Sue Silver Says Goodbye After 43 Years at SHS
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Throughout her 43 years at Scarsdale High School, Sue Silver has been a prized teacher who brightened the lives of the many students who were fortunate enough to be in her class. She taught with passion and energy; with the ability to captivate any student who walked into her classroom. Senior Anna DeNelsky who had the privilege of being in Silver’s Advanced Topics English class this year said, “Her AT class was always intriguing and the conversations we had as a class were sophisticated, going far beyond the text. I always looked forward to her class.” DeNelsky is the among the last students to benefit from Silver’s class, as “Sue” as she is known, will retire at the end of the school year.
Sue never intended to teach in a district like Scarsdale. After graduating college with a master’s degree, Sue discovered that New York City had just laid off 6,000 teachers and there were absolutely no jobs available. Although she considered going to Australia to look for work, her boyfriend at the time, now her husband, was settling in New York City and she wanted to stay. She originally planned to work with underprivileged children in the city, but given the bleak hiring market she applied for jobs in both Chappaqua and Scarsdale. Scarsdale just happened to respond first.
Sue began her high school teaching career in Scarsdale High School’s Alternative School, where she spent 14 years. In her words, the A-School gave her what she needed to grow as an educator. She loved the opportunity to have a close-knit relationship with an entire group of students, which the A-School encourages, and she felt passionately about her role as an advisor to students. The environment in the A-School was different than the main school, which is something Sue valued. She aspired to bring this same sense of community to the high school when she transitioned to the regular school. She got involved in the school’s Civ Ed program and brought the American Studies program into the high school.
As a teacher who believes in interdisciplinary learning, Sue started the American Studies program, which is offered to high school juniors and integrates American history with literature. The history and English teachers leading this class collaborate and the students learn how history affects literature. For the first three years only one class was offered due to lack of popularity. Since then, however, the program has grown and now it is one of the most popular options for juniors.
Teaching 43 years ago is not what it was like today. Sue noted that when she first started, teaching would translate to lecturing. However, now teachers are more like facilitators who set up lessons or activities for students. “The best way to learn is to discover it yourself; where we make mistakes but that’s okay,” said Sue. In her opinion, this transition has definitely been for the better, since “no one can impart information as a god-like teacher.” Another big change since Sue started as SHS has been the implementation of technology. When Sue started, there were no computers; she commented that using new technology has been tough, but she challenges herself to learn how to use at least one new piece of technology a year.
Another way Sue says the culture of education has changed is that students do not read for pleasure anymore; part of this comes from the pressure to get into college. Sue finds students reading Spark Notes instead of enjoying literature. She encourages students to put their phones down, turn off the TV, and just read. In fact, the most frustrating part of being a teacher for Sue has been trying to convey a love of learning for learning itself rather than grades. “Just trying to get a grade has destroyed what is important,” noted Sue. She believes that the stress of trying to get perfect grades for college admissions limits students’ room to explore, experiment, and fail. “You don’t have to be great at everything; not everyone is great at everything all the time,” said Sue.
What did she like best about teaching? Sue says she will miss forming relationships with her students and advising them as a teacher. “I will miss that moment when they say something that blows me away, which is almost everyday,” she commented. About her colleagues she said, “I’m really lucky there's a great staff and administration in Scarsdale.” She looks forward to playing tennis and paddle, going walking, seeing friends, traveling, reading and figuring out the next phase of her life.
Sue is a vital part in SHS who will surely be missed by students and faculty alike.
Math and Empathy Should be at the Center of Good Governance
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- Written by Mayra Kirkendall-Rodríguez
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The Scarsdale School district has been spending a lot of time in the last few years emphasizing math and empathy. I urge you Mr. Mayor and trustees to also make math and empathy the cornerstone of good governance at Village Hall.
Since I accidentally stumbled into the disastrous Ryan reval June of 2016, I keep noticing that there is a deficit of math and empathy at Village Hall. Ryan still has not produced documentation for his model, and you have not gone after taxpayers’ money that you paid him on our behalf. You are still not helping residents who are paying more taxes than they should.
For over a year, most of Board meetings have been about trees. Scarsdale Official last week was about trees and plants. You just passed an ordinance without even being able to give us numbers. How many trees are cut and planted each year in Scarsdale? It is the net number that matters!
Unfortunately, you are ignoring my husband’s math, showing that you are giving a discount to excess water users in Scarsdale, and without empathy, penalizing the rest of us, who do conserve.
Over a year into your administration, you still have no numbers showing what residents’ priorities are. This is dangerous, because Scarsdale need a long-term financial model and plan.
Recent market signals are showing that anyone invested in municipal bonds should be looking at municipalities very carefully. This last quarter, the Bloomberg Barclays Municipal Bond Index had its biggest first-quarter decline in 15 years. Additionally, investors pulled about $830 million out of state and local government bond mutual funds during the week ended April 11, the biggest outflow since January 2017, and the second straight week of investors pulling cash from muni mutual funds.
Municipalities are challenged by uncertainties caused by the new federal tax law, rising medical costs and pervasive underfunded pension problems. Additionally, having to operate in a rising interest rate environment and with a potential trade war looming, municipalities need to factor how potential economic, market, or operational risks, such as natural disasters or cyberattacks, could impact their financial stability.
