It's Official! Second Saturday In Beacon Is BACK! BeaconArts Has Spoken.

You all have been asking: “Is Second Saturday still going on in Beacon?” and ALBB’s answer has been: “The spirit of Second Saturday has never left. The art galleries are still having their openings. There just hasn’t been, like, a banner hanging over Main Street or something like that. But go! Go to the galleries!”

This week, the organization who originated Second Saturday in Beacon, BeaconArts, announced that Second Saturday was officially BACK. BeaconArts announced to its newsletter community: “A full calendar of events is on its way! We’re also in the process of adding more benefits for BA Membership on every level. Perks will include discounts, workshops, and exclusive member-only events.”

So far, BeaconArts will promote Second Saturday on their Instagram, which you can follow here.

The galleries and shops exhibiting art that BeaconArts is promoting for May 14th include: Garage Gallery Beacon, Hudson Beach Glass, Fridman Gallery, Bau Gallery, Mariala Gostudio 502, Marion Royael, Silica Studio 845, Rick Rogers Studio, Hyperbole, Clutter Magazine, and Landmark Beacon (this is the former Star of Bethlehem Baptist Church that currently serves as an event space).

You can join BeaconArts here as an artist, individual or business.

Beacon does not disappoint with being able to not contain itself for excitement! The Pink Unicorn has been spotted at Marion Royael Gallery with a bubble machine for Second Saturday pre-game. ALBB was lucky to have met the person behind the costume at a recent I Am Beacon mixer at Homespun this week. We know the story behind how they got their costume. They’ll need to chime in to let us know if we can share the behind-the-scenes story.

Next Event From BeaconArts

In their own words: “Our first member meet-up! This event will include a special musical performance. We encourage all members who attend to bring a non-member guest. If you’re not sure if you are still a member, please email treasurer@beaconarts.org. Renewing your membership or joining online is super easy! These meetings/gatherings will be held bi-monthly for all BeaconArts members. If you’re not a member yet, you can sign up on the spot. We’re easy, no pressure! Come check it out. This is a chance to meet like-minded artists and local businesses. Each get-together will include the latest BA news and updates, member announcements, a brief artist talk or performance, and ample time to network and grab a drink. The first round is on the house, followed by a cash bar.”

New Board Members Announced For BeaconArts

Along with the announcement for upcoming networking events, BeaconArts announced their new board member lineup:

President: Matthew Agoglia
Vice-President: Damon Banks
Treasurer(s): Christine Olivier, Aaron Ketry
Secretary: Becky Eaton
Board Members At-Large: Samantha Palmeri, Suzanne Ball, Denise Gianna, Marilyn Mitchell

UPDATED: Bans Off Our Bodies March Happening This Saturday In Beacon, Kingston and In Hudson

Bans Off Our Bodies March-May 14th Hosted by Hudson Valley Strong and IndivisibleUlster

Beacon
Day:
Saturday, May 14, 2022
Time:
2pm - 4pm
Location:
Polhill Park, Main St & South Ave, Beacon, NY 12508
More Information >

Kingston
Day: Saturday, May 14, 2022
Time:
11am - 1pm
Location:
Academy Green Park, 238 Clinton Ave, Kingston, NY 12501
More information >

Hudson
Day:
Saturday, May 14, 2022
Time:
1pm - 2pm
Location:
Planned Parenthood Health Center, 804 Columbia St, Hudson, NY 12534

Carmel
Day: Sunday, May 15, 2022
Time: 1pm
Location: Putnam County Courthouse, 40 Gleneida Avenue, Carmel, NY

From Womens March -

“On May 2nd, we learned from a leaked draft opinion that SCOTUS is poised to overturn Roe v. Wade, stripping the constitutional right to abortion in spite of fifty years of precedent.

“The Supreme Court is making their official decision on abortion rights in June. Once that happens, 26 states could move quickly to ban abortion, meaning millions of people could live without local access to abortion care.

“Roe has always been the floor, not the ceiling. Many Black, Indigenous, Latinx, and other people of color experience barriers to accessing abortions. The people in your community and across the country deserve the power and freedom to make their own personal reproductive health care decisions.

“We have to act NOW, all across the country. Together we will send a strong message that we're not backing down. Supporting abortion access must be protected and defended.”

