Jack Kavanaugh fights back the ball from Centereach. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown West boys soccer vs. Centereach on 09/12/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown West boys soccer vs. Centereach on 09/12/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown West boys soccer vs. Centereach on 09/12/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown West boys soccer vs. Centereach on 09/12/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown West senior Jack Visnius redirects. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown West boys soccer vs. Centereach on 09/12/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown West boys soccer vs. Centereach on 09/12/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown West boys soccer vs. Centereach on 09/12/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown West boys soccer vs. Centereach on 09/12/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown west boys soccer vs. Centereach on 09/12/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown West boys soccer vs. Centereach on 09/12/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown West boys soccer vs. Centereach on 09/12/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown West boys soccer vs. Centereach on 09/12/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown West boys soccer vs. Centereach on 09/12/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown West boys soccer vs. Centereach on 09/12/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown West boys soccer vs. Centereach on 09/12/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown West boys soccer vs. Centereach on 09/12/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown West boys soccer vs. Centereach on 09/12/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown West’s Jake Hutter battles Dominick Melendez. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown West boys soccer vs. Centereach on 09/12/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown West boys soccer vs. Centereach on 09/12/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown West boys soccer vs. Centereach on 09/12/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown West boys soccer vs. Centereach on 09/12/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown West boys soccer vs. Centereach on 09/12/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown West boys soccer vs. Centereach on 09/12/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown West boys soccer vs. Centereach on 09/12/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown West boys soccer vs. Centereach on 09/12/24. Photo by Bill Landon
By Bill Landon
With both teams with three games under their belt, the Bulls of Smithtown West hosted the Centereach Cougars Thursday afternoon, Sept. 12, in a league matchup where a single goal would be the difference.
With three minutes left in the opening half, Smithtown West senior Jake Hutter dished off the ball to sophomore Tony Garcia who drilled the ball into the back of the net to edge ahead 1-0, a score that would make the final buzzer.
Both goalies Jerry Nagosky (Bulls) and Thomas Zwirblis (Cougars) had two saves apiece.
The Bulls had another 1-0 victory — at East Islip — Monday, Sept. 16, taking them to 5-0 atop League V. On the same day, the Cougars won 3-1 at West Islip for a 2-1-2 league start.
Photo courtesy of Caroline Episcopal Church of Setauket
Photo courtesy of Caroline Episcopal Church of Setauket
Photo courtesy of Caroline Episcopal Church of Setauket
Photo courtesy of Caroline Episcopal Church of Setauket
Photo courtesy of Caroline Episcopal Church of Setauket
Photo courtesy of Caroline Episcopal Church of Setauket
Photo courtesy of Caroline Episcopal Church of Setauket
Photo courtesy of Caroline Episcopal Church of Setauket
Photo courtesy of Caroline Episcopal Church of Setauket
Photo courtesy of Caroline Episcopal Church of Setauket
Photo courtesy of Caroline Episcopal Church of Setauket
Photo courtesy of Caroline Episcopal Church of Setauket
By Toni-Elena Gallo
This past Saturday, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., the Caroline Episcopal and Setauket Presbyterian Churches held their annual Country Fair.
The live music added some electrifying ambiance to the over 70 available vendors — ranging in variety from arts and crafts to delectable baked treats — allowing for a memorable family experience.
Last Chance Animal Rescue was also on hand to tryand find pups forever homes, and boats on the premises were compliments of Great Oak Marina.
It was a magical weekend chock full of fun, and community spirit!
