Get Rid of Dated Prescription Drugs this Saturday
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Scarsdale Task Force on Drugs and Alcohol encourages your participation in the National Take-Back Initiative this Saturday, September 29th. How many of us have prescription drugs in our medicine cabinets that are expired or simply no longer needed? Prescription drugs are an important safety hazard for young children, and household availability of prescription medication, especially narcotics and stimulants, contributes to high levels of adolescent prescription drugs abuse. According to 2011 data from the National Survey of Drug Use and Health, non-medical use of prescription drugs is second only to marijuana as the most common category of illicit drug use among youth and young adults ages 12-25. It is also estimated that more than 1/3 of those who begin misusing prescription drugs are under age 18 when they start.
To help combat the abuse of prescription medication, the Scarsdale Task Force on Drugs and Alcohol encourages all households to participate in the National Take-Back Initiative on September 29, 2012. The initiative, spearheaded by the Drug Enforcement Administration in partnership with state and local organizations and law enforcement agencies, urges people to dispose of unwanted or unused prescription drugs in a safe manner.
This Saturday from 10- 2am, you can visit one of the several disposal sites in our neighboring communities including Larchmont, Bronxville, and Ardsley. At the last Take-Back event on April 28th, the Drug Enforcement Administration reported collection of 552,161 pounds (276 tons) of unwanted or expired medications that were safely disposed of at the 5,659 take-back sites throughout the country. They are hoping to surpass these efforts on Saturday.
Please note that disposal of medication through a take-back program is the safest means of disposal from a health and environmental standpoint although the FDA has published disposal guidelines in the event a take-back program is not available.
For more information and addresses for participating sites, visit the National Takeback Initiative website .
iPhone 5 - Should You Upgrade?
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The iPhone 5 arrives on store shelves at the end of this week (September 21, 2012), and much like the release of previous Apple devices there are already people lined up on the streets to get one. Seriously. I think people who line up days in advance are seeking the media attention more than anything else, but as an Apple aficionado myself I do get excited for their latest offerings. I draw the line, however, at camping on the street when I can pre-order a device online in the comfort of my own home.
Are you looking to upgrade to the iPhone 5 from a previous iPhone? Or are you looking to switch over from a Blackberry or Android smartphone? Here’s the skinny…
Making the upgrade:
If you own an iPhone 3GS or iPhone 4, you are likely eligible for a carrier-subsidized upgrade depending on the date of purchase/contract renewal. The 16 gigabyte iPhone 5 is $199. The benefits of the upgrade include a larger screen size (great for watching movies or streaming Netflix), thinner profile, and faster data speeds with a 4G/LTE data plan. Much of southern Westchester County and NYC has 4G data coverage with Verizon and AT&T. Sprint has 4G coverage as well, but generally not in Scarsdale (at least not yet). Other improvements to the phone include a faster processor and camera, and longer battery life.
Apple has changed the dock connector from a 30-pin connector to an 8-pin. The 30-pin connector has been widely used on all previous iPhones, iPod, iPod Touch devices, and the iPad. For folks like me with multiple Apple devices, you will no longer be able to use old data cables to charge your iPhone 5, unless you fork over $20-$40 for an adapter. This has been a sore spot with many Apple consumers since it will require such adapters to work with older third-party devices (home stereo system receivers, alarm clocks, etc.) that only use the 30-pin dock connector…AND, the adapter is not guaranteed to work with all devices. Folks who connect their iPhones to their car stereo systems via proprietary cables may no longer be able to do so. Please check with your vehicle’s manufacturer.
Switching to Apple from a different device:
If you’ve been waiting to make the switch to an iPhone, now is the best time to do it. You will have the latest and greatest device that you’ll surely be happy with. The previous iPhone models (the iPhone 4 and 4S) are still being sold by Apple, but now at a lower cost than the iPhone 5. These phones are still fast and current with great cameras and screen resolution. If having 4G/LTE data speeds is not a concern to you, if you live in an area that has spotty or no 4G/LTE coverage, or if you have a teenager begging you for an iPhone, getting an iPhone 4 or 4S is a great alternative that will save money.
How to get one:
For those like me who don’t want to wait in line on launch day, the best bet is to pre-order an iPhone 5 online and have it delivered to you. This is a relatively hassle-free process and the phone will arrive pre-activated when ordered through your carrier’s website. There’s also something to be said for waiting a few days or weeks for the hoopla to die down. By waiting and visiting an Apple store, Best Buy, or your carrier’s store, you should be able to get one provided that inventory is still available. The iPhone is offered in black or white, both of which are sleek and attractive. You can’t go wrong with either one.
Have any iPhone questions or anything else Apple-related? Add a comment below or send me a tweet @jasonbajor.
A lover of all kinds of technology, Jason Bajor is a freelance website designer and owns JB Web & Photo, based in White Plains. He can be reached at jason@jbwp.com.
Lightning Strikes Edgewood Home
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A swift response by an observant neighbor and the Scarsdale Fire Department was instrumental in saving a Bradley Road home that was struck by lightning during a violent storm on Friday, September 7th.
