Monday, January 30, 2012

Mineola coming attractions proudly presents who sold the ranch

 

WebCivil Supreme - Appearance Detail
Court: Nassau Civil Supreme
Index Number:   014436/2010
Case Name: NASSAU REGIONAL vs. GLORIA R. KELLY
Case Type: Commercial Division
Track: Standard

Appearance Information:
Appearance
Date
Time On For Appearance
Outcome
Justice /
Part
Comments Motion
Seq
02/27/2012    Supreme Trial   VITO M. DESTEFANO
VITO M. DESTEFANO (COMC) 
  
09/19/2011    Supreme Trial Preliminary Conference Held  IRA B. WARSHAWSKY
IRA B. WARSHAWSKY (PC PART) 
  
03/18/2011    Supreme Trial Adjourned  IRA B. WARSHAWSKY
IRA B. WARSHAWSKY (PC PART) 
PEND.APPEAL  
01/18/2011    Supreme Trial Adjourned  IRA B. WARSHAWSKY
IRA B. WARSHAWSKY (PC PART) 
  
11/30/2010    Motion Fully Submitted  IRA B. WARSHAWSKY
IRA B. WARSHAWSKY (MOTION PT) 
   001
11/30/2010    Supreme Trial Adjourned  IRA B. WARSHAWSKY
IRA B. WARSHAWSKY (PC PART) 
  
10/29/2010    Supreme Trial Hearing Held  IRA B. WARSHAWSKY
IRA B. WARSHAWSKY (HEARING PT) 
  
10/22/2010    Motion Fully Submitted  IRA B. WARSHAWSKY
IRA B. WARSHAWSKY (MOTION PT) 
 9-28-10 TO IBW  002
10/22/2010    Motion Fully Submitted  IRA B. WARSHAWSKY
IRA B. WARSHAWSKY (MOTION PT) 
 10-4-10 TO IBW  003
10/06/2010    Motion Adjourned  IRA B. WARSHAWSKY
IRA B. WARSHAWSKY (MOTION PT) 
   001
09/10/2010    Motion Adjourned  IRA B. WARSHAWSKY
IRA B. WARSHAWSKY (MOTION PT) 
   001
09/03/2010    Motion Adjourned  IRA B. WARSHAWSKY
IRA B. WARSHAWSKY (MOTION PT) 
   001
08/20/2010    Motion Adjourned  ANTHONY L. PARGA
ANTHONY L. PARGA (MOTION PT) 
SIGND RSM 7/29 F/F   001
07/29/2010    Supreme Initial (first time on) Adjourned  ANTHONY L. PARGA
ANTHONY L. PARGA (PC PART) 
*  
07/27/2010    Motion Adjourned  ANTHONY L. PARGA
ANTHONY L. PARGA (MOTION PT) 
SIGND RSM 7/29 F/F   001


Sheldon Silver should see that all NY OTBs are open 365 days of the year

Silver proposes boosting minimum wage to $8.50

ALBANY, N.Y. — The top Democrat in New York's Legislature began pushing legislation Monday to boost the state's minimum wage from $7.25 to $8.50 an hour and then link future increases to the inflation rate.
Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, joined by dozens of colleagues from his chamber controlled by Democrats, said census data show nearly half of the U.S. population has fallen into poverty or joined the ranks of the working poor. He said New York's minimum wage has risen 10 cents in the last six years, it is lower here than in 18 other states, and increasing it is "a matter of human dignity."
Gov. Andrew Cuomo has supported previous proposals to raise the minimum and his office will review this one through the legislative session, spokesman Matthew Wing said Monday
Scott Reif, spokesman for Republicans who control the Senate, said the Senate GOP would "continue to promote policies that encourage job growth and make New York a more business-friendly state, just as we did last year partnering with Governor Cuomo."
The New York Farm Bureau and the state Business Council said raising the minimum wage would hurt small businesses, farms and nonprofits that are struggling to meet payrolls now. Farm Bureau President Dean Norton called it "a stealth tax."
The Fiscal Policy Institute, a research nonprofit whose aim is "a strong economy in which prosperity is broadly shared," said raising the minimum wage would help 1.6 million workers, mainly in retailing, food services and local service businesses, that don't compete with businesses in other states. The institute said it would actually create 25,000 jobs since the money would be quickly spent and pumped back into local economies.
The advocacy group Hunger Action Network said the $8.50 an hour rate would be too low to address the gulf in income inequality and should be $10, less than what it would be if the old $1.50 minimum wage from 40 years ago had been adjusted along with inflation.
For workers Monday, it was more than a theoretical debate.
Hippolyte Lohaka, laid-off from his job as a lecturer at Baylor College in Texas two years ago and looking for similar work in Buffalo, meanwhile greets shoppers and wrangles carts at Sam's Club. He makes about $8 an hour. It's not enough to make ends meet. He splits expenses with a roommate.
Raising the minimum wage "would be very helpful," he said at the Buffalo Employment and Training Center in Buffalo, where he and other job-seekers sat at computers updating resumes and scouring job sites. "There are not a lot of jobs. For the economy, that would be a partial solution," he said.
Loretta Glover, 63, of Mount Vernon, said she made about $26 an hour as a salesperson, counting commission and bonuses, before she was laid off by Time Warner Cable in 2008. Now she makes $7.25 an hour working part-time to supplement her Social Security, while taking college courses in hopes of getting a better job. She canceled her cable TV to save money.
"It's very hard to pay my bills at $7.25," Glover said. "I have to get food stamps, and a subsidy to pay my rent."
Glover wants to see the minimum raised to $10 an hour. "That way, I could buy new clothes when mine get worn out. I wouldn't have to be subsidized to pay my rent. Maybe scratch together enough to take a trip now and then," she said. "I can't imagine someone with children living on this."
At a corner Korean-owned deli on Manhattan's West Side, 18-year-old Mexican immigrant Jaime Gallindo smiled as he appeared from a back room where he earns $7.80 helping prepare the salad bar:
"If I made $8.50, I could save some money!" he said in Spanish. Most of his salary goes to cover monthly rent of $600 for one room in someone's apartment. "I save nothing now."
But an increase in the minimum wage for a few of his lowest-paid employees would put a squeeze on deli owner Jay Kim, who says he's barely keeping the business open. "The economy is bad, and I can't pay more because it's almost impossible to keep this place now," he said, glancing around the neatly stacked shelves and deli bar that's often crowded at lunchtime.
____
Associated Press writers Carolyn Thompson in Buffalo, Mary Esch in Albany and Verena Dobnik in New York contributed to this report.