Sean Casey stars as the Wildcats cruise past the Baymen
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The Wildcats of Shoreham-Wading River take the Thomas Cutinella Memorial Field Saturday afternoon to open their 2024 football season. Photo by Bill Landon
Shoreham-Wading River wide receiver Sean Casey looks upfield. Photo by Bill Landon
Shoreham-Wadint River football vs. Hampton Bays 09/14/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Shoreham-Wadint River football vs. Hampton Bays 09/14/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Shoreham-Wadint River football vs. Hampton Bays 09/14/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Shoreham-Wadint River football vs. Hampton Bays 09/14/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Shoreham-Wadint River football vs. Hampton Bays 09/14/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Shoreham-Wadint River football vs. Hampton Bays 09/14/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Shoreham-Wadint River football vs. Hampton Bays 09/14/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Wildcats Senior Michael Casey in traffic in home opener against Hampton Bays. Photo by Bill Landon
Senior wide receiver Michael Iberger with the touchdown catch. Photo by Bill Landon
Shoreham-Wadint River football vs. Hampton Bays 09/14/24. Photo by Bill Landon
By Bill Landon
Shoreham-Wading River football team kicked off their 2024 season, with a convincing victory, defeating Hampton Bays 40-12 at the Thomas Cutinella Memorial Field, on Saturday afternoon.
It was the Sean Casey show for Shoreham-Wading River, as the senior wide receiver ran back the opening kickoff covering 88 yards to put the Wildcats on the board. Casey found the end zone at the 1:08 mark in the first quarter with a 32-yard run, and had another kickoff return in the opening minutes of the second half, covering 74 yards.
Freshman quarterback Noah Gregorek threw a seven-yard touchdown precision strike to Michael Iberger in the right corner of the end zone, and completed eight of nine passes for 102 yards in the Division IV matchup.
Shoreham-Wading River field hockey vs. West Islip on 9/17/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Marisa Cacciola maneuvers midfield for the Wildcats. Photo by Bill Landon
Shoreham-Wading River field hockey vs. West Islip on 9/17/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Shoreham-Wading River field hockey vs. West Islip on 9/17/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Shoreham-Wading River field hockey vs. West Islip on 9/17/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Shoreham-Wading River midfielder Ellie Arena pushes upfield for the Wildcats. Photo by Bill Landon
Shoreham-Wading River field hockey vs. West Islip on 9/17/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Haylie Abrams shoots for the Wildcats. Photo by Bill Landon
Shoreham-Wading River field hockey vs. West Islip on 9/17/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Shoreham-Wading River field hockey vs. West Islip on 9/17/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Shoreham-Wading River field hockey vs. West Islip on 9/17/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Shoreham-Wading River field hockey vs. West Islip on 9/17/24. Photo by Bill Landon
By Bill Landon
Through five games, the Wildcats of Shoreham-Wading River stand atop the Division II leaderboard. The team is not only undefeated, but has not allowed a single goal against them.
Tuesday afternoon, Sept. 17, at the Thomas Cutinella Memorial Field, the Wildcats were back at it when they blanked West Islip 6-0.
Madison Herr scored her second goal of the game in the opening minutes of the second quarter to put her team out front 3-0. Forward Ella Frazzetto rocked the box in the opening minutes of the third quarter and Herr found the box again for her hat trick to begin the final 15 minutes of play. Alessia Olivio rounded out the score when her shot found its mark to seal the deal for the Wildcats.
Comsewogue girls soccer vs. Amityville on 9/14/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Comsewogue girls soccer vs. Amityville on 9/14/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Comsewogue girls soccer vs. Amityville on 9/14/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Sophomore Alana Rodriguez maneuvers mid-field for the Warriors. Photo by Bill Landon
Comsewogue girls soccer vs. Amityville on 9/14/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Comsewogue girls soccer vs. Amityville on 9/14/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Jayla Callender with a clearing kick for the Warriors. Photo by Bill Landon
Comsewogue freshman Kailey Wiggins takes a shot at the goal. Photo by Bill Landon
Comsewogue girls soccer vs. Amityville on 9/14/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Comsewogue girls soccer vs. Amityville on 9/14/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Comsewogue senior Emma Cross passes to the wing. Photo by Bill Landon
Comsewogue girls soccer vs. Amityville on 9/14/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Comsewogue girls soccer vs. Amityville on 9/14/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Comsewogue girls soccer vs. Amityville on 9/14/24. Photo by Bill Landon
Comsewogue girls soccer vs. Amityville on 9/14/24. Photo by Bill Landon
By Bill Landon
The Comsewogue girls soccer squad, having won their last three games, looked to make it four in a row Saturday morning, Sept. 14, when the Warriors hosted Amityville, and did just that, by trouncing their opponents in an 8-0 blowout.
