Friday, November 30, 2012

Christie should tell Cuomo he has alot of... to



 ask the King for cash when he thinks that he can close Nassau OTB, a public benefit corporation, on any day that tracks are running all across the United States that bettors want to bet. Christie welcomes with open arms NY Bettors who can't bet in NY when Andrew Cuomo may be in Church. Andrew Cuomo thinks that he can close Nassau OTB on Roman Catholic Holidays in preference to Greek Orthodox holidays. Christie can teach Andrew about NY Const. Art. 1, Sec. 3.

 

The Oceanside Branch of Nassau OTB was severely damaged by the hurricane.



 

NY, NJ, Conn. seek $83B aid in Sandy recovery

ALBANY, N.Y. — New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and Connecticut Gov. Dannel Malloy are joining forces in a regional effort to land nearly $83 billion in federal aid to recover from Superstorm Sandy.
Cuomo said at a New York City briefing Thursday that he is working with committee chairs in Congress to ensure that aid for the three states will be "flexible" so that they can better use the funds where they are most needed.
Cuomo, a Democrat, is asking for $42 billion for repairs and preventive measures. Christie, a Republican, is seeking $37 billion for recovery and rebuilding. Malloy, a Democrat, says Connecticut's bill is $3.5 billion.
The massive requests come at a time when Congress and President Barack Obama are trying to drastically reduce the nation's deficit, weighing spending cuts along with tax cuts that are soon to expire next year.
Cuomo said he's working closely with Rep. Peter King, a New York Republican, because getting aid approved by the GOP-led House may be "trickier" than in the Democrat-led Senate.
King told The Associated Press that the cost won't have to be offset by spending cuts as part of the tense budget negotiations. He said Congress is awaiting a proposal from Obama on disaster aid.
"I'm reasonably optimistic," said King, who is pushing for New York's proposal in Congress.
Malloy said the aid is also needed in Connecticut to protect against future storms.
"While our state was not impacted as severely as New York or New Jersey during Storm Sandy, we have seen substantial damage from three storms now that occurred in a little more than a year's time," he said.
___
AP Writer Susan Haigh contributed to this report from Hartford.




HI-
Thanks for the help. The item’s below. I’d be happy to mail you a copy, if you give me a mailing address.

Claude Solnik
(631) 913-4244
Long Island Business News
2150 Smithtown Ave.
Ronkonkoma, NY 11779-7348 

Home > LI Confidential > Stop scratching on holidays

Stop scratching on holidays
Published: June 1, 2012


Off Track Betting in New York State has been racing into a crisis called shrinking revenue. Some people have spitballed a solution: Don’t close on holidays.
New York State Racing Law bars racing on Christmas, Easter and Palm Sunday, and the state has ruled OTBs can’t handle action on those days, even though they could easily broadcast races from out of state.
“You should be able to bet whenever you want,” said Jackson Leeds, a Nassau OTB employee who makes an occasional bet. He added some irrefutable logic: “How is the business going to make money if you’re not open to take people’s bets?”
Elias Tsekerides, president of the Federation of Hellenic Societies of Greater New York, said OTB is open on Greek Orthodox Easter and Palm Sunday.
“I don’t want discrimination,” Tsekerides said. “They close for the Catholics, but open for the Greek Orthodox? It’s either open for all or not open.”
OTB officials have said they lose millions by closing on Palm Sunday alone, with tracks such as Gulfstream, Santa Anita, Turf Paradise and Hawthorne running.
One option: OTBs could just stay open and face the consequences. New York City OTB did just that back in 2003. The handle was about $1.5 million – and OTB was fined $5,000.
Easy money.


Hostess Twinkies Presents Andrew Cuomo

who can eat Twinkies and rebuild roads and pray while denying the rights of drag racing Ocean Parkway Bettors their rights secured by NY Const. Art. 1, Sec. 3.  Even a Twinkie know that Andrew Cuomo can't close Nassau OTB only on Roman Catholic Easter Sunday and Roman Catholic Palm Sunday in preference to Greek Orthodox Easter Sunday and Greek Orthodox Palm Sunday. When tracks are running anywhere in the US Ocean Parkway Bettors want to bet at Nassau OTB and will exercise speeding vehicles to take them down Ocean Parkway on the way to Nassau OTB. Andrew Cuomo is a thief of our rights secured by NY Const. Art. 1, Sec. 3


Contact Information:
Governor's Press Office
NYC Press Office: 212.681.4640
Albany Press Office: 518.474.8418
press.office@exec.ny.gov
Andrew M. Cuomo - Governor

Governor Cuomo Announces Ocean Parkway to Reopen For Tomorrow's Morning Rush Hour

Printer-friendly version
Roadway opened with lane restrictions following unprecedented damage from Hurricane Sandy; full restoration to be completed before Memorial Day

Albany, NY (November 25, 2012)

Governor Andrew M. Cuomo today announced that emergency repairs to Ocean Parkway on Long Island have been completed and the roadway will reopen in time for the morning rush tomorrow, Monday, November 26, with lane and speed restrictions.

The 15.5-mile long road, which provides access to Jones Beach, Robert Moses State Park, other popular recreational sites and residential communities along a stretch of Long Island’s southern shore, sustained unprecedented damage during Hurricane Sandy last month.

"Step by step our state's infrastructure is being restored after the catastrophic destruction caused by Hurricane Sandy," Governor Cuomo said. "I thank the individuals from the New York State Department of Transportation and the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation who have been working around the clock since Hurricane Sandy to make emergency repairs to the roadway so it could be reopened to motorists as quickly as possible."

NYSDOT, NYSOPRHP and the Department of Environmental Conservation are working with the Federal Highway Administration and the Army Corps of Engineers to develop a coastal barrier protection roadway repair project to restore Ocean Parkway to its pre-storm condition. This will include replacing the two-mile section of roadway destroyed in the vicinity of Gilgo Beach and restoring protective dunes between the parkway and the ocean.

NYSDOT and NYSOPRHP are also collaborating to design a project to rebuild damaged lanes to the traffic circle in Robert Moses State Park. The preliminary estimated cost of the work to restore Ocean Parkway and the traffic circle is $35 million, and both will be completed by Memorial Day. It is anticipated that the federal government will provide cost sharing for the project, and NYSDOT is working with the Federal Highway Administration and other federal agencies to delineate federal funding eligibility.

