Quantcast
Channel: The Suffolk Times
Viewing all 24121 articles
Browse latest View live

Valerie A. Bartolacci

$
0
0

Valerie A. Bartolacci, a resident of Upper Nyack, N.Y., and Laurel, Long Island, passed away Dec. 9, 2019, at the age of 80 following a brief illness.

Born Jan. 5, 1939, in St. Albans, Queens, she was the daughter of Harry and Florence Wissler.

Valerie attended Archbishop MacDonald High School in Brooklyn and SUNY/New Paltz, graduating with a degree in education. Valerie was a member of the Arethusa Sorority and worked as a second-grade teacher in Hempstead, N.Y.

Valerie met her husband of 55 years, A. Ralph Bartolacci, in New York City at the one and only Catholic Alumni event that Ralph attended. She informed Ralph that she was “geographically undesirable” because she lived out in Long Island and he lived in upstate New York. This did not deter Ralph, who wore out a brand new car visiting her.

Valerie and Ralph were passionate world travelers, having visited over 50 countries. A highlight of their life together was the years they lived in France and England with their three young children. During this time they often loaded the family into their blue Volvo station wagon to set off on a new adventure to East Germany, French or Swiss Alps, or perhaps Yugoslavia. There would be no itinerary or reservations, but simply the desire to explore and experience something new.

Valerie was a lifelong swimmer and especially loved doing laps in the Long Island Sound and Great Peconic Bay. She also served as first mate to Ralph on a series of motor boats that increased in size as the years went by. Passionate about the arts, Valerie enjoyed going to concerts, ballets and shows in all different venues, from village gazebos to Broadway and Lincoln Center. Inspired by her time in Europe, Valerie was a gourmet chef and a lifelong student of the French language. She had a deep love for animals, often doing pet therapy for those in need.

She is survived by her husband, Ralph; her brother, John Wissler (Jean) of Londonderry, N.H.; her three children, Susan Bartolacci Dahiya (Sandeep), Peter Bartolacci (Suzanne) and Gary Bartolacci (Heidi); and her eight grandchildren, Asha, Pria and Julian Dahiya; Anna and Brendan Bartolacci; and Abigail, Eliza and Matthew Bartolacci.

A funeral mass for Valerie was held at the Church of the Transfiguration in Tarrytown, N.Y., and she was laid to rest at the Sacred Heart Cemetery in Cutchogue, N.Y.

In lieu of flowers, the family asks that donations be made in Valerie’s name to the Courtney Anne Diacont Memorial Foundation (courtneyscause.org) or to Maria Fareri’s Children’s Hospital (mariafarerichildrens.org/ways-to-give1).

This is a paid notice.

The post Valerie A. Bartolacci appeared first on Suffolk Times.


James R. Duffy

$
0
0

James R. Duffy, born July 22, 1936 of Cutchogue, N.Y., passed away unexpectedly Dec. 27, 2019 at the age of 83. 

He is survived by his best friend and loving wife of 60 years, Mary Ellen (nee Powers); his son Terence and his wife, Lil, his son James and his wife, Mary Ellen, his son Sean and his wife, Jessie, his son Michael and his wife, Diane, and his daughter, Mary Ellen, and her partner, Renee. He also leaves behind his 15 amazing grandchildren Nolan, Liam, Laura Lynn, Alannah, Ashley, Jim, Erin, Coleen, Kieran, Meghan, Aidan, Luke, Grace, Ian and Emmet; sister Ronnie and her husband, Paul Wolfrom. In addition, he leaves behind his beloved golden retriever, Whitey Ford. He was predeceased by his parents Terry and Rozzie, his sister Peggy his sister Kathy and her husband, Paul Joyce. 

He was a prominent trial attorney and senior trial partner of Duffy & Duffy, PLLC and worked tirelessly representing plaintiffs in medical malpractice cases. 

He had an incredible mind and a variety of interests and, amongst other things, regularly attended the opera and plays with his wife. As a lifelong Yankee fan, he especially enjoyed bringing his grandchildren to baseball games and sharing his love of baseball with them. He was an avid reader and an author of multiple books. He had a great sense of humor and loved putting a smile on the faces of his friends and family. Perhaps his favorite thing to do was to gather with family and friends for meals and the exchanging of stories, laughs and cherished memories. 

Wake services will be held at Towers Funeral Home in Oceanside, N.Y., Thursday, Jan. 2, and Friday, Jan. 3, between the hours of 2 and 4 and 7 and 9 p.m. A Mass to celebrate his life will be held Saturday Jan. 4, at 11:30 a.m. at Our Lady of Good Counsel Church in Mattituck, N.Y.

In Memory of James, donations may be made to Doctors Without Borders, doctorswithoutborders.org/support-us/faq-donating.

The post James R. Duffy appeared first on Suffolk Times.

In Memoriam: Remembering those we lost in 2019

$
0
0

There are a couple of old sayings that sum up our feelings when important people in our lives pass away.

The ranks are thinning, you will hear, as well as that the cemeteries are filled with irreplaceable people. Both statements are true and untrue since every day people pick up a fallen standard. Even though we’re diminished by the deaths of those who have dedicated their unique lives to doing good, there are always others who are ready to replace them, even when we’re sometimes left with an emotional void that will never allow us to feel whole again.

A family mourns loved ones who are gone, and a community also can mourn the loss of people who thinned the ranks through their passing.

The following is a list of obituaries published by The Suffolk Times for Southold area residents and public figures who died in 2019.

Click on the name of the deceased to read more about their life:

A

Joan Ahlsen

Carol Gardner Albertson

Richard Edward Allen

Nicholas G. Andriotis

Betty R. Angstadt

Mercedes Antongeorgi

Barbara Anne Armstrong-Gleason

Anne L. Arnold

Harley Byron Arnold

Dorothy K. Austin

B

Sheila Sweyer Bachman

Sandra Bage

Ann Louise (Jones) Bannon

Valerie A. Bartolacci

Gary Bartoloni

Mary Ann Baumgratz

Gordon E. Baylis

Nora Beate Sigerist Beeson

Eunice P. Benfield

Barbara Ann Benson

William Henry Beresford

Edith M. Berry

Robert Thomas Best

Kelley Marie Blanchard

Bruce Bloom

Gary A. Bodenstein

Charles Frazier Booth

Walter F. ‘Wally’ Boron

Frances J. Borrelli

Ruth Joy Borst

Thomas P. Brady

Deyan Ranko Brashich

Donald F. Brown

Terence M. Browne

James Bryan

Walter John Buchanan

Richard S. Burden

Madeline Ruth Burgess-Barnett

Robert Burns

Norman Austin Burt

Richard Francis Butler

C

Maria Carpenter

Bruce Christopher Carr

Renee Ann Carragher-Phelps

Patricia Brown Chamberlain

Elizabeth Charles

Joseph A. Cherepowich

Dolores A. ‘Tootsie’ Chituk

Theresa R. Chomicki

Angel B. Chorno

Peter M. Clark

William Francis Claudio

John Edward Clauss

Carol Jane (Geddes, Gurin) Coakley

Robert Cocorikis

William D. ‘Chilly’ Conklin

Phyllis Conley

Douglas E. Constant

Thomas H. Constantine

Jacqueline M. Conway

Joan Castel Conway

Albert George Cook

Robert Waide Cooper

Edward Francis Corrigan

Bernard Cosimano

Margaret Coutts

Theresa Cramer

Shirley Crocker

Charles Joseph Cromack

Patricia Nichols Curcuru

Mary Ellen Czelatka

D

Leonard D. Dank

Georgianna V. Danowski

Felix A. Deerkoski

Barbara Bolton Dello Joio

Andrew and Dawn Demchuk

Antoinette ‘Toni’ DeMeo

Edward L. ‘Ted’ deReeder III

Eleanor Lillian de Reeder

David T. Devlin

Ronald G. Dietrich

David Howard Dingle

Audrey M. Dinizio

Frances C. DiVello

Max George Dobler

Kathleen M. Donlin

Thomas F. Donovan

Marjorie Grathwohl Driver

James R. Duffy

Georgia Dumas

Lois L. Dunne

Rita A. Duva

Stephen Dzugas-Smith

E

Rosemarie Jessen Earl

Brian B. Edwards

Louise Elizabeth Hann Egert

Geoffrey Eggimann

Richard S. Engert

Maren Marie Erickson

Herbert Samuel Ernest

Maureen Ellen Van Etten

F

Barbara (Betty) R. Koehler Fairburn

Barbara H. Fanning

David Glenn Feavel

Ann Thornhill Felli

Philip H. Fenderson

Shirley Ann Fenderson

Ady Fenton

Bruce E. Ferguson

Alice S. Fife

Lisa Raye Finnegan

Jane (Worthington) Flatley

Joy Flurry

Rush McGrew Forquer Jr.

Patricia Lillian McFarland Foster

Deane Knox Fox Jr.

