Three Village residents were treated to a local holiday favorite Dec. 10 as the Three Village Holiday Electric Parade traveled down the streets of East Setauket. The parade kicked off at 5 p.m. with a variety of vehicles and floats adorned with lights that added a festive feel to the chilly night. Presented by the Three Village Kiwanis Club, the event featured floatsĀ from students from the Three Village Central School District and the participation of Scout troops and various businesses and organizations from the area, including Shine Dance Studios and North Shore Jewish Center. Cheerleaders, pep squad members, athletes and Stony Brook University mascot Wolfie also participated. After the parade, families gathered at the Kiwanis Park next to Se-Port Deli for the chance to visit with Santa and Mrs. Claus, who arrived in a train replica decorated with colorful lights.
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Three Village Kids Lemonade Stand volunteers participate in the 2017 Three Village Holiday Electric Light Parade. Photo by Laura Mastriano
Founders of the Three Village Kids Lemonade Stand, Maddie and Joseph Mastriano, participate in the 2017 Three Village Holiday Electric Light Parade. Photo by Laura Mastriano
One of the floats in the Three Village Holiday Electric Light Parade. Photo by Rita J. Egan
One of the floats in the Three Village Holiday Electric Light Parade. Photo by Rita J. Egan
One of the vehicles in the Three Village Holiday Electric Light Parade. Photo by Rita J. Egan
Participants in the Three Village Holiday Electric Light Parade. Photo by Rita J. Egan
One of the floats in the Three Village Holiday Electric Light Parade. Photo by Rita J. Egan
Frosty the Snowman and friend at the Three Village Holiday Electric Light Parade. Photo by Rita J. Egan
One of the floats in the Three Village Holiday Electric Light Parade. Photo by Rita J. Egan
One of the vehicles in the Three Village Holiday Electric Light Parade. Photo by Rita J. Egan
Santa and Mrs. Claus in the Three Village Holiday Electric Light Parade. Photo by Rita J. Egan
Santa's train in the Three Village Holiday Electric Light Parade. Photo by Rita J. Egan
Santa's train in the Three Village Holiday Electric Light Parade. Photo by Rita J. Egan
Children patiently wait for Santa Claus after the Three Village Holiday Electric Light Parade. Photo by Rita J. Egan
Children pose with Santa Claus after the Three Village Holiday Electric Light Parade. Photo by Rita J. Egan
Students from Stony Brook University participate in the 2017 Three Village Holiday Electric Light Parade. Photo by Bruce Larrabee
Members of Shine Dance Studios participate in the 2017 Three Village Holiday Electric Light Parade. Photo by Bruce Larrabee
Parade coordinator Cheryl Davey, historian Beverly Tyler and committee member Mike Owen before the parade. Photo by Bruce Larrabee
The community came together in Port Jefferson Village over the weekend to embody a famous quote from Charles Dickens’ “A Christmas Carol”: “There is nothing in the world so irresistibly contagious as laughter and good humor.”
Dec. 2 and 3 marked the 22nd annual Charles Dickens Festival in Port Jeff, an event that brings out locals and visitors to take part in a weekend full of events, activities, performances and parades. Attendees were treated to ice skating, cookie decorating, a display of decorated Christmas trees with various themes, street performances by actors portraying people from the Dickens era, horse-drawn carriage rides, toasted marshmallows, Christmas carols and much more.
Every year the organizers of the event select honorees and dedicate the festival in their name. This year, George and Karen Overin, two long-time Dickens Festival participants and volunteers, were recognized.
“Perhaps there are no two people that better represent the joy, the feeling of family, and, indeed, the magic of this cherished weekend that has captured the imagination of people from around the globe,” the dedication to the honorees read in part.