ALBB Takes A Trip To Homespun Foods Backyard Patio For Lunch - Those Crispy Onions - Those Tulips!

ALBB took a Lunch Date over in the garden at Homespun Foods! Teslie (Program Manager) got the citrus salad and added salmon (good choice)… “refreshing and so delicious”, and Katie (Owner of ALBB) got the burger because “those crispy fried onions are too hard to resist!” We got to flip through the wine list that the writer, sommelier and owner Joe hand-stitched together. Love this about business owners who let their passions overlap into each other.

Teslie and Katie don’t make many appearances here on the blog, but we wanted to show you the tulips. The backyard garden is gorgeous and so relaxing! Learn about all of the restaurants in A Little Beacon Blog’s Restaurant Guide here.

A Little Beacon Blogs sister company, Katie James, Inc., designed Homespun Foods website and created features that allow them to bring their restaurant to life and offer their beer store online! And a beer subscription for craft beers! Yup, you can subscribe to beer right on their website. You can also view their full menu online and order for pickup right through their site. Definitely make sure to check out their daily specials page and keep up with all they have going on!

Key Food Beacon Possible Victim Of Implicit Bias & Entitlement; Is This Arab Family Owned Business Unprotected?

This article is 1st in a 3-part series that covers in the incident at Key Food Beacon on March 2, 2020, that was written about and published in the Highlands Current on March 25, 2022, after a settlement was reached on March 15, 2022 between a customer who was injured in what Key Food Beacon maintains was self-defense. This article takes a Deep Dive into that incident by relying on hundreds of pages of court documents, 3 police reports, multiple interviews, texts, and questions asked of people in authority who did not respond.

RELATED ARTICLES IN THIS SERIES

This article includes lots of dialogue in Q&A form so that you can get a feel for how people were feeling and how they described the situation. Not how a reporter could describe it. This article also includes a lot of explanation about why it was written. But sure to read. till. the. end.

Mo Dabashi (left) and Emad Dabashi (right) pictured in 2022, after the ordeal. Emad actually works somewhere else now, but you may notice his other brother working the deli. Not twins, but they look like twins.
Photo Credit: Katie Hellmuth Martin

Please note: after the newspaper article published, and before this blog article did, some fellow business owners felt protective of Key Food Beacon, and wondered if a second article was in their best interest. Feeling in solidarity with Key Food, knowing that dealing with rude people in the public is unpredictable. They asked if Key Food would want this spotlight, again. The owners have told me yes.

After the newspaper article, Key Food Beacon began receiving threats from some Beacon community members by phone, email and in person to their family members. Key Food did not ask for this blog article. But has voiced approval in telling more of this story than what is shown in a picture and 20 second video.

This is that story.

Resources Used For This Article:

3 Police Reports (incident happened on 3/02/2020):
According to Mo Dabashi (manager), JB Said (co-owner) the police were “divided” in how the police responded to the first verbal altercation of the customer. A second verbal altercation happened hours later, which resulted in the customer’s injury.

  • Beacon Police Report 3/3/2020
    Report Numbers: BL - 001734-20 CR-00232-20
    Notable about this report:
    1. Police Not Stopping Alvin: This Police Report states: "HQ advised units that the male inside the store was removed from the store earlier in the day and told not to return by the store owners. This agency was contacted about the previous incident and the male fled from the area prior to officers arrival." However, as seen in the parking lot video, and testified by the customer himself, the customer did not flee, and walked past the first officer who arrived. According to Emad’s testimony, when Emad asked the officer to tell the customer not to return, the police officer told Emad that there was nothing he could do, and that Emad would need to go to the station to file a report. Additionally, video and the customer’s testimony tell that he was not removed from the store, but had walked out after buying groceries. The customer stated in his lawsuit testimony that he and his mother “kept walking as if nothing happened” (Alvin had been verbally abusive in the store, causing the employee to ban him from returning).
    2. Alvin’s Notable Intoxication: That the officers interviewing Alvin after he was put on the floor by Emad could not get much information from Alvin because he appeared to be “under the influence of alcohol,” which Alvin later identified which prescription medications he had taken with beer later in his testimony during his lawsuit.