We need a Governor like Jessica Alhquist who knows OUR RIGHTS

Surely Jessica could teach Andrew Cuomo a few things about
NY PML Sec 105 and the rights of New Yorkers
Who does Cardinal Andrew Cuomo think he is kidding?

 
(If this message is not displaying properly, click here to launch your browser.)
From the Office of Governor Andrew M. Cuomo
Dear New Yorker,
No area of government needs reform more than our education system. New York State spends more than any other state per pupil, yet ranks only 38th in graduation rates. Why aren’t New Yorkers getting what they’re paying for?
Our system has suffered because Albany has spent more time worrying about the business of education -- contracts, salaries, and benefits -- than it has worrying about the children. Education should be about the STUDENTS. We need to have a system in Albany that focuses on improving student performance and school accountability.

Adopting a real teacher evaluation system is the key to this effort. In 2010, our state was awarded a $700 million grant from the federal government that required teacher evaluations, but the state has failed to produce the system. Currently there is a lawsuit between the teachers unions and the State Education Department that is blocking the evaluations from moving forward. If we do not act, we are at risk of losing $700 million in federal funding.
We must act now: CLICK HERE to see the Governor's proposal on education and encourage your fellow New Yorkers to join the fight to put students first.
But the issue of performance in education goes beyond teacher evaluations. Last year Governor Cuomo proposed two competitive grants funds to encourage student performance and administrative efficiency in school districts.  This year the first grant recipients will be awarded and the program will be expanded.
Let’s ensure our students are getting the education they deserve.
Thanks for getting involved.

Governor Cuomos Facebook Page Governor Cuomos Twitter Feed
Governor Cuomos Facebook Page



This is a message from the New York State Executive Chamber, State Capitol, Albany, NY 12224.
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Sunday, January 29, 2012

Hoffa and Kevin McCaffrey agains the right of workers to chose whether

to work or not. We need someone with common sense and legal analytical ability like Jessica Ahlquist to put these people to shame. Even a high school student from Rhode Island such as Jessica Ahlquist would know that NY PML Sec 105 violates the rights of New York Bettors secured by NY Const. Art. 1, Sec. 3.
Ditto for Laura Campione and Barry Yomtov. See Teamsters Local 858, now defunct and Teamsters Local 707 which will soon be answering to the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation.


http://www.teamster.org/content/james-p-hoffa

  • Biography
    James P. Hoffa has been on a mission—to build the Teamsters Union into the strongest, most powerful voice in North America for working families—and he is well on his way to achieving this goal. Under Hoffa’s leadership, the Teamsters Union is winning industry-leading contracts, engaging in vigorous contract enforcement and organizing the unorganized. Teamster positions on the issues of the day—from unsafe Mexican trucks to misguided trade policies—now hold sway in Washington’s power corridors. Hoffa has spent a lifetime preparing for the challenge of running the Teamsters Union. He knows, first-hand, what Teamsters can accomplish when they are united. He is leading a Union that is a credit to its proud history. Hoffa is recognized as one of the foremost authorities on Union issues. As the most visible and outspoken critic of government trade policies and anti-worker corporate agendas, Hoffa is recognized as a leader on issues that affect working people.
  • Leadership
    Article VI, Section 1(a). The General President shall preside at the Convention of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters and conduct the same in conformity with this Constitution. He shall have the deciding vote in case of a tie on any question that is being voted on by the Convention. He shall act to the best of his ability in furthering the interests of the organization. He shall fill any vacancy among the officers of the International Union, subject to the approval of a majority of the General Executive Board.
  • Contacting the General President
    To find out how to get in contact with Teamsters General President Jim Hoffa, visit the Contact Us form for details.
Share

Friday, January 27, 2012

and if these guys got an Opinion from Attorney General Eric Schneiderman

 
 

S06293 Summary:

