Saturday, Sep 21st

MarcSamwickThese comments were made by Mayor Marc Samwick at the Village Board meeting on January 12, 2021.

Good evening. With optimism and hope for a better 2021, I wish you and your families a healthy, happy and peaceful new year.

Last night, there was a serious car accident in Fox Meadow. Our thoughts and prayers are with the five teenagers that are hospitalized, and we wish each of them a speedy and complete recovery. We would also like to keep all of those who are sick or who have recently lost loved ones in our hearts. May the memories of those who have been lost be a blessing.

2020 was a shock, or more appropriately, a series of shocks to our community, as it was across the country and the globe. Over the past year, we have faced a pandemic, a lockdown, an economic downturn, racial injustice, a major tropical storm, a tumultuous national election and a constitutional crisis. We have been tested in many ways. We even had a black bear roaming through the Village.

In Scarsdale, we are fortunate that our Village continues to perform at a high level - though it certainly hasn’t been easy. Our manager-form of government continues to serve us well with part-time volunteer elected officials with term limits and a professional staff often with long-term tenures that bring experience and professionalism to the day-to-day management of Village operations. Over the past year, staff’s experience in managing varied emergencies, coupled with our history of conservative fiscal stewardship, laid the groundwork for Scarsdale to be in a favorable position to weather this series of storms.

Your Village government and professional staff quickly responded to each of the crises that arose in the Village and to shift operations and fiscal management to responsibly address the rapidly onset of each of these emergencies. On behalf of our community, I would like to express my heartfelt appreciation to our Village staff – from the extremely capable Village Manager who steered us through each of these crises with skill, poise and professionalism to our janitors who had radical shifts in their jobs and rolled up their sleeves and helped protect residents and staff with new and much more extensive cleaning protocols to our sanitation engineers that continued trash collection in spite to risks they never imagined they would face to so many more examples of heroism that were never expected.

I could literally go on for hours and share stories of how members of staff in every single department went well above and beyond the call of duty, faced a new unseen threat and expanded job descriptions and did so with grace and professionalism. Make no mistake, there have been and remain real strains that staff are under as a result of this series of challenges. I would like to again offer my sincere gratitude to each Village employee. Your work is important, and you have again shown your dedication to Scarsdale and its residents and we are clearly a better place because you are part of our community.

I also offer to residents the suggestion that you have patience when dealing with staff as they continue to work remotely or often in an understaffed office and they endure the ongoing strains of the pandemic. I also ask that you join me in thanking staff whenever you interact with them. Village government is here to serve you and Scarsdale is very fortunate to have an exceptional group of employees at the service of this great community.

It is also important that we continue to help our friends, neighbors and loved ones slow the spread of COVID-19 by adhering to the following guidelines:

• Wear a mask.
• Wash or sanitize your hands frequently.
• Avoid touching your face.
• Practice social distancing.
• Stay at home if you are not feeling well.
• Get a vaccine when it’s your turn and encourage others to do the same.

Undertaking these efforts, including encouraging children, teens, and young adults, will reduce the likelihood that more rigorous restrictions on businesses and our daily activities may need to be reinstated.

We’ve done a great job locally. Although the number of infections has risen meaningfully over the past couple of months with 83 currently active cases in Scarsdale, our active cases per capita remain well below those of many of our nearby neighbors. There is light at the end of the tunnel with vaccine rollouts continuing. While we are waiting for widespread vaccinations, please stay healthy and safe.

One of the most important responsibilities of the Village Board is to review and adopt the annual municipal budget. As elected officials and residents, we take the matter very seriously. As you may know, Village staff undertake substantial effort to present a proposed budget that is both fiscally conservative and responsive to community needs. This is a difficult balance to achieve in most years, but an exceptionally challenging task amidst a continuing pandemic. We are very fortunate to have a long history of responsible fiscal stewardship that has provided us with a number of levers with which we can manage these challenging fiscal times. Our long-term fiscal discipline has provided us with the fiscal flexibility to manage through this economic downturn.

Importantly, budget development is a public process, and all residents are encouraged to participate. It is also a way to understand necessary trade-offs and help determine the impact of such decisions on local property taxes and level of municipal services provided.

Because of broad economic uncertainties and certain budget impacts related to COVID-19, this year’s budget process started a month early. All department heads were directed to be mindful of the revenue picture and present alternative cost reduction scenarios. The initial public meetings involving discussion of the proposed budget with the Village Board start with our first pass budget meeting next Thursday, January 21st at 5pm and all are encouraged to attend via Zoom.