New York State is examining options to strengthen those sections of the protective sand dunes that were damaged to provide better stability and resiliency to future storms. Completion of a major dredging project at the Fire Island Inlet, which will provide sand to restore damaged beaches and dunes, is a vital part of the long-term strategy for protecting the Ocean Parkway and Robert Moses State Park. In addition to providing needed sand, the dredging project will also make the Fire Island Inlet safe for commercial and recreational boating.

“The Ocean Parkway and our oceanfront beaches are vitally important to the economy and quality of life for Long Island and our State. Dredging the Fire Island Inlet, beach renourishment and federal aid will all play an important role in protecting ourselves and mitigating the disastrous consequences that come with a storm like Sandy,” said NYSOPRHP Commissioner Rose Harvey. “Ocean Parkway not only provides physical access to our beaches, parks and communities, but it is our mental access to building life long memories with our family and friends. Reopening the Ocean Parkway is a vital step in the State’s recovery efforts.”

Field 2 at Jones Beach is reopened to the public and Field 6, a favorite to many, is expected to reopen this week. Park officials are still cleaning up the parks and beaches and have cordoned off areas deemed to unsafe to visit to protect those returning. Robert Moses State Park remains closed but is expected to have access reopened by Memorial Day when traffic increases.

“NYSDOT is committed to working with our partners on the state, federal and local levels to rebuild Ocean Parkway, which carries nearly 10 million visitors per year to the beaches and parks along Long Island’s southern shoreline,” said NYSDOT Commissioner Joan McDonald. “We will also give careful consideration to options for improving the roadway’s protective barrier in response to the increased frequency of severe weather, which is a necessary step in order to minimize future damage to this vital route. Because of Governor Cuomo’s leadership, we are looking at improvements to the entire system instead of working on each repair individually, which is a good example of the approach embodied in his NY Works program.”

Ocean Parkway has been closed since October 30. Approximately five miles of the eastbound section of the road and its protective sand dunes were severely damaged; one-half mile of the roadway and 1.6 miles of the sand dunes east of Gilgo were completely destroyed. Immediately following Hurricane Sandy, NYSDOT began an emergency project to restore two miles of sand dunes between Gilgo and West Gilgo beaches before a Nor’easter struck on November 6. This emergency restoration work likely saved Ocean Parkway and homes to the north from additional damage.

Starting today, two-way traffic operations with a single lane in each direction will be established on the undamaged westbound side of Ocean Parkway for 4.8 miles between Cedar Beach and Tobay Beach. Westbound traffic will be reduced to a single lane near Cedar Beach until west of Tobay Beach. Eastbound traffic will transition from three travel lanes to one travel lane near Tobay Beach, then crossover to the westbound roadway using an existing center median turnaround. At Cedar Beach, eastbound traffic will then be directed back to the eastbound roadway using an existing median turnaround. The roadway will operate as normal in both directions for nearly 4 miles between the Wantagh State Parkway/Jones Beach water tower and Tobay Beach.

The speed limit will be reduced to 35 M.P.H. for the entire length of the roadway. Drivers are urged to use caution while traveling this area and be prepared to stop. The eastbound Ocean Parkway roadway between Tobay and Cedar beach will remain closed until restoration is completed.

Under Governor Cuomo’s direction, the New York State Department of Transportation had an average of 1,650 staff people working around the clock at the height of the response to Hurricane Sandy to clear and reopen damaged highways. In the wake of the storm, NYSDOT on Oct. 30 had 163 roads closed in the Hudson Valley, Long Island and New York City. Within one week, all but nine state highways had been reopened to traffic. With today’s reopening of Ocean Parkway, only one partial closure remains, the Battery Park Underpass.
###




ANDREW CUOMO WANTS TO PAVE OCEAN PARKWAY WITH GREEKS
HI-
Thanks for the help. The item’s below. I’d be happy to mail you a copy, if you give me a mailing address.

Claude Solnik
(631) 913-4244
Long Island Business News
2150 Smithtown Ave.
Ronkonkoma, NY 11779-7348 

Home > LI Confidential > Stop scratching on holidays

Stop scratching on holidays
Published: June 1, 2012


Off Track Betting in New York State has been racing into a crisis called shrinking revenue. Some people have spitballed a solution: Don’t close on holidays.
New York State Racing Law bars racing on Christmas, Easter and Palm Sunday, and the state has ruled OTBs can’t handle action on those days, even though they could easily broadcast races from out of state.
“You should be able to bet whenever you want,” said Jackson Leeds, a Nassau OTB employee who makes an occasional bet. He added some irrefutable logic: “How is the business going to make money if you’re not open to take people’s bets?”
Elias Tsekerides, president of the Federation of Hellenic Societies of Greater New York, said OTB is open on Greek Orthodox Easter and Palm Sunday.
“I don’t want discrimination,” Tsekerides said. “They close for the Catholics, but open for the Greek Orthodox? It’s either open for all or not open.”
OTB officials have said they lose millions by closing on Palm Sunday alone, with tracks such as Gulfstream, Santa Anita, Turf Paradise and Hawthorne running.
One option: OTBs could just stay open and face the consequences. New York City OTB did just that back in 2003. The handle was about $1.5 million – and OTB was fined $5,000.
Easy money.

It's only money, pass the Twinkies, Hostess

Hi qqq,

I have just looked over what you sent me and I will continue to monitor this situation. As the amount is not significant, and since the county would cover the debt payments if the OTB fails in its ability to operate, this is not necessarily an issue that we would cause concern to our audience. However, if the OTB does cease operations, I will report on that.

Thanks,

xxxx



PDF] 

2012 Mid-Year Report on the County's Financial - Nassau County

File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - Quick View
Jul 26, 2012 – Nassau County Structural Surplus (Gap) 2001-2012 ..... The 2011 audited financial statements for the OTB were issued with a “going concern” ...

BP buys NYC OTB to improve business integrity

and Teamsters Local 707 President Kevin McCaffrey and former Local 858 President Barry Yomtov announce that Hostess Twinkies will now be the official company of coffee at all meetings of Local 707.
Working. For people who do do study kinetics and thermodynamics and have done nothing to see that Nassau OTB is open 365 days of the year so that bettors can bet and workers can work if they wish before  it too follows NYC OTB in becoming a BP subsidiary.