BILL NO    S06293 

SAME AS    Same as Uni. A 9062

SPONSOR    FLANAGAN

COSPNSR    

MLTSPNSR   

Add S503-a, RWB L

Authorizes the Suffolk regional off-track betting corporation to file for
bankruptcy; provides that all funds in the capital acquisition fund shall be
available to the Suffolk regional OTB for any corporate purpose.
Go to top

S06293 Actions:

BILL NO    S06293 

01/20/2012 REFERRED TO RACING, GAMING AND WAGERING
Go to top

S06293 Votes:

There are no votes for this bill in this legislative session.
Go to top

S06293 Memo:

Memo not available
Go to top

S06293 Text:

S T A T E   O F   N E W   Y O R K
       ________________________________________________________________________

           S. 6293                                                  A. 9062

                             S E N A T E - A S S E M B L Y

                                   January 20, 2012
                                      ___________

       IN  SENATE  --  Introduced  by  Sen.  FLANAGAN -- read twice and ordered
         printed, and when printed to be committed to the Committee on  Racing,
         Gaming and Wagering

       IN  ASSEMBLY  --  Introduced  by  M. of A. SWEENEY, THIELE, ENGLEBRIGHT,
         RAMOS, RAIA -- read once and referred to the Committee on  Racing  and
         Wagering

       AN  ACT  to  amend the racing, pari-mutuel wagering and breeding law, in
         relation to authorizing the Suffolk regional off-track betting  corpo-
         ration  to  file  for  bankruptcy; and providing that all funds in the
         capital acquisition fund shall be available to  the  Suffolk  regional
         OTB for any corporate purpose

         THE  PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK, REPRESENTED IN SENATE AND ASSEM-
       BLY, DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

    1    Section 1. The  racing,  pari-mutuel  wagering  and  breeding  law  is
    2  amended by adding a new section 503-a to read as follows:
    3    S  503-A.  ADDITIONAL POWERS OF THE SUFFOLK REGIONAL OFF-TRACK BETTING
    4  CORPORATION.   IN ADDITION TO THE  POWERS  ENUMERATED  IN  SECTION  FIVE
    5  HUNDRED  THREE  OF  THIS ARTICLE, THE SUFFOLK REGIONAL OFF-TRACK BETTING
    6  CORPORATION IS HEREBY AUTHORIZED AND MAY  FILE  ANY  PETITION  WITH  ANY
    7  UNITED  STATES DISTRICT COURT OR COURT OF BANKRUPTCY UNDER ANY PROVISION
    8  OF LAWS OF THE UNITED STATES FOR THE COMPOSITION OR ADJUSTMENT OF MUNIC-
    9  IPAL INDEBTEDNESS.
   10    S 2. Notwithstanding any other provision of law or regulation  to  the
   11  contrary,  all funds in the capital acquisition fund, established pursu-
   12  ant to section 509-a of the racing, pari-mutuel  wagering  and  breeding
   13  law  shall be available to the Suffolk regional off-track betting corpo-
   14  ration for any corporate purpose.
   15    S 3. This act shall take effect immediately.


        EXPLANATION--Matter in ITALICS (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                             [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                  LBD13856-06-2
Go to top
Page display time = 0.0219 sec

and if these guys could think and read and write they would know that

if Suffolk OTB opened on Palm Sunday and each and every Easters Sundays, Suffolk OTB would make money.
What a silly bunch of people?  NY PML Sec 105, not worth the paper it is written on. Just ask Attorney General Eric Schneiderman for his Opinion (free).  Let's bet!
New York State Assembly Logo
 
 

A09062 Summary:

BILL NO    A09062 

SAME AS    Same as Uni. S 6293

SPONSOR    Sweeney (MS)

COSPNSR    Thiele, Englebright, Ramos, Raia

MLTSPNSR   

Add S503-a, RWB L

Authorizes the Suffolk regional off-track betting corporation to file for
bankruptcy; provides that all funds in the capital acquisition fund shall be
available to the Suffolk regional OTB for any corporate purpose.
Go to top

A09062 Votes:

There are no votes for this bill in this legislative session.
Go to top

A09062 Memo:

BILL NUMBER:A9062

TITLE OF BILL:  An act to amend the racing, pari-mutuel wagering and
breeding law, in relation to authorizing the Suffolk regional off-track
betting corporation to file for bankruptcy; and providing that all funds
in the capital acquisition fund shall be available to the Suffolk
regional OTB for any corporate purpose

PURPOSE OR GENERAL IDEA OF BILL:  This bill would provide Suffolk OTB
with the specific power to file for bankruptcy under the United States
Bankruptcy Code. The ability to file for bankruptcy protection would
allow Suffolk OTB to address its debts and long-term obligations in an
orderly manner, while continuing to operate and generate revenue to pay
creditors and Suffolk County. The bill also allows Suffolk OTB to access
funds in its capital acquisition fund for general corporate purposes of
the Suffolk OTB.

JUSTIFICATION:  Suffolk OTB was created in the early 1970s to raise
revenue for Suffolk County as a participating municipality, curb illegal
bookmaking, and support the State's horse racing industry. It is
required by statute to make payments to the State, Suffolk County, other
municipalities and the horse racing industry. In recent years it has
faced fiscal challenges.