It was a team effort, with seven different players finding the net in the League VI contest. Mikaela Knot found the back of the net twice, and teammates Emma Cross, Kaiya Dent, Madison Maher, Kailey Wiggins, Madison Moccio and Jayla Callender each scored a goal apiece.
Goalies Lila Capra and Payton Coyle each had two stops.
The Warriors attempted to make it five in a row, with a road game against Harborfields, on Tuesday, but fell 3-1.
Matt Makarius secures a tag line to Ryan Parmegiani as they prepare to enter the floodwater Aug. 19. Photo courtesy PJFD
By Lynn Hallarman
At 10 p.m. on Sunday, Aug. 18, Christian Neubert, second assistant chief for the Port Jefferson Fire Department, responded to what seemed like a routine call. The skies over Port Jefferson village were clear. But shortly after that, the village was caught unaware by an unrelenting downpour that would last nearly six hours.
“Once the rain started, we had very few moments of it letting up,” Neubert said in a phone interview with TBR News Media. The storm’s intensity caught everyone off guard.
Then, the firehouse started to flood. The station’s dispatchers could see through surveillance cameras that water was collecting in the back parking lot and the storm drains were slowing as water began to flow in reverse.
Dangerous conditions
Flooding at the Port Jeff fire station in the early morning of Aug. 19. Photo courtesy PJFD
Neubert recalled that at 11:20 p.m., Chief Anthony Barton notified all department members to respond to the firehouse to assist with worsening flood conditions. The fire trucks were moved out of the station, but rapidly rising waters filled with sewage and contaminants prevented members from moving gear and other equipment.
Soon, the calls for help started to come in. From 11 p.m. until 3 a.m., firefighters responded to 11 urgent water rescues as vehicles became trapped in rising floodwaters. Rescuers worked in pairs tethered by a rope, with one firefighter in the water, the other on solid ground. This strategy ensured that no one was swept away or sucked into an open manhole.
“The most dangerous aspect of flood rescues is to our team. As the drainage system in the village backs up, the manhole covers will literally blow off. That night, there were open manhole covers throughout the village,” Neubert said.
No firefighters or rescued members of the public were hurt that night, but people needed to be transported to the Village Grocery’s parking lot, where they could eventually be picked up by someone. The fire station, now flooded with 3 feet of water, could not be used to stage the station’s emergency response or serve as a temporary shelter for flood victims.
Complicating matters, firefighters were dispatched to respond to several fire alarms, which were triggered, it turns out, by floodwaters.
With the fire station out of commission, rescuers were forced to rely on radio communication while sitting in their trucks in torrential rain. The constant pelting on the vehicles made conversations hard to hear over the radio. And it was dark.
For hours, the fire department battled two emergencies at once: the flooding of their station and responding to calls for help from community members.
Storm surge vs. flash rain
A flooded vehicle the night of the storm. Photo courtesy PJFD
Neubert recounted the difference in conditions during Hurricane Sandy in 2012 compared to this rain event. He explained that Sandy’s flooding resulted from surging tides in a slow rise.
“We had time to prepare,” he said. “We took the fire trucks out of the building and staged them throughout various village locations. All the firefighting gear was moved to very high ground, well ahead of time.”
This time, however, was different — a sudden and unexpected deluge is harder to prepare for. The worst flooding of the fire station in recent years has resulted from heavy rainfall over a short period, as in 2018, 2021 and now 2024.
This most recent storm was the most damaging. “Our biggest loss was the machine we use to fill our air bottles, with the replacement cost nearing $100,000,” Neubert said. “Our contaminated gear needed professional cleaning.” The entire ground floor of the building required an extensive cleanup, and repairs are still being made to the walls and floors.