    3. Damaged Property: In this report, “officers did observe multiple grocery items damaged and on the floor of Keyfoods aisle.” This is notable because in co-owner JB Said’s Police Report that pressed charges against Alvin Medina two days later was allegedly tossed out by Detective Sirrine because after seeing the 20 second video of the physical altercation, Detective Sirrine allegedly decided that since he did not see damaged property in the confined space of the video, and that JB was not there that day but was filing on behalf of his employees, Detective Sirrine told JB that his Police Report was “incredible” and could not be used, as described by JB in his testimony during Alvin’s lawsuit (see below). According to Alvin’s testimony, he wanted to press charges two days after his incident, but the police advised him that they would have to arrest him if he came to the station. Later, according to Alvin, they called him to pick him up to take his report. It is unknown if they did this after discounting JB’s filing of charges, and telling JB his Police Report was deemed “incredible.”

  • Key Food Franchise Co-Owner JB Said’s Police Report Against Alvin Medina 3/4/2020
    Report Numbers: BL - 001734-20 CR-00238-20
    In this report, JB files to press charges against Alvin. In it, he stated that Alvin damaged store property and called his employees “terrorists.” This report was later allegedly tossed out by Detective Sirrine.

  • Alvin’s Police Report pressing charges against Emad 3/4/2020
    Report Numbers: CR-00232-20 Blotter/CC No: BL-001734-20 Arrest Number: AR - 00082-20
    In this report, Alvin had returned home from the hospital and had medical records to support a serious injury to his face. In this report, Alvin never admits to cursing or flipping the bird to Emad in response to not getting his combined deli salads, and accuses Emad of calling him a “faggot,” which Emad later denied in his testimony. In Alvin’s testimony, he admitted to saying “f-you” in response to not getting his deli salads in his testimony, and giving a hand gesture. Alvin allegedly said other threats such as “punch you in the face” but he did not mention those in this report.

4 Testimonies From Alvin’s Lawsuit: Emad Debashi, Alvin Medina, Mo Debashi, and JB Said.

Court Documents that the Highlands Current sent over.

Interviews with Mo Dabashi, JB Said and Junior Dabashi.

When the front page of a local newspaper that brands itself as “Beacon’s Hometown Newspaper” splashed a photo of a local Key Food Beacon employee, Emad Dabashi, in the final and most graphic seconds of a bad customer situation, that photo could have sealed his fate in ink as people wrote their own stories of what happened in their minds and out loud when gossiping with each other days and weeks after it was published.

As a frequent shopper of Key Food Beacon, I was taken aback by the photo, in the sense that seeing the 3 employees shown in this situation was highly unusual and out of character for them. At six o’clock on Friday morning, I read the article on my phone. I subscribe to the free newspaper as a monthly $10 donor, in order to support local media. I value their reporting. Which gets me the digital edition early.

From the article, I learned that this altercation happened two years ago in March 2020, and this month, on March 15, 2022, Alvin Medina, who was injured by Emad who maintains it was in self defense to Alvin’s alleged repeated threats and angry swinging of milk, filed a lawsuit days after his injury and was paid $95,000 by the insurance company of the local family business who owns the franchise of the Key Food Beacon.

After the settlement was signed on March 15, 2022, the customer started posting the video of his injury to his social media, making more verbal assaults. According to several people who saw his postings, he would publish the video, take it down, then publish it again with more angry words, one of which included a racial Arabic insult (see screenshot below). Seeing this bubbling in social media, the Highlands Current decided to run an article about it, according to Junior Dabashi of Key Food, who said that the reporter approached him with questions.

After reading the article, I was taken aback for a second time that the newspaper selected the photo that they did to represent the article. Not only that, but on the member-only digital edition of the newspaper that gets delivered via email on Thursdays at midnight, before the paper drops into newsboxes on Friday morning, the editor had issued a warning that the photo was graphic. The editor also noted that a second photo of a building demolition was disturbing. See more details about that here.

The Highlands Current editor hardly ever issues warnings like that. It was odd. As if he were excited to be publishing such a graphically disturbing photo to the expense of the people involved, with a researched yet abbreviated article to describe it.