Rosa D. Fucile

Eva Fugosich

G

Mary G. Gagen

Kevin E. Gallagher

Lynn A. Gallagher

Doris Mary (Gable) Gannon

Dimitrios Georgianis

Arthur S. Gibbons

Samuel Bellows Gilpin III

Alexander Vincent Giorgi

Barbara Anne Armstrong-Gleason

Myron William Goldstein

Jesse Robinson ‘Bobby’ Goodale III

George H. Gray

Victor Grissino

H

Christine and Joseph Haeg

Robert J. Hardman

Barbara A. Harkins

Barbara A. Harrington

Ned Harroun

Helen A. Heaney

Bernard Arthur Heinisch

Donald E. Henn

Joseph Charles Henry

Pearl Herbert

Brian T. Higgins

Cathryn Tolan Higgins

Charles J. Hoffmann

Marjorie K. Hoffman

Sylvia Holtzberg

Susan Elizabeth Homan

Gary R. Hotchkiss

Robert B. Howard III

Lester E. Hubbard Jr.

Raymond R. Huntington

J

Harry Jaquillard

Leon J. Jasinski Sr.

Joseph A. Johnson III

Ernest ‘Toppy’ Jones

Edward P. Jurzenia

K

Karen ‘Candy’ (Spencer) Kamm

Jane M. Kasper

Ellinor Kasuga

Judith Ann Kayton

Calliope Kentrotas

Edward H. King

Edward T. Kinsel

Henry M. Kislow Sr.

Walter Kluge

Steven Kosciusko

Patricia E. Kren

Anders E. Kritsberg

Edith Kudlinski

L

Joan Ann Lademann

Jon T. Lake

Tonya Larkins

Anne Carolyn Lee

Bruce J. Lehr

Shaun M. Leo

Merle P. Levine

Charles Arthur Ley

Mabel Antoinette Ley

Frank F. Licari

David M. Long

Edward H. Lopez

Caroline Ostrander Loschen

Hanna M. Lovett

Ethel Lubina 

Marjorie Reese Ludlow

Marie E. Lukert

Richard Mark Lupoletti

M

Frank W. Mackie

Lois M. Manfredi

Russell Edward Mann

Margaret ‘Midge’ Marcell

Andreas Emmanuel Markakis

Anne Loretta Marusevich

Mary Wheeler Doroski McCafferty

Maureen Anne McCarthy

Grace Elizabeth McDonough

Edward J. McGurn

John P. McLinskey

Shirley G. McMann

Marilyn E. McNulty

Cornelius McShane

Aubrey Mealy Jr.

August Francis Menchini

Eileen Anne Methven

Joseph M. Metzner

Father George Michell

Richard A. Miller

Kevin F. Monsell

Corinne L. Moore

Mary Patricia Mosca

Mirko A. Mrva

Mary Anthea (Ann) Mueller

Eve McDavid Mullins

Janet Myrin

N

Catherine Ann Napier

Cynthia L. Nelson

Dolores Ann Neudeck

John Norton

O

Catherine V. O’Neill

Dr. Victor S. Orioli

P

Addie ‘Nema’ Pace

Roy Cornell Pace

Anthony Palumbo

Ralph Louis Panella

Ioannis G. Papadakis

Gayle Elizabeth Patchell

LeRoy A. Paul

Cathy Lynne Pearce

Dorothy Penny

Richard F. Pierson

James J. Pirillo

Margaret Claire Pisani

William Edward PisaRelli

Mildred E. ‘Millie’ Pizzo

Joseph A. ‘Joe’ Pottgen

Bernard A. Power

Gerard Puccio

Gary J. Pumillo

Franco G. Purita

Q

Ethel May Quillin

R

Barbara M. Raacke

Mary Louise Rabe

Doris Raynor-Hennessey

Donald Richard Reeves

Robert C. Reeves Jr.

Daniel G. Reiter

Lawrence H. ‘Hunt’ Reybine Jr.

George Douglas Richards

Robert Herbert Ringewald

Robert Mayer Ringold

John Christopher Ritter

John Benedict ‘Ben’ Roache III

Joan Albertson Rogers

Rose E. Rogers

Robert J. Rosnack

Jeanne Rutkowski

S

Stella Sakowicz

H. William ‘Bill’ Sawicki

Marilyn Grace Hoffmann Scheiner

Harry E. Schlachter

Dennis P. Schlessinger

William B. Schneider

Robert C. Schoenhaar

John Malcolm Schriefer

William W Schriever

Theodore H. Schroeder

Harold P. Schwerdt

Mary Lee Matheson Shanahan

John Sidor Jr.

Bruce Franklyn Sieverman

George Russell Simpson

Arnold H. Sims

Jenny T. Skirel

Louise Washington Smiley

Irene Smith

Joseph T. Smith

Thornton Edward Smith

Vera C. Smith

William A. Smith

Muriel S. Snider

Joseph Soito

Alfred J. Spiro

Veronica M. ‘Roni’ Stankewicz

Glen A. Staples

Jane Constance Buckley Steinbugler

Charles André Stringfellow

Christine A. Stulsky

Rosina Suglia

Theresa Sullivan

Jeanette E. Swotkewicz

Alexander J. Sydlowski Sr.

Joseph Szot Sr.

T

Roy Herbert Taplin

Steve Tenedios

Mary E. ‘Miz’ Thomson

Kelli Elizabeth Thompson

Frank S. Thorp Jr.

Arthur J. Tillman

Peter M. Todebush

Carmela Barbara ‘Connie’ Toepfert

Lewis Stanley Tomaszewski

Mary E. Travers

Joan E. Tuthill

V

George Patrick Vallely

Heidi Ann Burczyk Vandall

W

Eleanor Ruth Walker

Margery Marie Walker

Peter Michael Walker

Pamela Watson

Gerald W. Weir Jr.

Gerald S. Wells

Kevin Wells

Robert M. Westover

Jerri Marie White

James Peter Wilcenski

Percy Bertel Wilson

Helen Alice Wolanski

Carolyn Wright

Antone J. Wysocki Jr.

Y

Dorothy C. Yanke

Z

Constance Rose Zahra

Frank J. Zambriski

Anne H. Zaneski

Barbara Ann Zaneski

Mary E. Zeballos

Maria Zegray

Peter B. Zuhoski Jr.

Editor’s Note: This list was compiled from obituaries submitted to The Suffolk Times by families of the deceased and area funeral homes. Obituaries not submitted to us for publication and news stories were not included.

The post In Memoriam: Remembering those we lost in 2019 appeared first on Suffolk Times.

The 20 most-read Suffolk Times stories of 2019

$
0
0

As the Suffolk Times recaps the past year, here’s a look at the most-read stories of 2019.

1. Suicidal man fatally shot by police, ending standoff in Greenport

2. Shark swims right up to shore in Mattituck Friday afternoon

3. Three injured, one dead in Mattituck boating accident

4. Southold Town races too close to call on Election Day

5. Greenport girl, 10, killed in crash at Route 48 and Chapel Lane

6. Prosecutor: Mattituck man took suboxone prior to fatal hit-and-run; homicide charge likely

7. Michael Maroni, chef known for his famous meatballs, dies at 57

8. Two dead in Mattituck plane crash

9. One fire chief suspended, another resigns following PESH evaluation

10. Kelley Blanchard, 27, remembered as vibrant woman who always helped others

11. Drowning victim remembered as fitness enthusiast who lived to help others

12. Fire damages storage building at Braun Seafood in Cutchogue; market reopens before noon

13. Claudio’s Waterfront submits documentation to comply with village

14. Piecing together clues from last week’s car race across the North Fork

15. Nicole Kidman, Hugh Grant film HBO limited series ‘The Undoing’ in East Marion

16. New ABC series with Southold police chief as main character premieres Tuesday

17. Michelangelo in Mattituck reopens after being seized

18. Bill Claudio, former co-owner of iconic Greenport restaurant, dies at 81

19. A secret kept hidden: New details emerge on who knew where Louise Pietrewicz was buried

20. Loved ones seek answers after man dies falling from car on Fishers Island

Caption: Actress Nicole Kidman carried an umbrella as she ducked into a car on the set of “The Undoing.” (Credit: Cyndi Zaweski)

The post The 20 most-read Suffolk Times stories of 2019 appeared first on Suffolk Times.

$3.65M for East End preservation in latest round of economic development grants

$
0
0

A Peconic Land Trust program to preserve farmland and open space and a Riverhead Town project to create a “town square” downtown were the biggest local recipients of Regional Council Award grants issued by New York State in December.

The grant awards were announced by Gov. Andrew Cuomo on Dec. 19 and totaled $761.5 million statewide for 997 projects.

Below is a breakdown of some of the grant recipients on the North Fork. The awards are administered through the Long Island Regional Economic Development Council.

• The Peconic Land Trust received the biggest award on the North Fork.

It received $3.65 million to implement the next phase of its Regional Aquifer Protection Land Acquisition Program to acquire land or development rights to protect Long Island’s sole source aquifer, according to the state.