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Port Jeff Village Mayor Margot Garant, right, dressed as a chimney sweep during the 2017 Charles Dickens Festival. Photo by Alex Petroski
Attendees of the 2017 Charles Dickens Festival in Port Jeff Village toast marshmallows. Photo by Alex Petroski
Horse-drawn carriages circulate through Port Jeff Village during the 2017 Charles Dickens Festival. Photo by Alex Petroski
Volunteers dress up as characters from "A Christmas Carol" during the 2017 Charles Dickens Festival in Port Jeff Village. Photo by Alex Petroski
File photo by Alex Petroski
Attendees of the 2017 Charles Dickens Festival decorate cookies at Danfords Hotel & Marina in Port Jeff. Photo by Alex Petroski
The 2017 Charles Dickens Festival commences with a parade on East Main Street in Port Jeff Village Dec. 2. Photo by Alex Petroski
Attendees of the 2017 Charles Dickens Festival in Port Jeff Village sing a Christmas carol. Photo by Alex Petroski
Horse-drawn carriages circulate through Port Jeff Village during the 2017 Charles Dickens Festival. Photo by Alex Petroski
Volunteers dress up as characters from "A Christmas Carol" during the 2017 Charles Dickens Festival in Port Jeff Village. Photo by Alex Petroski
A toy train set on display at the Port Jefferson Village Center during the 2017 Charles Dickens Festival. Photo by Alex Petroski
Attendees of the 2017 Charles Dickens Festival decorate cookies at Danfords Hotel & Marina in Port Jeff. Photo by Alex Petroski
Attendees of the 2017 Charles Dickens Festival in Port Jeff Village toast marshmallows. Photo by Alex Petroski
Volunteers dress up as characters from "A Christmas Carol" during the 2017 Charles Dickens Festival in Port Jeff Village. Photo by Alex Petroski
Christmas trees on display at the Port Jefferson Village Center during the 2017 Charles Dickens Festival. Photo by Alex Petroski
The town crier declares the 2017 Charles Dickens Festival underway in Port Jeff Village Dec. 2. Photo by Alex Petroski
Attendees of the 2017 Charles Dickens Festival in Port Jeff Village toast marshmallows. Photo by Alex Petroski
Olaf from "Frozen" poses for photos during the 2017 Charles Dickens Festival in Port Jeff Village. Photo by Alex Petroski
Horse-drawn carriages circulate through Port Jeff Village during the 2017 Charles Dickens Festival. Photo by Alex Petroski
A Christmas tree on display at the Port Jefferson Village Center during the 2017 Charles Dickens Festival. Photo by Alex Petroski
Volunteers dress up as characters from "A Christmas Carol" during the 2017 Charles Dickens Festival in Port Jeff Village. Photo by Alex Petroski
Attendees of the 2017 Charles Dickens Festival decorate cookies at Danfords Hotel & Marina in Port Jeff. Photo by Alex Petroski
A Christmas tree on display at the Port Jefferson Village Center during the 2017 Charles Dickens Festival. Photo by Alex Petroski
On Dec. 3, legends and spies from history such as Culper Spy Ring members Major Benjamin Tallmadge and Caleb Brewster, prominent shipbuilder Jonas Smith and philanthropists Ward and Dorothy Melville joined Stony Brook and neighboring residents to ring in the holiday season.
The village’s 38th annual holiday festival featured the historic characters in giant puppet form, created by Processional Arts Workshop, during the event’s Puppets Processional led by The Jazz Loft owner Tom Manuel and his band. Santa was on hand to hear all the children’s’ wishes and take photos. Additional activities at the event organized by The Ward Melville Heritage Organization included live music with WALK Radio; a performance by Roseland School of Dance; carolers; a holiday train display at the Cultural Center; and Wiggs Optician’s holiday windows.
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A puppet of American military officer, spymaster and politician Major Benjamin Tallmadge
at the Stony Brook Village Holiday Festival's Legends & Spies Puppets Processional. Photo by Heidi Sutton
A puppet of Culper spy and patriot Caleb Brewster at the Stony Brook Village Holiday Festival's Legends & Spies Puppets Processional. Photo by Heidi Sutton
A puppet of prominent shipbuilder Jonas Smith
at the Stony Brook Village Holiday Festival's Legends & Spies Puppets Processional. Photo by Heidi Sutton
A puppet of cultural innovator and philanthropist Dorothy Bigelow Melville at the Stony Brook Village Holiday Festival's Legends & Spies Puppets Processional. Photo by Heidi Sutton
A puppet of businessman and philanthropist Ward Melville at the Stony Brook Village Holiday Festival's Legends & Spies Puppets Processional. Photo by Heidi Sutton
Tom Manuel and his band performing at the Stony Brook Village Holiday Festival. Photo by Heidi Sutton
Tom Manuel and his band performing at the Stony Brook Village Holiday Festival. Photo by Rita J. Egan
Tom Manuel and his band performing at the Stony Brook Village Holiday Festival. Photo by Rita J. Egan
Santa poses with Nicolo Palermo, 6, of Ronkonkoma, at the Stony Brook Village Holiday Festival Dec. 3. Photo from Chris Palermo
Santa poses with Matteo Sigillo, 11, Nicolo Palermo, 6, and Sara Sigillo, 7, of Ronkonkoma, at the Stony Brook Village Holiday Festival Dec. 3. Photo from Chris Palermo
Santa poses with children at the Stony Brook Village Holiday Festival Dec. 3. Photo by Heidi Sutton
Santa poses with children at the Stony Brook Village Holiday Festival Dec. 3. Photo by Heidi Sutton
Santa listens to children's requests at the Stony Brook Village Holiday Festival Dec. 3. Photo by Heidi Sutton
Santa poses with children at the Stony Brook Village Holiday Festival Dec. 3. Photo by Heidi Sutton
Like a scene from a popular HBO show, Port Jefferson was overrun with dragons for as far as the eye could see Sept. 16. The Greater Port Jefferson Chamber of Commerce hosted its fourth Dragon Boat Race Festival at Harborfront Park and in Port Jefferson Harbor Saturday. The annual event features boat races, food, vendors, traditional Chinese ceremonies and customs, and musical performances.