A Little Beacon Blog’s Research Of The Key Food Story

This article here at A Little Beacon Blog aims to give space to the voices of both Emad and Alvin, to be heard to express how they were feeling in their own words in the 2 different times Alvin came into the store - the first time, and then the second time where he defied the ban he earned for allegedly cursing at Emad so loudly and consistently, and was not stopped by police the first time as Emad had requested. Their testimonies during Alvin’s lawsuit show what happened in a way that cannot be told from the final 20 seconds of a silent surveillance video clip.

Quotes from their testimonies, as well as from manager Mo Dabashi who was there that day and in the newspaper photo, and co-owner JB Said who was not there that day, have been used to tell more of this story that is being discussed in the Beacon community. More details have been added, including the restraining order Key Food filed and was granted against Alvin, as well as how the police were allegedly “divided” about how they responded during the first time Key Food called the police about Alvin, asking for the help of the police for him to not return to the store.

A spotlight is placed on Alvin’s testimony during his lawsuit that the police possibly protected Alvin from being arrested after JB pressed charges against Alvin on behalf of Key Food, as reads in Alvin’s testimony below. ALBB reached out to the detectives mentioned, but neither they nor the City Administrator responded.

Several details are cross referenced across depositions, police reports, and interviews. This article has been broken up into chapters so that you can take your time with it.

During Interviews With Key Food

Hours after the newspaper article published, I went to Key Food to speak with Mo and JB directly. We stepped outside to the parking lot so that I could listen to the first bits of what happened two years ago, and what was happening right now. Because of the newspaper article and the customer circulating the 20 second video of the most heated moments and his allegations of homophobia, some members of the Beacon community began calling and emailing the store, threatening and speaking their angry minds.

As I sat on the railing of the shopping carts, a customer pulled in, a white older man, and sneered at JB and Mo as he walked in to store. Or was he squinting at the sun? But the sun was behind him. Hours later, as I returned to the store to shop for my weekend snack-supply, an older white woman praised my fashion while I was in the back of the store near the chips. Speaking in smiles, we happily discussed where she too could buy it. Later, we ended up in the checkout line together. JB and his brother-in-law Max were behind us, speaking in Arabic. The large and extended family who owns this Key Food Beacon franchise is from Yemen. That’s in the Middle East.

From the checkout line, my new friend turned around to look at JB and Max as they conversed in Arabic. She made a sneering face as she leaned in toward me to tell me something quietly. Before hearing what she had to say, I promptly turned around to step out of line to interrupt JB and Max to ask them in English where to find the chocolate covered cookie sticks (Arabic is not currently in my Babble app, as it has so many dialects, but I am working on my Spanish and do speak in Spanish to the Car Wash Guy across the street when asking for the Super Wash).

Max and JB jumped on my request right away to find the chocolate covered cookie sticks. Max looked on the bakery table by the bread, and JB looked in the snacks by the toilet paper. By the time I got back to the checkout line, the woman was leaving, and we happily waved goodbye to each other with smiles

2 Different Altercation Events This Article Covers

There are 2 different encounters with the customer and the Beacon Police. Then, there are events involved with each party filing Police Reports against each other, one of which seemed to have gotten tossed out. The Highlands Current reported that Key Food did not file charges against the customer. But what the newspaper did not report was that the Key Food Beacon franchise co-owner JB tried to press charges against Alvin on behalf of Emad, but his filing seems to have been tossed out. Additionally, days after the incident, JB filed and was awarded a restraining order against the customer on behalf of the store. The customer must now walk on the opposite side of the sidewalk.

The customer and plaintiff, Alvin Medina, who cursed at and threatened an employee, Emad Dabashi, at Key Food, causing him to be scared and call the police to have the customer banned from the store.

Threats Made To Key Food

The newspaper article and the social media posts of the customer triggered a swell of discourse and community chatter about Key Food Beacon. The public became the jury in a case they knew very little about, deliberating amongst themselves. While many members of the community came to Key Food’s defense in social media comments and out on the street, some people called and emailed the local owners of Key Food with threats. Those threats extended to personal comments made to the children, spouses and siblings of the Key Food Beacon family. Most women in the Dabashi and Said families wear the hijab (head scarf), and are easily identifiable. Read what JB expressed about that here.

