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The Long Island Rail Road shut down Saturday after unionized workers went on strike for the first time in three decades.
No new negotiations have been scheduled.
“We’re far apart at this point,” union head said “We are truly sorry that we are in this situation.”
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PLAYLAND COMES BACK!
THE 2026 GRAND OPENING OCT.23

THE DRAGON (LOOKS INCREDIBLE AFTER HIS STAY AT THE DRAGON HEALTH SPA) IS REHEARSING AND THE SHAKE RATTLE AND ROLLING CARS OF SCREAMS SQUEALS AND OPEN MOUTH 45 DEGREE DESCENTS AND NERVE RACKING ASSENTS ARE ROARING GETTING READY FOR FOR KIDS OF ALL AGES

THE MUSCLE THRILL CARS ARE SO IN SHAPE EVEN THEY ARE ROLLING EMPTY REHEARSING THIS WEEK THEY ROARED DOWN THE TWISTS TURNS LEANS AND STOMACH FLIPPING HOLD ON TIGHT TO THAT RAIL OR YOUR BOY FRIEND DOWN THE TRACKS OF TERROR FUN THRILLS YOU NEVER FORGET!

YOUR LOCAL EPIDEMIOLOGIST DR. J PUTS THE HANTAVIRUS IN PERSPECTIVE
THE SCHOOL BOARD ELECTION AND BUDGET VOTE
MEET THE CANDIDATES UP CLOSE AND PERSONAL JOHN BAILEY REPORTS ON
LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS “CANDIDATES CONVERSATION” WITH VALERIE DANIELE AND ROSEMARIE ELLER WHAT BOARD MEMBERS DO AND WHY IT IS THE MOST IMPORTANT JOB THEY’VE EVER DONE!
THE DISTRICT ATTORNEY REPORT ON CRIME IT IS WAY DOWN PROSECUTIONS 49% GUILTY VERDICTS

