State and county officials had what appeared to be the first confrontation with a utility to speed up the restoration of power after the storm following Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s warning to companies to act fast.
State Director of Operations Howard Glaser said the response by New York State Electric and Gas Corp. to its customers without power in northern Westchester County was “silence, darkness and an utter lack of any NYSEG presence whatsoever.” Glaser then proposed a new motto for NYSEG: “Lights out, Nobody’s Home,” according to an email he sent to NYSEG President Mark Lynch that was obtained by The Associated Press.
“Any objective assessment is that NYSEG is by far the poorest performing utility in this situation in the state,” Glaser wrote.
An NYSEG spokesman said the utility was slowed by the number of trees downed during the superstorm, but more crews were coming in to help with its restoration efforts.
Cuomo and Westchester County Executive Robert Astorino were assigning monitors to watch NYSEG’s progress. Glaser said, if necessary, Cuomo would order another utility to take over the restoration effort for NYSEG customers.
Westchester County Executive Robert Astorino on Thursday said he and state officials met with the utility’s president Wednesday after residents complained. Officials said crews weren’t working to restore power the way other utilities were and the process was moving too slowly or was nonexistent.
Astorino says NYSEG also wasn’t communicating adequately. Public works crews were forced to wait to clear streets of trees and debris until they heard from NYSEG if downed lines were safe, he said.
NYSEG had about 114,000 customers without power at the peak, a tally that was down to about 80,000 by midday Thursday. The pace was similar to other utilities in New York: Statewide, the peak number of power outages was 2.2 million, down to about 1.6 million by midday Thursday. In a statement Thursday, the company said the majority of customers downstate should have power back by midnight Sunday, but some won’t get electricity back until midnight on Nov. 7.
The Cuomo administration said the volume of complaints from NYSEG’s northern Westchester service area prompted a tour Tuesday night, where they said they found none of the crews at work chain-sawing and splicing, as Consolidated Edison crews were doing. In addition, Cuomo spokesman Josh Vlasto said, NYSEG was singled out because it was slowest to return power the Metropolitan Transportation Authority needed to clear tunnels and power trains and pumps.
A NYSEG spokesman in Westchester didn’t immediately respond to questions about the meeting and the complaints, but a corporate spokesman, Dan Hucko, said the first essential task was to make sure the main transmission line was safe to handle power. That required walking and driving along the line and observing it by helicopter.
“That takes time, especially in Westchester and Dutchess and Putnam counties, because of the trees that were down,” he said. “It’s a pretty long, involved process. We have a lot of crews there and we are sending more crews down there on an hourly basis.”
He said crews from NYSEG’s sister company in Maine had completed restoration work at home Wednesday night and were headed to New York on Thursday to help out.
“I can imagine in some of the states and residential areas that people haven’t seen our crews because they have not gotten there yet, and there are other crucial elements.”
Astorino told the AP his meeting with Mark Lynch, president of NYSEG, was “very frank, candid and sometimes uncomfortable.”
“There was an obvious breakdown in communication between NYSEG and local communities that needed to be fixed immediately,” he said. “I don’t think there was a lot of lost time. There was some frustration.”
Astorino said he thought “things have gotten a little better” since his meeting with Lynch.
Category Archives: Lewisboro
Home Featured in ‘Amityville Horror’ Movie for Sale | Mt Kisco Realtor
5 reasons you shouldn’t rely on building department inspection | Katonah NY Real Estate
DEAR BARRY: Your articles often recommend that home inspectors be hired to inspect brand-new homes. If a home has just been inspected and approved by the building department, what’s the point of hiring a private home inspector? –John
DEAR JOHN: The answer to your question is worth repeating. Here are the five essential differences between a building department inspection and a professional home inspection:
1. A building inspection is strictly for building code compliance, but it is possible for a home to be poorly built and still comply with code. Home inspections deal with all kinds of substandard conditions, including those that do not involve code, such as poorly fitted doors, poorly mitered trim, missing tile grout, missing shelves in cabinets, sloped floors, loose toilets and faucets, etc.