PREFACE:
The Alleged Anti-Arab Racial Insults

While the alleged racial insults are not the reason for feelings of fear that Alvin created in Emad and Mo (they said they responded more when they said Alvin would punch them in the face), everybody knows that some people in the Beacon community have expressed anti-Arab Muslim sentiments aimed at the Yemeni families who own the Beacon franchise of Key Food. One could argue that anti-Arab insults have become normalized in this country and around the world, and go unchecked.

In the police Incident No. BL-001734-20, Case No. CR-00238-20, filed by JB with Detective James Sirrine of the Beacon Police, JB described that when the customer “was turned away from the deli he became verbally abusive towards his staff, and began calling them profanities and terrorists.”

In the depositions of the court documents, both Emad and Mo stated that the customer did not call them “terrorists” when asked directly by Alvin’s attorney.

However, when I interviewed Mo for this article, Mo without question told me that Alvin used racial insults. The reason why both Emad and Mo answered the way that they did in the lawsuit depositions is explored later in this article.

Alvin Medina’s racial insult to the employees of Key Food posted on March 28, 2022, calling them “dirty,” which is a racial insult towards Arabs, who observe hygiene into their prayers, which they practice 5 times a day and wash before each prayer.

Upon the signing of the Stipulation of Discontinuance With Prejudice on March 15, 2022, which ended the lawsuit two years after the incident, and after agreeing to a payment of $95,000, the customer began expressing his discontent in social media, starting a fresh batch of verbal abuse, and used an anti-Arab racial insult on March 28, 2022, calling the employees of Key Food “dirty.” He deleted it in April after the check was mailed to his attorney. As of the taking of this screenshot, the customer’s Facebook was public, and posts could be viewed.

A screenshot of his insult was preserved by A Little Beacon Blog and published here. Several other members of the Beacon community have also preserved screenshots of the customer’s recent posts on Facebook and Instagram after the lawsuit ended.

Being called “dirty” as an Arab Muslim is one of the lowest Arab insults. Arab Muslims wash themselves before each prayer. Hygiene is extremely important to them, and is incorporated in guidance for their Friday prayers, the holiest day of the week for Muslims (like Sunday to Christians, or Saturday to Jews). Many Muslims pray 5 times per day. Key Food uses a room in the back of the store as a prayer room, as described in Mo and Emad’s depositions in the court documents.

CUSTOMER BEHAVIOR OVERVIEW:
A History Of Prior Insults Allegedly Made By Alvin

Key Food has a loyal following of customers and happy shopping experience. As with anywhere, a handful of customers feel entitled to take out their frustrations on employees. Most businesses on Main Street can attest to this as they deal with the public.

During a time prior to this incident, JB recalled a different time the Alvin was upset in the checkout line, and used the profanity: “F***ing A-rabs,” (pronounced with a sharp A). Said JB to A Little Beacon Blog in an interview: “He scared our cashier so badly. We sent her home that day to recover.”

According to lawsuit testimonies from Mo, Emad and JB, the police have had to be called over the years for unruly customers. As discovered in those testimonies, the the approach with an aggressive customer is to be patient, try to understand the customer’s level of understanding, and to call for help of other managers to help diffuse a situation.

While Alvin’s profanity didn’t offend them, Mo and Emad said in the depositions that it scared them. Calling the police is part of their policy when a situation gets too scary, said Mo and Emad in their testimonies to Alvin’s attorney. Mo told ALBB during an interview: “We need the help of the police. We rely on them.”

What follows is a story of an entitled customer, a police response, newspaper coverage with deaf ears, and the City of Beacon’s response that was dimly lit with gaslight.

A Tale Of 2 Salads:
A Story Of Entitlement


CHAPTER 1: The Deli Counter

Frequent shoppers of Key Food know that Emad Debashi is a tall, quiet person who usually wears glasses, as his other brothers do. One of his brothers looks very much like him, but they aren’t twins. Emad often bends down to give people his attention, and speaks from a low place, almost matching the speed of a slow rolling river. He has worked at Beacon’s Key Food for 10 years, and is a member of the family who owns the local franchise, Key Food Beacon.

On March 2, 2022, a customer named Alvin Medina came in with his mother to grocery shop. According to the customer, he went to check out with his mother, but had a craving for shrimp salad, so went to the deli counter. In the deposition, Alvin answered the Key Food’s attorney’s question about what salad he was craving: “Basically usually I would get, like, the shrimp salad mixed with some of the other salad that was there, I think it was like crab or something.”