This year 30 dragon boat teams competed in a recreational division, and four club teams squared off on the open seas in a more competitive one. Teams consisted of 20 rowers, one steersman and one drummer for the races around the inner harbor. The festival is the brainchild of Barbara Ransome, director of operations at the chamber, who said she got her inspiration after she attended a dragon boat race festival in Cape May, New Jersey, a few years back.
āWeāve got it down from an organizational perspective,ā Ransome said in a phone interview after the event. āEverything went very well and very smooth.ā
Ransome said she thought this year yielded larger attendance numbers ā she speculated several thousandĀ ā than previous years, and said she is happy the event is growing. She said about 140 people utilized a free shuttle service provided to take attendees from their cars to the park, which was about 40 percent more than during last yearās event.
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Rowers compete in the 2017 Dragon Boat Race in Port Jefferson Sept. 16. Photo by Alex Petroski
Rowers compete in the 2017 Dragon Boat Race in Port Jefferson Sept. 16. Photo by Alex Petroski
Spectators cheer on teams from the shore during the 2017 Dragon Boat Race in Port Jefferson Sept. 16. Photo by Alex Petroski
Rowers compete in the 2017 Dragon Boat Race in Port Jefferson Sept. 16. Photo by Alex Petroski
Rowers compete in the 2017 Dragon Boat Race in Port Jefferson Sept. 16. Photo by Alex Petroski
Rowers compete in the 2017 Dragon Boat Race in Port Jefferson Sept. 16. Photo by Alex Petroski
Rowers compete in the 2017 Dragon Boat Race in Port Jefferson Sept. 16. Photo by Alex Petroski
Rowers compete in the 2017 Dragon Boat Race in Port Jefferson Sept. 16. Photo by Alex Petroski
Rowers compete in the 2017 Dragon Boat Race in Port Jefferson Sept. 16. Photo by Alex Petroski
Spectators cheer on teams from the shore during the 2017 Dragon Boat Race in Port Jefferson Sept. 16. Photo by Alex Petroski
Rowers compete in the 2017 Dragon Boat Race in Port Jefferson Sept. 16. Photo by Alex Petroski
Rowers compete in the 2017 Dragon Boat Race in Port Jefferson Sept. 16. Photo by Alex Petroski
Rowers compete in the 2017 Dragon Boat Race in Port Jefferson Sept. 16. Photo by Alex Petroski
Rowers compete in the 2017 Dragon Boat Race in Port Jefferson Sept. 16. Photo by Alex Petroski
Harborfront Park in Port Jefferson is crowded with thousands of people for the 2017 Dragon Boat Race Festival Sept. 16. Photo by Alex Petroski
Rowers compete in the 2017 Dragon Boat Race in Port Jefferson Sept. 16. Photo by Alex Petroski
Chinese culture is on display during the 2017 Dragon Boat Race Festival in Port Jefferson Sept. 16. Photo from Port Jefferson Village
Teams exit the pier after a heat during the 2017 Dragon Boat Race Sept. 16 in Port Jefferson. Photo by Alex Petroski
Rowers compete in the 2017 Dragon Boat Race in Port Jefferson Sept. 16. Photo by Alex Petroski
Rowers compete in the 2017 Dragon Boat Race in Port Jefferson Sept. 16. Photo by Alex Petroski
Rowers compete in the 2017 Dragon Boat Race in Port Jefferson Sept. 16. Photo by Alex Petroski
In the recreational group, a team from the Long Island School of Chinese called Huaxia Dragon took home the gold with a time of 58.06 seconds, narrowly edging Seas the Day, a team of rowers from St. Charles Hospital, who finished in 58.10 to capture silver. A New York City-area rowing club called The Collective won gold in the club division with a time of 58.27 in the final heat. The New York City Police Department rowing club came in second, finishing just two-tenths of a second behind The Collective.