In fact, all budget meetings are planned to be via Zoom. The notice and agenda for each budget meeting is available on the Village’s website. Staff are committed to posting each meeting’s materials online in advance, as soon as practical ahead of the meeting. Please also note that a consolidated summary of the Budget Schedule is available on the Village Treasurer’s Budget Webpage.

I look forward to an engaged community participation in development of the FY 21-22 Village Budget.

As we begin this new year filled with its new offerings and responsibilities, let us draw strength from our extraordinary community and use our own strength to bolster and support one another.

Amy R PaulinThis in from Assemblywoman Amy Paulin:
The federal Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 (the Act) eliminated the full deductibility of state and local taxes (SALT), and capped deductions at $10,000. This law disproportionately hurts Democratic states like New York, where residents’ state and local taxes often exceed $10,000. To fight back I’ve proposed legislation that would make the full SALT deduction available to partnerships and other pass-through entities. The proposal will be considered during the New York State legislative session which begins this month.

Relief for Partnerships
As it stands right now, the SALT cap only applies to deductions paid by individuals, but not by corporations. Since members or shareholders of partnerships typically pay income taxes individually, rather than at the entity level, they are subject to the SALT cap.

My proposed legislation however would allow New York State partnerships and other pass-through business entities to elect to pay a tax to New York State, for which they would get a full federal deduction, with the tax payments offsetting the partners’ New York State income tax. This set-up would be fiscally neutral to New York State, but would allow partners to take the full SALT deduction, which would otherwise be limited to $10,000 if the partners paid their income taxes directly to New York State.

Following the passage of the Act in 2017, several states, including New Jersey and Connecticut, passed similar laws allowing pass-through entities to pay taxes at the entity level, and receive a credit on their state income taxes to offset it, which avoids the SALT cap. On November 9, 2020, the IRS issued a notice which stated that they would allow this arrangement to apply to tax payments made on or after November 9, 2020.

This is an opportunity that should not be missed. Now that the IRS has approved the taxation structure for partnerships and pass-through entities, we should quickly pass my bill and give much needed relief to New Yorkers who have been disproportionately affected by the SALT cap. The legislation will provide a common-sense benefit to New Yorkers - at no cost to New York State - for the 2021 tax year.

Relief for Individual Residents
In 2018 I authored and passed a law that allowed deductions for contributions to charitable reserve funds in order to give relief to residents who had just lost the SALT deduction. The law gave counties, local governments, and public school districts the option to authorize a real property tax credit of up to 95% of the amount of a property owner’s monetary contribution to the reserve funds.

Later in 2018, however, the IRS issued regulations denying that a taxpayer who makes a contribution to a charitable reserve fund could receive a state or local tax credit. A subsequent IRS notice then announced that businesses would be entitled to a full deduction for their contributions, creating an arbitrary distinction between contributions made by businesses, whose full deductibility was preserved, and contributions made by individuals, which were not.

In response to the IRS’ regulations and conflicting positions on charitable reserve funds, I formed and chaired a coalition of counties, cities, towns, villages, and school districts in New York, called the Coalition for the Charitable Contribution Deduction (3CD), and filed a letter with and testified before the Treasury Department and the IRS, requesting the withdrawal of the proposed regulations under the Act which denied a full charitable deduction for donations from individuals to the charitable funds.

In 2019, working with the Village of Scarsdale, a lawsuit was filed against the IRS, with the Village of Scarsdale acting as Plaintiff, seeking to overturn the IRS regulations as arbitrary and capricious, and therefore invalid. I’ve continued to take the lead role in the initiative, asserting that taxpayers should be entitled to the full charitable deduction for their donations to charitable reserve funds and similar vehicles. The lawsuit is ongoing. Together with the 3CD, we are hopeful that the IRS will issue new regulations that conform to established law and internal IRS rulings, and we are continuing our challenge to the regulations in federal court.

It is critically important that we take all of the actions we can to help minimize the impact to residents, many of whom are struggling financially due to the pandemic. The establishment of charitable reserve funds to give a SALT deduction to individual residents, and the allowance of a SALT deduction for partnerships and pass-throughs, would provide tax relief to many New Yorkers right now - at a time when they need it the most.

chairFollowing its public organizational meeting, the Citizens Nominating Committee seeks Scarsdale residents for the offices of Village Mayor and Village Trustee. All Village residents are invited to seek nomination for Village Mayor and Trustee. Please send your name in by January 1, 2021. Contact any elected member of the CNC (https://www.scarsdaleprocedurecommittee.org/CNC), or inform the CNC Chair, Eric Lichtenstein at 917-864-1122 or edlichtenstein@gmail.com, or CNC Vice Chair, Steve Pass at 917-744-5026 or smpass@gmail.com.