BP Caught Off Guard

Reuters
When U.S. authorities said they were temporarily suspending BP BP.LN +0.13% from new contracts with the Federal government due to a “lack of business integrity” demonstrated by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, there were strong indications that BP had been caught off guard.
People familiar with the matter said BP was taken by surprise at the Environmental Protection Agency’s public reprimand. Although the move doesn’t affect BP’s existing operations and oil leases in the Gulf of Mexico, it is of huge importance to the company.
Unless it can change the EPA’s mind—which BP says it is working to do—the company is barred from participating in auctions for new offshore drilling leases in the Gulf of Mexico–one of its core oil-production areas.
“The genuine shock yesterday shows that things aren’t going particularly smoothly in the U.S.,” said RBC Capital Markets analyst Peter Hutton.
The EPA’s move indicates that BP still has a long way to go to repair its battered relationship with U.S. authorities, despite agreeing a record $4.5 billion settlement of criminal charges and penalties stemming from the 2010 Deepwater Horizon explosion, which caused 11 deaths and resulted in the worst offshore oil spill in the U.S.
The U.S. administration is still taking a tough stance toward the company, Mr. Hutton said.
The surprise also shows how BP has misread the situation in the U.S.
On Nov. 15, following the settlement of criminal charges, senior BP executives told analysts that it had already been in discussions with the EPA and hadn’t been advised of the intention to suspend it from government contracts.
“These agencies don’t come under the control of the [U.S.] Justice Department, so we have to go through process of filing first and then engage with them, which we have been doing ahead of this filing…Right now there’s no indication that there will be an issue,” BP’s Chief Financial Officer Brian Gilvary said on a conference call.
The timing of the EPA’s move, and the extra pressure it puts on BP, is not helpful for the company as it prepares for a civil trial due to start in February over violations of the Clean Water Act during the spill–with possible fines that could top $21 billion.



BP Caught Off Guard

Reuters
When U.S. authorities said they were temporarily suspending BP BP.LN +0.13% from new contracts with the Federal government due to a “lack of business integrity” demonstrated by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, there were strong indications that BP had been caught off guard.
People familiar with the matter said BP was taken by surprise at the Environmental Protection Agency’s public reprimand. Although the move doesn’t affect BP’s existing operations and oil leases in the Gulf of Mexico, it is of huge importance to the company.
Unless it can change the EPA’s mind—which BP says it is working to do—the company is barred from participating in auctions for new offshore drilling leases in the Gulf of Mexico–one of its core oil-production areas.
“The genuine shock yesterday shows that things aren’t going particularly smoothly in the U.S.,” said RBC Capital Markets analyst Peter Hutton.
The EPA’s move indicates that BP still has a long way to go to repair its battered relationship with U.S. authorities, despite agreeing a record $4.5 billion settlement of criminal charges and penalties stemming from the 2010 Deepwater Horizon explosion, which caused 11 deaths and resulted in the worst offshore oil spill in the U.S.
The U.S. administration is still taking a tough stance toward the company, Mr. Hutton said.
The surprise also shows how BP has misread the situation in the U.S.
On Nov. 15, following the settlement of criminal charges, senior BP executives told analysts that it had already been in discussions with the EPA and hadn’t been advised of the intention to suspend it from government contracts.
“These agencies don’t come under the control of the [U.S.] Justice Department, so we have to go through process of filing first and then engage with them, which we have been doing ahead of this filing…Right now there’s no indication that there will be an issue,” BP’s Chief Financial Officer Brian Gilvary said on a conference call.
The timing of the EPA’s move, and the extra pressure it puts on BP, is not helpful for the company as it prepares for a civil trial due to start in February over violations of the Clean Water Act during the spill–with possible fines that could top $21 billion.


HI-
Thanks for the help. The item’s below. I’d be happy to mail you a copy, if you give me a mailing address.

Claude Solnik
(631) 913-4244
Long Island Business News
2150 Smithtown Ave.
Ronkonkoma, NY 11779-7348 

Home > LI Confidential > Stop scratching on holidays

Stop scratching on holidays
Published: June 1, 2012


Off Track Betting in New York State has been racing into a crisis called shrinking revenue. Some people have spitballed a solution: Don’t close on holidays.
New York State Racing Law bars racing on Christmas, Easter and Palm Sunday, and the state has ruled OTBs can’t handle action on those days, even though they could easily broadcast races from out of state.
“You should be able to bet whenever you want,” said Jackson Leeds, a Nassau OTB employee who makes an occasional bet. He added some irrefutable logic: “How is the business going to make money if you’re not open to take people’s bets?”
Elias Tsekerides, president of the Federation of Hellenic Societies of Greater New York, said OTB is open on Greek Orthodox Easter and Palm Sunday.
“I don’t want discrimination,” Tsekerides said. “They close for the Catholics, but open for the Greek Orthodox? It’s either open for all or not open.”
OTB officials have said they lose millions by closing on Palm Sunday alone, with tracks such as Gulfstream, Santa Anita, Turf Paradise and Hawthorne running.
One option: OTBs could just stay open and face the consequences. New York City OTB did just that back in 2003. The handle was about $1.5 million – and OTB was fined $5,000.
Easy money.


Sunday, November 25, 2012

before we open 365 days of the year we will

go bankrupt. bet on it? 

PDF] 

2012 Mid-Year Report on the County's Financial - Nassau County

www.nassaucountyny.gov/.../Finances/.../2012midyearreportfinal.pdf
File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - Quick View
Jul 26, 2012 – Nassau County Structural Surplus (Gap) 2001-2012 ..... The 2011 audited financial statements for the OTB were issued with a “going concern” ...
 
with tracks running every day of the year you might think that Nassau OTB would be open to take bettors' bets?
 
nope
 
any Martian knows you can't close on Roman Catholic Holidays in preference to Greek Orthodox holidays.
 
 
Palm Sunday  which one or none or both
Easter Sunday which one or none or both
 
OTB another word for bankrupt

Saturday, November 24, 2012

Freeport Mayor prepares to rub out Nassau OTB

first Wantagh, then Freeport?

Former Wantagh Nassau OTB site leasing up | Long Island Business ...

libn.com › NewsReal Estate
5 days ago – Former Wantagh Nassau OTB site leasing up. by David Winzelberg Long Island ... to Long Island Business News subscribers. Email Address: ...

drive by the Freeport Branch of Nassau OTB, look at the construction and read the painting on the wall saying that OTB is open but not indicating for how long. Look at the doors and windows and remember the good old days when there was a good Chinese restaurant in the  shopping center.

Oceanside Branch of Nassau OTB was killed by a hurricane that spared Freeport for now?

Thursday, November 22, 2012

please send us updates as information is

hard to find.