This bill would amend the Racing and Wagering Law to specifically
empower Suffolk OTB to file for bankruptcy. This specific authorization
to allow Suffolk OTB to file for bankruptcy will protect taxpayers as
well as the horse racing industry in New York.  Without bankruptcy
protection, in the face of fiscal difficulty, Suffolk 0TB could be
forced to shut its doors and terminate hundreds of employees. This has
devastating consequences for employees, suppliers, landlords, neighbor-
hoods and creditors, and creates complicated and expensive issues for
taxpayers. In addition, it causes New York horse racing enthusiasts and
racing revenue to shift from New York State-based operations to out-of-
state horse racing ventures.

In March, 2011, Suffolk OTB filed for bankruptcy protection. It filed a
Plan of Debt Adjustment with the bankruptcy court, providing for the 100
percent payment of its creditors over time according to specific sched-
ules. The bankruptcy allowed Suffolk OTB to continue to operate and
generate revenue to pay creditors, while addressing its debts and long-
term obligations in an orderly manner. However, an objection to the
bankruptcy petition filed by an out-of-state competitor, challenging the
OTB's legal authority to declare bankruptcy, was ultimately sustained.

Amending the Racing and Wagering Law to specifically authorize Suffolk
OTB to file for bankruptcy protection will provide Suffolk OTB with the
tools to methodically address debts and long term obligations such as
leases and health care coverage while continuing to operate, serve the
public, generate revenue for the State and Suffolk County and pay credi-
tors; and then exit bankruptcy as soon as practicable.  Suffolk OTB is
not on the expense side of State or local budgets.

Section 509-a of the Racing and Wagering Law expressly authorizes
regional OTBs to create capital acquisition funds, funded by pari-mutuel
wagering pools, for the purpose of financing the future acquisition,
construction or equipping of facilities. This bill would provide that
all funds accumulated in Suffolk OTB's capital acquisition fund created
pursuant to section 509-a of the Racing and Wagering Law or deposited
into such fund thereafter will be available to Suffolk OTB for any
corporate purpose. It will allow Suffolk OTB to access and use for
corporate purposes funds that are simply not needed for the future
acquisition, construction and equipping of facilities.

PRIOR LEGISLATIVE HISTORY: New bill.

FISCAL IMPLICATIONS: None.

EFFECTIVE DATE:  This act shall take effect immediately.
Go to top

A09062 Text:

S T A T E   O F   N E W   Y O R K
       ________________________________________________________________________

           S. 6293                                                  A. 9062

                             S E N A T E - A S S E M B L Y

                                   January 20, 2012
                                      ___________

       IN  SENATE  --  Introduced  by  Sen.  FLANAGAN -- read twice and ordered
         printed, and when printed to be committed to the Committee on  Racing,
         Gaming and Wagering

       IN  ASSEMBLY  --  Introduced  by  M. of A. SWEENEY, THIELE, ENGLEBRIGHT,
         RAMOS, RAIA -- read once and referred to the Committee on  Racing  and
         Wagering

       AN  ACT  to  amend the racing, pari-mutuel wagering and breeding law, in
         relation to authorizing the Suffolk regional off-track betting  corpo-
         ration  to  file  for  bankruptcy; and providing that all funds in the
         capital acquisition fund shall be available to  the  Suffolk  regional
         OTB for any corporate purpose

         THE  PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK, REPRESENTED IN SENATE AND ASSEM-
       BLY, DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

    1    Section 1. The  racing,  pari-mutuel  wagering  and  breeding  law  is
    2  amended by adding a new section 503-a to read as follows:
    3    S  503-A.  ADDITIONAL POWERS OF THE SUFFOLK REGIONAL OFF-TRACK BETTING
    4  CORPORATION.   IN ADDITION TO THE  POWERS  ENUMERATED  IN  SECTION  FIVE
    5  HUNDRED  THREE  OF  THIS ARTICLE, THE SUFFOLK REGIONAL OFF-TRACK BETTING
    6  CORPORATION IS HEREBY AUTHORIZED AND MAY  FILE  ANY  PETITION  WITH  ANY
    7  UNITED  STATES DISTRICT COURT OR COURT OF BANKRUPTCY UNDER ANY PROVISION
    8  OF LAWS OF THE UNITED STATES FOR THE COMPOSITION OR ADJUSTMENT OF MUNIC-
    9  IPAL INDEBTEDNESS.
   10    S 2. Notwithstanding any other provision of law or regulation  to  the
   11  contrary,  all funds in the capital acquisition fund, established pursu-
   12  ant to section 509-a of the racing, pari-mutuel  wagering  and  breeding
   13  law  shall be available to the Suffolk regional off-track betting corpo-
   14  ration for any corporate purpose.
   15    S 3. This act shall take effect immediately.


        EXPLANATION--Matter in ITALICS (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                             [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                  LBD13856-06-2

Help the Bettors and OTB workers of New York have a choice Jessica

Kevin McCaffrey President of Teamsters Local 707 is also the Deputy Mayor of the Village of Lindenhurst.
He has done nothing to see that his members who work for Nassau OTB have a choice of whether to work or take vacation on the days found in NY PML Sec 105. He may obtain or cause to be obtained a free Opinion from the New York State Attorney General.