Ransome said upon request from teams that competed in 2016, this was the first year racers were separated into groups based on experience levels, and she thought it was a good decision.
Port Jefferson Dragons, a Port Jefferson Village team, prepared extensively for the 2017 race, according to Ransome, so the group was bumped up as the fourth team in the club division. As a modest underdog, Port Jefferson Dragons got on the podium with a third-place finish.
āThat was very impressive,ā she said. āThey did extraordinarily well.ā
The Confucius Institute at Stony Brook University, an educational partnership between the school and Chinaās Office of Chinese Language Council International, was once again a sponsor of the event. According to a staff member at the institute, its directors were pleased with the event.
āWe basically support any cultural events in the area that promotes Chinese culture, so it makes sense,ā the staff member said.
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) sent Assistant Director of Constituencies for Asian American Affairs Joanne Choi to the event as a representative on his behalf. Suffolk County Legislators Kara Hahn (D-Setauket) and Sarah Anker (D-Mount Sinai), Brookhaven Town Councilwoman Valerie Cartright (D-Port Jefferson Station) and Village Mayor Margot Garant were among the other elected officials also in attendance.
A maximum occupancy restriction was placed on the village-owned pier for the event, which has been found to need repairs following the 2016 race. Ransome said the guidelines were strictly adhered to, and actually made the event easier for timekeepers and organizers.
Port Jefferson Village and John T. Mather Memorial Hospital squared off on the open seas for the eighth time Sept. 9 for the Village Cup Regatta, an annual event that features a parade, sailboat race, a reception and even remarks from actor Ralph Macchio. Representatives from both groups man vessels and race in the Long Island Sound near Port Jefferson Harbor for bragging rights and, more importantly, to raise money for cancer research. The Mather team won the 2017 incarnation of the race and proudly took the trophy back from Village Mayor Margot Garant, who had the cup since the village’s 2016 victory. In total, about $65,000 was raised forĀ Mather’s Palliative Medicine Program and for the Lustgarten Foundation, which funds pancreatic cancer research. The event is hosted by the Port Jefferson Yacht Club.
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A scene from the parade to kick off the 2017 Village Cup Regatta. Photo by Alex Petroski
Village Mayor Margot Garant aboard a ship during the 2017 Village Cup Regatta parade Sept. 9. Photo by Alex Petroski
Port Jefferson Yacht Clubs's Chuck Chiaramonte, actor and Regatta Ambassador Ralph Macchio and PJYC's Karl Janhsen during the reception following the 2017 Village Cup Regatta. Photo from Mather Hospital
Sail boats compete in the 2017 Village Cup Regatta Sept. 9. Photo from Mather Hospital
Sail boats compete in the 2017 Village Cup Regatta Sept. 9. Photo from Mather Hospital
The Town of Huntington will host boating safety courses for residents. File photo by TBR News Media
Participants in the 2017 Village Cup Regatta prepare to board their ships. Photo by Alex Petroski
Suffolk County Leg. Kara Hahn watches the 2017 Village Cup Regatta parade from Port Jefferson Harbor Sept. 9. Photo by Alex Petroski
Spectators gather on land and sea to watch the parade ahead of the 2017 Village Cup Regatta Sept. 9. Photo by Alex Petroski
A scene from the parade to kick off the 2017 Village Cup Regatta. Photo by Alex Petroski
A scene from the parade to kick off the 2017 Village Cup Regatta. Photo by Alex Petroski
The 2017 Village Cup Regatta parade is accompanied by bagpipes. Photo by Alex Petroski
A scene from the parade to kick off the 2017 Village Cup Regatta. Photo by Alex Petroski
A scene from the parade to kick off the 2017 Village Cup Regatta. Photo by Alex Petroski
A scene from the parade to kick off the 2017 Village Cup Regatta. Photo by Alex Petroski
Mather Hospital Vice President of Community Affairs Nancy Uzo accepts a check from the PJYC's Gary Passavia. Photo from Mather Hospital
Mayor Margot Garant hands the trophy for the annual Village Cup Regatta to Mather Hospital's Vice President for Community Affairs Nancy Uzo after Mather captured the cup Sept. 9. Photo from Mather Hospital
Through the efforts of a retired physicist, an orthopedic surgeon from Stony Brook University and a dedicated Haitian who has since moved to Long Island, a 16-year-old from Haiti is on a path with more open doors than ever.