While Joseph Cairo adds exempt employees to the payroll Nassau OTB's Freeport Branch appears to face extermination. Drive by the Sunrise Highway shopping center and observe the construction and wonder.
The employees of Nassau OTB in the Freeport Branch work and wish to continue to do so. Teamsters Local 707, Kevin McCaffrey President, Barry Yomtov Business Agent have not provided information on the
Nassau OTB Freeport Branch.

Nassau OTB had eight Branches before Hurricane Sandy made the Branches Number Seven.
The construction in Freeport makes you think that soon Nassau OTB will have only SIX Branches.


Plans to develop Freeport's economy revealed at forum | L&M ...

merricklife.com/.../plans-to-develop-freeports-economy-revealed-at-f...
Sep 29, 2011 – A shopping center on the northwest corner of Sunrise Highway and Meadowbrook ... shopping center, and the revitalization of the Freeport Shopping Plaza. ... The OTB is a county facility and we hope to get them out of there.

Nassau Downs OTB - Branches

info.nassauotb.com/otb_branches.aspx
Branches. Nassau OTB provides a complete range of wagering and ... Nassau OTB Branch Locations and Hours: ... Freeport*, 131 W.Sunrise Highway. Franklin ...

Oklahoma Church Judge Andrew Cuomo sentences


Greek Bettors to not bet at Nassau OTB while Andrew Cuomo is in Church on "Palm Sunday" and "Easter Sunday" because Andrew Cuomo is great, mighty, exalted and constitutionally illiterate and vicious.
See eg NY Const. Art. 1, Sec. 3. All infidel bettors know that Nassau OTB is their church and that they shall bet anytime on any race that they wish. Is it any wonder that New York State is "functionally" BANKRUPT?

Even an Oakie knows that the Gregorian and Julian Calendars are calendars to be followed by the faithful.

Constitution Experts Denounce Oklahoma Judge’s Sentencing of Youth to Church

Initially there was little outcry in Muskogee, Okla., last week when a judge, as a condition of a youth’s probation for a driving-related manslaughter conviction, sentenced him to attend church regularly for 10 years.
James Gibbard for The New York Times
Judge Mike Norman, in his Muskogee courtroom, seemed surprised by the scrutiny. “I sentenced him to go to church for 10 years because I thought I could do that,” he said.
The judge, Mike Norman, 67, had sentenced people to church before, though never for such a serious crime.
But as word of the ruling spread in state and national legal circles, constitutional experts condemned it as a flagrant violation of the separation of church and state.
This week, the American Civil Liberties Union said it would file a complaint against Judge Norman with the Oklahoma Council on Judicial Complaints, an agency that investigates judicial misconduct, seeking an official reprimand or other sanctions.
“We see a judge who has shown disregard for the First Amendment of the Constitution in his rulings,” said Ryan Kiesel, executive director of the civil liberties union branch in Oklahoma.
The 17-year-old defendant, Tyler Alred, was prosecuted as a youthful offender, giving the judge more discretion than in an adult case. Mr. Alred pleaded guilty to manslaughter for an accident last year, when he ran his car into a tree and a 16-year-old passenger was killed.
Although his alcohol level tested below the legal limit, because he was under age he was legally considered to be under the influence of alcohol. Mr. Alred told the court that he was happy to agree to church attendance and other mandates — including that he finish high school and train as a welder, and shun alcohol, drugs and tobacco for a year. By doing so, he is avoiding a 10-year prison sentence and has a chance to make a fresh start.
But his acquiescence does not change the law, Mr. Kiesel and others pointed out. “Alternative sentencing is something that should be encouraged, but there are many options that don’t violate the Constitution,” Mr. Kiesel said. “A choice of going to prison or to church — that is precisely the type of coercion that the First Amendment seeks to prevent.”
Mr. Alred and his family already attend a church, although Judge Norman said in an interview that he had not known that when he ruled.
The judge said he was surprised at the criticism. “I feel like church is important,” he said. “I sentenced him to go to church for 10 years because I thought I could do that.”
He added, “I am satisfied that both the families in this case think we’ve made the right decision,” and noted that the dead boy’s father had tearfully hugged Mr. Alred in the courtroom. If Mr. Alred stops attending church or violates any other terms of his probation, Judge Norman said, he will send him to prison.
As for the constitutionality of his ruling, Judge Norman said, “I think it would hold up, but I don’t know one way or another.”
Judge Norman did not specify which religious denomination Mr. Alred must follow. But he also said: “I think Jesus can help anybody. I know I need help from him every day.”
Randall T. Coyne, a professor of criminal law at the University of Oklahoma, agreed that the judge’s church requirement was unconstitutional. But unless the defendant fights the ruling, he said, civil liberties advocates have no way to challenge it in court, leaving the complaint to the judicial review agency as their only option.
Over the years, several judges around the country have mandated church attendance as part of sentences, sometimes stirring criticism. In the early 1990s in Louisiana, Judge Thomas P. Quirk ordered hundreds of defendants in traffic and misdemeanor cases to attend church once a week for a year. The judge said that he had imposed the condition only on people who agreed to it, and that it provided a good alternative to sending defendants to overcrowded jails or imposing fines they could not afford.
The Judiciary Commission of Louisiana found that Judge Quirk had engaged in knowing violations of the Constitution and recommended that he be suspended without pay for 12 months. But the Louisiana Supreme Court ruled in 1995 that while the judge might have erred, he did not engage in “judicial misconduct,” and it rescinded the sanctions.
In 2011, the city of Bay Minette, Ala., required first-time misdemeanor offenders to choose between doing jail time and attending church weekly for a year. The city dropped the program after the American Civil Liberties Union called it unconstitutional.

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

December 12th at 3:00 pm Courtroom 3539

at the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of New York  located at 271 Cadman Plaza East Brooklyn NY 11201 there will be a status conference, In re Suffolk Regional Off-Track Betting Corp.,
Chapter 9, Case No. 12-43503-CEC

See Carla E Craig's Scheduling Order dated November 15, 2012.



Nassau OTB proudly presents LIPA Director

John C Fabio who was Executive Vice President of Nassau OTB.