Based on my professional expertise working with different kinds of private and public sector entities, having a long-term financial plan provides a dynamic tool to help organizations preserve assets, determine investment needs, and to identify potential income shortfalls. Elected officials and municipal personnel should quantitatively determine the priorities of their constituents to help determine funding needs for infrastructure development or other community priorities, and to identify potential income shortfalls from residential or retail tax payers.
Sharing my view are also international standard setters and state comptrollers. For example, the Government Finance Officers Association of the United States and Canada, an important best practices standard setter for public finance officials, advocates for “long-term financial planning as a highly collaborative process that considers future scenarios and helps governments navigate challenges.” State comptrollers and treasurers also advocate that municipalities create and implement long-term financial plans. The Office of the New York State Comptroller for example recommends that municipalities create a long-term financial plan to cope with ‘future stresses.’
GOVERNING, the US’s leading media platform covering politics, policy and management for state and local government leaders, just published its annual survey "Equipt to Innovate." Of the 74 top municipalities participating in the survey, 32% had long-term plans that look ahead by three to five years.
Unfortunately, a lack of long-term financial planning leaves Scarsdale vulnerable to being more reactive than proactive. Recently, Standard and Poor’s public finance analyst Kurt Forsgren stated that “What bond-rating agencies are hoping to learn and are increasingly asking cities is how they are approaching long-term planning, both from an asset and revenue-stream perspective.”
Lastly, I ask, where is the importance of math and empathy when it comes to you not reappointing a talented volunteer for the Board of Assessment Review and instead appointing friends and relatives to boards? Justice Thurgood Marshall once said that “Truth is more than a mental exercise.” I urge you to give up verbal calisthenics and tell us the truth. Please, do not hide behind jumbled explanations and closed door executive sessions which no law requires. The more opaque you are, the bigger flashlight I will have to get. I look forward to your answers, and I know that all Scarsdale residents deserve answers as well.
Mayra Kirkendall-Rodríguez is a Fox Meadow resident.
Jewish Leader and Scarsdale Resident Aaron Panken Passes Away at Age 53
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- Written by Joanne Wallenstein
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The Scarsdale community is reeling after the tragic loss of a beloved neighbor, synagogue member, Rabbi and leader of the Jewish community. Aaron Panken of Scarsdale, the President of Hebrew Union College passed away on Saturday morning May 5 at the age of 53. The small plane that he was piloting crashed just after takeoff in Orange County. Panken was a certified pilot who was flying with an instructor who emerged alive from the accident.
In an email to the congregation of Westchester Reform Temple, Rabbi Jonathan Blake explained Panken’s importance to the Jewish community. He wrote, “Rabbi Panken was a giant among Reform Jewish leaders and intellectuals. He was the 12th President of Hebrew Union College - Jewish Institute of Religion, the world's oldest institute of higher Jewish learning, and the seminary for Reform Rabbis, Cantors, Educators, and a premier training ground for many other Jewish professionals. In this capacity he oversaw four campuses, in Jerusalem, Cincinnati, Los Angeles, and New York, since his inauguration in 2014, following many distinguished positions of leadership at the College-Institute dating back to his faculty appointment in 1995.”
A notice from the Hebrew Union College says the following about Panken: “Rabbi Panken was a distinguished rabbi and scholar, dedicated teacher, and exemplary leader of the Reform Movement for nearly three decades. As a product of the Reform Movement’s camps, youth movement, and seminary, his passionate commitment to Reform Judaism, to the State of Israel, and to the Jewish people worldwide inspired his efforts to ensure HUC-JIR’s academic excellence in fulfilling its sacred mission. As HUC-JIR President, Rabbi Panken implemented his transformative vision by forging strategic planning initiatives: embedding new technology in support of student learning and administration, strengthening recruitment to yield the largest incoming classes in a decade, launching new Jewish education, nonprofit management, and entrepreneurship programs and academic partnerships, and invigorating the ties linking HUC-JIR’s four campuses in Cincinnati, Jerusalem, Los Angeles, and New York and their larger communities and regions.”
Linda and Joseph Simon, friends of Panken, said, "Aaron Panken was a true Renaissance man. He was a rabbi, a leader of international repute in the Reform Jewish world and president of Hebrew Union College. He was an electrical engineer, and avid boater, and a pilot. He liked lively conversation over drinks and a game of darts. He was a learned scholar, teacher and mentor. He was a lively and engaging commentator of Bible and Talmud who could make even the most opaque passages of text come to life. Most of all he was a caring, kind and thoughtful friend, and a loving husband and father. He made everyone who knew him feel special and embraced by him. His loss is unfathomable, and he will be forever missed by his many friends, admirers, colleagues, and loved ones."
State Assemblywoman Amy Paulin sent her condolences; "Rabbi Aaron Panken, who tragically died in a plane crash on Saturday, was a gifted teacher and community leader, and will be sorely missed. For those of us lucky enough to have studied with him, we will always remember his intellect, enthusiasm and personal warmth. My heart and prayers go out to Lisa and his grieving family."