The fire department has federal flood insurance to absorb most of the cost of the cleanup. However, what cannot be accounted for are the person-hours devoted to resolving a multitude of logistical complications in the flood’s aftermath.
“It’s the ripple effect on operations that are most challenging,” Neubert said. While he emphasized that the response to community emergencies is not impacted, they temporarily need to rely on neighboring fire departments to fill their air bottles and host training events.
“And the community may forget our firefighters, about 100, who are all volunteers, live in the village and work full-time jobs,” he said.
The fire station sits in a floodplain
This reporter went on a three-hour tour of the downtown flood basin with former village mayor and longtime firefighter Mike Lee. Many years ago, the salt marsh was slowly filled in to accommodate new construction, disrupting the natural water management between the harbor and the higher ground. Now, much of the runoff flows into an overwhelmed culvert system, worsening flooding and putting additional stress on critical infrastructure such as the firehouse.
“The town, when first developed, was situated above the salt marsh, not on top of it,” Lee said. “The original Main Street was what is now East Main Street,” he said as we walked downhill toward the Gap parking lot.
The flooding problem is compounded by frequent heavy rainstorms related to climate change. The fire station sits atop a high-water table, once the salt marsh.
Moving the station?
“I do know for certainty, there is not another fire department in Suffolk County that floods,” Neubert said.
But he chuckled when asked about moving the fire station. “We would if it was realistic,” he said. It is not from want of trying, he pointed out.
“Find me an affordable 2 1/2-acre available piece of flat property within the boundaries of our 3-mile fire district that is not too near residential housing and is close enough so the response time to an emergency is not increased,” he said.
And this wish doesn’t include the cost of a new building.
According to Neubert, to preserve an ideal response time, a new firehouse would need to be situated in the fire district’s central geographic location, somewhere in the vicinity of Belle Terre Road and Myrtle Avenue.
For now, the fire department is doing everything it can to mitigate flood damage. “We are using FEMA money to install flood doors,” he said. “All the radio-server equipment has been moved to the second floor.”
The goal, he reflected, is to make sure the department is not fighting too many battles at once.
The Port Jefferson Civic Association is actively working to raise community awareness and build local support for the fire department, as the department considers options to address the flooding issue long term.
“Flooding is our greatest challenge,” Ana Hozyainova, president of the civic, said. “Yet, we’re not making strategic decisions as a community to help safeguard a vital asset — the fire department.”
“Their job is to protect our property, livelihoods and lives. The danger is that, eventually, their own crisis could grow so large that they won’t be able to respond to ours,” she added.
Lauren Feldman, left, competes with mother Elyse, center, and aunt Marcia, right.
Scene during the puzzle competition. Photo by Lauren Feldman
Scene during the puzzle competition. Photo by Lauren Feldman
A group competes during the puzzle competition. Photo by Lauren Feldman
Scene during the puzzle competition. Photo by Lauren Feldman
Scene during the puzzle competition. Photo by Lauren Feldman
The Puzzled Parents take home first place, completing their puzzle in a half hour. Photo by Lauren Feldman
By Lauren Feldman
By popular demand, Huntington Public Library brought back its puzzle competition on Sunday, Sept. 15.
This was the second puzzle competition the library has hosted. The first competition, which took place in early June, was a hit with residents, who flocked in pairs, trios and quads to complete a 500-piece puzzle in under two hours. Both were held in the auditorium of the Main Branch at 338 Main St.
For this round, four teams faced off to complete a fall-themed puzzle. The puzzle is kept a mystery until the clock starts counting down, and all teams are given the same puzzle to keep things fair.
The first group, who called themselves the Puzzled Parents, completed the puzzle in just under half an hour.
Jacqueline Basso, resident programming librarian, said, “The first puzzle competition was very popular, it was a fully-booked program and everyone wanted more. All the comment cards were really favorable. So we scheduled this one in the fall.”
First and second place teams received a swag bag from the library, as well as a first and second place trophy.
