Westchester Becomes Greener Away from Home
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- Written by Midori Im
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With the approval of new amendments to the Westchester County’s Source Separation Law, it will now be easier for individuals to maintain sustainable practices outside the home. The amendments require that nonresidential waste generators include separate recycling bins in spaces open to the public wherever garbage receptacles are already located. The recycling and garbage receptacles must be in close proximity to each other and clearly labeled.
Entities mandated to offer recycling bins include schools, houses of worship, and businesses. Eco-conscious individuals will no longer need to trash recyclable items or bring them home for recycling. Being able to recycle away from home may also encourage other people to adopt more sustainable practices when they return home.
The recent amendments also made mandatory for both residential and nonresidential waste generators the curbside recycling of cartons (juice, soup, milk etc). Please note that cartons get included with commingled (plastic, glass, aluminum) recycling.
If nonresidential waste generators are not complying with these new amendments, a complaint form can be completed here. Alternatively one can contact the Department of Environmental Facilities.
The Class of 2024 Walks the Red Carpet
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- Written by Joanne Wallenstein
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In Scarsdale’s own version of the Met Gala, the Class of 2024 with dates and friends turned out in formal attire for the Red Carpet event before the Scarsdale Prom on Thursday night May 30, 2024. Crowned by an arch of balloons, the red carpet extended the length of the north parking lot of Scarsdale High School to accommodate the parade of excited students headed for the much anticipated prom at Glen Island in New Rochelle. Parents, relatives, teachers and friends lined the walkway to see the spectacle and wish the students well.
The weather could not have been better – sunny and warm enough for bare shoulders but not too steamy for formal wear.
What were the trends in prom wear this year? In the crowd we spotted many gowns in solid shimmering colors – reds, pinks, brilliant blues, yellows and greens. Other’s wore tulle gowns sparkling with sequins, and some couples preferred to both wear black or black and white for a more traditional black tie look. Many girls completed the look with metallic or platform sandals. As is the custom, senior girls wore long gowns while underclassman sported short dresses above the knee. Not everyone went the usual way to secure a gown. One young lady reported that her uncle, who is a dress designer in Barcelona, made her a custom gown. Another said that she was unable to find what she wanted and her mother sewed her gown for her.
Hair was loose, long and curled.
Dates coordinated the look with matching bow ties, ties or vests and many sported wrist corsages and boutonnieres.
It was a long day for many of the partygoers, who started out with hair and makeup in the morning, then onto pre-prom gatherings for photos, followed by the red carpet event, the bus ride to Glen Island and a night of dancing and dinner.
Buses returned to the school around 10 pm. Some chose to extend the night even further, by changing outfits, boarding private party buses and going to venues in New York City for more celebration.
Take a look at the Class of 2024 in the photo galleries here. To add your photos, email them to [email protected].
Free Street Trees for Scarsdale Residents-First Come, First Serve
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- Written by Joanne Wallenstein
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Scarsdale Village plants new street trees in our neighborhoods every year. These are planted within the Village “right of way”, which means within the first 13 feet of your yard from the curb. If you want one of these trees planted in your front yard within 13 feet of the curb, please email Matse Jenkins at [email protected] immediately. There are only about a dozen remaining and they will be planted on a first come, first serve basis.
The Village will plant these trees at no charge and water them once per week during the hot summer months. They remain Village owned trees and the Village is responsible for maintaining them over their lifetime.
These trees should be planted in the next week or two before the summer heat sets in. The Village will need to have the utilities come to your property to mark the utilities, which is always done for your safety before digging to plant a tree.
Trees of taller stature when mature are planted on the side of the street without power lines, while trees of shorter stature will be planted on the side with power lines to avoid conflicts. Each year the species are changed in order to promote a healthy diversity of tree species in our community.
The Village plants trees native to our region to support our local ecosystem. These trees absorb gallons of stormwater, provide shade and oxygen, store carbon and will definitely increase your property’s value.
If you have questions, please call Matse Jenkins at Village Hall at (914) 722-1150 or contact resident volunteer, Cynthia Roberts, at [email protected]
The Notorious RGB? Not so Much. How Rolling Gradebook Might Help Make SHS The Opposite of Loneliness
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- Written by Wes Phillipson
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(The following was written by Wes Phillipson, SHS English Teacher) It was April or May of 2003 when I eased my forest green Honda Accord into that spot by the big tree overlooking the brook in the Yearbook picture above. Some epic R&B was playing. I was floating. It was the first time I’d seen Scarsdale High School in all its ivy-league-edifice glory. The only second-hand knowledge of SHS I had came from a middle school computer teacher whose son I taught in Rockland County, and my former colleague and friend Eileen Kelly who has since retired. Eileen told me she was - essentially - chained to her desk at SHS - but nothing could dissuade me from crossing the Hudson.