Putlockers-[HD]-Watch! The Grudge [2020] Online Full For Free

“This year the program will focus on acquiring land in the towns of Brookhaven, Riverhead, Southold, Shelter Island and East Hampton to protect land in the Central Suffolk, Southold and South Fork Special Groundwater Protection Areas within the Peconic Estuary and Long Island Sound Study Watershed,” the state said in announcing the grants.

Click to enlarge

• The Town of Riverhead received an $800,000 Empire State Development grant to create a new riverfront connecting Main Street to the river with recreational amenities and a gathering space.

The project, which town officials have called a “town square,” would “provide a public gathering space, pedestrian connectivity and open vistas from Main Street to the riverfront to reorient the pedestrian focus from the traditional Main Street to the Peconic Riverwalk, a unique attribute,” according to the town’s application.

Dawn Thomas, the town’s community development administrator, said the town has applied for other funding sources for the town square and she estimates that a few million dollars more will be needed to complete the project.

Last summer, the town square was part of the town’s application for the $10 million Downtown Revitalization Initiative, but the state gave that money to Baldwin instead.

Ms. Thomas said the town could still reapply for that funding next summer, and the receipt of the $800,000 ESD grant should help.

“The state has shown a level of confidence in what we’re doing,” she said.

Students at the Long Island Science Center

• The Long Island Science Center, a learning museum, is planning to expand its facility in downtown Riverhead and increase its STEM programs and exhibits.

It received $775,000 in ESD grants.

The science center is currently in a temporary location on Peconic Avenue.

• The Tesla Science Center at Wardenclyffe in Shoreham seeks to transform the only existing laboratory of inventor Nikola Tesla into three unique attractions: a museum honoring Tesla and his legacy; a center for education and research; and an entrepreneur and technologist innovation program. It received $750,000 in ESD grants.

• Tebbens Steel in the Enterprise Park at Calverton seeks to upgrade its structural metal fabrication facility by adding new equipment to expand its business. It received two grants totaling $500,000.

• The Village of Greenport plans to design and construct an expansion of its municipal sewer system, thus reducing current nitrogen pollution input to the nearby Peconic Estuary. The village received $390,000.

Riverhead Town’s sewer plant already performs a similar operation, discharging treated effluent onto the adjacent Indian Island Golf Course, which is owned by Suffolk County. The village received $26,240 in grants for the project.

CAST recently introduced a mobile food pantry. (Credit: Joe Werkmeister)

• Community Action Southold Town, Inc. will purchase and upgrade a building in Greenport to serve as a North Fork Community Resource Center, which will support CAST’s self-sufficiency programs. CAST received $300,000 in grants.

• Harbor Lights Oyster Co. seeks to build a collaborative aquaculture center to house an oyster hatchery and a shellfish processing center that will offer accessible shore-based services to the local seafood industry. Harbor Lights is located in Greenport and grows oysters in Southold. They received $180,000 in grants.

• Spirit’s Promise Equine Rescue seeks to expand its current space to enable them to offer year-round workforce development and youth programs at their facility on Sound Avenue in Riverhead. The rescue received $90,000 in grants.

• The Riverhead Foundation for Marine Research & Preservation on East Main Street seeks to engage the public in the critical work of the New York Marine Rescue Center to save endangered sea life.

“By providing enhanced tourism access to their unique hospital and rehabilitation center, offering specially tailored guided tours and educational programs, the [Foundation] intends to inform the public about man-made risks to sea life and other various tourism initiatives to increase visitation to the area and overall region,” according to the state. They received $75,000 in grants.

tgannon@timesreview.com

The post $3.65M for East End preservation in latest round of economic development grants appeared first on Suffolk Times.

2019 Person of the Year: Father Joseph Staudt; ‘a true friend to all’

$
0
0

Msgr. Joseph Staudt came to Sacred Heart Parish 12 years ago, filled with trepidation about what his new assignment would bring. He had been a very happy pastor at Christ the King R.C. Church in Commack, and when he learned he was being sent to Sacred Heart in Cutchogue, he worried that he was not up to the task. 

“My initial reaction was fear,” said Father Joe, as everyone in the parish calls him. “I had been in Commack for 10 years. A lot had been turned around. Now I was being moved. I was told they were having problems out there. I felt inadequate.”

A number of priests later identified in the 2002 Suffolk County grand jury report on the priest sex abuse scandal had served in Sacred Heart, which then had two churches, Sacred Heart in Cutchogue — now shuttered — and Our Lady of Good Counsel in Mattituck. Many parishioners were angry these men had served here without anyone being informed of the horrific allegations against them.

If the sex abuse scandal is the giant elephant in the Catholic living room, that elephant was front and center in Cutchogue and Mattituck — with Father Joe tasked to return trust to a parish where trust had been violated.

So on June 18, 2007, he arrived in Cutchogue. He knew he would work hard; that was a given. He knew in his homilies he would talk about what people were going through in their daily lives, reinforcing that God’s love is infinite; that was also a given. And he knew he would speak to the core messages in the Gospels – forgiveness, love, redemption.

He served his first six years and asked the diocese to continue for another six years, which he has now completed. He hopes to stay for another four years before he retires. The parish where he was worried he would not perform well is now a place he doesn’t want to leave. Nor does the congregation want to let him go.

A fit and youthful 68, he says he still wants to serve. His passion for what brought him to the priesthood 41 years ago remains strong and on full display every time he steps onto the altar for the Mass. As evidenced by the scores of laudatory letters The Suffolk Times received about Father Joe, and for what he has brought to the parish, he is The Suffolk Times Person of the Year for 2019.

These letters and emails describe a priest who speaks to them, who is among them — a sheep among the flock — who is not loath to talk about his own problems, and problems within his own family, and whose steady theme since his arrival has been to stay faithful to God, even when the unthinkable happens in your life that could make you turn away.

What are some of the things he wants to accomplish if he is lucky enough to remain in Cutchogue until his retirement? “I want to encourage people to gather together and see this as their parish and their home,” he said. “I want people to believe in this quote in Isaiah, chapter 41, versus 13: ‘For I am the Lord your God, who takes hold of your right hand and says to you, Do not fear. I will help you.’ ”

Msgr. Staudt blesses pet with Holy Water during a ceremony in 2017.

Jack McGreevy of Mattituck, one of many who wrote in support of Father Joe, said in an interview that “he is a man of the people, and he is inspiring and speaks to us at every Mass in words we should hear. We are so lucky to have him.”

Here are some excerpts from the letters people wrote about Father Joe: “He is kind, compassionate, smart, funny and good to everyone he meets, no matter what religion he/she is.” And: “He welcomes all people to our services, stressing God’s love and our need to work in our community to help those in need … he also teaches English as a second language to those who need that help.”

And this one: “Coming from a large family, he understands the issues families face and is able to relate to people of all ages, from teens to seniors. In these trying times, Father Joe is a role model of a faithful, compassionate human being and priest, always ready to stand with his parishioners.”

In a handwritten note: “… he is not only a pastor but a true friend to all. We can speak to him regarding anything and everything.” A few more samples: “Father Joe has brought the parish together … He oversees at least 30 ministries and also reaches out to the Spanish- and Polish-speaking community.” Another: “…he is a proponent of social justice for all.”

When he was interviewed for this story, Father Joe downplayed the praise and said he is uncomfortable in the spotlight. But his work speaks for itself, supporting Maureen’s Haven, teaching English at Cutchogue New Suffolk Library, and also — adding to his many duties — acting as administrator of Our Lady of Ostrabrama R.C. Church, the historic Polish church on Depot Lane in Cutchogue. His plate is full.

As one person who wrote in praise of Father Joe put it, “Since his stay within our community, his participation in many areas of civic activity, interfaith relationships, care for the poor and ailing, among other attributes, has been an asset to all … he has enhanced the betterment of our town.”

Looking back on his journey, Father Joe sees some very critical turns in the road, where doubt held its own for a while, only to be replaced by that inner voice and light that has pushed him along.

And there is this story about his mother: “When I was in Catholic grammar school, my mother said to me when I was polishing my shoes on a Saturday night before church, ‘I just want you to know, don’t feel any pressure [to be a priest]. If you feel this is not for you, we will always love you.”

Well, this can be said, for certain: It was for him. And he belongs on the North Fork.

Top Caption: Msgr. Joseph Staudt at a 2018 party celebrating the 40th anniversary of his ordination. (Credit: Steve Wick)

Previous Winners

2018: Mary Latham
2017: Eleanor Lingo
2016: Charles Reichert
2015: Kait’s Angels
2014: Jeff Heidtmann
2013: David Gamberg and Michael Comanda
2012: Southold Emergency Response Team
2011: Paul and Barbara Stoutenburgh
2010: Scott Russell
2009: Ryan Creighton
2008: North Fork NJROTC
2007: Maureen’s haven
2006: Southold Town Animal Shelter
2005: Ronnie Wacker
2004: Josh Horton
2003: Regina Maris Crew
2002: Colin Van Tuyl
2001: Frank LePré
2000: Ellie Hall
1999: Sister Margaret Smyth
1998: Reverend Lynda Clements
1997: Tim Caufield
1996: Dr. Micah Kaplan
1995: David Kappell
1994: Bob Levy
1993: Walter Dohm
1992: Reverend Summers
1991: Planning Conference
1990: 350th Committee
1989: Lynne Richards
1988: Franklin Bear
1987: Linda Graham

The post 2019 Person of the Year: Father Joseph Staudt; ‘a true friend to all’ appeared first on Suffolk Times.