Litigation is the civilized alternative to violence, but a free Opinion is a good first step before litigation?




Dear Attorney General Eric Schneiderman:

    The Bettors of the State of New York and the employees of the remaining OTBs, public benefit corporations, have no standing to ask for your Opinion to the following simple questions with seemingly obvious answers::


1. Will the Attorney General defend the constitutionality of NY PML Sec 105?
2. Does NY PML Sec 105 apply to   Nassau OTB?
3. Does NY PML  Sec 105 violate the rights of New York Bettors secured by NY Const. Art. 1, Sec. 3?
4. Is NY PML Sec 105 vague, indefinite and/or overly broad as the term "Easter Sunday" does not define one and only one Sunday in all years (see eg Gregorian and Julian Calendars)?

I hope that you will sua sponte issue an Opinion as to the above so that bettors may bet, workers may work or not as they wish, and the State and its subdivisions make money. There are tracks running all across the United States every day of the year that bettors want to bet. Track calendars may be found at eg www.ntra.com. The OTBs also sell  New York Lottery tickets which are drawn every day of the year. The OTBs also cash non IRS Lottery tickets in cash for any sum, a convenience for many Lotto Players.

It is critical in these current time that the OTBs are open when customers want to bet. I believe that your Opinion will belatedly validate the actions of New York City OTB taken on the advice of its Counsel in 2003.


Sincerely yours,

January 5, 2012


Open On 1st Palm Sunday, Otb Rakes In $2m - New York Daily News

articles.nydailynews.com/.../18220335_1_racing-and-wagering-boar...
Open On 1st Palm Sunday, Otb Rakes In $2m. BY JERRY BOSSERT DAILY NEWS SPORTS WRITER. Monday, April 14, 2003. New York City Off-Track Betting ...

§  105. Supplementary regulatory powers of the board.  Notwithstanding
  any inconsistent provision of law,  the  board  through  its  rules  and
  regulations  or  in  allotting  dates  for  racing  or in licensing race
  meetings at which pari-mutuel betting is permitted  shall  be  empowered
  to:  (i)  permit racing at which pari-mutuel betting is conducted on any
  or all dates from the first day of January through the thirty-first  day
  of December, inclusive of Sundays but exclusive of December twenty-fifth
  and  Palm  Sunday  and  Easter  Sunday; and (ii) fix minimum and maximum
  charges for admission at any race meeting.

