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Monday
Nov042019

Before You Vote Learn The Positions Of Candidates Running For Office

 

On Thursday, October 17 at Nesaquake Middle School  the League of Women Voters of Smithtown hosted a debate between Jan Singer and Rob Trotta candidates  in Suffolk County’s 13th Legislative District. ( The debate begins 15 minutes into video)

 

 

LWV Smithtown and LWV Huntington
Monday, October 21 7:00pm
Suffolk County Executive candidate debate 
Kings Park High School, Kings Park
Candidates Steve Bellone, Greg Fischer, John Kennedy (Debate begins 23 minutes into video)

 

 

Sunday
Nov032019

Open For Business Smithtown Welcomes Sweetwaters Coffee & Tea West Main

Smithtown by the Sound

By Nancy Vallarella

Sweetwaters Coffee & Tea West Main is currently open for business and will hold its Grand Opening - November 9th

Calculated analytics or kismet? Either way, it is a bold move for three healthcare career individuals (pharmacy owners, pharmacist, and pharmacy technician) to abandon their legacy career paths and open multiple Sweetwaters Coffee & Tea locations on Long Island.  The first one will be right here in Smithtown.

Owner and Director of Operations, Jeff Wong, cites many key characteristics for choosing Smithtown as their first location, “Traffic patterns, and credit card usage are common considerations. Smithtown rose to the top with the plans for transit-oriented development (The Lofts at Maple and Main), the large school district, and positive momentum for a growing small-business district. Then there is the destiny factor…The Nissequogue Indians called the area Hauppauge, meaning “the land of sweet water” as in the headwaters of the Nissequogue River.”

More likely, Sweetwaters Coffee & Tea West Main owners Lou Puleo, Chris Varvaro, and Jeff Wong are hedging their bet by choosing a franchise that has been successfully operating throughout the US since 2004. Founders Wei and Lisa Bee opened the first Sweetwaters Coffee & Tea in Ann Arbor, Michigan, in 1993. The founding couple continues to actively participate in 26 franchises throughout the country when they aren’t scouring the globe researching and tasting the next coffee, tea, or menu item to serve at Sweetwaters locations. 

There is a “real ingredient” focus at Sweetwaters. Some menu items are luxurious, but all are selected for their quality. Jeff Wong states,” We will not offer coconut milk. In its natural state, coconut milk does not mix well with coffee without questionable additives.  Menu items are carefully curated. Sweetwaters Ice Dragons are “perfectly blended frozen luxuries.”  Ice Dragon menu option, Strawberry Bliss, is an ingredient beverage made with fresh strawberries, yogurt, milk, sweet cream, and ice.  The real ingredient policy holds throughout Sweetwaters’ light fair menu. Expect croissants, pastry, and breakfast sandwiches. Over time, local artisan products will be offered.Nov. 2 Family and Friends Charity Event

A convenient drive-thru window is sure to be popular. Tea enthusiasts will be delighted with Sweetwaters teapot service. A catering menu boasts boxes of coffee, tea, and seasonal cider available in multiple varieties along with trays of muffins, pastries, cakes, fruit, and quiches.

Quality and community are hand in hand at Sweetwater. The goal of the franchise is to maintain a warm, welcoming, and inviting environment to work in and gather.  As director of operations, Jeff Wong is looking forward to mentoring the young staff.  His goal is to train, develop skills and work ethic while offering a comfortable atmosphere to stay beyond work hours to study or meet with friends.  It looks as though Jeff is on the right track…

“Sweetwaters immediately showed their commitment to the schools in the area by reaching out to me to join the Smithtown Schools Industry Advisor Board,” said Mary Pat Grafstein, Executive Director of the IAB. As the Work Experience and Internship Coordinator for the Smithtown School District, Mary collaborated with Sweetwaters on their job posting and general information on the café. Students were hired from Smithtown High Schools East and West. 

Sweetwaters Coffee & Tea West Main is located 200 West Main Street, Smithtown.Sweetwaters West Main is working on various community programs and events.

Local art and photography will be exhibited. St. James’ Watermark Galleries will be among the first to show. Students will be motivated with product rewards as part of Sweetwaters’ “Great Grades” Program. On-premise fundraising events are being scheduled. Check social media for other scheduled activities like OPEN MIC NIGHT!

Sweetwaters Coffee & Tea West Main is located 200 West Main Street, Smithtown. Just east of The Wine Guy. 

Sweetwaters Coffee & Tea West Main can be found on Facebook at SWWestMain and instagram at WestMainCoffeeAndTea.


 

 

 

Wednesday
Oct302019

SUFFOLK CLOSEUP - Captain Kidd's Treasure May Be Closer Than You Think

SUFFOLK CLOSEUP

By Karl Grossman

Where is the rest of Captain Kidd’s treasure?

I’ve been giving presentations about Gardiner’s Island in recent times—at the East Hampton Library, Southampton History Museum and last week at the Suffolk County Historical Society Museum.

Part of the talk involves the pirate Captain Kidd in 1699 famously burying treasure on Gardiner’s Island which is east of Shelter Island. Years ago, for a TV shoot on the privately held island that’s been in the Gardiner family for nearly 400 years, Robert David Lion Gardiner, its “16th Lord of the Manor,” brought me to the spot where the treasure had been buried.

Numerous historical accounts relate that after leaving the treasure on the 3,300-acre island, Captain Kidd told the “3rd Lord of the Manor,” Jonathan Gardiner, that if the treasure wasn’t there when he returned, he would kill Jonathan.

Captain Kidd was on his way to Boston—and never got back to Gardiner’s Island. He was arrested and tried for murder and piracy and hanged.