OTB | Long Island Business News

libn.com/tag/otb/
Richard Bianculli is leaving to take a position at the Nassau Downs OTB, county officials said. He is joining Joe Cairo, the vice chairman of the Nassau ...

and she works for LIPA



Probe eyes LIPA employees' links to pols

Newsday graphic
Photo credit: Newsday | Newsday graphic
Nearly a quarter of Long Island Power Authority employees in the last decade had connections to politically powerful people on the Island and in New York State before working at the utility, a Newsday investigation has found.
They include a former congressman's wife, the daughter of a former district attorney, a judge's son, a one-time county legislator, the wife of a former mayor, and several political party loyalists.
LIPA's politically connected have been paid better than colleagues without such ties, more frequently earning upward of $100,000 annually, Newsday found. Some left one government job for LIPA, stayed a few years, then got another public post -- keeping them in the state pension system.

EXPLORE: Employee-politician connections | LIPA salaries
MORE: Report on LIPA's Irene response | Utility ignored 2006 warnings
PHOTOS: LIPA protest | Stunning scenes from Sandy

In an extensive review of records and data and dozens of interviews with political insiders, Newsday examined the professional history, campaign contributions and family ties of each of the public authority's 174 employees since 2003 with reported earnings to the state pension system. At least 41 had clear ties to political power.
Employees with connections had average compensation in their first full year of service of almost $141,000, considerably more than the average $95,000 paid to those without political ties.
LIPA employees are the managers of Long Island's utility operation. The linemen and other workers are provided by National Grid, which has a contract with LIPA to manage the electrical system. National Grid's employees were not included in Newsday's analysis.
Both LIPA and National Grid have been reeling from public and official criticism after a response to superstorm Sandy that has been called chaotic and unacceptable. About 90 percent of LIPA's customers lost power in the storm. Thousands did not regain service for two weeks.
Newsday reported this month that LIPA officials ignored warnings dating to 2006 that it wasn't prepared to handle a major storm, partly because utility officials had neglected tree and pole maintenance for years.
Michael Hervey, LIPA's acting chief executive, announced his resignation last week. Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo has formed a commission with subpoena power to determine what went wrong. State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman's office is also investigating. Unlike Cuomo's commission, Schneiderman can prosecute or penalize subjects of investigations.
Investigators could start by scrutinizing a payroll filled with political insiders and their relatives who have little energy industry experience, said Matthew Cordaro, chairman of Suffolk County's LIPA Oversight Committee. He is also a former executive at three energy companies who has sought top jobs at LIPA.
State Sen. Kenneth LaValle (R-Port Jefferson), dean of Suffolk's Senate delegation, said customers are justifiably outraged.
"It's kind of obvious that ratepayers feel that in far too many situations, that LIPA let them down," he said. "If it looks like an internal patronage system, then the ratepayer has every right to be ticked off."
LIPA employees with political ties have ranged from short-term and low-level hires to the authority's top positions. They received, on average, $27,700 more in their highest earning years than their colleagues. Sixty-one percent of employees with links to political power were paid $100,000 or more, compared with 47 percent of those without connections.

Some appear qualified
A number of the employees with political ties appear qualified for the jobs they perform or performed at LIPA.
Diana Taylor, for example, dated New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg while she was LIPA's chief financial officer from 2001 to 2002, collecting a salary of more than $200,000.
Taylor, the mayor's domestic partner, is a Dartmouth grad and got her MBA at Columbia. She has a background in finance and served as a vice president of KeySpan Energy. After Taylor left LIPA, Gov. George Pataki appointed her to be superintendent of the New York State Banking Department.
LIPA is not the only utility to have political players in key positions. Con Edison's general counsel, Elizabeth D. Moore, served 12 years in former Gov. Mario Cuomo's administration.
Nick Braden, spokesman for the nonprofit American Public Power Association, which represents more than 2,000 community-owned electric utilities, said in a statement that as government bodies, public utilities have an inherent political character and that knowing how to "operate within a political structure" is useful.
"Having said that," Braden said, "of course it is important for utility staff to have strong knowledge of utility industry business, either in operations, engineering or administration."
Presented with Newsday's findings about LIPA employees' connections, Hervey insisted those workers were qualified for their positions. He said political relationships are a plus for LIPA's government affairs employees.
"Every one of these people, they are obviously performing the job," Hervey said. "We have evaluation processes here where we go through on an annual basis and look at their performance."
Hervey challenged Newsday to list the qualifications of each employee. The newspaper offered to publish the resumes of every employee online, but Hervey declined to divulge the work histories.
"I'm not so sure that's what's best for them," said Hervey, who will stay through the end of the year.
Hervey pointed to Paul DeCotis, LIPA vice president for power markets, as being unquestionably qualified. DeCotis, whose reported compensation to the state pension system was just under $233,700 in 2011, has held several energy-related positions in state government, including service as New York's deputy secretary for energy under governors David A. Paterson and Eliot Spitzer.
Cordaro, of the LIPA oversight committee, said it's a stretch to claim DeCotis has the proper experience for his current job, which involves negotiating power purchase contracts with producers. At private utilities, decades of experience are needed to hold such positions at the VP level, he said.
DeCotis declined to comment.

Family ties, controversy
Before becoming a senior vice president and chief of staff at LIPA in 2000, Ed Grilli was the longtime spokesman for then-Nassau County District Attorney Denis Dillon. Grilli went from a public relations man to being in a position to negotiate power sales agreements and supervise utility staff, Cordaro said.
"I have had friendly conversations with Grilli," Cordaro said. "Even he admits that he was challenged by taking on an entirely new task foreign to his experience."
Grilli was the most highly compensated LIPA employee in the last 10 years, collecting more than $330,000 in 2007, the year he left the utility. His daughter, Katie Grilli-Robles, is a spokeswoman for Nassau County Executive Edward Mangano.
Grilli declined to comment.
Also connected to Dillon is his daughter, LIPA's compliance officer, Barbara Dillon. She was previously the utility's human resources director. Barbara Dillon's reported compensation to the state pension system in the 2012 fiscal year, which ended in March, was $125,000.
Barbara Dillon's family ties drew her into a controversy in 1993 after Nassau Republican chairman Joseph Mondello gave her a $20,000-a-year off-track betting job at a time when her father was investigating one of Mondello's top associates, Joseph Cairo.
Two years later, when Barbara Dillon was 27, Mondello tapped her for what turned out to be an unsuccessful bid for a seat in the Nassau County Legislature. She joined LIPA in 1998.
Barbara Dillon declined to comment.