Daily Update: Riverhead Town Supervisor sworn in; economic development grants awarded

$
0
0

The daily update, a podcast briefing on what’s happening across the North Fork, is brought to you by San Simeon by the Sound Center for Nursing and Rehabilitation, award-winning care when and where you need it most.

Get the daily update delivered straight to your inbox each weekday morning by subscribing to our newsletter. Or listen through Apple Podcasts by subscribing to Closer Look.

Here are the headlines across the North Fork for Thursday, Jan. 2:

NEWS

Aguiar sworn in as Riverhead Supervisor; promises to be ‘inclusive’

$3.65M for East End preservation in latest round of economic development grants

2019 News-Review Person of the Year: Det. Brian Simonsen; ‘a legacy of service to others’

2019 Suffolk Times Person of the Year: Father Joseph Staudt; ‘a true friend to all’

NORTHFORKER

Our 2019 Northforker People of the Year brought winter movies back to Greenport

WEATHER

Expect sunny skies today with a high temperature of about 46 degrees, according to the National Weather Service.

The low tonight will be around 44 and rain is likely in the overnight hours .

The post Daily Update: Riverhead Town Supervisor sworn in; economic development grants awarded appeared first on Suffolk Times.

The Times Review Media Group 2019 People of the Year

$
0
0

Podcast sponsored by:

Each year since 1987, our company has selected individuals and groups in the communities we cover and honored them with our People of the Year awards.

The program has expanded over the years and now includes a dozen winners each year, always announced on the first Thursday of the following year.

The selections, which include not just our overall people of the year for each of our newspapers and websites, but also several selections in community leadership, public service, education, business and sports.

Each of the winners will be honored at a special ceremony we host in March. You can read about their accomplishments in this week’s newspapers as well as in online posts that will be published throughout the week.

Here’s the full list of this year’s winners as well as a schedule for when their profiles will be published online. Pick up a copy of the paper on newsstands now or check back each day for the next post.

The Suffolk Times

Person of the Year: Father Joe Staudt

Businessperson of the Year: Marc LaMaina (Jan. 7)

Public Servant of the Year: Kevin Webster (Jan. 6)

Community Leader of the Year: Cathy Demeroto (Jan. 3)

Educator of the Year: Christine Schade (Jan. 4)

Sports Person of the Year: Skip Gehring (Jan. 5)

Riverhead News-Review

Person of the Year: Det. Brian Simonsen

Businessperson of the Year: Beth Hanlon (Jan. 4)

Public Servant of the Year: Judge Allen Smith (Jan. 3)

Community Leaders of the Year: The McMorris Family (Jan. 6)

Educator of the Year: Sal Loverde (Jan. 7)

Sports Person of the Year: Ethan Greenidge (Jan. 5)

Shelter Island Reporter

Person of the Year: Mary Kanarvogel (Jan. 4)

Northforker.com

People of the Year: Tony Spiridakis and Lisa Gillooly

The post The Times Review Media Group 2019 People of the Year appeared first on Suffolk Times.


The Work We Do: Chris Hayes, Vintage Mattituck Wine and Spirits

$
0
0

Brought to you by:

My name is Chris Hayes. I’m one of the managers at Vintage Mattituck. 

I’ve been here for five years since we opened in 2014, but I’ve been working for this family for 12 years now in the wine business.

I actually used to work at Stone Creek Inn in East Quogue. I went to school for culinary. I was in the same restaurant business. One of my old managers was a sommelier at Stone Creek Inn. He kind of saw my work ethic and took me in and moved me into this business.

For me, since I come from a culinary background and have a wine background, it’s just fun for me … when someone comes in and they [say], ‘I’m having something for dinner, what wine goes well with that?’ And I pair the wine with the food, and I get someone to come back the next day and they say it was perfect. The feedback like that is one of my favorite things.

I’ve always been good with my hands … Food was just the easiest choice to go into. You have the most creativity. Whatever you want, you just throw together. Hopefully it tastes good.

Most people like to just stick with the same wines over and over again because they trust it and it’s kind of tradition. But wine is the same thing — you can try something new from a different area you’ve never been to and see what the styles are and see the other flavors.

So, we just got a new van. We do deliveries anywhere from Shelter Island to Aquebogue. We go every day — a few times a day, actually. So, we’re trying to make it easiest for everybody if they’re having a party or don’t want to leave because they’re cooking dinner — we’ll come out to you.

In general, we do offer a large selection of local wines and wines from around the world, but we do offer liquor, also.

We try to carry a little bit of everybody. Since everyone’s so friendly … we want to carry everybody’s wines.

We want to feel like more of a mom-and-pop, family-run business … We’ve always been kind of family-friendly, easy-going for everybody. Everyone enjoys that a little bit more.

I believe Vintage opened Memorial Day 2014. We were half a store at the time. Two years later, Subway was next to us and they ended up leaving. We knocked down the wall and expanded and made it into a proper store.

The post The Work We Do: Chris Hayes, Vintage Mattituck Wine and Spirits appeared first on Suffolk Times.

Southold Town officials sworn in at inauguration ceremony

$
0
0

The swearing-in ceremonies at Southold Town Hall Thursday included the longest-tenured supervisor in town history and the first Democrat elected to the Town Board in a decade. 

Supervisor Scott Russell, who was sworn into his fifth term in office, welcomed elected officials and their families to the standing-room only ceremony led by Suffolk County Judge James Hudson.

As she was sworn in, Sarah Nappa became the first Democrat in nearly a decade to join the Town Board.

“I’m excited to get to work,” she said Thursday.

Incumbent councilwoman Jill Doherty, who was appointed to serve as Mr. Russell’s deputy supervisor, also took her oath of office.

“[Ms. Doherty] is very knowledgeable,” Mr. Russell said in an interview after the ceremony. “She brings a great deal of experience to the table not just as a town board member but as a former trustee.”

The inaugural ceremony welcomed two more newcomers: Democratic Southold Justice Dan Ross and Republican Tax Receiver Kelly Fogarty. Incumbent assessor Rich Caggiano and trustees Glenn Goldsmith and Nick Krupski were also sworn in.

Russell Ackroyd of the North Fork United Methodist Church offered words of prayer for the elected officials, calling for them to encourage one another and work together despite today’s political climate.

Congressman Lee Zeldin (R-Shirley) and Suffolk County Legislator Al Krupski (D-Cutchogue) also attended the ceremony.

In his remarks, Mr. Russell welcomed Ms. Nappa to the board. “I believe we have a lot in common and I’m looking forward to working with her,” he said. “I think we’re going to get a lot done together.”

At a reorganizational meeting held ahead of the swearing in, Ms. Nappa was appointed as liaison to several committees, including deer management, helicopter noise and transportation. Though she had sought to serve as liaison on the agricultural advisory committee, Mr. Russell said for the time being, he would take on the role previously held by Bill Ruland. “There are ongoing issues that we want to keep the ball moving on,” he said, but noted that Ms. Nappa — and any board members — are welcome to attend any committee meetings.

The supervisor also gave a nod to allow Ms. Nappa to resurrect the water advisory committee by appointing her as liaison. “[The WAC] had fizzled out, so I’m excited to get that going again and finding some good people to work on that,” she said, adding that she’d get involved with the agricultural advisory committee. “They have important work to do as well and I’d love to assist them with my experience,” she said.

Several board members will also take on new committees this year, including Bob Ghosio on the economic development committee and Jill Doherty on the Housing Advisory Commission.

In his closing remarks, the supervisor described the seven others sworn into office Thursday as “great people that are going to dedicate themselves,” to the town, regardless of political party. “Southold town isn’t about politics. It’s putting that outside the door when you come in and working together, working in collaboration on behalf of all the residents,” he said.

Following November’s election, Mr. Russell indicated that his fifth term in office would be his last. After Thursday’s ceremony, he confirmed that he will not seek a sixth term. “Sooner or later, there’s going to be a need for new perspectives and new leadership,” Mr. Russell said. “I feel I have some more to contribute, but ultimately the position needs to be left in new and capable hands.”

tsmith@timesreview.com

The post Southold Town officials sworn in at inauguration ceremony appeared first on Suffolk Times.

2019 Community Leader of the Year: Cathy Demeroto

$
0
0

For over 50 years, the mission of Community Action Southold Town has been to serve low-income families and individuals on the North Fork.

