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Tag: Westchester County

  • Partial parking garage collapse damages cars, closes roads in Westchester County

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    The fifth floor of a parking garage in Westchester County appeared to suddenly collapse on Wednesday, damaging a number of cars parked on the floor below.

    There were no immediate reports of injuries in the collapse at the White Plains garage near South Broadway.

    A photo from the scene shows an upper floor leaning diagonally onto the floor below it, crushing vehicles in the process. White Plains Public Safety confirmed a partial collapse. Nearby roads are closed.

    An aerial view from Chopper 4 showed the center of the roof level of the garage caved in.

    People are asked to avoid the area to facilitate the investigation.

    No other information was immediately available.

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    NBC New York Staff

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  • Saw Mill River Parkway collapse blamed on too much rain

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    A giant sinkhole that opened on a Westchester County highway early Monday, forcing road closures, was weather-related, authorities said in a statement Monday.

    Chopper 4 was over the scene as a bulldozer cruised through a giant sinkhole on the Saw Mill River Parkway, at exit 13 (Farragut Avenue) in Hastings-on-Hudson. The roadway was shut down in both directions for a time, but the northbound side reopened by about 11 a.m. Efforts were being made to reopen the southbound lanes.

    The state Department of Transportation, which maintains and repairs the highway, said this weekend’s rainy weather caused the collapse. The area isn’t prone to flooding, and sees about 47,000 vehicles traverse it daily

    Motorists are advised to seek alternate routes.

    Heavy rain and powerful storms thrashed the tri-state area over the weekend, tearing down trees and triggering a flurry of severe thunderstorm warnings, as well as tornado alerts for parts of New Jersey.

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    NBC New York Staff

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  • Westchester County Executive George Latimer announces campaign against Congressman Jamaal Bowman

    Westchester County Executive George Latimer announces campaign against Congressman Jamaal Bowman

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    George Latimer challenges incumbent Congressman Jamaal Bowman


    George Latimer challenges incumbent Congressman Jamaal Bowman

    02:08

    NEW YORK — Westchester County Executive George Latimer formally launched his campaign Wednesday to challenge Congressman Jamaal Bowman in a Democratic Primary next year.

    Mount Vernon, Westchester County, is a rich source of Democratic Primary voters, and it’s soon to be a battleground between Bowman and Latimer.

    “It’s gonna be a hard choice for a lot of people, especially in Mount Vernon,” said former Mount Vernon mayor Andre Wallace.

    Wallace says this will be a blockbuster matchup.

    Bowman is the first African American to represent the district in Congress and has an unusually high profile for a relative Congressional newcomer.

    “Young kids in our community want to look up and they want to see somebody that looks like them so they can say, hey, I want to achieve that,” Wallace said.

    Latimer is a Mount Vernon native who played a key role in resolving a long dispute over Memorial Field.

    “Everything that he’s promised to deliver, he delivered,” Wallace said.

    Latimer announced his run days after a trip to Israel.

    Many Jewish groups urged him to Primary Bowman, unhappy that Bowman is pressuring Israel to call a cease-fire and boycotted Israeli President Isaac Herzog’s speech to Congress.

    “Even if you disagree with the policy, you still sit and listen to the president of Israel when he comes, as a matter of respect,” Latimer said.

    A spokesperson for Bowman’s campaign said in a statement:

    “Congressman Bowman’s focus remains first and foremost on delivering for the people of his district and standing up to powerful special interests in Congress. It’s not a surprise that a super PAC that routinely targets Black members of Congress with primary challenges, and is funded by the same Republican mega-donors who give millions to election-denying Republicans including Donald Trump, Ron DeSantis, and Ted Cruz, has recruited a candidate for this race. We will continue to fight and deliver what the people of New York’s 16th District are demanding, like affordable housing, child care, climate action, jobs, education, healthcare, and defeating antisemitism, Islamophobia, and racism.”

    Latimer told CBS New York’s Tony Aiello he sees Bowman as someone good at getting attention, less so in achieving results.

    “Arguing with somebody across the aisle on the steps of a government building gets attention, but it doesn’t solve the fundamental problem, which is what results are you delivering,” Latimer said.

    The 16th District is comprised of southern Westchester and a sliver of the Bronx.

    Latimer has held state and local office for 30 years and never lost an election. Insiders say he has a good chance to win what will certainly be a very expensive Primary.

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  • Trump golf course criminal investigation is officially closed, Westchester D.A. says

    Trump golf course criminal investigation is officially closed, Westchester D.A. says

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    A two-year criminal investigation into the Trump Organization’s valuations of a golf club in Westchester County, New York, has been closed, the county’s district attorney, Miriam Rocah, confirmed Thursday.

    “Part of why I’m saying anything at all is that I think it’s really important, more important than ever in our country, to make sure that people understand that we have independent prosecutors, we have a justice system that operates independent of politics,” Rocah, a Democrat, told CBS News after a press conference announcing arrests and other updates in several cold case homicides. “I can stand here and proudly say that I’m one of those prosecutors, and I look at every subject of any investigation, every organization that’s a subject of an investigation, the same way.”