Student Faces Town’s Wrath in Protest Against a Prayer

Gretchen Ertl for The New York Times
Jessica Ahlquist, a Rhode Island atheist, won a suit against her school's prayer poster.
CRANSTON, R.I. — She is 16, the daughter of a firefighter and a nurse, a self-proclaimed nerd who loves Harry Potter and Facebook. But Jessica Ahlquist is also an outspoken atheist who has incensed this heavily Roman Catholic city with a successful lawsuit to get a prayer removed from the wall of her high school auditorium, where it has hung for 49 years.
Gretchen Ertl for The New York Times
Jessica has received threats and the police have escorted her at school.
Gretchen Ertl for The New York Times
Supporters are selling T-shirts with the Cranston High School West prayer.
Gretchen Ertl for The New York Times
Many residents say the prayer reflects universal values.
Gretchen Ertl for The New York Times
Steven Knowlton, principal of Cranston High School West, in its auditorium, where the prayer, up for 49 years, has been covered pending an appeal.
A federal judge ruled this month that the prayer’s presence at Cranston High School West was unconstitutional, concluding that it violated the principle of government neutrality in religion. In the weeks since, residents have crowded school board meetings to demand an appeal, Jessica has received online threats and the police have escorted her at school, and Cranston, a dense city of 80,000 just south of Providence, has throbbed with raw emotion.
State Representative Peter G. Palumbo, a Democrat from Cranston, called Jessica “an evil little thing” on a popular talk radio show. Three separate florists refused to deliver her roses sent from a national atheist group. The group, the Freedom From Religion Foundation, has filed a complaint with the Rhode Island Commission for Human Rights.
“I was amazed,” said Annie Laurie Gaylor, co-president of the foundation, which is based in Wisconsin and has given Jessica $13,000 from support and scholarship funds. “We haven’t seen a case like this in a long time, with this level of revilement and ostracism and stigmatizing.”
The prayer, eight feet tall, is papered onto the wall in the Cranston West auditorium, near the stage. It has hung there since 1963, when a seventh grader wrote it as a sort of moral guide and that year’s graduating class presented it as a gift. It was a year after a landmark Supreme Court ruling barring organized prayer in public schools.
“Our Heavenly Father,” the prayer begins, “grant us each day the desire to do our best, to grow mentally and morally as well as physically, to be kind and helpful.” It goes on for a few more lines before concluding with “Amen.”
For Jessica, who was baptized in the Catholic Church but said she stopped believing in God at age 10, the prayer was an affront. “It seemed like it was saying, every time I saw it, ‘You don’t belong here,’ ” she said the other night during an interview at a Starbucks here.
Since the ruling, the prayer has been covered with a tarp. The school board has indicated it will announce a decision on an appeal next month.
A friend brought the prayer to Jessica’s attention in 2010, when she was a high school freshman. She said nothing at first, but before long someone else — a parent who remained anonymous — filed a complaint with the American Civil Liberties Union. That led the Cranston school board to hold hearings on whether to remove the prayer, and Jessica spoke at all of them. She also started a Facebook page calling for the prayer’s removal (it now has almost 4,000 members) and began researching Roger Williams, who founded Rhode Island as a haven for religious freedom.
Last March, at a rancorous meeting that Judge Ronald R. Lagueux of United States District Court in Providence described in his ruling as resembling “a religious revival,” the school board voted 4-3 to keep the prayer. Some members said it was an important piece of the school’s history; others said it reflected secular values they held dear.
The Rhode Island chapter of the A.C.L.U. then asked Jessica if she would serve as a plaintiff in a lawsuit; it was filed the next month.
New England is not the sort of place where battles over the division of church and state tend to crop up. It is the least religious region of the country, according to the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life. But Rhode Island is an exception: it is the nation’s most Catholic state, and dust-ups over religion are not infrequent. Just last month, several hundred people protested at the Statehouse after Gov. Lincoln Chafee, an independent, lighted what he called a “holiday tree.”
In Cranston, the police said they would investigate some of the threatening comments posted on Twitter against Jessica, some of which came from students at the high school. Pat McAssey, a senior who is president of the student council, said the threats were “completely inexcusable” but added that Jessica had upset some of her classmates by mocking religion online.
“Their frustration kind of came from that,” he said.
Many alumni this week said they did not remember the prayer from their high school days but felt an attachment to it nonetheless.
“I am more of a constitutionalist but find myself strangely on the other side of this,” said Donald Fox, a 1985 graduate of Cranston West. “The prayer banner espouses nothing more than those values which we all hope for our children, no matter what school they attend or which religious background they hail from.”
Brittany Lanni, who graduated from Cranston West in 2009, said that no one had ever been forced to recite the prayer and called Jessica “an idiot.”
“If you don’t believe in that,” she said, “take all the money out of your pocket, because every dollar bill says, ‘In God We Trust.’ ”
Raymond Santilli, whose family owns one of the flower shops that refused to deliver to Jessica, said he declined for safety reasons, knowing the controversy around the case. People from around the world have called to support or attack his decision, which he said he stood by. But of Jessica, he said, “I’ve got a daughter, and I hope my daughter is as strong as she is, O.K.?”
Jessica said she had stopped believing in God when she was in elementary school and her mother fell ill for a time.
“I had always been told that if you pray, God will always be there when you need him,” she said. “And it didn’t happen for me, and I doubted it had happened for anybody else. So yeah, I think that was just like the last step, and after that I just really didn’t believe any of it.”
Does she empathize in any way with members of her community who want the prayer to stay?
“I’ve never been asked this before,” she said. A pause, and then: “It’s almost like making a child get a shot even though they don’t want to. It’s for their own good. I feel like they might see it as a very negative thing right now, but I’m defending their Constitution, too.”
Jen McCaffery contributed reporting.

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Let's see Pretlow get a (free) Opinion so that the OTBS may open all year

The Saratogian (saratogian.com), Serving the Saratoga Springs, N.Y. region
Sports

Michael Veitch: Some legislators feel there is hope for Aqueduct

Tuesday, January 24, 2012
By MICHAEL VEITCH
sports@saratogian.com
Gary Pretlow, who serves as chairman of the Assembly Racing and Wagering Committee in the New York legislature, is that rare Albany lawmaker who gets it when it comes to the thoroughbred industry.

Last week, as reported on the Blood Horse magazine website, Pretlow supported Aqueduct Race Track when commenting on the proposed convention center on the property.

The Genting Resorts World company, which operates the Aqueduct slots parlor, and New York Governor Andrew Cuomo recently agreed to the proposal, which threatens the survival of the track that has served the industry so well since 1894.

And it appears that this discussion included only Genting and the Governor.

Assemblyman Pretlow stated his fear that closing Aqueduct would mean the end of winter racing, the season which means a great deal to many in the state industry.

“As it stands now,” he said, “I don't see Aqueduct shutting down.”

I hope Pretlow is right.

In his speeches on issues of the day, Gov. Cuomo likes to call on our state's former nickname as the “Empire State.”

I would think if he cared about thoroughbred racing, that he would support the long history of Aqueduct, Belmont and Saratoga as the premier circuit in the United States.

Regarding the state industry, bills in both houses of the state legislature support bankruptcy protection for Suffolk County Off-Track Betting.

They were introduced and referred to the respective committees on Friday.

It is nice that these bills recognize the jobs provided by Suffolk County OTB, and that protection could eventually mean the organization's $1 million owed to the New York Racing Association might be paid.

But the advocacy for Suffolk County OTB strikes me as an example of what is wrong in this state when it comes to racing.

At this early stage of the 2012 legislative session, we have a situation which could lead to the closure of Aqueduct, that very institution upon which Suffolk County OTB is able to do

business.

Sort of like protecting the wick and not the wax.

There it is, my friends.

The priorities of state government do not focus on the fan base, wagering, jobs both on and off the track, related services, simulcast outlets, quality of racing and the like that Aqueduct provides.