Under the supervision of executive director Cathy Demeroto, CAST has made strides in pursuing its goal of identifying and serving those in need. This year, the organization created a mobile food pantry, hosted a hunger forum and continued its education programs, all the while supplying food, clothing and employment to community members.

Ms. Demeroto, a Long Island native, has dedicated herself to helping people at and below the poverty level since she took on the administrative role in 2017. She has continued to bring attention to hunger and poverty issues on the North Fork — which is why The Suffolk Times has selected her as our 2019 Community Leader of the Year.

“She’s a ball of energy,” Southold Town government liaison Denis Noncarrow said. “She has a good pulse of what the needs [of the community] are and she’s a fireball for getting those folks what they need. Absolutely amazing.”

The CAST on Wheels mobile food pantry was unveiled Dec. 12, and will enable CAST staff to travel throughout Southold Town to address food insecurity. The van will begin operation in January 2020.

Mr. Noncarrow feels the mobile food pantry will benefit people in the community who often fall under the radar.

“Cathy knows that they’re there, and has a real heart for those people,” Mr. Noncarrow said.

This year Ms. Demeroto narrowed her focus on the organization’s capital campaign and its search for a larger facility to operate in.

“She’s energetic, she’s been extraordinary,” American Beech owner Brent Pelton said. “She’s put together a team of really dedicated, knowledgeable employees who are really committed to their work in helping neighbors in need.”

Mr. Pelton and Ms. Demeroto spearheaded the capital campaign to find a new building that would provide additional space for educational programs and teaching resources.

The duo has also worked together for the past three years to put together the annual Blast for CAST Gala. This year’s event brought in more donations than years past, Mr. Pelton said. They also joined forces on Greenport’s Winter Wonderland holiday decor competition.

“She brings this energy and vitality to the community, and I’m so grateful to have her on the North Fork,” Mr. Pelton said.

Ms. Demeroto took the reigns on organizing CAST’s inaugural Hunger Forum in October, which featured a screening of the 2013 documentary “A Place at the Table” and a panel discussion on hunger in America featuring filmmaker Lori Silverbush; chef Tom Colicchio and others.

Greenport Harbor Brewing Company co-founder and Greenport Business Improvement District president Rich Vandenburgh said that through the forum and other fundraisers and programs, Ms. Demeroto was able to make hunger more relevant in the context of our society.

“Those people that are at or below the poverty borderline, they’re kind of the hidden population that really keeps a lot of the wheels of the town, agriculture and industry moving,” Mr. Vandenburgh said. “So being able to understand what CAST’s mission has done to support that part of our community, it’s just kind of an unsung hero type of a role.”

And Ms. Demeroto has done a “fantastic job” responding to the increased need in Southold Town, he said.

“She just has some extra eye that these people are out there and is constantly thinking about them,” said Mr. Vandenburgh, who served on the CAST board beginning June 2018.

knalepinski@timesreview.com

Previous Winners
*The award was previously called Civic Person of the Year

2018—Rev. Dr. Ann Van Cleef
2017 — Mindy Ryan
2016 — Valerie Shelby and Sonia Spar
2015 — Don Fisher
2014 — Designer show house organizers
2013 — Ron and Doris McGreevy
2012 — Group for the East End
2011 — American Legion Post restoration volunteers
2010 — Peggy Murphy
2009 — North Fork Community Theater
2008 — Lori Luscher
2007 — Committee for Phil McKnight
2006 — Relay for Life organizers
2005 — Merle Levine
2004 — Christine Roache
2003 — Barbara Taylor
2002 — Kim Tetrault
2001 — Elinor May
2000 — Mark Miller
1999 — George Hubbard Sr.
1998 —Ed Siegmann
1997 — Freddie Wachsberger
1996 — Shelley Scoggin
1995 — Craig Richter
1994 — Stewardship Task Force
1993 — Walt Krupski
1992 — The Eklunds
1991 — Bill Grigonis
1990 — Merlon Wiggin
1989 — Jeanne Marriner
1988 — Ray Nine
1987 — Bessie Swann

The post 2019 Community Leader of the Year: Cathy Demeroto appeared first on Suffolk Times.

Residents question decision to raise Mattituck superintendent’s salary

$
0
0

Despite a 2% annual salary hike as called for in her contract, Mattituck-Cutchogue School District superintendent Jill Gierasch saw her salary rise by 11.4% this school year — which has angered some community members.

Ms. Gierasch was hired as the district’s superintendent in June 2018. She received a base salary of $204,321 in the 2018-19 academic year, according to data from the New York State Department of Education.

As per a contract between the district and the superintendent, the superintendent was expected to obtain a 2% salary hike at the beginning of the 2019-2020 academic year. However, in September 2019, the school board approved a contract amendment which increased her salary to $229,100 between July 2019 to June 2020, according to district records. The amendment states that her base salary is inclusive of the 2% annual raise. The amendment added an extra 9.4% to her salary — which increased the total to 11.4%.

The contract also provides the superintendent with an additional $4,500 as reimbursement for incidental expenses, including cell phone use and travel.

School board president Barbara Wheaton said in a statement Dec. 17 that, based on the contractual agreement between the superintendent and the school board, salary negotiations take place on an annual basis.

Ms. Wheaton said that during the 2018-19 academic year, Ms. Gierasch had one of the lowest salaries for superintendents across Long Island.

“…The superintendent’s salary was ranked 110 lowest out of the 116 superintendents serving school districts on Long Island,” she wrote. “After analyzing several factors, it was decided that the superintendent’s salary was not commensurate with the responsibilities of the position and the salary was adjusted accordingly.”

She said that the board “fully supports the efforts of the superintendent” and they stand behind the salary hike.

But the salary increase has sparked criticism from some community members who say the increase is high for a superintendent.

Lauren Gilbert, mother of two boys at Cutchogue East Elementary School, said she believes some of the frustration stems from the 2% annual increase built into the contract. She said “with the turmoil the school has been in for the past year and a half” regarding teacher suspensions as well as moving staff, she feels “it was negligent of the BOE to award a raise at this time.”

Former teacher of 24 years and former PTA president Pat Arslanian of Mattituck, who spoke at a Dec. 12 school board meeting, said the increase was “puzzling” to her since the administrator has only worked for one year.

“As a taxpayer and a former teacher, I’m concerned that after one year’s time — instead of the board just giving the 2% guaranteed contractual increase — that they felt the need to give her so much in that one year,” Ms. Arslanian said.

While she said she couldn’t speak to the actions of the administrator, she added that the district’s teachers are “the backbone of the district,” and the funds could have been directed toward them, administrators or district staff.

Mattituck-Cutchogue Teachers Association president Tom Farrell said the association is hopeful that the school board will discuss the contract with association members, but he did not provide additional comment.

Former superintendent Anne Smith was appointed in June 2014 and received $190,000 annually with a 1.75% salary increase per year. An amendment to her contract extended her term to July 2019, though she retired in July 2018. A second amendment gave her a 2% annual salary increase.

James McKenna, who was appointed superintendent of the district in January 2006, earned $143,800 in his first year of employment, according to records with the district. From July 2007 to June 2008, his base salary increased to $147,175 and to $150,634 from July 2008 to June 2009.

Ms. Gierasch began her career in 1989 as an elementary teacher in the William Floyd School District and later became an elementary teacher in the Bayport-Blue Point School District before beginning her administrative career. Prior to joining Mattituck, she served as the deputy superintendent of the Plainview-Old Bethpage School District since 2009.

knalepinski@timesreview.com

The post Residents question decision to raise Mattituck superintendent’s salary appeared first on Suffolk Times.

Southold Blotter: DWI, criminal possession of stolen property arrests

$
0
0

Sheryl Davis, 51, of Greenport was arrested Dec. 20 around 11:30 a.m. for petit larceny and criminal possession of stolen property in the fifth degree.

Police were dispatched after receiving a report of a female attempting to break into parked vehicles in the First Street area. They determined Ms. Davis to be the suspect and found while investigating that she was in possession of items stolen from Colonial Drug Store. Police determined that Ms. Davis was also responsible for having stolen items from Mattituck CVS in an incident reported on Nov. 30 and was charged with an additional count of petit larceny.

• Nicole Conway, 39, was arrested Saturday, Dec. 21, around 8:52 p.m. for driving while intoxicated, aggravated DWI, operating an unregistered vehicle and for moving from a lane in an unsafe manner. Ms. Conway was headed westbound along Route 48 in Cutchogue when, police said, she swerved over the white line. Police determined Ms. Conway to be intoxicated.

• Four people were injured in a two-car collision in Mattituck last Monday around 5:37 p.m. A Mattituck woman turning left from North Farmer Communications into the eastbound lane of Route 25 did not see the vehicle of a Mattituck man who was traveling westbound on Route 25, subsequently pulling out in front of his vehicle. The man told police he was unable to avoid hitting the woman’s vehicle and struck the driver’s side of her rear passenger door. Both drivers and vehicle occupants were transported by members of the Mattituck Fire Department to Peconic Bay Medical Center with minor injuries.

