Tuesday, March 29, 2022

Bronxville Insider: Westchester County: March 28: County Executive George Latimer Gives Westchester Weekly Update.

 


March 28: County Executive George Latimer Gives Westchester Weekly Update.


Latimer was joined by Bronxville Mayor Mary Marvin.

 

Watch full briefing here: https://youtu.be/oVSNmW4Nyhg 

 

During his weekly Westchester briefing, Latimer discussed:


·         Guest: Bronxville Mayor Mary Marvin

·         COVID update

·         COVID Vaccinations at the County Center

 

With the declining number of vaccinations at the County Center, Westchester County is undertaking the following steps:

 

         Friday, April 1 will be the last COVID vaccination clinic at the County Center.

 

         Anyone who received a first dose this week or through April 1 will be contacted by the Westchester County Department of Health to receive a second dose at 134 Court Street.

 

         Starting April 8, COVID vaccines will be offered at 134 Court Street on Fridays from 9 A.M. to 3 P.M.

 

o   This is the routine immunization day for the County’s Health Department.

 

         The Health Department will continue to offer satellite clinics in high need communities, including the “Thank You” program, senior centers, and booster clinics.

 

Sunday, March 27, 2022

Bronxville Insider: Westchester County: 3/28 - 2PM - County Executive George Latimer to Give Westchester Weekly Update.

 


County Executive George Latimer to Give Westchester Weekly Update.

 

Latimer will be joined by Bronxville Mayor Mary Marvin.

 

Monday, March 28

2 p.m.

Watch on https://www.facebook.com/westchestergov/

 

During his weekly Westchester briefing, Latimer will discuss:


·         Guest: Bronxville Mayor Mary Marvin

·         COVID update

Wednesday, March 23, 2022

Bronxville Insider: Westchester County Legislator James Nolan 15th District: Special Presentation: Celebrate the Spirit and Cultural Legacy of Ukraine.

 


Special Presentation: Celebrate the Spirit and Cultural Legacy of Ukraine.

The Bronxville Adult School is offering an interactive virtual presentation, Celebrate the Spirit and Cultural Legacy of Ukraine!, on Monday, March 28, that will explore Ukraine's complex history, decorative folk arts, language, traditions, geography, and regional distinctions - all of which make the Ukrainian people so fiercely protective of their land, culture and independence.

The presentation will also touch on the origins of Kyivan Rus' and the influence of the Scandinavian Vikings on the region. Other topics will include the Kozak master horsemen, the wooden vernacular architecture of the Carpathians, ancient folklore, holiday customs, regional national costumes, dance, traditional foods, and even distinctive musical instruments, many of which are unique to Ukraine.

The instructor is Motrya (Moki) Kokoris, who has expertise in multiple disciplines, among them environmental advocacy, architecture, graphic design, fine art, and all things Arctic. In addition to being the first Ukrainian woman to reach the Geographic North Pole, and graduating from the Ukrainian Music Institute, Moki is a United Nations representative in consultative status with the UN Department of Global Communications for the World Federation of Ukrainian Women's Organizations. Moki has taught Ukrainian studies and the Ukrainian language as well as traditional pysanky folk art. She has written articles for a number of Ukrainian publications, and is a member of many Ukrainian organizations in the diaspora.

Register online at www.bronxvilleadultschool.org or click here. Register by phone at 914.395.0516.

 

Tuesday, March 22, 2022

Bronxville Insider: Bronxville Mayor Mary Marvin Weekly Column.

 


Mayor’s Column: March 21, 2022.

In the past few weeks, you have received several alerts from the police department of importance as they related to residents of our Village. The police chief and the board recognize that they were of great concern so I write this with substantive input from our Chief of Police to explain these most exigent alerts and phone messages and the necessary legal and personal protocols that often have to drive their wording.

As you can discern, each event relating to personal safety had its own unique set of facts. Before the Police Chief can disseminate any information, he has to filter his words through many legal lenses.

As example, he must follow the HIPAA laws which require the privacy of personal medical records; he must respect the individual privacy of those involved, most especially juveniles who must be handled with utmost sensitivity, all while sharing only that information that preserves the integrity of any possible ongoing criminal investigation.

The Chief’s emails are immediate notifications generated from the scene and are purposely limited to the facts at hand that can be legally divulged. Their primary purpose is to seek resident help in real time to perhaps identify a person or locate a subject and thanks to the civic involvement of residents, these alerts have proven very successful in solving situations.

Just last week, as a result of a very brief but real time alert, a resident identified young people whose parents were concerned about their whereabouts and they were located safely.

To set up a scenario, the Chief is often sending these alerts from his cell phone as he is supervising the event at hand and logistically moving all available officers. He is not a Chief in the typical large department sense as he literally has his sleeves rolled up and becomes the Incident Commander from the actual place of the event.