A long-standing reputation
LIPA's reputation as a publicly financed reward center for those with powerful allies has followed the authority for more than a decade, dating to the tenure of former chairman Richard Kessel -- himself a well-connected figure in both Democratic and Republican state politics.
Kessel declined to comment for this story. In an interview with Newsday in 2000, he said: "If a prominent person who is important to LIPA's future asks me to take a look at somebody, I will. But I would never hire an unqualified person."
Appointed by Democratic Gov. Mario Cuomo three years after LIPA was created by the State Legislature in 1986, Kessel led the authority for 18 years. Before running LIPA, Kessel was defeated when he ran for Nassau County executive as a Democrat.
During his tenure, LIPA's payroll increased from about 20 employees to its current roster of just over 100. The authority has a board of trustees appointed by the governor and state legislative leaders and operates with a high degree of independence.
As an authority, LIPA is exempt from civil service rules that impose legal limits on political activity and affiliation being the basis for employment, and is not constrained by union contracts.
Board chairman Howard Steinberg did not return calls seeking comment.
In 2007, Kessel left LIPA and went on to serve as the chief executive of the New York Power Authority.
Kessel's successor, Kevin Law, also came from politics, having served as Suffolk County's chief deputy county executive under Steve Levy from 2004 to 2007.
Despite lacking a utility background, Law told Newsday that he was "not a patronage appointment." He cited his experience representing energy corporations as a lawyer.
Law acknowledged that before he resigned in 2010, he hired people with government connections but no energy experience.
"I would not call it patronage," Law said. "Did I hire people who I knew who came out of the government world who I had trust and confidence in? Yes."
Law insisted that LIPA's culture became less political under his reign.
"I tried to professionalize it," he said. "I put in an ethics code. I hired a compliance officer. I fired three lobbyists."
Newsday's analysis of LIPA's payroll supports Law's contention.When Kessel left, 34 percent of LIPA employees had ties to political power, according to Newsday's analysis. That figure declined in the years after Kessel's departure and was at 23 percent as of March 2012.
Between 2003 and 2007, about 30 percent of all the money LIPA annually paid to employees went to politically connected people. The amount peaked in 2007, when LIPA was paying more than $3 million to employees Newsday identified as having political ties, out of the $7.2 million total spent on compensation.
By this year, the percentage of the budget paid to connected employees had dropped to 19 percent, with just under $2 million paid.

Who received paychecks
Connected current and former LIPA employees include:
Sharon Laudisi, who is married to former Glen Cove Mayor Alan Parente. She rose quickly at the authority, starting as its clean-energy assistant and eventually overseeing a "$38 million annual budget for LIPA's Clean Energy Initiative," according to an online biography. Her total compensation jumped from $53,000 to $76,000 between 2004 and 2007.
Laudisi is now an energy consultant and an author of a children's book on energy. She didn't respond to a message left with her husband.
"She didn't get her job through me," Parente said. "She got her job because she was friendly with Richie Kessel. I don't think she would have been hired if Richie didn't think she was qualified."
Eric Kopp, who made as much as $130,000 annually as an assistant to LIPA's chief of staff during his tenure from 2005 to 2007, had served in a similar position under then-Suffolk County Executive Robert Gaffney. He's now a part-time aide to Suffolk Executive Steve Bellone.
Reached by Newsday, Kopp defended his qualifications: "I have a pretty well established record as an administrator, having worked on the administrations of seven county executives in both parties."
Tracy Burgess-Levy, LIPA's director for community and governmental affairs, is married to former Rep. David Levy, who had been a member of the Hempstead Town Council. Burgess-Levy reported more than $97,000 in compensation to state pension system in the 2012 fiscal year, which ended in March. She declined to comment.
Andrew McCabe, LIPA's assistant general counsel, is the son of Edward McCabe, a former justice of the New York State Supreme Court, administrative judge of Nassau County, county attorney for Nassau County and town attorney for the Town of North Hempstead. McCabe reported nearly $117,000 in income to the state pension system in the last fiscal year. He declined to comment.
Lisanne Altmann is a Great Neck Democrat and in 1999 was a Nassau County legislator hired by Kessel to initiate a clean-energy program and encourage conservation.
"She has done an extraordinary job not just in putting the program together, but in garnering the support of the board," Kessel said of Altmann in a May 1999 Newsday article. "I need her here."
She reported income of more than $113,000 to the pension system last fiscal year. Nassau Legis. David Denenberg (D-Merrick) said Altmann "was one of the best resources" after superstorm Sandy. "I think because she was a legislator in the past, she certainly understands constituent service."
She declined to comment.

No reply from Cuomo
The governor is responsible for making nine appointments to LIPA's 15-member board. The Assembly speaker and the Senate majority leader make three appointments each. There are five vacancies.
Cuomo did not respond to Newsday's questions to his communications staff about whether he had done enough to root out cronyism at the agency.
The governor's office provided Newsday with post-Sandy remarks by Cuomo, who described LIPA as "fatally flawed" and "without function" and "beyond repair, for a long, long time." Cuomo has said an overhaul is needed, and the state commission he announced will determine what has compromised the utility.
Peter Schlussler, a former manager at KeySpan Energy, which had the utility operations contract with LIPA before National Grid, is now a member of Suffolk's LIPA Oversight Committee. He said patronage has hurt the utility.
"If we had seasoned, qualified utility folks at LIPA, we would not have ended up in the predicament we were in," he said.
Cuomo's commission must look at the qualifications of LIPA employees, Schlussler said.
"If the commission doesn't look at that, then it's all semantics. Value zero."

Dear Ramon Dominguez:



As you know tracks run all across the United States every day of the year that bettors want to bet. Years ago Teamsters Local 858, Barry Yomtov President,  which represented the Managers of New York City OTB and the employees of Nassau OTB told its members that the tracks did not run in New York on Roman Catholic Easter Sunday and Roman Catholic Palm Sunday because the jockeys did not want to ride.  This argument did not address the constitutional rights of New York Bettors secured by NY Const. Art. 1, Sec. 3. Even without reference to the New York Constitution it is clear to many that New York State can't pick and choose to close Nassau OTB on Roman Catholic Easter Sunday and Roman Catholic Palm Sunday in preference to Greek Orthodox Easter Sunday and Greek Orthodox Palm Sunday. 

Please share with the bettors who bet at Nassau OTB  your opinion on whether BETTORS should be able to bet at Nassau OTB on any day of the year and Nassau OTB employees who wish to work be able to do so. NYC OTB employees were paid double time for working on ANY SUNDAY  that they chose to work
Nassau OTB employees are paid time and a half for WORKING on ANY SUNDAY.. They are paid straight time if they chose or are forced to take vacation.