    Insider first reported Wednesday that the investigation was closed this month.

    Prosecutors in the suburban county, north of New York City, subpoenaed records from the town of Ossining and Trump National Golf Club Westchester, examining efforts by the club to reduce its local tax burden.

    The company and town were for years at odds over its annual tax bill. The club claimed its property was worth as much as 90% less than the town’s valuation. In July 2021, the town and the company agreed to a compromise in which Ossining refunded the club about $875,000 and cut the property assessment by close to 30%.

    The investigation was led by Elliott Jacobson, a former assistant U.S. Attorney who came out of retirement to serve as special prosecutor for the Westchester D.A. Jacobson told CBS News in May he had been a volunteer working part-time for the office, and concluded his service in November 2022.

    While its dispute with the town focused on an effort to reduce the club’s valuation, the club surfaced in a 2022 lawsuit against Trump and his company for the opposite reason. The office of New York Attorney General Letita James alleged in its civil case that Trump inflated the club’s value, as well as other property valuations, in order to overstate his personal net worth.

    Trump National Golf Club Westchester
    File photo of Trump National Golf Club Westchester in Briarcliff Manor, New York.

    Bobby Bank/WireImage via Getty Images


    “At Mr. Trump’s golf course in Westchester, the valuation for 2011 assumed new members would pay an initiation fee of nearly $200,000 for each of the 67 unsold memberships, even though many new members in that year paid no initiation fee at all,” James’ office wrote. “In some instances, Mr. Trump specifically directed club employees to reduce or eliminate the initiation fees to boost membership numbers.”

    Trump and the company have vehemently denied all allegations related to the New York attorney general’s case, which is scheduled for an October trial. 

    Representatives for Trump and the company did not respond to requests for comment. 

    Other Trump legal cases

    The Westchester County investigation’s end represents a rare recent legal win for Trump. 

    In September 2022, James’ office sued Trump, three of his children and the company for $250 million, alleging widespread fraud and demanding a raft of sanctions designed to limit for years their ability to do business in New York. In December, two Trump Organization companies were found guilty of 17 New York State felony counts related to tax evasion. In April, he was charged in Manhattan with 34 state felony counts of falsification of business records related to an alleged scheme to cover up a “hush money” payment to an adult film star. In May, a federal jury unanimously found Trump liable for sexually abusing and defaming the writer E. Jean Carroll, awarding her $5 million. On Tuesday, Trump was arraigned in a federal court in Miami on 37 felony charges stemming from special counsel Jack Smith’s investigation into Trump’s retention of classified and top secret documents after he left office. 

    He has entered not guilty pleas in all the criminal cases, and vehemently denied all allegations. He has also repeatedly accused Smith, James and Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg of targeting him out of political animus, an accusation he has also previously levied against Rocah.

    Rocah said Thursday that she hopes “the message that every American should take” in her closing the investigation is that prosecutorial decisions aren’t about politics.

    “We do our job independent of politics or any other kinds of personal political affiliations or beliefs, period,” Rocah said.

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  • Yonkers apartment building fire was sparked by marijuana growing operation: Police – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    Yonkers apartment building fire was sparked by marijuana growing operation: Police – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

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    The massive fire at a Yonkers apartment building earlier this week that left one person dead and dozens of families displaced was sparked by a marijuana growing operation, according to police.

    The fire at the Mona Lisa Luxury Cooperative Residence on Wednesday started in a first-floor apartment, according to fire officials, and was likely caused by an electric heating lamp used to cultivate six marijuana plants that a resident was growing for personal use.

    “Evidence recovered at scene and statements from the resident lead investigators to believe that the lamp detached from its hanging support and broke, sparked on the floor starting the fire. Upon discovering the fire, the resident proceeded to raise the alarm and alert his neighbors,” the Yonkers Police Department said in a statement Saturday afternoon. 

    FILE – Firefighters extinguish a fire in Yonkers that killed one and displaced hundreds.  (FOX 5 New York)

    The fire eventually claimed the life of a 67-year-old man living on the building’s 4th floor and injured six other residents. Roughly 65 people were evacuated, and over 100 firefighters from the city and surrounding area were called in to fight the…

    Original Author Link click here to read complete story..

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    MMP News Author

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  • Ecogy Energy Helps New York Power Authority Advance Rooftop Community Solar Projects for Westchester County Municipalities

    Ecogy Energy Helps New York Power Authority Advance Rooftop Community Solar Projects for Westchester County Municipalities

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    Brooklyn-based Developer, Financier, and Owner-Operator Ecogy Energy (‘Ecogy’), Selected for Westchester County’s Westchester Community Solar Partnership between New York Power Authority’s (‘NYPA’) and Sustainable Westchester, is Now Developing Solar Energy Projects Across the County.