 

santadrawingScarsdale kids have big expectations for Christmas this year – but are also concerned for Santa’s health, well-being and whereabouts. That’s what we noticed from a sampling of the 600 Letters to Santa received by the Scarsdale Recreation Department this year, addressed to Elf Road on the North Pole.

The letters provide a window on what’s on kids minds during this most unusual year. Many of the kids assured Santa that they had been very good this year – and then detailed the toys, books, make-up, outdoor equipment and electronics they hoped to receive. One girl lamented, “I hope this won’t be the first year I get coal in my stocking,” and apologized to Santa for asking for an expensive night light with blue tooth. Other popular requests were for hover boards, roller blades, paw patrol items, watches, sports jerseys, bikes, craft kits and books. One girl asked for “Great Expectations” by Charles Dickens along with a bookshelf to house it.

The kids displayed much empathy for Santa and others in their families. They asked Santa how he was getting around, how he was feeling and wondered how old he was…. that child guessed “Four years old.” Another asked Santa to bring a present for her mom because “she believes in you and it’s her birthday.”

One of the sweetest requests was for a baby brother.

Two mothers or caregivers made their requests as well.

A 29 year-old named Samantha said she had “kept herself alive”, and “not died,” and wished for “a well-deserved break and $$$ $$$.”skate

Another caregiver named Lindsay was happy and grateful. She said, “Dear Santa Claus: This year for Christmas I want nothing. I am perfectly satisfied with my life. So instead here are a couple of things I am grateful for. I am grateful for my family, this job, this amazing family I work for, and the sweet kids. I am also grateful for my health and that we all got through COVID. Thank you for Christmas.”

Each letter received an official response from the desk of Santa Claus and assured the senders, “I have already made my list and checked it twice – and guess what? If you’re on the nice list again this year I will be sure to bring you something very speak for being so good.”

Merry merry everyone.

natsukisantaartsantagetaroundsantalist

HarwoodBuildingSome businesses are born out of necessity. As a lawyer in New York, Dan Shaked found that he needed an office in Wilmington, Delaware for marketing purposes. Not wanting to spend big bucks on a lease and furniture, he signed up for a virtual office in downtown Wilmington at a fraction of what a full-time office would cost. In addition, his New York law office was located in a shared office space. As he became more familiar with the workspace industry, he realized that this was the future. But it needed some tweaking.

He considered his options. At the time, there were many co-working and executive office suites. Shaked explained, “You could rent a 20,000 square foot office space, partition it into 50 individual offices and rent them out for a profit. But this concept has a very high startup cost, is subject to market conditions, and would have required competition with the likes of WeWork.” Virtual Offices, on the other hand, were underserved. Shaked saw an opportunity to combine the best of both – to provide virtual offices with a few meeting rooms that could be rented by the hour or by the day.

That led to the formation of the first 4Corners Business Center in downtown Brooklyn, opened in September 2014. Today, downtown Brooklyn 4Corners provides virtual offices to over 120 companies including lawyers and many small companies in the technology, construction, cleaning, real estate, finance, and advertising industries. Most of their clients work from home but prefer to have a prestigious business address and to avoid letting their clients know where they live. Brooklyn 4Corners also has three meeting rooms that they rent by the hour/day that customers use for client meetings, job interviews, depositions and even on-location movie shootings. In fact, word had gotten out at the NYU Graduate Film School that the premises were perfect for shooting that “office scene.” Shaked also got a call from a large movie studio to shoot a scene, but could not accommodate the 170 people on set.

In the winter of 2019 Shaked decided it was time to open a second location in his own hometown, Scarsdale, where he lives with his wife and two children.  He hired Richard, an old law client, to manage the Brooklyn location and leased space at 14 Harwood Court in Scarsdale, a prestigious old building across the street from the train station with ample parking. Now local business owners can enjoy the prestige of a prime Scarsdale business address at a fraction of the cost of a full-time office.

Here’s what 4Corners can do you for:

-Provide a downtown business address

-Collect your mail and special packages which you can stop by to pick up or have forwarded to you

-Provide a local phone number

-Offer privacy

Shaked says, “We used to market our services as an alternative to a full-time office. However, now that everyone is working from home, we focus on the advantages of privacy and anonymity. After all, do you really want your clients to know where you live? We heard many stories about disgruntled clients showing up at a business owner’s home harassing family members. By simply setting up a virtual office, no one will know where you live; and if clients or potential clients Google your business address, they will assume that you work from a prestigious office complex.”

So if you’re a one man office working from home and would like some additional services, privacy and a Scarsdale business address, click here to find out what 4Corners Business can do for you.