Berlinda was born with two clubbed feet, though she is motivated to better herself, with the dream of one day walking on her own two feet. Steve Kramer, a retired Brookhaven National Lab accelerator physicist met the student in Haiti through Life & Hope Haiti, a nonprofit founded by Haitian-American Lucia Anglade, who built the Eben Ezer School in her hometown of Milot, Haiti.
Berlinda practices arithmetic. Photo from Steve Kramer
āShe had only been at the school for a few months and she was already learning basic arithmetic,ā Kramer said of seeing Berlinda back in March, after meeting her during her introduction to the school in December. āI gave her two columns of work and she handed it back to me with a big smile and said, āmore.āā
Berlinda has spirit, according to many who have met her, and Kramer was so moved by the story that he reached out to Dr. Wesley Carrion at Stony Brook University School of Medicineās orthopedics department about performing surgery to fix the girlās feet. He agreed to do it free of charge.
When he contacted Carrion, Kramer said his secretary Joan mentioned he was deployed in Afghanistan and she didnāt know when he would return. Within a day or two she called to tell him sheād heard from the doctor, who said heād return by April. In May, the two met.
āI sent him copies of Berlindaās X-rays and the video and he said he felt he could treat her and rotate the feet, and he would donate his time and get the equipment donated,ā Kramer said. āThat was a big relief. I felt it might become a reality.ā
Carrion had informed Kramer that he would need to get the hospital to donate some of the costs, so Kramer reached out to the Department of Medicineās Dr. L. Reuven Pasternak, who serves as vice president for health systems and chief executive officer of Stony Brook University Hospital.
What the external cages look like that will be used to repair Berlinda’s clubbed feet. Photo from Steve Kramer
āHe said they would cover her hospital costs,ā Kramer said after his meeting with Pasternak in July. āThis was a bigger relief since beside rotating the club feet we need to check out the status of the hole her spinal column might still have from the spinal bifida she was diagnosed as having. Everyone told me the hole doesnāt close up on its own, but she is doing so well that it may have, but it needs to be checked and closed if it is still open.ā
To help bring Berlinda to the United States, Kramer set up a GoFundMe to raise money for her flight cost and other post-operation expenses.
āThe fundraising has been going slower than I had hoped, even though everyone I contact is verbally supportive,ā he said. āAs a physicist my human appeal needs a lot of improvement to really move people to give. But then I look at the video and see the determination she has and feel she will deal with it as she has the tragic events she has already endured and I know she will persevere and will learn to walk.ā
Following the surgery, Berlinda will be in the hospital for four months, getting her feet rotated to stretch the tendons as part of the healing process. Her legs will be in cages called external frames that will be attached by pins drilled into her leg bones. Because these create open wounds, itās best for her to stay the hospital instead of returning to Haiti, to keep the wounds sterile. While recovering, she will continue to go through schooling, which will be one-on-one instead of in a larger classroom back in Haiti.
Without the construction of The Eben Ezer School, Berlindaās struggles might never have come to light for Kramer. What began as a 10-child school back in 2001 has grown to population over 400, according to Anglade.
āI took the $7,000 I received from my tax return and decided I wanted to build a school in my home country ā that had been my motivation,ā said Anglade, who now lives in West Babylon. āIām so blessed. I thank God for that, say thank you all the time. Itās a big school now, and weāre still helping.ā
Berlinda crawls on her hands and knees because she cannot walk with her two clubbed feet. Photo from Steve Kramer
Anglade first visited Berlinda at her house, and heard from the 16-year-old how her brothers and sisters attended school, and she wished she could join them. Because the school is far from her house, she couldnāt walk there.
āI went to her house and she was quiet, said she canāt go to school,ā Anglade said. āI told her I was going to help her, and I took her to the school. I pay someone to stay with her at the school. Her dream is to walk, to learn, to be someone. She wants to be happy.ā
Kramer and Stony Brook University Hospital are making her dream a reality.