Basso indicated the library plans to host another competition in the coming months, possibly closer to the fall holidays. “It seems like something our patrons are enjoying, and I hope to highlight it more in our newsletters going forward,” she said.
Horseshoe crabs at Cedar Beach in Mount Sinai. Photo by John Turner
The bill has passed in Albany, but awaits governor’s signature
By Mallie Jane Kim
The future of a bill to enhance protections for horseshoe crabs in New York waters is unclear, but advocacy around the issue is heating up.
If signed into law by Gov. Kathy Hochul (D), the bill would prevent the taking of horseshoe crabs for commercial or biomedical purposes in New York. The bill was passed by the state Assembly and Senate June 7, and though it has not yet been called up by the governor for consideration and potential signature or veto, advocates for and against the bill have been working hard to make their voices heard.
“Our job is to make sure the governor is aware that the horseshoe crab is a beloved species, it’s in danger and she can help it,” said Adrienne Esposito, executive director of the Farmingdale-based Citizens Campaign for the Environment, which is spearheading efforts to encourage the governor to sign the bill.
Fifty-eight groups signed on to a September letter urging Hochul to adopt the bill, including Audubon, Sierra and Rotary clubs from around Long Island, as well as the Port Jefferson Harbor Commission, The Whaling Museum & Education Center of Cold Spring Harbor and the Setauket Harbor Task Force.
Thousands of citizen postcards supporting the bill are on the way to the governor over the next weeks, according to Esposito, who predicts the bill won’t get called up before December, a pattern she has noted for environmental bills over the last few years.
“The tough bills are the ones they wait longer to call,” she said. “The issue now is to make sure the public raises their voice.”
Horseshoe crabs, which are relatives of arachnids like spiders and scorpions, are considered “living fossils” since they have been around for an estimated 450 million years, but they have faced a steady decline in recent decades due to harvesting and habitat loss, impacting bird species that feed on horseshoe crab eggs during migration, like red knots. Commercial fisherman rely on horseshoe crabs as bait for whelk, and its blue blood is prized for biomedical research and vaccine development — though there are not currently any permits for biomedical harvesting in New York.
Local fisheries oppose the bill
Opponents of the bill don’t believe a complete ban on harvesting horseshoe crabs is an appropriate way to protect the species, since it is already monitored and regulated by the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission and New York State’s Department of Environmental Conservation.
“If they felt that the horseshoe crab stock was in danger, we would hear about it first,” said Bonnie Brady, executive director of Montauk-based Long Island Commercial Fishing Association. “To use a law to regulate a fishery, when they are already regulated by appropriate bodies that have the science to back it, is just not the way to allow fisheries to survive.”
Some individual members of the association have written to the governor advocating against the ban, according to Brady, who added that she believes the proposed regulations are based on feeling, not fact.
“No one wants to see [horseshoe crabs] become depleted to the point where their continued vibrance is in danger,” Brady said, explaining that whelk fishing is a significant aspect of day fishermen’s seasonal catch.
“It would be like suddenly someone says, ‘We’re going to take 20% of your paycheck going forward without any scientific basis for doing so and without any compensation,’” she said. “Would you be OK with that?”
The Long Island Farm Bureau, based in Calverton, is also advocating against the bill with state lawmakers on Long Island and the governor’s office in Albany, according to the bureau’s administrative director Rob Carpenter.
He emphasized that the state DEC’s efforts to preserve the species since the population levels in New York were rated “poor” in 2019 — including voluntarily limiting the annual take of horseshoe crabs to 150,000 and requiring mesh bait bags to reduce the amount of crab that fisheries need to use in whelk traps — should be given a chance.
“Before we go and ban everything, I think that needs an opportunity to really work,” he said.
Middle Country Central School District Board of Education met Sept. 10 at a special meeting to discuss a range of agenda items centered around a food-services presentation.