• A Jamesport man reported Saturday around 11:51 a.m. that his $3,000 Swarovski green spotting scope and $250 tripod, both of which he left unattended on the corner of Mill Lane and Second Street in Peconic around 9 a.m. Saturday, had been taken. The man reported seeing only two people in the area, walking dogs. A detective was notified.

• Members of the Southold Fire Department extinguished a fire caused by a closed damper in a lit fireplace in a Southold residence Friday around 3:56 p.m. A Southold woman at the home told police she lit a fire in the fireplace, when her home began filling up with smoke and her fire alarm activated. She said she did not realize the damper in the fireplace was closed, causing smoke to fill the house. The fire was extinguished, the damper was opened and smoke was cleared from the residence, according to police. A minor amount of smoke damage was reported. Police advised the woman to exercise greater caution next time she lights a fire.

The post Southold Blotter: DWI, criminal possession of stolen property arrests appeared first on Suffolk Times.

2019 Educator of the Year: Christine Schade

$
0
0

The packed Hofstra Arena fell silent as judges calculated the final scores for each team at the FIRST Robotics SBPLI Long Island Regional competition at Hofstra University. When the judges announced the scores, Christine Schade’s eyes filled with tears.

First place.

Students from Southold/Greenport High School robotics team R.I.C.E. 870 exploded into cheers, joyously yelling about their second regional competition win in one season. Parents, teachers and school administrators cheered them on.

Earlier this year, Ms. Schade, who is both team adviser and a longtime math teacher at Southold High School, led the robotics team to victory in March at both the SBPLI Long Island Regional competition and the semifinals at the Finger Lakes Robotics competition at Rochester Institute of Technology.

As adviser, Ms. Schade has improved communication on the team, helped establish the program as a joint venture between the Southold and Greenport districts and allowed participating students to explore their individual interests.

For these reasons, Ms. Schade has been selected as our 2019 Suffolk Times Educator of the Year.

Team co-adviser Bob Gammon joined the team roughly five years ago alongside Ms. Schade, when roughly 23 students were enrolled. At that time, the club was active only three months of the year.

Since she took over, Ms. Schade has reorganized team R.I.C.E. 870 into separate departments —such as media, build and finance — which allows its nearly 50 student members to hone in on their personal interests, Mr. Gammon said.

“She’s incorporating more real-world skills into the club,” he said.

Some members came from Greenport schools, a concept presented by joint Superintendent David Gamberg, Mr. Gammon said. Ms. Schade was eager to welcome them.

“When [the idea] was brought to us, there was no apprehension,” Mr. Gammon said. “She was like, ‘Yes, let’s get more kids involved.’ ”

All the while, Ms. Schade has worked as a math teacher in Southold for over 25 years. This year, she’s juggling three sections of geometry and one section each of accounting and Introduction to Coding. Her passion for academics, school board member Judi Fouchet said, has not dwindled.

“Robotics can be very stressful, especially for her position,” she said. “To me, the crux of who she is, the minute a student approaches her, she smiles, her eyes light up and she’s like, ‘What’s up?’ A student never feels like they’re adding to her stress, or can even see it — because she’s so devoted to how she can help them.”

Ms. Fouchet, who has volunteered with the robotics team since 2005, said some nights the crew will work on robots until 10 p.m. — and both Ms. Schade and Mr. Gammon are always present, making sure that all students complete their homework and eat dinner.

“Her pride is always in the kids, no matter what they do and what they accomplish,” Ms. Fouchet said. “She’s tough, but they trust her and, more importantly, their families trust her.”

The club is now active nearly 11 months of the year and is most busy in January. That month is crunch time for R.I.C.E. 870 and robotics teams around the country, as that is when officials reveal what task a robot must complete during the year’s competition.

Shortly after that announcement, if the team makes the playoffs, Ms. Schade remains focused and invites sponsors and parents to the upcoming competitions. It’s stressful to nail down travel plans for those events, Mr. Gammon said, but she manages to keep it all running smoothly.

“Her organizational skills are second to none,” he said. “I got the team with the good robots, and she got the team with the incredible planning skills.”

Ms. Fouchet said Ms. Schade is devoted to her students — and to ensuring that they fit into the team.

“What sticks out to me is her never-ending smile and focus on students when they need her,” she said. “I’ve seen it a hundred times. That is something that has always amazed me.”

Photo caption: Christine Schade, a longtime Southold High School math teacher and adviser to the Southold/Greenport High School robotics team, at a recent team meeting. (Credit: Kate Nalepinski)

2018: Rosemary McGoey
2017: Sarah Benjamin
2016: Emily Gundersen
2015: John Roslak
2014: Phillip ‘Skip’ Munisteri
2013: Al Edwards
2012: Daniel Goldfarb
2011: Major William Grigonis
2010: Jean Dempsey
2009: Robert Feger
2008: Charles Kozora
2007: Kathy Williams
2006: Dr. Stuart Rachlin
2005: Mattituck Fund for Students
2004: Ron McEvoy
2003: Chris Gallagher
2002: Brigitte Gibbons
2001: Barbara Ackerman
2000: Ruth Yoskovich
1999: Tom Brennan
1998: Peggy Dickerson
1997: Elizabeth Goldsmith
1996: Lee Ellwood
1995: Linda Gates
1994: Poppy Johnson
1993: Peggy Murphy
1992: Patricia Wall
1991: Charles Nephew
1990: Dennis Claire
1989: Bruno Brauner
1988: Winifred Billard
1987: Jim Christy

knalepinski@timesreview.com

The post 2019 Educator of the Year: Christine Schade appeared first on Suffolk Times.

Boys Basketball: Change isn’t easy for Porters

$
0
0

Change is the name of the game in high school boys basketball. Players come and go. That’s the nature of the beast.

Greenport knows that as well as anybody. It was just last March when the Porters were New York State Class C semifinalists, holders of a shiny 21-3 record.

But a new season has brought new challenges. Stiff challenges.

Greenport has lost eight of its top 10 players from last season and doesn’t have much in the way of depth. For the new players, this has been on-the-job training.

With Greenport’s 69-58 non-league loss at Hampton Bays High School Saturday, the Porters suffered their eighth defeat in 10 games.

Basketball can be humbling. When the pendulum swings, it can really swing.

“Yeah, it’s definitely been different,” sophomore guard Ev Corwin said. “A lot of it is trying to build our chemistry. I think that’s one problem that we have. We don’t have the greatest chemistry yet, but I think that will come over time.”

Corwin and senior shooting guard Joshua Santacroce are the only remaining players who were on the varsity team for the entire 2018-19 season. Two sophomore guards, Jahmeek Freeman and Kevin Azama, had varsity experience entering this season. For the others, though, this is all new.

Even the team’s most experienced players, Santacroce and Corwin, are learning how to deal with changes.

“Big time,” Santacroce said. “We went from being role players to having to be leaders.”

Greenport coach Ev Corwin — father of the younger Corwin — likes it that his players don’t seem intimidated by the competition. “It’s a young group and we’ve played some good teams,” he said. “We played Southampton and Central Islip, Mattituck twice. Mattituck’s got a good team this year. The one thing about these guys is they really haven’t hung their heads during these bad losses.”

Hampton Bays (9-1 overall) represented a test. The sharpshooting Baymen showed their quality, breaking the game open with a 17-0 run for a 30-11 lead. Greenport couldn’t recover.

Lucas Brown had 11 points in the first quarter, 16 by halftime and finished with 19 to go with nine rebounds and five assists.

Hampton Bays comes at teams different ways. Jaden Ottati (16 points, four three-pointers), Jonathan Salas (13 points) and Jack McNamara (12 points, five assists) also hit double figures as the Baymen shot 51.1%.

Hampton Bays has proven it can rise to the challenge in crunch time. The Baymen have had two overtime wins, a triple-overtime triumph and one victory on a 65-footer at the buzzer by Steven Mora. Also, Ottati went 9-for-9 in three-pointers in a game earlier this season and McNamara sank 20 of 20 free throws in another game.

“We’ve had so many different guys step up in big spots,” Hampton Bays coach Pete Meehan said. “We just talked about being 9 and 1 and how easily it could be 4 and 6 or 5 and 5. There’s a fine line between winning and losing basketball games.”

It’s a line the Porters are hoping to cross.

Santacroce did his best, canning six three-pointers as part of a 20-point effort. Jalen Stilley added 11 points. Corwin turned in an all-around game with 10 points, eight steals, seven assists and three rebounds.

Rebounding and turnovers have been an issue for Greenport this season, but not so much on Saturday. The Porters held a 32-28 edge on the boards, with 11 rebounds coming from Donovan Lawrence.

“With a young team, we turn it over too much,” Coach Corwin said before the game. “We’re having an issue on the boards. That’s probably our biggest issue right now. Teams are just killing us on the boards. I haven’t had to worry about that in a long time.”

Greenport was coming off a 74-42 trouncing of Bridgehampton Friday, with a career-high 24 points from Corwin and 22 from Freeman. “We just needed a win,” said Coach Corwin.