I have repeatedly petitioned the NY Racing and Wagering Board to ask New York Attorney General for a FREE FORMAL OPINION to determine whether
1. NY PML Sec 105 and Sec 109 apply to Nassau OTB
2. Whether the above statutes are constitutionally defensible
3 Whether the above statutes violate the rights of Nassau County Bettors secured by NY Const. Art, 1, Sec. 3
4. Whether the above statutes are vague, indefinite and/or overly broad as the Gregorian and Julian Calendars do not define the same Sunday to be Palm Sunday in all years. Ditto for Easter Sunday.

Countless bettors at Nassau OTB seek to buy a program the day before "Palm Sunday" and "Easter Sunday". They are told that OTB is CLOSED. 






Jockey Ramon Dominguez Is Cool, Calm and Collecting Millions ...

www.nytimes.com/.../an-unorthodox-jockey-and-predictable-winner....
2 days ago – Ramon Dominguez, with an unorthodox style on New York racetracks, will lead riders in the United States in earnings for a third year.


I-
Thanks for the help. The item’s below. I’d be happy to mail you a copy, if you give me a mailing address.

Claude Solnik
(631) 913-4244
Long Island Business News
2150 Smithtown Ave.
Ronkonkoma, NY 11779-7348 

Home > LI Confidential > Stop scratching on holidays

Stop scratching on holidays
Published: June 1, 2012


Off Track Betting in New York State has been racing into a crisis called shrinking revenue. Some people have spitballed a solution: Don’t close on holidays.
New York State Racing Law bars racing on Christmas, Easter and Palm Sunday, and the state has ruled OTBs can’t handle action on those days, even though they could easily broadcast races from out of state.
“You should be able to bet whenever you want,” said Jackson Leeds, a Nassau OTB employee who makes an occasional bet. He added some irrefutable logic: “How is the business going to make money if you’re not open to take people’s bets?”
Elias Tsekerides, president of the Federation of Hellenic Societies of Greater New York, said OTB is open on Greek Orthodox Easter and Palm Sunday.
“I don’t want discrimination,” Tsekerides said. “They close for the Catholics, but open for the Greek Orthodox? It’s either open for all or not open.”
OTB officials have said they lose millions by closing on Palm Sunday alone, with tracks such as Gulfstream, Santa Anita, Turf Paradise and Hawthorne running.
One option: OTBs could just stay open and face the consequences. New York City OTB did just that back in 2003. The handle was about $1.5 million – and OTB was fined $5,000.
Easy money.


