21 April 2007

NEWS; PROPERTY TAX FREEZE PROPOSED

MINEOLA, Mar. 29—Nassau County Republican lawmakers have proposed a freeze on property tax assessment increases for the next five years because the 2003 reassessments, and subsequent annual assessments, have caused “sticker shock” for Nassau County residents, according to the legislators.

The proposed legislation calls for County Assessor Harvey Levinson to continue assessing properties, but any increases he finds would not take effect until 2013. Any depreciation in property value, whether by assessment or by sale, would take immediate effect.


The Democratic majority objected to the proposed legislation and they planned to prevent a vote on the proposal by using parliamentary maneuvers.


Nassau
was ordered to reassess properties for three years beginning in 2003 due to a court case, settled in 2000, which found that the county’s method for assessing real property was discriminatory. The plaintiff had argued that property in poorer and minority communities were over-assessed.

"Annually reassessing the value of Nassau residents’ homes during a real estate boom is not an accurate reflection of proper proportionate property taxing as envisioned by New York State law,” said Legis. John Ciotti (R-Elmont) in a statement.


Prior to the case, properties were assessed for tax purposes at the 1938 land value, according to minority press secretary Christina Brennan. This led to the over-assessment of some communities in the 1990s, because there was no real definitive community of minorities or the poor on Long Island in 1938, she said.


"Our families are being torn apart because no one can afford to remain here or start a life here due to the exorbitant costs of living on Long Island—and a big part of that is runaway property taxes,” said Legis. Denise Ford (R-Long Beach) in a statement released to the press.


Democrats dispute the motives for the legislation. “It is the most politically motivated, irresponsible, public relations feel-good idea that I have ever heard of in government,” Presiding Officer Judy Jacobs (D-Woodbury) said.


Because the three-year period of the settlement is over, the Republicans wanted to prevent the re-assessments from continuing. This proposal, according to the Republican press office, is the “first of many measures to decode the Nassau County taxing procedure and bring predictability back to our residents’ households.”

Property taxes in Nassau County are calculated by taking the fair market value (as assessed), and multiplying it by an assessment rate, which is currently 1 per cent. Next, that assessed value is taxed at the rates the assorted taxes require.

However, state law requires that an assessed value cannot increase by more than 6 per cent annually, so to circumvent that, Minority Leader Peter Schmitt (R-Massapequa) alleged, County Assessor Harvey Levinson has been “manipulating the fractional assessment rates.”

The Democrats are not putting the bill onto the legislative calendar, which is tantamount to killing the bill before it even arrives.

University faculty and staff were divided on the issue. “No, I don’t think a freeze is the thing to do,” said, Executive Secretary of the political science Mary Starke, who is from Bellmore. “History taught us a lesson when County Executive [Tom] Gulotta appeased voters by never addressing taxes under a code from the 1930s.”

“Property taxes are exorbitantly high, second to New Jersey for highest in the country,” said Dr. Leslie D. Feldman, associate professor of political science, who is from Great Neck. “This platform is a good way for Republicans to get back power.”

One professor questioned its happening. “In theory it is a good idea, but is it realistic?” asked Dr. Rosanna Perotti, Associate Professor of political science. “I don’t know.

NEWS; DIPLOMAT SAYS TALK TO IRAN

The United States must normalize relations with Iran instead of preparing for a possible invasion, said Mansour Farhang, who spoke Wednesday concluding the “International Scene” lecture series presented by the University’s Center for Civic Engagement. He also said that the American-supported Shah had been a major supporter of Iranian nuclear capability prior to his overthrow in 1979.

Mansour Farhang is an Iranian-born author and diplomat. He served as the first ambassador to the United Nations after the Iranian revolution but left in 1981 as a dissident. He currently teaches Middle Eastern politics and international relations at Bennington College, in Vermont.

His lecture focused on relations between the United States and Iran, especially if Iran were to gain the capacity to build a nuclear weapon, which he said that experts believe is to be about 5-7 years away.

Farhang sought to dispel the notion in the United States that the current Iranian administration is nothing but a group of religious fanatics. “I consider the Iranian political leaders, those that are managing the country today, to be rational actors in the Machiavellian sense,” he said. “They are people who calculate and think about their interests, as opposed to being whimsical or fanatical.”

Farhang said the development of weapons is to be more of a deterrent to forces surrounding the country, rather than to use them against Americans or their allies.

Iran had been pursuing the nuclear option since the early 1970’s, according to Farhang. The Shah at the time, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, wanted to ensure Iranian security if the good relations between Iran and the US were to deteriorate.

Revolutionary Iran dissolved the nuclear program soon after its ascendance to power because they did not trust anything done by the Shah and because the new Prime Minister did not trust the science behind it, Farhang said.

