smithtown Town Councilman Edward Wehrheim, Town Attorney John Zollo is currently looking into options.

“[The developers] started building and quickly ran into all kinds of problems,” Wehrheim told Smithtown Matters.  “The Building Department went and inspected the homes and determined that a lot of work had to be done on the property.”

According to Wehrheim, the original developer sold the property to its current owner, who is now serving a four-year prison sentence for unrelated offenses.  However, that incarceration left the two houses unfinished and without proper maintenance.  Now, not only have the two structures become eyesores to local residents, but concerns regarding safety have quickly escalated.

“If they’re not safe, they have to take them down,” Lehmann stated at the March 13th Civics Association meeting.  “That’s our position.”  

According to Lehmann, the County is currently pursuing the proper avenues to take possession of the property, although a series of measure must be taken first; this includes a six-month period where the developers can catch up of back taxes; if such action isn’t, it could be an addition three years before the County can auction the land off – much to the chagrin of both Smithtown and Kings Park residents.

Last June, Wehrheim, joined by fellow Smithtown Town Board members Robert Creighton and Kevin Malloy, launched a major initiative to conduct a survey of defunct and blighted structures in town.  Drawing up a master list of nineteen suitable properties, both Hightower homes easily made the cut.

Wehrheim went on to explain, “[the Town] is looking to have the developer either complete the homes or take them down … We’ve learned that the County is in the process of taking the property on a tax lean.  That’s the current status.”