āThank God for Steve ā he has a good heart and I canāt do it by myself,ā Anglade said. āWith all my heart, I am so happy. Steve has put in a lot of effort to helping Berlinda make her dream come true.ā
Kramer first visited the Eben Ezer School through Wading Riverās North Shore United Methodist Church in 2015. He joined a group visiting Haiti in February, and has since visited three more times by himself and with Anglade. They are working toward improving the facilities at the school through solar power and updating the water system.
Kramer also provided economic opportunities for students and natives of the town. He cultivated a group of farmers that grow ancient Egyptian wheat, kumat, which is exported to the U.S.
Now, heās trying to help provide a future for Berlinda.
āSheās very positive, sheās a sponge for learning,ā he said. āI just want to help this Haitian girl who has had a tragic life story so far, but has kept her joy of life and has determination to improve herself.ā
Sixteen-year-old Berlinda from Haiti will be receiving surgery on her two clubbed feet at Stony Brook University Hospital. Photo from Steve Kramer
Amy Miller, of Maine, who has helped Anglade since 2007, said she finds what Kramer is doing admirable.
āI met Berlinda and I really respect his desire to help her move forward,ā she said. āYou meet someone and they kind of capture your heart, and I think you have to follow your heart. Thatās what heās doing.ā
Both said they are also moved by Angladeās motivation.
āI am tremendously inspired by Lucia,ā Miller said. āSheās a force. Lucia is a person that astounds most people that meet her ā her energy and her commitment. She loves the kids and itās wonderful to watch. The community once said she should be their mayor after she brought water to the school she also to the community. Sheās quite something.ā
Anglade said sheās just doing what she thinks is right, in giving back to her hometown.
āMy four kids here go to school, theyāre in college, they eat every day, but in Haiti, we donāt have enough to feed over 400 kids, so sometimes when weāre down there for a week or two, we can only feed them for one week,ā Anglade said. āI canāt go every week, but if I could go every week, every month, Iād go, just to help them. For me to be able to go down there to help those students, my community, Iām so happy to do it. I really feel good about it.ā
To donate to help get Berlinda to the United States and to receive the care and post-treatment she will need, visit www.gofundme.com/BerlindasMiracle. To find out more about Life and Hope Haiti, or to get involved, visit www.lifeandhopehaiti.org.
A braveĀ dog took Port Jefferson Harbor by storm to rescue a flailing fawn July 16, and as a result has become a national celebrity. A video was posted on Facebook Sunday morning of Storm, a dog owned by Setauket resident Mark Freeley, bounding into Port Jeff harbor to rescue a drowning baby deer as Freeley watched from the shore and urged his dog to bring the deer in. By Wednesday, several million shares and views later, the video had gone viral and Storm was set to be honored by Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone (D). Freeley said it best at the conclusion of the one-minute video: āGood boy, Storm!ā Check back next week for a full story on the local hero.
History is repeating itself, at the boat ramp in Port Jefferson Marina located at the north end of Barnum Avenue in Port Jefferson Village.
A man is being treated for serious injuries at Stony Brook University Hospital after driving into Port Jefferson Harbor via the ramp at about 5:30 p.m. April 6, according to the Suffolk County Police Department. The car was found submerged underwater and at least one good Samaritan helped remove the man from the car. Members from the Suffolk County Marine Bureau dive team went in the water to search for possible additional victims, and the police said the investigation is continuing.
Several similar incidents have occurred since an episode in December 2005 when then-60-year-old Setauket resident Richard Levin drove into the water on the same ramp and onlookers had to pull his unconscious body from the fully submerged car. Levin died days later as a result of the incident.
āPeople are dying here and itās a simple fix,ā Christopher Kelsch, one of the people who witnessed Levinās death 12 years ago and tried to help, said after seeing news of the April 6 incident.
Good Samaritans and SCPD Marine Bureau divers help a driver submerged in Port Jefferson Harbor April 6. Photo by Andrew Tetreault/Fully Involved Media Group
Kelsch was given a Carnegie Medal by the Carnegie Hero Fund Commission, for his attempts to save Levinās life. Kelsch had to be rescued by firefighters as a result of his efforts, and suffered from hypothermia in the aftermath. He was also called to give testimony about the incident when Levinās family sued Brookhaven Town for negligence, a suit that was dismissed by the New York State Supreme Court.
The Carnegie Medal recipient said during the interview he wanted to reach out in part to make the 2017 victim and family members aware he would be glad to help them if they sought him out.
āSomebody needs to shine a serious spotlight because Dr. Levin died at that location,ā he said.
A Brookhaven Town spokesperson said in an emailed statement there are clear signs and traffic measures in place to warn residents of the rampās location.