Instead, the focus is on protecting the organization that feeds on Aqueduct.

Hansen to Return Sunday

Hansen, winner of the Breeders' Cup Juvenile and the Eclipse Award as champion of his class for 2011, is slated to return to action this Sunday in the Holy Bull Stakes at Gulfstream Park.

The Grade 3 event at one mile carries a juicy purse of $400,000.

The unbeaten Hansen worked five furlongs in a swift 59 4/5 seconds this past Sunday morning at Gulfstream.

Algorithms and Consortium are expected opponents in a small field; both are sons of Travers Stakes winner Bernardini.

They finished 1-2 in a Gulfstream Park allowance at 6-1/2 furlongs on Dec. 16.

Algorithms had not been out since breaking his maiden on June 3 at Belmont, and defeated Consortium by a length in a swift 1:15 2/5 for the distance.

Consortium broke his maiden on Nov. 16 at Aqueduct.

However, there is $400,000 in graded money on the line in this prep for the Kentucky Derby

Hansen has yet to resemble the immortal Hindoo, yet a field of only four or five is expected at this writing.

This is another example of what irritates racing fans.

Michael Veitch writes about horse racing in The Saratogian on Wednesdays and Sundays. He can be reached at patelin@nycap.rr.com.


Dear Attorney General Eric Schneiderman:

    The Bettors of the State of New York and the employees of the remaining OTBs, public benefit corporations, have no standing to ask for your Opinion to the following simple questions with seemingly obvious answers::


1. Will the Attorney General defend the constitutionality of NY PML Sec 105?
2. Does NY PML Sec 105 apply to   Nassau OTB?
3. Does NY PML  Sec 105 violate the rights of New York Bettors secured by NY Const. Art. 1, Sec. 3?
4. Is NY PML Sec 105 vague, indefinite and/or overly broad as the term "Easter Sunday" does not define one and only one Sunday in all years (see eg Gregorian and Julian Calendars)?

I hope that you will sua sponte issue an Opinion as to the above so that bettors may bet, workers may work or not as they wish, and the State and its subdivisions make money. There are tracks running all across the United States every day of the year that bettors want to bet. Track calendars may be found at eg www.ntra.com. The OTBs also sell  New York Lottery tickets which are drawn every day of the year. The OTBs also cash non IRS Lottery tickets in cash for any sum, a convenience for many Lotto Players.

It is critical in these current time that the OTBs are open when customers want to bet. I believe that your Opinion will belatedly validate the actions of New York City OTB taken on the advice of its Counsel in 2003.


Sincerely yours,

January 5, 2012

Open On 1st Palm Sunday, Otb Rakes In $2m - New York Daily News

articles.nydailynews.com/.../18220335_1_racing-and-wagering-boar...
Open On 1st Palm Sunday, Otb Rakes In $2m. BY JERRY BOSSERT DAILY NEWS SPORTS WRITER. Monday, April 14, 2003. New York City Off-Track Betting ...

§  105. Supplementary regulatory powers of the board.  Notwithstanding
  any inconsistent provision of law,  the  board  through  its  rules  and
  regulations  or  in  allotting  dates  for  racing  or in licensing race
  meetings at which pari-mutuel betting is permitted  shall  be  empowered
  to:  (i)  permit racing at which pari-mutuel betting is conducted on any
  or all dates from the first day of January through the thirty-first  day
  of December, inclusive of Sundays but exclusive of December twenty-fifth
  and  Palm  Sunday  and  Easter  Sunday; and (ii) fix minimum and maximum
  charges for admission at any race meeting.

Jeffrey Casale & Deputy Village Mayor Kevin McCaffrey

also President of Teamsters Local 707 which represents Nassau OTB employees should obtain or cause to be obtained an Opinion from Attorney General Eric Schneiderman so that bettors can bet and Teamsters can work (if they wish) before their employer eg Suffolk OTB, drops dead, goes bankrupt. Not everyone is as connected as former New York City OTB Manager Barry Yomtov who was President of Teamsters Local 858 (no longer in existence) which merged with Kevin McCaffrey's Local 707 in return for inter alia Barry Yomtov being given a paid position as Teamsters Local 707 Business Agent.  You can't make money unless you work? If Suffolk OTB is not open to take bets on Palm Sunday or Easters Sundays, it can't make money?  Taxpayers should care? Suffolk OTB employees should have a choice of whether to work or not before they are no longer working?  Those NYC OTB employees, like the dinosaurs of ages ago, were paid double time for working on any Sunday. Sure looks good. Working? A silly way to earn money?