Alvin’s attorney questioned Emad about the salad, who recalled: “He ordered two different salads to be filled up into one container, two different prices. I told him that we don't put two different salads with different prices. If it was the same price I would do it with no problem, but since there are two different prices I told him I can't do it.”

Alvin felt a way: “I asked if I could get the salad, and when I asked it, he just gave me like a rude face, he just looked upset. I don't know if it was his day or what was going on. But he was like, we don't do that here. And he just turned his face like he was pissed off or something he didn't like, yeah.”

Key Food’s deli opened in August 2019, along with a newly paved and painted parking lot.

According to Emad in his testimony: “He [Alvin] insisted. He said that he's gotten it there multiple times and that he's been there at the store for 4 years and shopping there for 4 years.”

Alvin later said in the deposition that he got the salad maybe two times. The deli opened in August 2019, and this salad incident happened in March 2020. A Little Beacon Blog wrote about the deli opening because the investment was such a large undertaking with construction limiting the flow of shopping for a while.

Emad told Alvin’s attorney: “I always advise if there's two different prices not to put it in the same container and I didn't want to overcharge him and I didn't want to under charge the store so I advised to give him two different containers and I'll put it in two different containers, two different prices. He still refused it and wanted it in the same container.”

Next, Alvin told the attorney that Alvin said: “I said okay fuck you. And I went back in line and waited with my mother.”

Emad recalled: “After I refused he flicked his middle finger towards me, and then kept walking, and then started cursing using fowl language so I told him since you're using fowl language I need you to step out of the store. I don't want you coming into the store anymore, and that was the first interaction.”

Alvin admitted to not knowing the employees at the Key Food Beacon store, despite his stated long shopping history. “I never paid much attention to the employees there, besides the one with the long hair.”

CHAPTER 2:
The Checkout Line

Emad described how Emad came out from the deli counter to the checkout line to tell Alvin to leave.

Alvin described to Key Food’s attorney: “Waiting then basically he had said something, I had said something. Because he was waiting behind me. I was like, there's no reason for you to wait behind me. I don't know why you're waiting behind me, this that and the third. And then that was when me and him started going and exchanging words at the time.” According to Emad, he was telling Alvin to not come back to the store, based on the cursing.

Emad recalled the conversation to Alvin’s attorney, and recited the words he could remember: “The first thing [Alvin said] is, like, fuck you, and then I was, like, all right. I won't help you. And then he went to the register. He's, like, fuck you, you don't know who you're talking to, you don't know who the fuck you're talking with, I'll fucking punch you in the face right now and just went on. Later on his mom got involved and was, like, you don't know the family you're fucking with, you don't know us.”

According to Emad’s testimony, he walked out of the deli toward the cash registers at the front of the store where the door to exit is, to tell Alvin to leave. While Alvin was cursing, Alvin’s voice got louder, “to the top of his [Alvin’s] lungs,” said Emad, while Emad was telling Alvin to leave the store. Alvin proceeded to checkout with his mother at the cash register.

In Alvin’s testimony, he accused Emad of calling him a “faggot.” Alvin’s attorney asked Emad about it:

Alvin's Attorney: “Did you call Mr. Medina a fag or a faggot?”

Emad: “No.”

Alvin''s Attorney: “Is there anything about the way he was conducting himself or speaking that led you to believe that might be gay?”

Emad: “No. I didn't even know that.”

Emad wanted to call the police. He stated in the testimony: “When he was threatening me saying that he was going to punch me that's why I had to call the cops in order to have the cops deal with it... I was feeling threatened in the case of they're saying you don't know who our family is, that he's going to punch me or whatever so that's why I called the cops to get the cops involved and to have him be banned from the store.”

During his testimony, Mo Dabashi told the attorney why sometimes they have needed to call the police for an unruly customer in the past: “There are, you know, events like that, you know, where you would have to, you call the police because this guy is crazy or he's on drugs and not listening or --- you know, and you don't know what to do with them so you would have to call police.”

In a video of the cash register, Alvin can be seen standing at the register. He claps his hands, and turns to say words to Emad. “I'm not 100% sure of what he to the T,” Emad testified, “but it was cursing at the time I asked him to leave the store and he's not to come into the store.”