JOHN BAILEY ON MEMORIAL DAY THE SCHOOLS, THE SCHOOL BUDGET
REPORTING WHITE PLAINS WESTCHESTER NEWS YOU NEED TO KNOW
EVERY WEEK ON WHITE PLAINS FOR 25 YEARS
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Enjoying this newsletter? Why not share it with a friend? 4 hantavirus updates and other things that can impact your health right nowThe Dose (May 12)
This week, the hantavirus outbreak continues in a climate of distrust toward each other and authorities. We also answer a reader question: Are cruise ships really floating petri dishes? There’s also all the normal stuff going around: Peak tick and allergy season, norovirus surges on another cruise ship, and scientific wins worth celebrating. Here’s The Dose: what’s going on in the world of health and what it means for you. Spotlight: 4 updates on the hantavirus outbreakThe risk to the general public remains exceptionally low, but the situation continues to march forward for the high-risk cruise passengers. Note: If you missed it, this post builds on last Friday’s. You can catch up here. And big thanks to the entire YLE team, from virologists to physicians to epidemiologists, helping keep track of this rapidly moving situation. 1. Touchdown in NebraskaYesterday, 18 Americans landed safely in Nebraska by private transport after disembarking from the cruise ship in Spain. Why Nebraska? In 2019, your federal tax dollars paid to build the only national quarantine facility in the U.S. specifically designed to safely monitor individuals exposed to high-consequence disease. This facility has a college-dorm feel, complete with TVs and exercise machines (see picture below), but people are completely separated. They don’t share air and don’t mingle. This facility was built for situations just like this.
Jake Rosmarin, who is currently in one of the rooms at the National Quarantine Unit in Nebraska. Source: Jake Rosmarin Instagram Down the street, there is also a biocontainment unit, similar to a hospital room but with many more precautions to safely treat someone who becomes ill. Importantly, Nebraska isn’t the only biocontainment unit. The U.S. has a network to help distribute people in situations like this. All of these systems are activated. So, out of the 18 people:
In addition, there are seven Americans in quarantine at home across five states who were on the ship after the initial case died, but before public health authorities knew this was an outbreak. There are also ~11 people exposed to these cruise passengers while flying. None have symptoms, and all are in close contact with local public health departments. 2. The debate on whether to send passengers home intensifiedAfter the home assessment, if they remain symptom-free, CDC will give those in the Nebraska quarantine facility a choice: stay or return home on a charter flight (not commercial) and stay in close, daily contact with local health departments. Either way, a full 42-day quarantine is expected. A lot of people disagree with this move. After all, requiring people to stay in Nebraska reduces the risk to everyone else to zero. And, we are living in a very low-trust environment. Offering this option is asking communities to trust that those people will remain in quarantine and cooperate. But, as with any public health decision, there are real trade-offs to consider. This is both a public health and humanitarian response:
It doesn’t seem any individual has made a decision yet. And there is a possibility that pressure is enough to prompt the administration to change course. But I think the best option is the least restrictive approach that still keeps communities safe. 3. Transmission: How close is a close contact?I know people are worried about this one, so let’s talk about what we do and don’t know. We do know that there are two primary ways Andes hantavirus spreads: through contact with infected rodents and through “close contact” with people who are both infected and symptomatic. We also know that the first passengers to be infected with the Andes virus were exposed in the most typical way: through contact with infected rodents off the boat. The next two cases also contracted the virus in a typical way: through close contact with infected people. (Close contact is defined by CDC as 6 feet for more than 15 minutes.) Cruise ships are notorious for putting people into close contact. But, during a 2018 Argentina outbreak, a symptomatic patient infected 5 people while sitting close at a birthday party. One case may have involved only a brief, passing interaction. That said, 94 other partygoers didn’t contract the virus, and 82 healthcare workers who cared for the resulting patients remained healthy, many without PPE. (See a deeper dive from Ed Nirenberg here.) Getting the transmission pathways matters a lot for contact tracing to ensure everyone who needs to be monitored is monitored (like on a flight). It also matters that scientists collect the right specimens on the ship so we can learn more. In general, though, the overall risk of a pandemic remains very, very small, especially when added to a few other things we know:
I will start worrying if we start seeing new infections among people who were not on this ship and had no contact with a positive case. (We haven’t seen this yet.) 4. HHS communications finally woke upOver the weekend, physicians received a HAN (a routine alert about what to watch for), and the CDC website was finally updated, followed by a press briefing yesterday morning. Better late than never, but the drip of information has made all of this genuinely difficult to track. WHO remains stellar in communications. What this means for you
Disease weather reportWhile this small but deadly hantavirus outbreak plays out, there are four other pathogens that are more likely to affect your health right now. Ticks: Are they slowing down?Tick bites are certainly earlier this year than in previous years, but it’s not clear whether this will translate to a more severe season. After some exponential growth, the rate has come to a slow crawl. Regardless, we are in peak tick season.
Source: CDC. Annotated by Your Local Epidemiologist.
Feeling crummy? It’s likely the common cold and/or allergiesCommon colds are approaching their spring peak while other respiratory viruses become dormant. If you’re feeling crummy right now, it’s probably a cold.
Percent of positive tests for respiratory viruses. Source: NREVSS; Annotated by Your Local Epidemiologist Or it may not be a virus at all. This week is going to be another bad one for people with allergies, particularly in the North and Midwest. Allergy season is getting longer and more intense. Plants are releasing pollen about 40 days earlier than they used to and stopping about two weeks later, thanks to rising temperatures. Higher CO2 levels mean more pollen per plant.
Source: Pollen.com
Another cruise, another outbreak: NorovirusAnother cruise ship made headlines last week due to a major norovirus outbreak with more than 115 cases. Norovirus—think nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea—is also midseason but on its way down. Norovirus is very infectious. On average, one infected person will infect two to seven other people, and the virus can live on surfaces for weeks. And while cruise ship outbreaks usually make the news (like this one), they only account for 1% of outbreaks. Three out of four norovirus outbreaks occur in nursing homes. Restaurants and schools are the next most common settings.