2. A building inspection usually lasts about 15 to 30 minutes, while a home inspection lasts from 2 1/2 to four hours. This is because many more things are inspected and tested in the course of a home inspection.
3. Building inspectors simply look at the completed construction. They do not test the operational condition of fixtures and appliances. Faucets are not turned on; drains are not tested for leaks; appliances are not operated; smoke and carbon monoxide detectors are not tested; and so on.
4. Gas and electrical services to a home are not turned on until the final inspection is completed and the home is signed off. The building inspector can approve the appearance of the wiring and gas piping, but nothing is tested as part of the final inspection because you cannot test fixtures without gas or electricity.
Home inspectors arrive when utilities have been turned on. They plug testers into outlets to ensure grounding, correct polarity, and ground fault protection. They operate built-in fixtures and appliances such as dishwashers, garbage disposals, lights, ceiling fans, exhaust fans, electric ovens, garage door openers, and more. They also test the gas-burning fixtures such as forced-air furnaces, water heaters, gas-log fireplaces, and cooking appliances.
5. Building inspectors perform a walk-through inspection only. They do not crawl through subareas or attics, and they do not walk on roofs. Home inspectors do all of these things, enabling them to identify construction defects that routinely go unnoticed during a municipal inspection.
Veteran home inspectors know that all brand-new homes have defects of various kinds, usually minor but sometimes major. Examples include broken roof tiles; missing roof flashing; attics without insulation; furnaces improperly installed in attics; congested drainpipes; drains that leak; nontempered glass next to bathtubs and showers; inoperative GFCI outlets; ungrounded outlets; drain vents that terminate in attics; chimneys in contact with combustible materials in attics; loose safety rails; disconnected air ducts under the house; PVC discharge pipes on water heater relief valves; and this list could go on and on.
These are the reasons why people who buy brand-new homes should hire an independent home inspector. A home inspection gives homebuyers the best opportunity to take advantage of the builder’s warranty. Bypassing an inspection leaves undisclosed defects to be discovered at a later date, after the builder’s warranty has expired.
6 Playfully Spooky Marketing Campaigns Just in Time for Halloween | Mt Kisco Real Estate
Mount Kisco NY Real Estate | New home sales shoot up 5.7% in September
New single-family home sales rose 5.7% from August to September, with 389,000 homes sold last month, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
That is up from 368,000 sales in August and 27.1% above year ago levels when only 306,000 units were sold.
The median sales price of a home in September hit $242,400 while the average price hovered at $292,400.
“September’s rise in new home sales is another sign that homebuyers are becoming more willing and more able to splash out on a new home,” research firm Capital Economics said in response to the report.
The number of new homes for sale at the end of September reached 145,000, which reflects a 4.5-month supply of homes at today’s sales pace.
Econoday called the jump in home sales the best annual rate increase since mid-2010 when the market was still benefitting from homebuyer tax credits.
“September’s gain is convincing and is led, with a 16.8% jump, by the South which is far larger than all other regions combined,” Econoday said. “Supply, at 4.5 months for the lowest reading since 2005, is very tight and is limiting sales.”
Content Marketing and Strategy | Katonah NY Real Estate
Last week I gave a lecture to Estonian Business School MBA students. The lecture topic is Content and Strategy and it gives an overview how to use blogs, content and social media to drive business results for your brand.
The key points of the lecture are:
Goals (measurable user actions)
- Marketing models (consistency, predictability, and repeatability)
- Target group
- Content strategy (what do you have to offer)
- Participation rate
- Types of content
- Best practices
- Max strategy of content distribution
- Basics of on page SEO
- Content planning
- Keyword research
- Promoting content
- Engaging target audience
- Social media bomb
- Link building
- Driving conversions
- Distributing content to your blogs and social media sites
- Planning resources (people, time, money)
- Measuring results (and ROI in socia media)
via dreamgrow.com
5 Reasons Why Do-it-Yourself Marketing Can Actually Hurt Your Business | Katonah NY Homes
Entrepreneurs, by nature, are do-it-yourself people. Not a bad thing. While that trait may serve you in many areas there’s one where it actually works against you: Marketing. Here’s five reasons why.