The treasure was recovered from Gardiner’s Island but, the historical accounts have it, somehow a diamond was either taken by the Gardiners or fell out of the travel bag in which the treasure was placed to be sent to London. In any event, the diamond was given to Jonathan’s daughter, Elizabeth, says the accounts.

Before the talk last week, I was a guest on the Giana Volpe’s “Media Mavens” radio program on WPPB, the Long Island NPR station, and spoke about the upcoming presentation. Then, when I got to the college where I’m a journalism professor (SUNY/Old Westbury), there was a phone message from Dr. Gary Rosenbaum. The physician, infectious disease specialist at Peconic Bay Medical Center in Riverhead, said he had heard me on WPPB and then told a fascinating—history-changing—story.

As a Boy Scout, said Dr. Rosenbaum, his troop, from Commack, spent several weeks in 1971 in a camp-out on Gardiner’s Island. At one point, he related, Mr. Gardiner invited the boys and their leaders into the main residence on the island, its Manor House, and showed them goodies which Mr. Gardiner identified as being from Captain Kidd’s treasure. This included, said Dr. Rosenbaum, a tiara studded with rubies and emeralds, and gold coins—Spanish doubloons. An armed guard stood by as the items were presented, he related.

I asked Dr. Rosenbaum if he might come to the Suffolk County Historical Society Museum presentation and tell the audience there what he just told me. He did. I introduced him from the audience as I got to the portion on my talk about Gardiner’s Island involving Captain Kidd’s treasure, briefly summarized his story and said he would provide details. 

When I finished, I asked Dr. Rosenbaum to come to the podium. There he repeated what he had originally told me on the phone. He noted that the guard—armed with a sidearm—“watched us like a hawk” as Mr. Gardiner displayed the items.

Buttressing Dr. Rosenbaum’s account was an audience member, Peter Vieblig of Shelter Island. A “history buff,” he’s on the board of the Sylvester Manor Educational Farm on Shelter Island (where there’s also an historic manor house) and long active in the Shelter Island Historical Society. Mr. Vieblig said all of Captain Kidd’s treasure apparently never got to England.

This, he said, was confirmed by Mr. Gardiner when Mr. Vielbig visited Gardiner’s Island on a tour of it with the Sag Harbor Historical Society in 1975. Mr. Gardiner, however, “didn’t say” the Gardiners got more of the treasure beyond that diamond.

In articles about the auctions of Gardiner heirlooms after Mr. Gardiner died in 2004, and then his wife, Eunice, died in 2011, there is reporting on furniture and paintings and similar items being sold off but, unless I missed something, nothing about the sale of a tiara or gold doubloons.

The question: where is the rest of Captain Kidd’s treasure now?

And who to contact on this?  With Mr. and Mrs. Gardiner having passed away and leaving no heirs, I tried to contact their last attorney. But answering the phone number of the lawyer who is listed on Google resulted in my being connected to a bagel shop in Smithtown. Seeking information from English Colonial authorities in Boston about whether they knew they had been short-changed would be to no avail as they haven’t been around for centuries. 

In coming months, I will again be giving the presentation about Gardiner’s Island—in itself an historic and ecological jewel—at the Amagansett Free Library, Huntington Public Library and Shelter Island History Center. It will include a screening of the TV piece filmed on Gardiner’s Island which features scenes of the exquisite island and my interviewing the late Mr. Gardiner there.

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.   

Sunday
Oct272019

Zeldin Says He Hasn't Heard "A Single Thing" 

Telling the truth or telling a truth he wants the public to believe, Congressman Zeldin is all in on opposition to impeachment inquiry.

The Hill is reporting that House Foreign Affairs Committee member Rep. Lee Zeldin (R-N.Y.) has said he hasn’t heard “a single thing” that President Trump could be impeached for during witness testimony in the House impeachment inquiry. 

“As someone who’s been in that deposition room a lot, I have not heard a single thing that you could possibly impeach the President of the United States for,” Zeldin said in an interview with radio host John Catsimatidis on AM 970’s “The Answer.”

The Foreign Affairs Committee, on which Zeldin sits, in addition to the House Oversight and Intelligence committees, are leading the investigation into Trump over his dealings with Ukraine. Read The Hill article 

Thursday
Oct242019

Legislator Trotta Asks NYS Attorney General To Investigate Suffolk County PBA

Suffolk County Legislator Rob Trotta held a press conference Wednesday afternoon to call attention to what he considers a misappropriation of funds by the Suffolk County Police Benevolent Association (PBA). Trotta has written to NYS Attorney General Letitia James and asked that her office open an investigation into the PBA’sRob Trotta calls out PBA Wednesday, Oct. 23 practice of transferring member dues to its Political Action Committee  and then distributing funds to political candidates through the Suffolk County Police Benevolent Association PAC

Legislator Trotta is a former Suffolk County police officer who retired from the SCPD when elected to the Suffolk County Legislature in 2014 and is not a PBA member.

Trotta, citing NYS election law section 14-116 or corporations, believes  the PBA is limited to a $5,000 a year contribution. Currently the law is not applied to unions.

According to Newsday, the PAC has contributed $87,005 to candidates and political committees this year. PAC funds have been distributed to both Republicans and Democrats including Trotta’s Democrat opponent Jan Singer.

Trotta has not received and said he would not accept contributions from the PBA or unions that have contracts that come before the legislature on which he is asked to cast a vote. He called on Jan Singer and all candidates who received funding from the PAC to return the donations.

Legislator Rob Trotta’s Letter to NYS Attorney General Letitia James