However, after the Iran-Iraq war, they saw the necessity in redeveloping the weapons capacity. Rather than the Western aid that they sought last time, Iran received investment and supplies from the East, including Russia, China and Pakistan, Farhang said.

Iran wants functional independence, according to Farhang. Rather than being tied down and surrounded by the American hegemon, Iran wants to be able to assert itself as a major player in the region.\

Four things must happen for relations to normalize between the two countries, according to Farhang.

This includes security guarantees from the United States, saying that the surrounding Americans will not invade the nation. The Americans have a military presence in nearly every country bordering Iran, including Iraq, Afghanistan and Turkey, and the Iranians feel threatened, he said.

Iran wants the sanctions lifted. According to Farhang, the revolution failed in its attempt to provide income equality and freedom for its people. The sanctions have strangled the economy while strengthening the regime, much like Saddam’s Iraq, he said.

If the Iranian economy were to be able to flourish with western investment, this could be beneficial for both countries, Farhang added.

Because of its history in the region, Iran wants respect. The American attempts to isolate the country for the last 28 years have failed, so respect is in order, according to Farhang.

Most importantly to Farhang, any negotiations cannot have any preconditions. Iran has said they listen to the United States, but they will not act because conditions are unfair.

Farhang believes that the American foreign policy elites want to have a détente with Iran, though some still ache for confrontation.

“The nuclear issue has come to symbolize the nature of this estrangement between the two countries,” he said. “But the estrangement is not limited to the nuclear issue.”

The confrontation between the US and Iran has aided the “most reactionary elements of the body politic,” Farhang said. “They use xenophobia, they use the confrontation to suppress dissent and justify their repression of political opponents.”

Both countries have a stake in many issues, according to Farhang. A peaceful Persian Gulf is in Iran’s interest, he said. “Normalization of US-Iranian relations would be a fantastic gift that the Bush administration, or maybe the successor, could give the Iranian democracy.”

OP-ED; IMUS SHOULD NOT HAVE BEEN FIRED

The Madness Must Stop

Let me begin by stating that this is not a defense of Don Imus. What he said was both reprehensible and indefensible, but this must be clear: he should not have been fired.

Don Imus got his stripes as a “shock jock” in the 1970s and 1980s, and statements like this were his calling card. His reinvention as a bastion of the establishment brought Imus a newfound credibility from a source he had previously disregarded.

With this newfound credibility came responsibility. Imus interviewed many members of the press, as well as politicians. The interviews were highly substantive and nuanced: some even compared their experiences on Imus to “Q & A” on C-SPAN.

With that being said, a profile on Imus aired on “60 Minutes” in July 1998; Mike Wallace interviewed him. In the piece, Wallace accused his program of being racist, to which Imus responded, “Give me one example of one racist incident.”

Wallace replied: “You told Tom Anderson, the producer, in your car, coming home, that Bernard McGuirk is there to do n----- jokes.” Imus protested and said that he had never used the word himself, but Anderson, who was at the interview, said that Imus had in fact used the word. Imus backed down.

When Bob Herbert of the New York Times indicated to MSNBC that he was going to refer to the piece, “they began acting very weird.” The same day the column ran, April 12, Imus was removed from MSNBC’s broadcast schedule.

As I mentioned earlier, Imus had a long record of misogyny, racism and anti-semitism.

What matters now, however, is what comes next. Since the “establishment” had such a close relationship with the Imus program recently, they have been extremely quiet on the issue.

Frank Rich, also of the New York Times, appears to be the first to attack the future head on. In his column published April 15, he admitted to his own hypocrisy on the issue: he has been a regular guest since the 1990s.

Rich called the slurs “burlesque” but admitted that the slurs didn’t bother him previously; Rich is Jewish, but he saw Imus as an equal opportunity offender. With Imus’ firing, Rich argued that edgy comics, once again, are going to be marginalized. Let us remember the example of Bill Maher, he said.

Rich’s fundamental argument is one held by many journalists, including this columnist: no speech should be censored and more speech leads to better speech.

Immediately following Imus’ firing, discussions are being held over the influence of hip-hop music on today’s youth. Mainstream hip-hop is chock full of examples of misogyny and racism: the word n----- is tossed about regularly, women are either bitches or ho’s and the lyrics portray an image of increasing drug abuse and crime.

Not all of the artists are black, either. For every 50 cent, there is a Bubba Sparxxx with a song like “Miss New Booty.” For every D.M.X., there is an Eminem.

Most important is the audience consuming this dose of hateful music. According to Russell Simmons, President of Def Jam Records, 4 out of 5 hip-hop records are bought by white suburban teens.The white kids are listening to “street” music, because they think it makes them “harder.” They are looking for that edge that their suburban, upper middle-class lifestyle is not providing for them. What they don’t realize is how detrimental it is to their interpersonal development.