1) You Don’t Know What You Don’t Know.
While you might feel savvy after reading a couple marketing books or listening to a savvy marketing guru, it doesn’t compare to working with a qualified team or consultant with great experience and a great record. You simply don’t know what you don’t know, and if you do it yourself, what you don’t know will hurt you. Like having a tag-line that makes no sense, or sends a wrong message. Like pouring money into SEO or your website when the better focus is Content Marketing and improved organic search. Like not realizing you need video. Or having a self-produced video that’s so unprofessional it works against you. The list goes on.
2) A Business Owner Can’t Be Objective.
Passionate business owners tend to be absorbed by their business—an advantage when it comes to DIY marketing, right? Not really. Effective marketing starts with an unbiased perspective. To be successful at marketing, business blemishes must be seen clearly. As a business owner you just don’t have that objectivity. If you read Ken Segall’s book Insanely Simple, about his working with Apple, you’ll read how Steve Jobs was proven wrong time and time again by his more objective and talented outside team who created some of the most iconic and successful marketing ever done.
3) The Best Marketing Isn’t About A System or Formula.
As more small business owners attempt to save money by trying to do their own thing, more self-proclaimed marketing gurus are popping up on the Internet with their “Amazing Profit-Making Marketing” systems. They all sound amazing and they all claim amazing results. They even have amazing testimonials. But every business is different, and a cookie-cutter, systematic approach is not the most effective way to market a business or product. While an “Amazing Profit-Making Marketing System” sounds amazing, the ones making the most money from them are usually the ones getting you to spend money on them.
4) Great Marketing Requires Talent.
Great marketing is part science, part art. Yet, the creative part often gets lost or diminished in this ever-advancing tech world. Focused, creative talent is the ingredient that helps communicate your message and persuade your prospects to buy. It’s not easy to find, but if you do it’ll make a huge difference.
5) DIY Doesn’t Really Save Money.
Because you’re not spending money on outside resources you might think you’re saving tons of money with a DIY approach. Just remember this…it’s not just what you spend, it’s what you spend and get back on what you spend.
Great marketing will get you back more, and sometimes significantly more, than what you spend. So, how do you get great marketing? You find and hire great marketing people, like Steve Jobs did, like Nike’s Phil Knight did, and like every successful business owner does. And, they didn’t just do it when they were big successful companies with huge marketing budgets. They did it from the very beginning of their companies, only months after they incorporated.
You also have to factor in what your time is worth. It’s not cheap. If you kept track of every minute you spent trying to do it yourself and applied a dollar value to that, you’d be surprised at the expense. Also realize that every expensive minute you spend fumbling with something you don’t do great is taking away valuable time and talent from something you do do great. That’s another expense.
To sum up I’ll end with a simple quote from someone who’s interviewed hundreds of small business owners and knows what it takes to be successful:
“Business success is all about finding the right outside service providers and using them wisely. You can’t do it all yourself.” — Anita Campbell, Founder of Small Business Trends
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Property in Westchester County Is for Sale | Mt Kisco Real Estate
A listing on the Web site of Ginnel Real Estate refers to the three-story, 10,000-square-foot colonial-style home, in the Mount Kisco area, as a “state-of-the-art and eco-friendly country estate” with geothermal heating and cooling, energy-efficient appliances and fiber-optic lighting. It sits on 10 acres on South Bedford Road.
Muffin Dowdle, the agent listed as managing the sale, did not respond to requests for comment.
The names of Mr. Kennedy and his estranged wife, Mary R. Kennedy, appear on a deed for the property, as well as on a record of a $500,000 mortgage taken out on the residence in June 2010.
The Kennedys were embroiled in divorce and child-custody proceedings in the period before Ms. Kennedy’s death. The body of Ms. Kennedy, 52, was found in a barn on the property. The medical examiner said she died of asphyxiation after hanging herself.




Goals (measurable user actions)