The family is well known in Scarsdale where Panken’s wife Lisa Messinger grew up and is a leader in her own right. She is the past President of Westchester Reform Temple, Chair of the Major Gifts Committee for the Scarsdale Library, a Director of the Scarsdale Adult School and a former member of the Scarsdale Bowl Committee. Panken is survived by Lisa, his two children, Eli and Samantha, his parents Beverly and Peter and sister, Rabbi Melinda Panken of Congregation Shaari Emeth in Manalapan, NJ.
The tragedy hit as congregants of Westchester Reform Temple and Scarsdale friends were still grappling with the death of five members of the Steinberg family, who also passed away in the crash of a small plane, on December 31, 2017.
Funeral services will be observed at Westchester Reform Temple on Tuesday, May 8th at 1:00 PM. A live webstream of the service will be available on the temple’s website at www.wrtemple.org.
If you would like to share your rememberances, email us at [email protected] and we will add them, or feel free to comment below.
Votes for Crouch and Singer are Votes for Open Dialogue and Transparency on the School Board
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This letter was sent to Scarsdale10583 by Mitch Kahn of Brewster Road
Since joining the SNBC over a year ago, I have received lots of feedback from our neighbors about their experience with and image of the school board. While most people appreciate the hard work and dedication of the board members, I share the belief that the school board and the administration have areas where they can improve. This year, the SNBC has provided a slate of candidates that will work to address the most common concerns about the school board and the administration and ask that you vote for the SNBC Slate of Woodrow Crouch and Alison Singer.
I have identified four main areas that I believe the community would like to see improved:
1. People should be welcomed and encouraged to speak in from of the school board and the administration; and doing so should not be an unpleasant or unfriendly experience.
2. The school board and administration should more effectively and transparently communicate with the residents about the board’s planning and decision-making.
3. Community members should be allowed and encouraged to ask board members their thoughts and positions on issues and express their concerns with individual board members.
4. Individual board members should explain their opinions on important issues.
Woodrow Crouch and Allison Singer represent what is best about Scarsdale and understand the importance of engagement and transparency.
Woody has spent over 40 years in Scarsdale raising his family here and remaining in town when his children returned with their families to be near his grandchildren. He has worked on numerous boards and is as approachable as anyone I have ever met. In his time at Con Edison, Woody was involved in community outreach to listen to and address community concerns about various Con Ed projects and worked to balance the logistical needs with emotional community members. Throughout it all, he was dedicated to solve complex problems with grace, compassion and a soft spoken nature that left those engaged in the process feeling heard. His time at Con Edison is the perfect experience for the board’s responsibilities in the near future as it faces the negotiation of its contracts with the union and other critical district needs including continued capital improvements and efforts to increase our STEAM curriculum. Woody has negotiated with numerous unions and municipalities, assisted with the construction of several major capital projects involving the construction of power plants. Finally, not to be overlooked, I know he will provide an ear and a voice to the older, and often under represented, senior members of our community who I know still care a great deal about Scarsdale.
Alison is as accomplished a potential board member as we have seen. She sent her two children through the school system on very different paths. Having a child that has special needs and a super high achieving child that has gone on to attend Yale, Alison has a dual perspective of the education programs and opportunities that our schools provide. This is a person who understands, first hand, the responsibility that a superior public school system has to all of its students, regardless of their strengths and weaknesses. I also believe that Alison’s professional background as an accomplished television producer will help to improve the board’s messaging and communications efforts. Finally, I know Allison is a person who is unafraid to speak her mind and will work to challenge the status quo in areas where she sees need for improvement.
So I ask the readers of this paper, what do you want your school board to be? Do you want to help make it better, warmer and friendlier? Do you want your ELECTED officials to actually listen to their constituents and explain their opinions? Do you want the board to better communicate with the public? Do you want to feel that you are being heard and respected?
If that is the case, then I implore you to vote for the SBNC slate of Woodrow Crouch and Allison Singer. They are a big step in the right direction.
Mitch Kahn
198 Brewster Road
Compost Give Back Day Draws Hundreds to the Recycling Center
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- Written by Michelle Sterling
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Scarsdale residents welcomed spring by picking up compost made from their own food scraps at the Scarsdale Recycling Center on Saturday April 21. For the second year in a row the center held a Compost Give Back Day where residents were able to come to the Scarsdale Recycling Center and fill up buckets with compost destined for their home gardens. Hundreds of residents turned out to contribute and reap the rewards of their work.
Last year over 200,000 pounds of food scraps were collected and turned into useful compost instead of sending it to an incinerator. This program is not only centered around talking about making the earth a better place, but doing something about it right here in Scarsdale.
Residents who attended expressed positive feelings for both the Scarsdale food scrap recycling program and the compost give back day. It was truly a successful day in Scarsdale!
At the event many residents signed up for the new weekly home pickup of food scraps — which will be starting in late May/early June. Any resident can get weekly home pickup of food scraps, but they need to sign up to get it! Registration is not over yet, just email [email protected] to sign up. Once registered, residents will be notified via both snail mail and email of their start date and weekly pick up day.
Any questions please email [email protected].