Frank Colella and his daughter were both in the house shortly before 6 pm when lightning struck, but initially did not realize what had happened. In fact, the daughter was on the phone with her mother, Pat, who was in lower Manhattan at the time and the call got cut off. Not realizing what had happened, the daughter called her mother back on her cell phone and continued to chat. A few minutes later, the 17-year-old heard a crinkling sound in the attic and feared there were squirrels in the house. She yelled down to her dad to come upstairs -- and when he pulled down the Bessler stairs to the attic to investigate he found the insulation melting, saw flames and closed the stairs back up.
They both ran downstairs to call the fire department but found that their phone line had been knocked out. Fortunately, by that time, neighbor and volunteer firefighter Jeff Hill had called 911 and ran into the house to tell the Colella’s to get out. He had heard thunder, seen a flash of light and smoke coming from the Colella’s roof. Three to five minutes later, the fire department was there and went to work to save the house.
Eight vehicles from Scarsdale, along with crews from Hartsdale and the County came to the house which is near the corner of Boulevard in Edgewood. The firefighters acted quickly and aggressively and were able to confine the fire to one end of the attic and prevent it from spreading to the rest of the house.
Firefighters opened up the roof to vent the attic and also had to open up the ceilings to the second floor to fully extinguish the flames. The attic and the roof suffered structural damage and there was smoke and water damage on the first and second floors. The house is now uninhabitable.
Scarsdale’s Fire Captain McIlvain was the tour commander and Captain Mann served as the safety captain. In addition to the professional staff, 23 volunteers along with several off duty career staff and a mutual aid FAST team from Hartsdale assisted with the effort. No one was injured. According to Captain Mann, if the firemen had not acted so quickly, the fire would have destroyed the house. Scarsdale Fire Chief Thomas M. Cain said, “The early notification, rapid response and diligent work by our firefighters surely kept this from being a total loss.”
The family has moved to a hotel as the attic is thoroughly burnt and there is extensive damage on the second floor. The first floor of the home has smoke and water damage and Colella is not sure what can be saved. Firefighters did allow the family to go back in and gather some of their belongings and they were able to retrieve family photos from the basement. They grabbed the clothes they could find and a helpful neighbor spent all day Sunday doing laundry to try to save at least some of their belongings.
Pat says she is “stunned, shocked and overwhelmed” by what happened but extremely grateful to the fire department for ensuring the safety of her husband and daughter and saving the house.
She is also very grateful to the members of the Scarsdale Congregational Church who rallied around her family as well as many of their Edgewood neighbors. Members of the church and friends came to the house immediately to help and have done everything from finding them lodging to giving them gift cards for meals and providing emotional support.
Contractor Found Dead in Scarsdale Basement
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On the morning of August 29 Scarsdale Police got a call from a worried relative of a contractor who had been working in Scarsdale the previous day. The man failed to return home that night.
Police went to the Birchall Road home where the man was working to investigate and found the deceased contractor in a narrow crawl space of the basement where he had been working on the electrical lines. When his body was found, he was still holding an electrical wire. It appeared that the cause of death was electrocution.
The victim was identified as Michael Macol, age 47 of Bethel CT. In order to remove the body from the house, the electricity had to be disconnected and a temporary generator brought in to light up the crawl space. The Scarsdale Fire Department and a Technical Rescue Team from the White Plains Fire Department removed Macol’s body from the home.
Macol had been working at the house with the general contractor on Tuesday and the contractor finished his work and left the job first. When the residents returned home at 8 pm Tuesday night, they found the electrician’s van in their driveway but did not know why it was still there. Presumably, they went to sleep uaware that Macol's body lay in their basement.
The Scarsdale Police Department Investigations Section and the Westchester County Medical Examiner’s Office are investigating the death, and a final determination of the cause is pending.
Henry Clifford of COPIP Responds to Article on Scarsdale10583
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We received the following comment from Henry Clifford, Chair of the Committee for Peace in Israel/Palestine about an article on billboards the group sponsored that are now posted at Westchester Metro North train stations. According to their website, COPIP advocates a two-state solution to the conflict in the Middle East ― a complete withdrawal by Israel from the Occupied Territories, an autonomous and contiguous state for the Palestinians, an end to violence on both sides, and mutually recognized, secure borders for both countries.
Here are Mr. Clifford’s comments on the article:
As the sponsor of the MTA posters that introduced the discussion (wars) and Chairman of COPIP I ask to comment on your coverage of 8/14/12 which has just come to my attention.
- You describe our committee as "an anti-Israel group." Your charge is baseless and false. The founding members of our committee were one half Christian and one half Jewish.
- You state that "the posters contended that Israel had taken Palestinian land . . ." We contend nothing, we present the historical and geographical fact which can be obtained from UN, Israeli, and Palestinian documentation.
- The newer posters "contend" 19,250 deadly Islamic attacks with no source or proof provided which contention you evidently accept without question. Regardless of any other consideration or red herring the fact remains that the Palestinians have lost most of their homeland. There is no spin that can obviate that fact.