As illustration in the most recent event, the Chief was in communication with the Metro North Police Department, the New York City Police Department and the Port Authority Police Department while sending officers to many locations in Manhattan.

Though the Trustees are by New York State law so designated as Police Commissioners tasked to oversee the department, its goals, force numbers etc., there is an ethical wall as to information relating to privacy and criminal activity, so when you reach out to the Trustees or me, we often don’t have any more information than our fellow citizens at the moment of the incident.

The police department asks you to place your trust in them and do not interpret short alerts or read into them a different fact set. The alerts are as detailed as can be and should be read literally. As example, in a recent one it did not say “abducted” juveniles it said “missing” juveniles.

If there is any danger to you, communitywide or a neighborhood specific danger such as perhaps could have been the case in the NYP-Lawrence Hospital false active shooter case, you will be alerted immediately. Net net if it affects you, you will know in real time.

As the amount of characters are limited in a text, we ask you to sign up for the E-Alerts emails as well as text messages in which the Chief can expand on information not doable in a text. Due to the safeguards in the system and required verification, we cannot sign up for you but it is an easy process.

We live in one of the nation’s safest communities in no small part thanks to you as concerned citizens and your immediate response to these alerts. As I mentioned previously, the missing juveniles were located as a direct result of a citizen response and identification. In another situation, a young person was bitten by a dog near Starbucks and thanks to one of you, the dog was identified and the youngster did not have to go through a series of rabies shots. We are safe. We have not had a home invasion in over a decade and frankly much of our recent crime relates to unlocked cars with key fobs left inside.

I also encourage you to go on the police department website, which gives a review of all police activity for the month prior as well as reading our police department’s recent annual report which has been lauded for its transparency and thoroughness. If you have any questions or hear information that is disturbing, please do not hesitate to call the police desk to get your questions answered.

It does take a Village.

 

Tuesday, March 8, 2022

Bronxville Insider: Bronxville Mayor Mary Marvin Weekly Column.

 


Mayor’s Column: March 7, 2022.

The Bronxville Board of Trustees and our Village Administrator stay very involved with our colleagues both on the state level and our Westchester partners. I share with you some of the initiatives that we are trying to bring forward as a Westchester delegation.

As many of my colleagues noted at a recent meeting, we have been batting about zero in the past few years, in terms of positive changes in Albany. Our dismal record is not the result of our local elected’s efforts, rather the fact that our Westchester interests are often not aligned and not supported by legislators across the state, most notably the electeds representing the five boroughs.

We continue to ask for Aid to Municipalities that even reaches 10% of the aid given to school districts and we continue to fight to seek an exclusion from the tax cap for municipal expenditures on public infrastructure, an exclusion already granted to schools and used by the state itself. The tax cap as applied to municipalities discourages capital infrastructure investment at a time when such investment is critically needed as many of our communities are 100+ years old with infrastructure reflecting that age.

A positive outcome to these two perennial issues would make a great deal of difference to every community in Westchester, regardless of size, density or affluence.

In addition, the following are items that are new on our Westchester priority list reflecting the times we are living.

As illustration, during the recent police department review initiatives, it was quite evident that municipal police need access to social workers and mental health professionalism on a twenty-four-hour basis.

Our first responders are frequently called to crisis situations, which the Covid epidemic exacerbated, but they have few resources to call upon and little training to address the root problems. We are requesting support from the state to develop shared mental health services including on-call professionals on a 24/7 basis and increased training for first responders.

The impacts of the pandemic on students and at home workers made clear the importance of universal broadband and reliable cell service. A plan to address gaps in broadband cellular coverage and bandwidth is urgently needed for the entire county.

As we know in Bronxville, water and sewer infrastructure is critical to both a community’s economic growth and its quality of life. The State Comptroller highlighted multiple studies estimating a combined multiyear funding deficit of $65 billion for municipal infrastructure. Every Westchester community is desperate for state help on this issue.

The Westchester Municipal Officials Association also supports legislation that would provide a local option to each community to charge tax exempt properties for the cost of services such as police protection, fire protection, street and highway construction, maintenance and lighting, sanitation and water.

Looking beyond our County’s particular needs, Governor Hochul included the following in her budget proposal released last week which impact us as well.

Extended Producer Responsibility for Packaging and Paper 
The new initiative would require large producers to develop and implement programs to manage their paper and packaging products. The end goal is to analyze the recycling needs in New York and require producers to take responsibility for the recycling and reuse of discarded packaging/paper products from their companies.

Sales Tax on Vacation Rentals 
The Executive Budget would require that all vacation rentals be subject to the same sales tax as traditional hotels, motels and bed-and-breakfast . The vacation rental market outlets would be required to collect such sales tax on the rental properties they facilitate. The tax would be levied as of September 2, 2020.