Greenport started three sophomores and had an eighth-grader, Patrick Brennan, come off the bench.

“The best thing about sophomores is they turn into juniors and then they turn into seniors, so that’s a team that’s only going to get better,” Meehan said. “I saw [Coach] Ev said that … He said they’ll be back, and I believe him. They will be back. They have some parts. They’ve played a tough non-league schedule — tougher than us, tougher than us — and that only makes you better.”

Change is bound to happen.

bliepa@timesreview.com

Photo caption: Greenport’s Jahmeek Freeman was called for a charging foul while trying to pass Hampton Bays’ Jaden Ottati. (Credit: Robert O’Rourk)

The post Boys Basketball: Change isn’t easy for Porters appeared first on Suffolk Times.


Editorial: Do our synagogues now need full-time security?

$
0
0

The recent machete attack on Hasidic Jews at a rabbi’s home in Monsey, N.Y., was another reminder of the remarkably ugly times we are living in and yet another domestic terror attack in our country.

Earlier this month, two people attacked a kosher market in Jersey City, killing three. And in October of last year, a rabid anti-Semite bent on murder shot his way into the Tree of Life Congregation in Pittsburgh during services, killing 11 and wounding six.

The Monsey attack stunned Rabbi Gadi Capela of Congregation Tifereth Israel in Greenport and Rabbi Michael Rascoe of Temple Israel in Riverhead, but neither was surprised. Violent attacks on Jews have sharply increased in America, as they have in Europe. The Unite the Right march in Virginia in 2017 featured people shouting “The Jews will not replace us” and carrying Nazi flags and torches. Rabbi Rascoe had a personal connection to Tree of Life: He was born and raised in Pittsburgh and his parents were married in that temple.

“Attacks on Jews are getting very common these days,” said Rabbi Rascoe. “And I am of an age where I didn’t think I would ever see violence like this. This isn’t to say I have not experienced anti-Semitism. When I was younger people would say things, but nobody was attacked. This is all new and extremely troubling.”

In Greenport, Rabbi Capela said he and his congregation must now have a conversation about security. “I was with my congregation when I heard about the Monsey attack,” he said. “I watched it on the evening news. This was an escalation since the attacker went into a private home. It’s one thing to secure houses of worship; it’s another thing to secure every Jewish home and every rabbi’s home.”

In both Riverhead and Southold, town police have reached out to the temples to reassure the rabbis they are there to help and offer added protection. Police in Riverhead will increase patrols around Temple Israel, particularly during services, Rabbi Rascoe said; Southold’s chief, Martin Flatley, said in an email “we step up our patrols of our two houses of worship during these periods.

“Yes, this year is dramatically different with the most recent acts of violence against the Jewish community and we remind our officers of their responsibilities for securing these locations…” he added.

The sight of a police car sitting in the parking lot of a North Fork synagogue will become normal. Both rabbis made the point that their neighbors must also help out. “I would be encouraging our neighbors to be vigilant about this,” said Rabbi Capela. “If we learn from history, we know some Germans did not want to give up their Jews.

“But America has to answer some questions: Do we agree with this rhetoric and name calling? Or are these people on the fringes? We can’t slide any farther back. This has to stop,” he said.

The post Editorial: Do our synagogues now need full-time security? appeared first on Suffolk Times.

Southold School District joins opposition of mandatory HPV vaccine

$
0
0

Southold School District has joined the list of several North Fork school districts who have publicly opposed the potential amendment to Section 2164 of the state public health law, which mandates a human papillomavirus vaccine for all public school students.

In a letter dated Dec. 18, 2019, from Southold’s five school board members to New York State Gov. Andrew Cuomo, Senator Ken LaValle and Assemblyman Anthony Palumbo, board members said that they “fervently object to this proposed legislation” that would immunize all children born after Jan. 2, 2009.

The letter comes after one family in the district expressed concern to board members about the mandate. Superintendent David Gamberg said in a previous interview that the board has been working to consider “how they would like to proceed with these concerns in mind.”

If the legislation is approved by the Senate, it could take effect Sept. 1, 2021.

The letter states that “HPV can only be transmitted through sexual contact and poses no threat to the school-aged population at large.”

“To require that children be vaccinated against a sexually-transmitted disease or be denied entrance to school is unconscionable,” the letter states.

The HPV vaccine, which prevents certain cancers, is typically given to children around the age of 11 or 12. The revised bill states that HPV is “an incredibly common sexually transmitted infection that can be passed even when an infected person is asymptomatic, and can cause genital warts or cancer.”

Only parents and guardians are responsible for their children’s health care and education, the Southold letter noted.

“It is a parent’s/guardian’s right to decide … what is appropriate for their children in regards to vaccinations beyond the extensive list of communicable disease vaccinations already required for school attendance.”

Last year’s amendment to the law, which prohibited the use of religious exemptions for vaccination requirements, sparked concern from parents in the Riverhead Central School District. School board members in Riverhead and Shoreham-Wading River districts have already opposed the HPV mandate.

In neighboring Mattituck-Cutchogue district, board members are also working to reach out to local legislators, district superintendent Jill Gierasch said.

“The district has heard from several parents and we feel our elected officials can have the greatest impact knowing there is opposition coming from our school community,” she said in a previous interview. “As this is a legal issue, we want to encourage parents to reach out to our local legislators to voice their concern.”

The bill is sponsored by Senator Brad Hoylman (D-Manhattan), who sponsored legislation eliminating the religious exemption for vaccines for schoolchildren.

The HPV vaccine is mandated for public school students in Rhode Island, Virginia and the District of Columbia.

knalepinski@timesreview.com

The post Southold School District joins opposition of mandatory HPV vaccine appeared first on Suffolk Times.

2019 Sportsperson of the Year: Skip Gehring

$
0
0

The praise coming from those who know him is as generous as the man himself.

Generosity sprouts from Skip Gehring along with coaching wisdom. The Greenport/Southold high school girls basketball coach is generous in spirit and deeds.

Much of Gehring’s generosity emerges behind the scenes, without fanfare, the way he prefers it. He and his wife of 28 years, Brenda, have made large gifts and donations to schools and causes over the years. Among other things, they have paid for improvements to facilities, bought uniforms for teams and golf carts for schools and funded a new summer girls basketball league.

As a coach, Gehring is also giving of his time, going above and beyond the call of duty in devoting his free time to working with athletes.

“I don’t do it for the pat on the back,” he said. “I really don’t. I’m trying to teach the kids if you’re going to do something, do it. Be passionate about what you’re doing.”

Gehring, 60, of New Suffolk, has given and given. Now he is a recipient — of The Suffolk Times 2019 Sports Person of the Year award.

A former Navy man, successful businessman, committed coach and family man, Gehring has been through a wide range of life experiences, with sports being a central theme. He played basketball and baseball at Chaminade High School before going on to play baseball for Villanova. Baseball was Gehring’s first love. He played semipro baseball and to this day still plays catcher in a men’s league. When Gehring was in the Navy (five years on active duty, three years in the reserves), he played for a base team that went up against minor-league teams. He played against Darryl Strawberry and Dwight Gooden.

“On the active duty, I’ve seen some nasty things when I was in the military, combat areas, stuff like that,” he said. “So, you come back, you want to give back. You feel fortunate enough to be alive. I lost a lot of friends.”

Gehring also boxed during his military days and it was an opportunity to offer boxing instruction at a gym that began his immersion into coaching. He has coached at numerous colleges and high schools. At the high school level, he has coached baseball, basketball and softball. His coaching career has taken him to, among other places, Bishop McGann-Mercy, Southold, Greenport and Dolgeville, N.Y., where he will coach baseball this coming spring. He ran a sports facility, Fundamental Sports Training in Westbury, that opened in 2010 before he sold it in 2015.

Greenport’s head coach Skip Gehring directs his defense against Smithtown Christian. (Credit: Daniel De Mato)

All five of Gehring’s children are current or former college athletes and his four daughters are all girls/women’s basketball coaches. Kati works with her father as coach of the Greenport/Southold junior varsity team, Tori and Dani coach the St. Anthony’s JV team and Cari is an assistant coach at Brooklyn College. His son, Greg, is an All-Conference catcher for Anna Maria College (Mass.).

Skip Gehring said what he enjoys most about coaching is spending time with young people. Life lessons come with his basketball practices.

“Every day there’s 24 hours,” he said. “So, at their age, eight hours a day is sleep, eight hours a day is school. So, what you do with that balance of the eight hours of the day is what defines who you are or what you become. So, what I really enjoy is teaching kids how to maximize those eight hours that’s left over in terms of becoming the person that they want to become.”

Gehring’s popularity among his players is unquestioned. Freshman guard Skylar Mysliborski said playing for Gehring is “the best thing that could have happened to me, honestly. I’m honored to play for him. He’s changed me. He’s changed the way I play. More than just basketball, he gives me great life advice. He gives me advice on everything, really. He’s just an amazing man and coach and everything in between. I love him so much.”