Newsday > Long Island > Politics

Legislators aim to help Suffolk OTB

A handout photo of the Bay Shore branch
Photo credit: Handout | A handout photo of the Bay Shore branch of OTB.
ALBANY -- Two state legislators are trying to get Suffolk Regional Off-Track Betting Corp. out of a legal bind with a new bill that would allow the agency to seek bankruptcy protection.
The move comes seven weeks after a federal court ruled Suffolk OTB improperly went about filing for Chapter 9 bankruptcy in March and that, for now, the betting entity isn't eligible for protection.
The U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of New York said Suffolk OTB inappropriately sought authority from the county legislature, rather than going through the State Legislature and Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo.
Assemb. Robert Sweeney (D-Lindenhurst) and State Sen. John Flanagan (R-East Northport) filed a bill that would give Suffolk OTB state approval.
"Without bankruptcy protection, in the face of fiscal difficulty, Suffolk OTB could be forced to shut its doors and terminate hundreds of employees," the lawmakers said in a memo. "This has devastating consequences for employees, suppliers, landlords, neighborhoods and creditors, and creates complicated and expensive issues for taxpayers."
Churchill Downs, the Kentucky horse racing track and an OTB creditor, filed suit to block the Chapter 9 filing. According to the federal court decision, OTB's bankruptcy plan calls for all creditors to be paid in full. But if the bankruptcy filing is dismissed, it said, "Suffolk OTB may be required to cease operations."
Jeff Casale, Suffolk OTB president, welcomed the legislation. "This doesn't cost the state anything and there is no cost to the taxpayer," he said. "It is simply a procedural step that allows us to address the issues raised in court and continue to restructure and get out of bankruptcy as soon as possible." With Rick Brand






Dear Attorney General Eric Schneiderman:




    The Bettors of the State of New York and the employees of the
remaining OTBs, public benefit corporations, have no standing to ask
for your Opinion to the following simple questions with seemingly
obvious answers::




1. Will the Attorney General defend the constitutionality of NY PML Sec
105?


2. Does NY PML Sec 105 apply to   Nassau OTB?


3. Does NY PML  Sec 105 violate the rights of New York Bettors secured
by NY Const. Art. 1, Sec. 3?


4. Is NY PML Sec 105 vague, indefinite and/or overly broad as the term
"Easter Sunday" does not define one and only one Sunday in all years
(see eg Gregorian and Julian Calendars)?




I hope that you will sua sponte issue an Opinion as to the
above so that bettors may bet, workers may work or not as they wish,
and the State and its subdivisions make money. There are tracks running
all across the United States every day of the year that bettors want to
bet. Track calendars may be found at eg www.ntra.com.
The OTBs also
sell  New York Lottery tickets which are drawn every day of the year.
The OTBs also cash non IRS Lottery tickets in cash for any sum, a
convenience for many Lotto Players.




It is critical in these current time that the OTBs are open when
customers want to bet. I believe that your Opinion will belatedly
validate the actions of New York City OTB taken on the advice of its
Counsel in 2003.




Sincerely yours,




January 5, 2012




Open
On 1st Palm Sunday, Otb Rakes In $2m - New York
Daily News


articles.nydailynews.com/.../1......


Open On 1st Palm Sunday, Otb Rakes
In $2m. BY JERRY BOSSERT DAILY NEWS SPORTS WRITER. Monday,
April 14, 2003. New York City Off-Track Betting ...




§ 105. Supplementary regulatory powers of the board. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, the board through its rules and regulations or in allotting dates for racing or in licensing race meetings at which pari-mutuel betting is permitted shall be empowered to: (i) permit racing at which pari-mutuel betting is conducted on any or all dates from the first day of January through the thirty-first day of December, inclusive of Sundays but exclusive of December twenty-fifth and Palm Sunday and Easter Sunday; and (ii) fix minimum and maximum charges for admission at any race meeting.

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

and DiNapoli still has not gotten the OTBs and NYRA open all year?

DiNapoli: Racing Group Lax on Reform - The Bond Buyer Article

www.bondbuyer.com/.../new-york-racing-association-failed-financial...
13 hours ago – The New York Racing Association has failed to implement ... Bond Buyer LogoThe Bond Buyer: The Daily Newspaper of Public Finance ...

NY PML Sec 105 
do something about it Thomas DiNapoli
we want to bet and /or work while we still have jobs

DiNapoli: Racing Group Lax on Reform
Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Related Stories
·                                 Judge Tosses Out Suffolk OTB's Chapter 9 Bankruptcy Petition - December 7, 2011
The New York Racing Association has failed to implement significant financial reforms after its 2008 exit from Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, according to an audit by New York State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli released Tuesday.
“More than a year after my office’s last audit and real-time financial monitoring of NYRA, the organization still has much work to do to carry out the reforms we recommended,” DiNapoli said in a statement.
Tuesday’s audit found that NYRA, which operates horse racing tracks in the New York metro area, projected an $11.5 million deficit for the calendar year 2011 and expects a $19.7 million loss from racing operations in 2012.
DiNapoli worries that NYRA will use revenue from video lottery terminals to “mask ongoing financial problems and inefficiencies.”
Only by gaining the new terminals will NYRA show an overall profit this year, DiNapoli said.
“I will closely monitor NYRA to ensure it reins in unnecessary spending and does not waste the new money coming in from the Aqueduct racinos.”
Gov. Andrew Cuomo, in his state of the state speech in Albany three weeks ago, proposed a convention center for New York City’s Queens borough at the site of Aqueduct Racetrack, which last fall added slot machines.
NYRA, in a statement, said it took DiNapoli’s recommendations “very seriously” but considers the $19.7 million figure misleading.
“It should be noted that the 2012 budget was not within the scope of nor was it referenced in the audit, and was never discussed with NYRA management,” the association said in a statement released by its director of communications, Dan Silver.