    Press Release


    Nov 22, 2022 14:00 EST

    Ecogy Energy, a developer, financier, and owner-operator, was selected through a competitive Request for Proposal (RFP) in 2021 by the New York Power Authority (NYPA), in partnership with Sustainable Westchester and Westchester County, to develop solar energy projects under the Westchester Community Solar Partnership (WCSP), along with two other developers. The WCSP broadly aims to power the economic growth of New York State by supplying Westchester County residents and municipalities with locally based, ideal land-use, and discounted electricity costs through community solar projects.

    Ecogy is securing preliminary agreements with the first municipality in a series of upcoming projects and has obtained approvals for a Con Edison interconnection and incentives from the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA).

    Sustainable Westchester, a nonprofit consortium of Westchester County local governments, is the designated community solar acquisition provider for the WCSP and will collaborate with Ecogy to enroll local residents, with a focus on affordable housing communities and low-to-moderate income (“LMI”) individuals. By prioritizing these groups in the development plans, NYPA, Westchester County, Ecogy, and Sustainable Westchester are making large strides toward supporting environmental justice and directing benefits to historically underserved and overlooked communities.

    “Many homeowners are ineligible to install solar on their homes for a host of reasons, including that they may be renting a property, have too much shade, poor roof conditions, or because of financial restrictions. However, Community Solar is designed to be accessible for all communities and residents, bringing them financial rewards and environmental improvements. We are proud and excited to be partnering with NY-based Ecogy and once again with Sustainable Westchester on an innovative cost and energy-saving initiative,” said Westchester County Executive George Latimer.

    Community Distributed Generation (CDG) projects help governments and schools support renewable energy developments that benefit their communities and dismantle the inequitable distribution of renewable energy that can occur, redirecting the benefits to those who may not have the space, time, financial resources, or development experience to logistically support their own solar PV system. The WCSP will enable surrounding communities to access clean energy with a simple subscription process, no cost to sign up, no cancellation fees, and a guaranteed discount for subscribers of up to 10% on earned solar credits while offering site lease payments to those municipalities hosting the solar arrays.

    The massive shift to clean energy for New York requires exactly the kind of public-private-nonprofit partnership that this project represents. Such collaborations help educate residents about the benefits of community solar, subscribe to community solar projects, and earn long-term savings from renewable energy.

    “NYPA and Westchester County are actively pursuing innovative and inclusive renewable energy solutions for municipalities and communities that want to provide energy savings to their constituents,” said NYPA Interim President and CEO Justin E. Driscoll. “Prioritizing the underserved is a key project element we focus on as part of our role in helping to realize the state’s bold clean energy transition. Community partnerships will serve as a blueprint for renewable energy development for years to come and we are hopeful that our best-in-class examples here in New York State will serve to inspire the rest of the nation.”

    “We are proud to partner with Westchester County and the New York Power Authority to bring the benefits of solar hosting to Sustainable Westchester’s municipal members and the County’s school districts. Sustainable Westchester is committed to helping Westchester County achieve New York State’s nation-leading climate and equity targets. This partnership will accelerate our achieving those goals, while building on our other successful solar initiatives,” said Nina Orville, Executive Director, Sustainable Westchester.

    To finance the project, Ecogy intends to utilize NY’s Value of Distributed Energy Resources (VDER) and the NYSERDA NY-Sun Incentive Program, a state initiative offering cash incentives and/or financing for the deployment of qualified solar projects to drive growth in the solar industry. The program is helping New York State advance its Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act (CLCPA) implementation targets of 10,000 MW of distributed solar PV and 70% renewable energy by 2030.

    Ecogy is building upon its history of leadership in Westchester County, which includes the first community solar projects in Yorktown, Croton-on-Hudson, and Ossining, and the largest solar canopy system in Westchester County with the Maryknoll Society. Sustainable Westchester worked with Ecogy to enroll community members in the Maryknoll Community Solar farm.

    Ecogy has also been a leading force on community solar projects in other states, beginning in 2015 with a community solar project for the Town of Strafford, Vermont, which serves the Morrill Library, Barrett Hall, local Newton Elementary School, and the United Church of Strafford. Ecogy is committed to well-sited, close-to-load solar systems that require intense engineering, significant expertise and resources, and a vast amount of collaboration to complete and execute.

    “Ecogy is proud to create rooftop community solar solutions for our fellow New Yorkers and continue to open doors for traditionally underserved communities upon which Ecogy has focused for the last 12 years,” said Jack Bertuzzi, Ecogy Principal, “None of this would have been  possible without the leadership of the New York Power Authority and Sustainable Westchester, who have been consistently innovative, have progressively supported initiatives that promote renewable energy, and prioritized equitable and just clean energy development.”

    In coordination with the portfolio of projects, Ecogy plans to install their energy monitoring device, the Econode, which will allow every site to benchmark consumption to further drive efficiency through data-driven results and second-by-second analysis. All projects will have their data accessible, not only to municipalities and subscribers, but also to NYPA’s energy management platform, the New York Energy Manager (“NYEM”), helping to grow the data pool used to improve energy efficiency statewide.

    Source: Ecogy Energy

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