āThe Port Jefferson boat ramp has existed at its current location for generations,ā the spokesperson said. āA number of measures are in place including a multitude of āDo Not Enterā signs, road arrows and other traffic control measures to clearly indicate that this is not an entrance.ā
Port Jefferson Village Mayor Margot Garant is taking the issue seriously, and said she asked the villageās code enforcement chief to compile data for her regarding the number of times similar incidents have happened at that location, and she plans to present the data to Brookhaven Supervisor Ed Romaine to reiterate calls for preventative action to be taken by the town. Garant said in a phone interview she had heard the driver was in stable condition as of Saturday, but she was told he had taken a turn for the worse since.
āItās only a matter of time before this happens again,ā Garant said. She added at the present time she plans to call on the town to do something to solve the problem and no plans of possible village actions are currently being discussed. Garant said Port Jefferson Village and Brookhaven Town cofunded a waterfront revitalization plan years ago, which included a proposal to move the town ramp elsewhere.
āThis is town-owned property ā they have to step up and resolve this once and for all,ā Garant said. She added that additional signage beyond two ādo not enterā signs or some sort of barricade would be āminimalā steps the town could take.
Video shows the second blaze of the night March 9 being battled by the Terryville and neighboring fire departments. Video by Port Jefferson Fire Chief Charlie Russo
Three fires were intentionally litĀ March 9, with the first starting just before 1 p.m. and the last starting at 9:15 p.m. atĀ the site of the former industrial air-craft part manufacturer Lawrence Aviation off Sheep Pasture Road in Port Jefferson Station, according to the Suffolk County Police Department.
“Police were called to a fire at an abandoned home on the property at 12:55 p.m,” the departmentĀ said in a statement.Ā “Several hours later, police responded to another structure fire on the property at 8:50 p.m. At approximately 9:15 p.m. police responded to a fire at a third structure. The fires were intentionally set. There were no injuries.”
The Terryville Fire Department responded to the calls and extinguished the fires with help from neighboring departments. Two firefighters were transported to a local hospital for precautionary reasons, according to the department.
The department responded to the first fire on the property at a vacant house at about 1 p.m. according their Facebook page.
“Hours later they responded to the same sight for another fire, that was well involved,” the post said. “Moments later they were notified of a third fire on the Lawrence Aviation property, which is a Super Fund Site.”
The second fire was in a vacant private dwelling onĀ Willis Avenue Extension off of Sheep Pasture Road, just north of the Lawrence Aviation Property.
“Our department responded to the same location earlier in the day for a bedroom fire which was quickly extinguished,” the post said. “The second fire in the evening was unrelated to and more extensive than the first and had started in a separate section of the home…at approximately 9:30 p.m., while units were still operating at the house fire on Willis Avenue Extension, we were alerted to an additional structure fire, this one reported to be on the property of the defunct Lawrence Aviation Property.”
Suffolk County Police Department Arson Section detectives are investigating the incidents.
A site is declared a Superfund site if it has been contaminated by hazardous waste and is designated for cleanup by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency because it poses a threat to human health and/or the environment.
Brookhaven Town restrictedĀ development at theĀ polluted site in July 2015Ā using a special zoning district.Ā Lawrence Aviation dumped harmful chemicals at the site over years, contaminating soil and groundwater. The EPAĀ and the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation have been working for several years to undo the damage through the federal Superfund program, which cleans up such contaminations of hazardous materials, but it could still take two more decades to completely clean local groundwater.