The New York Times


November 19, 2012

A Jockey Is Cool, Calm and Collecting Millions

It is easy to pick out Ramon Dominguez in a crowded field. To the untrained eye, most jockeys look the same in the saddle, but not Dominguez. Taller than your average rider, at 5 feet 6 inches, he sits high in the saddle, stretches his hands onto the reins in an unorthodox manner and flashes his whip in an almost exaggerated half-windmill arc. There is an easier way to spot him, too: look for who is in front at the finish.
Dominguez, who will turn 36 on Saturday, is the best rider in the United States, at least by the metric of money earned. Based in New York, he led the nation in earnings the previous two years and is about to do so again. He received the Eclipse Award for Outstanding Jockey the past two years, with another in store. This year his mounts have earned $24.2 million and counting, already a record.
And Dominguez is self-taught. Of his riding style, he said: “I learned on my own in Venezuela. Sometimes it looks awkward, but it feels very comfortable for me. If I could change it, I might.” He smiled. “But it’s too late to be making changes now.”
Why would he? With purses in New York higher than ever, aided by the year-old slot machines at Aqueduct Racetrack, the riding colony around Dominguez is as strong as ever. And yet he has dominated since arriving permanently in late 2008. Facing the best at Saratoga last summer, Dominguez rolled to a record 68 wins. In recent years he has piloted the champions Gio Ponti, Havre de Grace and Hansen. At the Breeders’ Cup this month, he won the $3 million Turf aboard the long shot Little Mike.
He is also the king of Aqueduct, the Ozone Park oval that opened Nov. 2 for its six-month haul. The top riders will move to Gulfstream Park in South Florida at the end of this month, except for Dominguez. He has won the last five winter meets at Aqueduct, and he is a short bet to win a sixth. In the past, staying behind would cost a rider opportunities on the better horses once the stables returned to New York from Florida, but Dominguez changed that notion.
“The perception of a winter rider — in quotation marks — has shifted over the years,” he said. “It’s also not a financial sacrifice any longer, because the money is so good here. You can make more here than going south.”
After Aqueduct’s purses skyrocketed last winter, the New York Racing Association faced fierce condemnation over a rash of fatal breakdowns during that time. A state-appointed task force that investigated the breakdowns proposed new rules on medication and veterinary oversight that the New York State Racing and Wagering Board approved.
“Of course everybody had their concerns,” Dominguez said. “But I feel like something good came out of this negative event. I’m optimistic that these reforms will work. It gives everybody peace of mind.”
Last Wednesday morning in the Aqueduct jockeys’ room, Dominguez answered questions while running on a treadmill at top speed. To make sure his weight stayed no higher than 115 pounds, he wore a heavy polyester sweatshirt and, with a rag in one hand, wiped the sweat from his face. He also frequents the sauna, which jockeys call the box.
Dominguez is an avid chess player, and the way he explains his fortunes on the track speaks to that mind-set.
“You can sense how things are going to happen before they happen,” he said. “It’s hard to put into words. It’s second nature. You see the paths before they open.”
Dominguez was born in Caracas and brought up in Cagua, an hour and a half away. His mother was a schoolteacher, and his father ran an off-track betting parlor in Caracas that had been in the family for two generations. It was open on weekends, and Dominguez’s father would sometimes take him to help around the shop. At the end of the weekend, his father had to drive the betting machines to La Rinconada, the Caracas racecourse, where they were emptied of money. At 13, Dominguez first watched a live race there and resolved to become a jockey.
But there was no horsemanship in his family, and his parents disapproved of his career choice. As a trade-off, and perhaps as a way to placate the boy, they allowed him to take show-jumping lessons nearby. Dominguez was content, and after a year he entered some competitions. But after one competition, he had a fateful encounter.
“I was on the bus on my way home and saw this kid with a helmet on,” Dominguez recalled. “I went up to him and asked him about it, and he told me he was riding racehorses at a training center nearby. I didn’t even know there was a training center nearby. So the next time I was on my way to show-jumping lessons, I stayed on the bus and got off at the training center.”
Dominguez did this a few times, but his parents quickly found out. They were not as unhappy as he expected, Dominguez said, and he soon won them over with his commitment. Most mornings he would travel on three buses to the training center, where he taught himself the basics of riding racehorses, and then return home, shower and ride another bus to high school.
Contrary to his individualized path, most would-be jockeys in Latin America attend formal riding schools. The best graduates are then connected to agents in the United States. But during his development, Dominguez said, the riding school at La Rinconada was closed. So he received his apprenticeship at two perilous, rough-riding bush tracks outside the city limits. He lived in dreary, dirty tack rooms and also groomed the horses.
Seven months later, there was a promotion for young jockeys to go to La Rinconada, and with the help of a politically connected friend, Dominguez jumped at the opportunity. He rode there throughout 1995, after he had turned 18, having little success the first six months but finishing with 53 wins.
“It was exciting for me to make it to the big track, but the reality of it is I was extremely green,” Dominguez said. “I didn’t have much confidence at all. I was focused on making a career of this, but I was pretty far behind the other kids. I was intimidated. It wasn’t easy for me by any means.”
Dominguez did not linger in Venezuela. With the help of the same friend who got him to La Rinconada, he was set up with an agent in the United States. He arrived in 1996 and won his first race, at Hialeah Park in Florida, that March.
‘Remarkable Hands’
Success came swiftly. From Florida he moved to Maryland, long known for able horsemen and jockeys, like Chris McCarron and Kent Desormeaux, who had gone on to Hall of Fame careers in California and New York.
Edgar Prado was another such rider. When Prado left Maryland for New York in 1999, his agent, Steve Rushing, stayed behind. In what Dominguez called “a turning point for me,” he soon joined with Rushing. Much of Prado’s business went to Dominguez, who is still with Rushing after almost 13 years.
In 2001, only five years after arriving in the United States, Dominguez led all riders nationally in wins, and he repeated the feat in 2003. His move to the big stage was only a matter of time, and in New York his immediate success was startling — he won nine consecutive leading rider titles in his first year and a half.
Dominguez is known for his quiet hands, his tremendous patience and his strong, signature style of pushing and driving in the final furlongs. Graham Motion, the trainer of last year’s Kentucky Derby winner, Animal Kingdom, was one of Dominguez’s earliest supporters. Their success together in Maryland and Delaware helped propel both careers.
“Ramon had a knack — he still has a knack — for getting horses to relax that other jockeys find difficult to ride, which is something I noticed about him from the beginning,” Motion said. “I think that’s his biggest asset. He’s just got remarkable hands on a horse.”
Asked to explain his talent, Dominguez said it was more art than science. “It’s something you kind of learn on your own,” he said. “I can’t describe how I do it. I have a passion for horses and I just try to listen to what they tell me, instead of maybe being a more mechanical rider. I feel like that patience pays off.”
Motion often gave Dominguez his most unruly horses. One of those, a headstrong gelding named Better Talk Now, responded to Dominguez’s patient handling, and their rapport shaped a memorable career. With Dominguez riding for the latter half of Better Talk Now’s nearly eight-year racing career, the horse won the 2004 Breeders’ Cup Turf — a milestone victory for trainer and jockey — and more than $4.3 million and five Grade I races.
“I enjoy the challenge if a horse is difficult or too aggressive,” Dominguez said. “I take it as a personal challenge to get that horse to relax.”
This suits the rider, and helps make him stand out in grass races, where saving ground and patience decide razor-thin margins. Dominguez’s calm demeanor and humble attitude also stand out in the jockeys’ room, where he is widely admired.
Asked if success had changed Dominguez, Motion said: “No, not at all. That’s the most remarkable thing. He’s still personable, down to earth, kind, well spoken. None of that has changed, not even a little bit.”
An Impulse for Improvement
To figure out a jockey’s income, the rule of thumb is to take 8.5 percent of his horses’ earnings; for his career, Dominguez’s mounts have earned nearly $190 million.
But he does not flash his wealth. He drives a 2006 Honda Civic, which replaced the 1993 Honda Accord he drove for 13 years. He lives near Belmont Park in Floral Park, N.Y., with his wife, Sharon, a former exercise rider he met at Delaware Park, and their sons, Alexander, 7, and Matthew, 6. They also own a 14-acre horse farm near Elkton, Md. His family is the main reason he rides year-round in New York.
“I’m well aware of this being a short career,” he said. “I just hope that I can do the best I can with what I make, not only for myself but the future of my family. My wife and I have a simple lifestyle, and we take pleasure in the small things. I don’t keep up with the Joneses, so to speak. I feel like I have it all.”
Dominguez’s rise to the top has encountered a few blips. Jockeys are regular visitors to emergency rooms. Dominguez missed a month last spring because of a separated collarbone. Other major injuries included fractured collarbones, wrists and even his skull, the outcome of a nasty spill in 1998 at Delaware Park. His longest layoff has been four months, with a broken wrist, which is better than most of his contemporaries.
Out of superstition, Dominguez said he liked to avoid the topic.
Dominguez said he also refrained from setting goals, but he acknowledged that the classic victories that had eluded him were in his mind. His best finish in the Kentucky Derby, for example, was a second in 2006.
Although he is a first-choice jockey, Dominguez continues to put in his work off the track, arriving at the jockeys’ room several hours before the races, to exercise and study the card and watch race replays for the horses he is riding for the first time.
He does not cherry-pick races, either. From the Derby pageantry to unmemorable races on frigid Wednesdays in January, Dominguez has been the busiest jockey in racing in 2012, with 1,333 mounts through Sunday — a day on which he won five races at Aqueduct.
“I’m very critical of myself,” he said. “After a race, I always replay what I could have done differently, even if I win. I still have my doubts on a daily basis. You can’t rest on your laurels. This business sure changes quick.”
Last Wednesday, with the first race 45 minutes away, Dominguez slowed to a jog on the treadmill. He usually runs two miles, but this morning he ran three and a half. Wednesday mornings are often challenging after two days off and an accompanying weight gain. The extra fitness was also necessary for the winter ahead, the bone-chilling, thumping winds off nearby Jamaica Bay as familiar as losing tickets scattered on Aqueduct’s grandstand floors.
Winters are physically demanding, Dominguez said, but not as mentally demanding as the high-stakes drama of Saratoga or Belmont.
But this is Dominguez’s turf, and he was excited for another meet in which his fellow riders could hope for only second-place money. With a smile, he said, “Winning always makes you feel a little warmer.”