Good news
Question grab bagThese outbreaks have me reconsidering my cruise plans. Are cruise ships really floating petri dishes compared to other settings? Cruise ships have a reputation as floating petri dishes. Some of this is a monitoring artifact. The CDC’s Vessel Sanitation Program requires cruise ships to report outbreaks and maintains a public database of all reported cases, which doesn’t exist for hotels, resorts, college dormitories, or restaurants, where the same viruses spread just as readily but without mandatory public reporting. So public health is looking for outbreaks, like norovirus. That said, the environment does matter. Dr. Adam Kucharski shared his interesting research on social mixing, which found that cruise passengers have nearly twice as many close contacts per day as people on land (20 versus 10). This means more opportunity to catch something. In 2020, the Diamond Princess became one of the most studied natural experiments in infectious disease history. One study found that Covid-19 airborne transmission likely accounted for more than half of disease spread on the ship, a finding that reshaped thinking about ventilation in enclosed spaces well beyond cruising. If you do cruise, the single best thing you can do is wash your hands before and after every meal, every time. And stay behind if you’re sick. Bottom linePublic health is never dull, but beneath the alarming headlines, there are systems, scientists, and dedicated people quietly doing their jobs to keep you safe and largely succeeding. Love, YLE Your Local Epidemiologist (YLE) is founded by Dr. Katelyn Jetelina, MPH PhD—an epidemiologist, wife. YLE comprises a team of experts, ranging from physicians to immunologists to epidemiologists to nutritionists, working together with one goal: to “Translate” ever-evolving public health science so that people are well-equipped to make evidence-based decisions. YLE reaches over 425,000 people across more than 132 countries. This newsletter is free to everyone, thanks to the generous support of fellow YLE community members. To support the effort, subscribe or upgrade below: Thanks for your financial support of Your Local Epidemiologist! We couldn’t do this without you. |
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CITY OF WHITE PLAINS MEMORIAL DAY PARADE AND CEREMONY
White Plains, NY– May 7, 2026 – Mayor Justin Brasch in cooperation with the Veterans and Memorial Day Committee today announced plans for the City’s annual community parade and ceremony commemorating Memorial Day to be held on Monday, May 25 at 10 am.
The parade will begin on Church Street and Main Street, proceed to North Broadway, and will end at the Rural Cemetery where there will be a memorial service at Soldiers and Sailors Monument beginning at 11 am. The public is invited to support and remember our veterans by viewing the parade and attending the memorial service at the cemetery.
The Grand Marshal for this year’s parade is
White Plains resident, Vincent Finnegan Jr., US Army National Guard.
The Ceremony Honoree (in memoriam) is Daniel Varghese Kuruvilla, U.S Army
Parade marching groups will include White Plains Veteran Posts, various military personnel, White Plains Boy and Girl Scout troops, White Plains High School Marching Band, Youth Bureau Drum Corp, Jewel Pathfinders Marching Band, and other community organizations and businesses.
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(This is for all you Moms out there. We know what you go through!)
“HEY MOM!”
Hey Mom– Bring me two waters so I’m set?
Where’s my underarmor? And my visor? Are my tights washed? My skates are dull.
Hey Mom, can you call the advisor?
Hey Mom, I wasn’t yelling at you.
I didn’t mean to! You were yelling at me!
You never let me do anything my friends do
Hey Mom, would you chill, lighten up, just do!
Hey Mom, I don’t like the way this looks for the prom –
I don’t like the color, how could you think this was me?
I just can’t wear this, it’s this, it’s that it’s…Oh, Mom!?!
Hey Mom, I’ve been studying all morning getting knowledge.
Can’t I go out, I’ll be back by ten?
But, I know the material, gone over it again and again.
Oh, Mom – I hate my life! I can hardly wait until college.
Hey Mom – But I did call and let you know
Don’t you understand, I couldn’t call at that time.
No, you can’t not let me go – it’s a great band
Oh, Mom – I hate you! You never understand!
Hey, Mom, please don’t embarrass me at the game
By screaming so loud, it’s just so tacky
But, hey mom, I like that you’re over there in the stand
Watching me play, you know that don’t you Mom, you understand?
Hey Mom, can you get me to the rink At 5
– I know you have to take off from work early?
Thanks, Mom, I’m so sorry but the team has a special thing
I have to be there, thanks Mom – I love you—really.
Hey, Mom, please when you pick me up at the dorm
Don’t come inside. Just wait outside, call me on the cell
I’ll be right down — it’s the norm.
Don’t ring the bell!
Hey, Mom, I’ve read the classifieds
There are no jobs, I can’t make all those calls.
Well, OK, I guess I can send that resume you made for me (sigh).
OK, I’m lost, where’s the post office, down Lexington to what?
Hey Mom, well I’m bringing my friends by,
Don’t let Dad embarrass me with his jokes, OK?
I’ll just die if he’s silly again — you won’t let him do that?
You’ll talk to him about that?
All right, Mom I’ll take that extra course.
But I’ve just been going to school for months it never ends!
Can’t I have a little vacation, I don’t know what’s worse
Can’t I spend a little time with my friends?
You do like him, Mom? Oh, I hoped you would.
Yes, I really do I am so glad you do too!
Hey Mom, can you take care of the kids this weekend?
We’re going to Vermont with a friend.
And Mom, the cats get kibble in morning and meat at night,
We love you mom, sorry for the short notice, talk to you tonight.
Hey Mom, I’m sorry I can’t see you Mother’s Day.
Are you all right, what will you be doing today?
Going to a play – great – you know we love you in every way?
Though we may not show it you’re always with us even when you’re away.
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COUNTY EXECUTIVE KEN JENKINS STATE OF THE COUNTY

MENTAL HEALTH COMMISSIONER WHITE PLAINS MICHAEL ORFT
ON NEW MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES
TWO CHALLENGE MAYOR’S APPOINTEES
TO VACANT COMMON COUNCIL SEATS

STAGGERED TERMS CHANGE THINGS UP
THE NEW SCHOOL BUDGET VOTE COMING UP MAY 19

POLICE APPREHEND TWO IN TWO SHOCKING CRIMES IN THE CITY
“EVERYBODY LOVES A MYSTERY” AUTHOR DRAWS 50 TO LIBRARY MYSTERY BOOK CLUB

KAREN DUKESS AUTHOR OF “WELCOME TO MURDER WEEK”
RAISES $2,000 FOR WHITE PLAINS LIBRARY FOUNDATION AT WOLF & WARRIOR
PERSPECTIVES 26 LOOKS AT THE THRILL OF DEMOCRACY: THE PEOPLE HAVE TO DO IT!

THIS WEEK EVERY WEEK WITH JOHN BAILEY AND THE NEWS
25TH YEAR REPORTING THE NEWS YOU NEED TO KNOW
FOR WHITE PLAINS NEW YORK USA, WESTCHESTER AND THE UNIVERSE
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