In Emad’s testimony, Alvin’s attorney confirmed that Alvin was gesturing and speaking in the surveillance video. Emad walked away toward the front office with the wood paneling at the front of the store, and told their accountant who was in the office, Barbara Malouf, to call the police, which she did.

According to Emad’s testimony, Alvin was muttering to himself saying “Oh, I'll punch this dude. I been here for four years.” And then Alvin’s mother allegedly got involved. As Alvin and his mother were leaving the store, Emad recalled the interaction: “He's saying things like you don't know who you're fucking with, you don't know our family, and she said the same type thing, don't fuck with us. She forgets her milk and then she comes back for it. As they were walking out the police car arrived.”

CHAPTER 3:
The Beacon Police Let The Customer Walk By In Parking Lot

Alvin remembered leaving after the groceries were bagged up, testifying: “After that, we left the store. We did see cop cars coming up as soon as we were leaving, but we just kept walking like nothing happened. She had her shopping cart. I was there with her and we walked and went home.” According to Alvin as clarified by Key Food’s attorney, the police did not follow him, or ask him to stay so that they could speak to him, or contact him later.

The Key Food surveillance cameras have video of two police cars pulling up as Alvin and his mother walked by them. This is established verbally in the depositions by Alvin’s attorney. A Little Beacon Blog has also verified these videos by watching them during an interview with Mo.

In an initial Police Report about both incidents (the second incident described later on), the officer writing the report, Trevor Wood (008) stated: "HQ advised units that the male inside the store was removed from the store earlier in the day and told not to return by the store owners. This agency was contacted about the previous incident and the male fled from the area prior to officers arrival." The report numbers for this report are BL-001734-20 CR-00232-20.

But according to video and his own testimony, he did not flee before officers arrived.

ALBB Editor’s Note: When this blogger wrote in her Letter to the Editor of the Highlands Current, objecting to the short, mike-drop style of their article describing this highly consequential situation which ignited a bush fire in the Beacon community toward Key Food, the editor, Chip Rowe, disputed what this blogger said about the police letting the customer “walk right by.” Chip said: “According to the police report, Medina had left by the time Beacon officers arrived; they didn’t “let him walk right by.”

As far as this blogger knows, there is no police report of this first arrival of the Beacon police, but there is a second one: BL-001734-20 CR-00232-20 which is perhaps Chip is referring to. ALBB asked Chip and reporter Jeff Simms which Police Report(s) they reported from, but they did not respond. Surveillance camera footage and Alvin and Emad’s testimony say that Alvin walked by the first police car to arrive. According to Emad, that officer told Emad there was nothing he could do, and that Emad would need to go to the police station to file a report.

In Alvin’s Police Report CR-00232-20 (also has a notation of CR-442-20 hand-written at the top) dated March 4th, 2020, he stated: “I then proceeded to leave the business with my mother and observe the Beacon Police arrive, but I was never stopped or approached by them.”

At Alvin’s attorney’s request, Emad describes the video of the police cars arriving: “This is when they were walking out. He left. His mom was still in the store and as she's walking out you'll see the police officer's car.” Emad comes out of the store, says hello to a taxi driver who is regularly there to pick up customers. Alvin’s attorney walks Emad through the video of the police:

Alvin’s Attorney: “Can you see if that's my client and pretty much right in front of the his mother police car? Are you able to tell that's them?”

Emad: “Yes.”

Alvin’s Attorney: “I'm going to zoom the video. This car just seems to roll by though and then you follow?”

Emad: “Yes.”

Alvin’s Attorney: “My client and his mother are walking away still?”

Emad: “Yes.”

Alvin’s Attorney: “I see it looks like a shadow, your shadow underneath that delivery truck and you're talking to the cop, I presume, at that point?”

Emad: “Yes.”

Captured in the deposition, Emad told the police officer what he needed: “I was telling him about the interaction with the customer, that he was cursing and threatening. I told him that I just wanted to ban him from the store so that he doesn't come back to the store. He said I can't do nothing about it. I would have to go to the police station and file a report.”

According to all involved, there was no followup by police after that. No one spoke to the customer to let him know that his behavior lost him privileges to return to the store. So far, no police report from this first call of the police has materialized in FOIL requests by A Little Beacon Blog, and cannot be found in court documents. A FOIL request did produce a Police Report of both incidents combined (BL-001734-20 CR-00232-20).