My first season at SHS ended with a major challenge that nearly ended me: a senior had failed my English class by not completing their research paper in the fourth quarter. Coming up on 22 years later, I’m still here, coming off what I feel is my single-best year of teaching, but I sincerely wonder: what if Rolling Gradebook had existed in 2003? Perhaps that student would have graduated on time, instead of scrambling to enroll in a G.E.D. program, resentful if not forlorn.
In 2021 I found sophomore Alex Ben-Gera staring back at me over a rumpled face-mask in Room 207: Peak Covid days, remember them? He looked younger than his age, and he seemed anxious — on high alert. It surprises me now that Alex helped do some initial background for this article you’re reading, as he was not a “writer” at that time. It lights me up that his Senior Options internship was spent at the headquarters of this storied publication (10583). His first essay for English 10 was (by choice) an opinion piece about Tom Brady’s irrefutable greatness. It didn’t work out. We collaborated on a new topic, this time about Alex’s relationship with Eli Manning and how watching Giants’ games with his father was transformative. That essay had the kind of legs that could match Dorsett or Henry’s 99-yard rush. To push that metaphor further, RGIII — the NFL QB — has rather fitting initials here: RGB = Rolling Gradebook. Once Alex shook off his imposter syndrome, found not just his legs but his voice in our English class, he was off and running. Even from the cheap seats, it’s clear that - had Rolling Gradebook been in effect for Alex’s first quarter - he wouldn’t have felt the direct hits that come with risk-taking, experimentation, and just getting things wrong the first few times in any class.
Alex’s final project was a video essay on the intersectionality of Inception’s antagonist Dom Cobb (DiCaprio), the title character from Macbeth, and a song lyric from a now-canceled rap star who shall remain nameless. Comparative analysis was not something Alex would have been comfortable attempting in September or October, but it just felt seamless - perhaps even effortless - in the spring. And while he doesn’t ever return to read his mash note to Tom Brady, he does watch his visual argument about the smokescreens that cloud reality whenever he needs creative inspiration for school or life.
For academic year 2023-24, I wasn’t certain if it would be “The Notorious RGB” (a menacing grading system that failed to reflect academic “truths” about my students), or more “RGB = Red, Green and Blue” (the primary colors that would allow me to paint the “truest” portraits of my classroom charges).
It was the latter.
And in one specific way, the “old gradebook” was akin to how some viewed the progressive R.B.G. (the late Supreme Court Justice) — maybe it, too, had overstayed its welcome, or had just hung on far too long.
In my senior English elective course Words & Images (it’s just like it sounds: we talk about words, we unpack images), I found some solace in RGB’s very existence. RGB was kind of my conscience when it came time to enter semester grades. My hallucination was that I’d always “aired on the side of the student,” but this time I had a license (if not a directive) to do so. In English classes (and - perhaps - the soft sciences), grading is largely subjective. What is an “A” on an essay, anyway? It’s not scientific, but grading is an art that I ask my students to participate in. My “rolling gradebook” - for the past 10 years or so - has been: grade it with me. Come to my office, sit down on my velvet tufted, faux mid-century chair next to me and let’s talk about this essay. Let’s read it aloud together. Let’s make sense of why you wrote this. Then let’s put a grade on it.
Now, will we always agree on the grade? No. But we get to have a conversation about it. It’s a discussion about standards. It’s a chance for the student to understand what I value, and that I grade (and put weight on) those things. It’s a chance for me to understand the person who (hopefully) wrote those words, who developed those ideas, and who made the form choices that they did.
I don’t think a science or math teacher can do that. In fact, I know that they can’t.
But that doesn’t matter: Rolling Gradebook can be, has been, and will be “the great leveler” for all students, and all disciplines. Or, at least it can play a role in creating parity.
Wellness at SHS has been “a thing” for quite some time now. I don’t know when it began, you could ask my friend and colleague Jennifer Rosenzweig who has been a great champion of students getting their heads on straight.
Much of Wellness within Scarsdale has the aftertaste of oxy-moron or cognitive dissonance for obvious reasons that I won’t go into. But RGB? That’s meaningful wellness. When we did away with summer reading, or prevented teachers from assigning homework over breaks, it’s not clear that that - inherently - boosts serotonin levels. But it’s likely that not having an academic quarter be put in quick-dry cement, or engraved (forever) like a grotesque tableau by Hogarth, is a sound idea that has been implemented by the administration at Scarsdale High School.
From the point of view of an SHS veteran teacher, who lived on Garth Road for 2 years long ago, and who even married a woman who grew up in Scarsdale, I think that our High School is (to borrow a term from Marina Keegan who died immediately after her Yale graduation), “the opposite of loneliness.”
Despite how massive and compartmentalized the place is, I never feel alone here.
It’s possible that RGB will make us all less lonely. Sounds strange? Well, I can tell you that there is just ONE set of faculty here that have nothing to do with grades, yet everything to do with grades: The Deans.