The question now becomes: who gets the right to say these words? Why do “artists” get the right to say it but “shock jocks” and the “establishment” cannot? When are the words wrong?]

All of these questions are now being answered in the wake of Imus’ fall, or at the very least, the attempt is there. My resolute belief in free speech calls for a theoretical defense of Imus. He has every right to say what he did, regardless of whether someone agrees with him.

As does Rush Limbaugh when he claimed Michael J. Fox exaggerated his Parkinson’s disease to win votes for a referendum in Missouri. That does not make his speech acceptable; rather it just makes it accessible, even if it isn’t true.

The free market will decide if people will tune into hateful communication, regardless of the medium. If there is a demand for it, a supply will be provided.

But if the country has truly moved on from the problem of racism and sexism, then the public will not tune into it, and it will fall by the wayside. Until this happens, we can assume that the divide has not been closed.

06 April 2007

PROFILE; MIKE ANDERSON-MOVERS AND SHAKERS (TIMES OF MIDDLE COUNTRY)

Careers in technology are the new job frontier, and Mike Anderson knows it. He has worked in the industry for over 20 years and has both designed and taught courses in technology for several colleges and universities.

His work for the Middle Country Central School District School Board as a Trustee and his membership in the Greater Middle Country Chamber of Commerce, all while running his own business, show his hard work ethic: something he developed growing up in Lindenhurst and in the military.

Mike Anderson grew up in Lindenhurst and graduated from Copiague High School in 1978. After graduating, he volunteered in the Army, serving with the 101st Airborne Division until 1981. Upon returning to Lindenhurst, he took courses at technical school and became a certified systems engineer with Microsoft.

Anderson became Chief Information Officer for Nextech Information Systems, which involved teaching over 40 trainers at a time at over 8 locations throughout Long Island. This led Anderson to design curricula for and teach courses for Nextech at colleges and universities all over the island, including SUNY Stony Brook, Hofstra University, St. John’s, Briarcliffe College and others.

Nextech closed down in 2001; Anderson proceeded to form his own business, American Professional Services. “It has given me time to give back to the community,” he said. Anderson was a founding member of the Centereach Chamber of Commerce, which, in turn, became the Greater Middle Country Chamber of Commerce to accommodate nearby Selden and Lake Grove. He was elected president of the Chamber last month.

Anderson has served as Trustee for the School Board since 2004. He was asked to run for the position by the School Board President after serving as a businessperson-advisor for a Budget Advisory Committee for the School District.

His committee assignments include Chairman of the Technology Committee, co-Chair of the Committee for Better Choices and co-Chair of the Budget Planning Committee.

As Chairman of the Technology Committee, Anderson is in charge of acquiring the best technology for the students of the District. “Enrico Crocetti, the Director of Technology, is doing a great job, he’s doing a lot of work with little resources,” he said. “There is very little to improve that is technology-related.”

New York State has cut financial aid to the school district, Anderson said. As such, funding for technology has lessened for the last few years. “We are working with the Legislative Committee to increase state aid to the district so all valued programs can continue in the district,” Anderson said.

Anderson was crucial in securing a $50,000 grant for the schools as co-chair for the Choices Committee. ‘The purpose behind the program is to give the students the knowledge and the opportunity to make better choices,” he said. “It’s not just to make ‘rec’ nights.”

“He got a lot done on the Choices Committee,” said Ron Grinnell, the School Board’s Vice President. Anderson has overseen the nights of recreation, counseling and social work, and the availability of literature to combat violence and drug abuse.

The Budget Planning Committee involves working with the Superintendent of Schools, Dr. Roberta Gerold, and Vice Superintendent, Herb Chessler. “He is a very focused board member who always has the student’s best interest in mind,” Gerold said.

The committee is looking at the programs run by the district with the district officers and working with the community to determine the value of each program. The committee is changing the way we look at the budget, from a single-year plan to a multi-year plan,” he said. “[It is] going to take some time to make that transition.”

Anderson’s background in technology has brought success to Centereach’s businesses and education. Though he does not actually write the budget, his insight is monumental in how the town allocates money, be it to attract new members to the Chamber of Commerce or to make the schools better in order to bring more people to live in Centereach.

Since being elected to the School Board, Anderson has joined an institution that values his membership. “Everybody on the board does a good job and he fits right in,” Ron Grinnell said.

The Centereach Civics Association agrees. “He is very knowledgeable and a very good organizer,” said Carol Cavalieri, its 1st Vice President. “He [Anderson] definitely is a mover and shaker.”