This presentation, given on behalf of the district’s food service team, began with a review of the mission statement, staff and partnership details with Whitsons Culinary Group of Islandia. The presenters then spoke about eligibility for free and reduced-price school lunches. The district is approved to serve no-charge breakfast and lunch meals daily for the upcoming school year but encourages households to fill out the Household Income Eligibility Form to qualify for such programs in the future.
The presentation covered a recent history of financial and sales data, which reflected a recent trend of budget surplus. According to the presenters, this positive funds balance was used entirely to enhance the school lunch program, exemplified by the purchase of a large replacement oven and the completion of a freezer project during the past school year.
The presenters then conveyed their plans for the future. The team has been pushing the Household Income Eligibility Form and plans to continue advocacy for free meals. They also listed some concerns with the rising costs of running such an operation, the continual push for grant money and issues with staff retention, before concluding with a more thorough push for universal free meals.
After the presentation, a number of routine items were addressed. Board President Dawn Sharrock was approved to act as the voting delegate for the district at the New York State School Board Association Virtual Annual Business Meeting Oct. 10, and in New York City at the Annual Convention and Education Expo Oct. 20-22. The board also approved a major field trip to Washington, D.C.
The next BOE meeting will be Oct. 16 at Centereach High School at 7 p.m.
Olivia Ross’ bracelets, which read Stony Brook Strong or Save the Mill Pond. 100% of the proceeds are donated to reconstruction efforts. Photo courtesy Olivia Ross
By Toni-Elena Gallo
Olivia Ross may live in Port Jefferson now, but Stony Brook will always be where her heart is.
The devastating storm that hit Suffolk County on Aug. 18 and continued into the early morning hours of the next day, left Stony Brook in complete disarray, draining the Mill Pond and destroying businesses and homes. Ross, who grew up in the village, felt she needed to spring to action and help the community that has provided her with such happy memories.
“When I was little, all the way up to me taking my nieces and nephews there. So, when I saw that nothing was there, there was no life, it just broke my heart,” she said in an interview.
“Then I said, ‘Why not have this community come together and do something good? Something to unite all of us together?’ I knew I had to do something to help, because it’s so important to me — there will always be a piece of me [in Stony Brook].”
“I thought of this idea because when I was younger, and the BP oil spill happened, my aunt created these bracelets and sold them to give donations to a company that was helping clean up. So, I thought ‘What a great idea,’” Ross continued.
After meeting Ross down at Stony Brook Harbor Kayak & Paddleboard Rentals, Gloria Rocchio, president of The Ward Melville Heritage Organization, said that what she’s doing is “wonderful.”
“The paddleboard business is helping her with sales, and [when we spoke] she expressed incredible affection for the Mill Pond,” Rocchio said. “If the general public desires, they can support the community in this very difficult time.”
Ross said that 100 percent of the proceeds will go to The Ward Melville Heritage Organization for repair and restoration efforts.
“We’re backing them up, and we want to help restore such important parts of the community,” Ross added.
Ross customizes the bracelets, which she buys in bulk, to say “Stony Brook Strong” on one side and “Save the Mill Pond”’ on the other. The bracelets sell for $2 each but donations are also accepted.
“I wear mine every day,” Rocchio said.
Ross explained that with all the “negativity that goes on in the world,” she was pleased to see the positive reactions she received on Facebook, where her bracelets are available on both her and WMHO’s pages, as well as through her email, [email protected].
“I’ve sold over a hundred, and I’m almost up to a thousand dollars in donations, so I am trying to spread the word more. I’ve had a couple of businesses reach out to me asking if they could buy some in bulk, and then sell them in their stores. I love that idea,” Ross said.
And, as far as the damage that remains in Stony Brook, Rocchio explained that the WMHO is working with all facets of government, including at the federal, state, county and in conjunction with the towns of Brookhaven and Smithtown, to get Harbor Road rebuilt, among a host of other issues.
The Stony Brook Grist Mill will be getting help as early as Friday, from an excavation crew, which will begin digging out the sand damage from under the mill’s wheel, by hand, to allow it to turn once again.