Sophomore guard Adrine Demirciyan said Gehring is “tough, but he wants us to win and he’ll do anything for us at any time and he’ll push us if we push ourselves … He has made me the player I am today.”

Gehring puts “heart and soul” into his work and looking after his players, Greenport athletic director Chris Golden said. “They know that he cares about them, much more than just a game. They know he cares about them as people and is genuinely interested in their well-being.”

What does Gehring get the biggest kick out of in regards to coaching?

“Overachieving,” he said. “Last year as an example. I loved it. No one expected us to have more than two wins. We went all the way into the last week of the season and we were still in the running for the playoffs. I loved that.”

One of the obvious changes Gehring has noticed over the years has been the pressure coaches face from parents regarding playing time, positions, strategy, etc. How bad has it gotten?

“It’s gotten very bad,” he said, “enough that I may call it quits after this year because it’s been that bad and it’s very, very hurtful because, from my point of view — I’m not saying it’s not hurtful to other coaches, I’m only talking from my point of view — because I am so passionate about what I do and genuinely care about the kids and put a lot of time and effort into it during the summers. I’ve been [in Greenport] three, four, five days a week. And this is the truth: I drive up to Dolgeville, I’ll train kids five hours up there, I’ll take the car back, drive back and train kids back down here. And when parents make derogatory comments, it hurts, it genuinely hurts.”

Gehring’s generosity matches his passion. Where does that generosity come from?

His late father, George Gregory, who started the textile company Gehring Tricot Corporation, which Gehring now runs as president and CEO.

“My father was absolutely the most generous person I’ve ever met in my life, and I’m not just saying that because [he] was my father,” Gehring said. “If he had literally the last penny in his pocket, he would give it up.”

Gehring saw the result of his father’s generosity after the elder Gehring was killed in Manhattan when an out-of-control bus went over a sidewalk and struck him Dec. 27, 2001. The funeral was held in Baldwin at St. Christopher’s Church, which holds about 1,800 people. “Literally, people could not fit in the church — could not fit in,” Gehring said. “People were standing outside. It was that jam-packed.”

.At the wakes, Gehring heard story after story that he never heard before about some of his father’s good deeds.

Years later, Gehring continues to bring that generous spirit to his coaching.

“It’s not just a labor of love,” he said, “but to be 60 years old and have a real purpose still to your life, that’s the blessing.”

Top photo caption: Greenport’s head coach, Skip Gehring talks to his players during a time out against Smithtown Christian. (Credit: Daniel De Mato)

bliepa@timesreview.com

Previous Winners

2018: Frank Massa
2017: Grace Syron
2016: Phil Reed
2015: Mattituck boys baseball team
2014: Mat Litchhult

The post 2019 Sportsperson of the Year: Skip Gehring appeared first on Suffolk Times.

2019 Public Servant of the Year: Kevin Webster

$
0
0

Seated in the bleachers at Floyd L. Maines Veterans Memorial Arena in Binghamton, as the Greenport boys basketball team tipped off its biggest game of the season, Kevin Webster smoothly began his introduction. 

“All right, you are looking live at the Final Four here, Class C between Cooperstown and Greenport,” he said to begin the broadcast. “…And good morning, I’m Kevin Webster along with Tommy Tsavaras and we’re going to try to bring this broadcast to you for as long as we can.”

A few seconds after tip-off, Greenport’s star guard Ahkee Anderson swiped the ball from a Cooperstown player and raced the other way for a driving layup and the game’s first points.

Mr. Webster’s voice quickly rose as he described the action.

“Hard foul and one! Strong finish!” he said.

The live video streamed on Facebook of the Porters’ state semifinals game with Mr. Webster on the play-by-play was the product of the Webster Sports Network. Beginning in late 2017 when Mr. Webster teamed up with students at GPO TV, Greenport High School’s student-run broadcasting service, fans of local sports teams have been treated to a steady stream of live game broadcasts. Mr. Webster takes the lead on play-by-play, bringing student-athletes’ games directly into the phone or tablet of fans anywhere in the world.

“Let’s go Porters from Jamaica, WI,” one fan commented on the Porters’ broadcast. “Watching from West Palm Beach,” another fan wrote.

Mr. Webster, shown here in 2012, is also a longtime town assessor. (Suffolk Times file photo)

As a lifelong sports enthusiast whose day job is a Southold Town Assessor, Mr. Webster volunteers his time to conduct the play-by-play on game broadcasts. What started primarily with basketball games and has since grown to feature soccer as well.

“The Greenport community is very supportive of our athletic teams,” Greenport athletic director Chris Golden said last year. “Kevin has now provided a means by which people who can’t attend athletic contests can watch, and comment during his broadcasts via the live-stream.”

With just a phone, tripod and Facebook, Mr. Webster, 49, created a platform to expand access to local high school sports. For his volunteer efforts, dedication to his community and unbridled enthusiasm for student-athletes, The Suffolk Times selected Mr. Webster as its Public Servant of the Year.

Supervisor Scott Russell said he’s worked alongside Mr. Webster for many years.

“Not only does he display his dedication to Southold as a public servant, he also displays his deep commitment to his family and to this community,” he said in an email. “He dedicates himself to the youth by his work in youth sports programs and is involved many community activities. His wit, his charm and his graciousness brings joy to everyone.”

Giving back to the community is at the heart of Mr. Webster’s life. The East Marion man volunteers with the East Marion Fire Department and was elected as a town assessor for the first time in 2005. It’s a position he’s held ever since, taking on a mostly behind-the-scenes role in town government where he works to keep the inventory of more than 18,000 parcels up to date based on changes either through additions to a property or demolitions.

Mr. Webster also volunteers with the East Marion Fire Department. (Credit: Grant Parpan)

Charles Sanders works alongside Mr. Webster as an assessor. He said Mr. Webster has created an inviting and open environment in the office where people can walk right in and speak with an assessor. That doesn’t always happen in assessor offices in other towns, he said.

“He has a very positive rapport with the community,” Mr. Sanders said. “His giving back to the community makes him very approachable.”

A graduate of Ithaca College, Mr. Webster moved back to Orient and started working in the fall of 1992 in the assessment, appraisal and real estate field. He is currently chairman of the Board of Assessors Office.

Mr. Sanders pointed out how Mr. Webster — who’s known for his impeccable memory — has led the office’s digital upgrades, a process that began after a flood in the office in 2018.

He has the ability to liven up anyone’s day and is never shy to dress up for an occasion. On Halloween, he dressed as Batman’s enemy, Riddler.

“Everybody loves him,” Mr. Sanders said. “He has an incredible amount of patience.”

Mr. Russell recalled one time Mr. Webster dressed as George Washington in a full-length wool coat and powdered wig to march in the town’s Fourth of July parade. It also happened to be about 90 degrees that day.

Previous Winners

2018: Rodney Shelby
2017: William Price
2016: Jim Grathwohl
2015: Jack Martilotta
2014: Ted Webb
2013: Heather Lanza
2012: Ed Romaine
2011: Greenport and Southold Highway Department Crews
2010: Leslie Weisman
2009: Betty Neville
2008: Thomas Crowley
2007: Philip Beltz
2006: Jesse Wilson
2005: Martin Flatley
2004: Mattituck-Cutchogue School Board
2003: Ben Orlowski Jr.
2002: Jack Sherwood
2001: Dave Abatelli
2000: Melissa Spiro
1999: Valerie Scopaz
1998: Jamie Mills
1997: Karen McLaughlin
1996: Lisa Israel
1995: John Costello
1994: Ray Jacobs
1993: Judy Terry
1992: William Pell
1991: Beth Wilson
1990: Antonia Booth
1989: Frank Murphy
1988: Venetia McKeighan
1987: Paul Stoutenburgh

The post 2019 Public Servant of the Year: Kevin Webster appeared first on Suffolk Times.

Daily Update: Man killed in crash, superintendent gets 11 percent raise

$
0
0

The daily update, a podcast briefing on what’s happening across the North Fork, is brought to you by San Simeon by the Sound Center for Nursing and Rehabilitation, award-winning care when and where you need it most.

Get the daily update delivered straight to your inbox each weekday morning by subscribing to our newsletter. Or listen through Apple Podcasts by subscribing to Closer Look.

Here are the headlines across the North Fork for Monday, Jan. 6:

NEWS

Police: One dead in single-vehicle crash in Riverside

Residents question decision to raise Mattituck superintendent’s salary

Police: Woman robbed at knifepoint outside Chase Bank in Riverhead

Southold School District joins opposition of mandatory HPV vaccine

Southold Town officials sworn in at inauguration ceremony

WEATHER

Expect some light snow early today before the sun comes out and temperatures rise to a high of about 40 degrees today, according to the National Weather Service.

The low tonight will be around 27.

The post Daily Update: Man killed in crash, superintendent gets 11 percent raise appeared first on Suffolk Times.

Viewing all 24121 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>