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Scenes from a hectic night at the site of Lawrence Aviation, where three intentional fires were set March 9. Photos by Dennis Whittam
Scenes from a hectic night at the site of Lawrence Aviation, where three intentional fires were set March 9. Photos by Dennis Whittam
Scenes from a hectic night at the site of Lawrence Aviation, where three intentional fires were set March 9. Photos by Dennis Whittam
Scenes from a hectic night at the site of Lawrence Aviation, where three intentional fires were set March 9. Photos by Dennis Whittam
Scenes from a hectic night at the site of Lawrence Aviation, where three intentional fires were set March 9. Photos by Dennis Whittam
Scenes from a hectic night at the site of Lawrence Aviation, where three intentional fires were set March 9. Photos by Dennis Whittam
Scenes from a hectic night at the site of Lawrence Aviation, where three intentional fires were set March 9. Photos by Dennis Whittam
Scenes from a hectic night at the site of Lawrence Aviation, where three intentional fires were set March 9. Photos by Dennis Whittam
Scenes from a hectic night at the site of Lawrence Aviation, where three intentional fires were set March 9. Photos by Dennis Whittam
Scenes from a hectic night at the site of Lawrence Aviation, where three intentional fires were set March 9. Photos by Dennis Whittam
Scenes from a hectic night at the site of Lawrence Aviation, where three intentional fires were set March 9. Photos by Dennis Whittam
Scenes from a hectic night at the site of Lawrence Aviation, where three intentional fires were set March 9. Photos by Dennis Whittam
Scenes from a hectic night at the site of Lawrence Aviation, where three intentional fires were set March 9. Photos by Dennis Whittam
Scenes from a hectic night at the site of Lawrence Aviation, where three intentional fires were set March 9. Photos by Dennis Whittam
Scenes from a hectic night at the site of Lawrence Aviation, where three intentional fires were set March 9. Photos by Dennis Whittam
Kiddie Academy hosts second annual Hop-A-Thon to raise money for the Lukemia and Lymphona Society
On Feb. 17, kids between the ages 5 and 12 turned the music up and busted a move for good reason: they helped to raise $575 for those with leukemia and those working to find a cure.
For the second year in a row, Kiddie Academy Educational Child Care in Wading River sponsored a fun-filled and awareness-driven Hop-a-thon for the Long Island chapter of the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, the largest voluntary health organization dedicated to funding research, finding cures and providing treatment access for blood cancer patients.
Leukemia and Lymphoma Society Campaign Specialist Alexa Landro speaks to kids at Kiddie Academy of Wading River. Photo by Kevin Redding
As part of the organizationās Student Series, which aims to involve young people in the fight against cancer through service learning and character education programs, the event is a dance celebration for kids who, along with their parents, contributed money to the important cause. As leukemia affects more children than any other cancer, the program lets kids help kids while having fun.
But before the academyās school age kids took to the lobby to hop and bop to songs like Taylor Swiftās āShake It Off,ā they sat down for a brief presentation about what they donated money towards, engaging in true-or-false questionnaires about blood cancers and learning about the āhonored heroesā on Long Island ā students from local school districts who have beaten cancer.
āThanks to each and every one of you helping to raise money, kids like these are 100 percent better today and happy and healthy,ā Leukemia and Lymphoma Society Campaign Specialist Alexa Landro told the energetic kids. āYouāre dancing for them and I canāt thank you enough.ā
Kiddie Academy of Wading River students danced during its second annual Hop-A-Thon Feb. 17 to raise money for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Socoety. Photo by Kevin Redding
Samantha Wooley, a Kiddie Academy staff member, said the Hop-A-Thon is a reflection of the values of compassion and community contribution the students work on every month.
āIn dancing, and just having fun, theyāre working as a team and doing this all together,ā Wooley said. āItās broken up into different ages and levels, some of them are more shy while others are outgoing, and weāre just mixing them all together to have one big dance off.ā
Kiddie Academy of Wading River reached out to the society last year to participate in the program to support one of its students who had been diagnosed with leukemia, and is currently in remission.
Christina St. Nicholas, the director of Kiddie Academy of Wading River, said in a press statement that the Hop-A-Thon was āexactly in line with our curriculumā and the child careās āstrong emphasis on character education.ā
ā[Itās] an exciting program that will engage our preschoolers and school-age children to help others in a fun, educational way,ā St. Nicholas said. āJoining in this program to fight leukemia is one of the many ways we strive to model the values of community, compassion and cooperation each and every day.ā
Kiddie Academy of Wading River staff member Michele Boccia, on left, and Leukemia and Lymphoma Society Campaign Specialist Alexa Landro, on right, talk to students about the lives they’re helping save. Photo by Kevin Redding
Nearly all 35 students in the school-age department of Kiddie Academy participated, with each classroom collecting bags of loose change. The childcare center also reached out to parents, who had the option to pay through a website or submit a check. Donations ranged from $25 to $75.
Kristin Lievre, a mother of two Kiddie Academy students from Wading River, said itās important that the kids learn at an early age to give back to the community.
āI think itās good to see there are ways we can help people through things like this,ā she said. āThis makes them feel good about what they can do for others.ā
Sophia, 10, one of the star dancers of the day, echoed Lievre.
āIt feels good because we can raise money for the people who are sick so they can get better,ā she said, āand donāt have to deal with the sickness anymore.ā