The Deans are entirely exempt from the phenomenon of: “The honeymoon is over.” Deans don’t grade their students. Teachers grade their students. Grades change relationships. There’s no avoiding that. Ask any student if they feel differently about a teacher after first quarter report cards come out.
Perhaps RGB will de-emphasize grades, allowing teachers and students to focus on building (and strengthening) esprit de corps, long-term rapport (independent of grades), and collaborators.
I have zero interest in grading students’ work in isolation, by my lonesome. I do - truly believe - that our HS is the antidote to loneliness. I do, however, want to build students who feel and believe they have a stake in the company. At least, they’re shareholders. I want to produce learners who dismantle the myth of gradelocking once and for all. For how can one be gradelocked if they hold the key?
Early on in all of my English classes this year I shared an essay that I wrote that articulates my singular educational goal: I want to be your producer. Jack Antonoff doesn’t “grade” Taylor Swift. He brings out the best, creatively, in Tay-Tay. Mark Ronson doesn’t “grade” Bruno Mars. He unleashes BM. If you don’t believe me - just watch.
And RGB has the power to help me, and to help my students simply focus on making some beautiful music together so we can dance like no one’s watching, and stop criticizing each other’s footwork. Wanna lead?
What Does Scarsdale Value in 2024?
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- Written by Joanne Wallenstein
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(This article was submitted by Cynthia Roberts)
The effort to protect a spectacular Black Oak tree in the historic Old Scarsdale neighborhood poses the question to our community leaders: What does Scarsdale value most in 2024? In an effort to protect a unique, historic and massive Black Oak tree from root damage and therefore premature death, Friends of the Scarsdale Parks, Inc. (FOSP), a local not-for-profit community organization has nominated the Black Oak tree at 21 Autenrieth Road for Heritage Tree designation pursuant to Scarsdale Village code. Heritage trees are given special protections by our tree code.
The tree is located in the front yard of 21 Autenrieth, a stunning brick 1910 Georgian revival home that was bought by an investment group developer to be flipped. It is notable that neither the neighbors pleading with the Board of Architectural Review (BAR) to protect this tree, nor FOSP, has objected to the developer’s proposal to build an addition expanding the living space of the house. Neighbors have merely requested that rather than placing a new garage and new driveway in the front yard of this home next to the oak tree, thereby damaging its roots, the developer use the existing driveway and one of the two existing garages. The neighbors have also supported a viable alternative presented to the BAR by the developer’s architect to place a new garage in a location a safe distance away from the tree.
More than a dozen neighbors have given up their evenings to attend multiple BAR meetings, pleading for respect of this iconic tree, a symbol of Scarsdale’s “Village in a park.” This oak tree was already growing in Scarsdale before the American Revolution, according to the expert arborist’s estimate that it is 275-325 years old.
Neighbors hired expert arborist Bill Logan, President of Urban Arborists, Inc., longstanding faculty member of the New York Botanical Garden, and a Visiting Professor of Landscape Architecture at Pratt Institute. to examine the tree and submit a report. In his report, Mr. Logan emphatically warned about the need to preserve the “green infrastructure” functions of this Black Oak tree, which serves critically important services to human health and the environment: “This oak is an extraordinary specimen, among the largest oaks in Westchester County. It is almost 5 feet in diameter at breast height (57.5” DBH). Such a tree represents an incalculable benefit, not only to the people who can see and interact with it daily, but also to the thousands of mammals, birds, insects, spiders, and other macroinvertebrates that live and/or feed on and in it, as well as to the billions of bacteria and fungi that inhabit it. It is part of the intact ecosystem that characterizes Scarsdale yards and gardens. Its loss would be very serious, not only aesthetically but also ecologically.”
Neighbors are also greatly concerned about flooding from the loss of the stormwater uptake of an oak this size, which is over 10,000 gallons in one year according to i-Tree, a tool of the USDA Forest Service for assessing the benefit of individual trees. “How will the Village protect us from water in our basements after the developer has flipped the house, killed the tree, and left town?”, asked one neighbor.
The consent of the owner of the property is required for Heritage Tree status consideration by the Board of Architectural Review (BAR). And, as was explained to the developer, should a future owner so desire, our code makes provision for a tree to be un-designated by the BAR.
Neighbors and FOSP had hoped that the developer would respect the longstanding value Scarsdale places on our historic trees and consent. But after hearing nothing from the developer for two weeks, there is little optimism that the developer will join our community in protecting our trees.
It is hoped, however, that our own BAR will represent our community’s values and recognize the enormous positive impact this tree has on the character of Autenrieth Road. The Bar can do so by requiring that the developer protect the tree as per the detailed instructions provided by expert arborist Bill Logan.
Over 1,000 trees are cut down each year in Scarsdale and at best, only one third are replaced. To allow this extraordinary Black Oak tree to become another statistic would be a huge loss for Scarsdale and will tell us clearly what Scarsdale values in 2024.