To Go Drinks

The budget would amend the Alcoholic Beverage Control law to allow any retail license that provides liquor or wine sale for inside consumption to also allow products for off-premise consumption. The State Liquor Authority would maintain the ability to adopt rules and regulations related to the sales including quantity, food required at the time of purchase and hours of sale.

Ten Day Voter Registration Deadline 
The Governor’s budget proposes to lower the voter registration deadline from the current 25 days to 10 days before the election.

College Campus Polling Locations

In instances where a college or university campus has 300 or more students who are registered to vote, a polling place designated within that election district would be located at the college or at an alternative location approved by the college or university.  This would take effect on January 1, 2024.

I will report periodically on the fate of the above initiatives as the legislative session progresses.

 

Tuesday, March 1, 2022

Bronxville Insider: Weekly Column of Bronxville Mayor Mary Marvin.

 


Mayor’s Column: February 28, 2022.

You may have noticed a buzz of activity at the intersection of Tanglewylde Avenue and Route 22 as Iona College is busy retrofitting the entire interior of the former Concordia College library to accommodate the needed equipment and square footage required for the new NewYork-Presbyterian Iona School of Health Sciences. This initial commitment of between $15 and $20 million for remodeling will transform and reconfigure the entire interior space. As a consequence, the gallery space will be retrofitted for academic programming.

It will be a relatively quiet summer on campus. You will see academic faculty in some of the other buildings by September and a limited number of graduate classes will begin at that juncture with the primary enrollment coming in January 2023.

When in full operation, the healthcare campus will consist primarily of graduate students and there will be no residential living on the campus for the foreseeable future. Some of the Iona deans or senior faculty will take up residence on Concordia Place. Iona has decided the street name will remain to honor the heritage and storied history of Concordia College. Sommers Center will remain available for multiple community uses including that of the Concordia Conservatory and continue as a voting site for our state and national elections.

As to other facilities, Iona is in discussions as to the usage of other campus buildings and is open to talking to neighboring school districts about athletic field space and gymnasium rentals. The college is currently before the Tuckahoe Planning Board with an application to resurface and improve drainage at the existing soccer field across Route 22 from the front entrance to the campus.

Iona has also employed the services of two landscaping companies to maintain the property in pristine condition and they have also kept on Concordia’s former head of security who is known and respected by the Village police department.

The vision for this campus is to be a center, an intellectual hub and cutting-edge facility to help not only educate healthcare workers at the highest level thanks to a $20 million commitment from NewYork-Presbyterian to partner with Iona, but also to be a catalyst to craft new models in the way we deliver, practice and finance medicine. New models are clearly needed as currently 20% of our GDP goes to healthcare and by just 2032, it is estimated the number will be at 32%, clearly unsustainable. Iona aspires to be the home of innovative critical thinking on this subject.

The above news was conveyed to the Trustees from Iona President Seamus Carey as we have forged a very open, realistic and seamless partnership.

President Carey has offered to hold a town hall meeting open to all to share plans as they evolve and answer questions.

The vision for this campus is to be a fully integrated partner with the Village and our residents and a hub of intellectual activity that will serve not only to enhance the college, but Bronxville residents as well.

Village Government Updates

The Trustees, Solar Legislation in concert with the Zoning and Planning Boards and the Village Building Department, have been re-vamping our local law relating to solar energy to be mindful of its importance in the energy paradigm as well as the vast improvements in efficiency and design. At the March 14th Board of Trustees’ meeting, the new draft local law will be presented. I invite all of you to review it online and reach out if you have any comments during this open period.

Farmers Market 


In partnership with the Chamber of Commerce,  the Village Board of Trustees approved the relocation of some parking spaces in the Maltby Lot to facilitate expansion of the number  of vendors at our Saturday market.

Westside Circle 


After professional study, the Trustees will soon be proposing improvements to the circle configuration to enhance pedestrian safety and more efficiently direct vehicular traffic. Proposed improvements include extending the island at the end of Parkway Road, thus giving pedestrians less exposure in the crosswalk as well as eliminating the left turn out of Leonard Morange Square.

You will also see work out near the island unrelated to the traffic study, rather the result of a truck destroying our small shed which contained our irrigation system and electricity and water meter installations for the oval.

Pondfield Road/Midland Avenue and Pondfield Road/Gramatan Avenue Signal Upgrade

Final designs are complete and bid documents will be available on Monday, February 28 with a bid opening on March 25. Upgrading these intersections to maximize walkability and pedestrian safety is of the highest priority for the Trustees and improvements will begin soon after the contract is awarded.

Online Parking Permits 


Our online program went active last week and is currently being utilized for all 24 hour resident reserved renewals. If you need any assistance, feel free to call Village Hall as this system will replace the former mail/paper application system in practice for decades. We are here to help you navigate as it will be a vast improvement for all.