The customer’s attorney asked Emad about previous experiences with working with police to ban someone from the store. Emad answered: “The cops will come and take the person's information and they do the report but, I haven't asked a police officer or had to follow up with it regarding a ban.” Emad continued that usually Mo or JB follow up by talking with police officers.

The customer’s attorney followed up with more questions about the process of the police’s involvement with banning an unruly customer:

Alvin’s Attorney: “When he called [in the past] the police arrive on premises and they take some sort of report?”

Emad: “Yes.”

Alvin'’s Attorney: “And the information that's in the report you believe is what the name of whomever the person being banned might be?”

Emad: “Yes.”

Alvin’s Attorney: “Of a description of them?”

Emad: “Yes.”

Alvin’s Attorney: “Anything else?”

Emad: “That's it.”

The attorney asked if there was a list or bulletin board, and Emad answered that there was not. “They already know. You specifically tell the person you're not allowed to come into the store and usually that's where it ends unless they come again and that's when you contact the police station. It depends on how the situation was. If they called the police and filed a report right there and then with the officer and they're banned from the store and they come again you call the cops and they'll come and deal with it.”

The reason this is important is because the customer came back to the store 2 hours later after taking prescription medication and having at least one beer. It is during the second shopping event that the physical incident happened.

In terms of how employees know who is banned, Emad answered that the managers, Mo and JB know the circumstances behind each customer, and inform each other if there is a situation, which is rare. In this situation, when the attorney asked if Emad told Mo or JB about the customer he banned, Emad replied: “I don't think I did because I went back to work. I had a busy schedule that day so I went right back to work and forgot all about it, forgot about the situation.”

A Little Beacon Blog called and emailed Detective Sirrine for comment about how the police handle unruly customers at this store and other stores, but he did not respond.

Alvin’s attorney pursued Emad to ask: “Were you angry about what happened with yourself and Mr. Medina?”

Emad answered: “Not necessarily because I could say we do have customers but usually when you tell them you're -- The only thing is just going to the cop, calling the police officers thinking that they'll do something that's just the thing that -- you know -- it lets you down thinking that the cops will help you out or something like that. But other than that it really didn't bother me since he already left the store.”

CHAPTER 4:
The Dairy Isle

A couple of hours after the customer got back home, he said in his deposition that he realized he needed milk. His mother bought milk, as was discovered in the sequence of events earlier, but he needed his own milk. He told the attorney: “I noticed I didn't have milk and I probably wanted to get something else for the house. I went to the same supermarket because I figured it's already been a while later he probably wasn't there. And on top of that, it was a little dispute, it wasn't nothing crazy.”

The customer walked into the store. Emad was standing at the front of the store, at the end of the isles, in front of the checkout lines. Frequent shoppers of Key Food know that sometimes Emad or other store managers stand in that position to help shoppers flow through the checkout lines seamlessly. Usually this front section has people standing in line, or delivery carts are being rolled through to stock inventory. Upon entering the store, Alvin turned left through this area and walked past Emad, then turned up an isle to head to the dairy section, where the milk is in the back left corner of the store.

As a frequent shopper of Key Food, the easiest and most direct way of getting to the milk is by walking into the store and staying straight. Walking up through the produce section, turning left at the meat section, and then turning left for the last isle - the dairy isle. But that is not the direction the customer went.

Emad was standing in the front of the store by the registers when he saw Alvin enter. Alvin walked by Emad, according to both of their depositions. According to Emad, Alvin’s hand was in his left pocket, and remained there the entire time he was in the store, which made Emad nervous, thinking he had a weapon.

The customer's attorney asked Emad how that made him feel. Emad said: "I was confused because I had told him not to come back to the store but he was coming back. I told him as he was walking 'you're not allowed to come into the store' and he just proceeded to walk."

The attorney asked Emad how far away he was from Alvin. Emad answered: “I'm not sure if as he was coming I told him or as he passed me I told him but I did I did tell him you're not allowed to come into the store and he just proceeded to keep walking so I followed him. I let him know -- you know -- you're not allowed to come into the store and as we were walking towards the dairy I told Barbara to call the cops again.”

When Alvin described it to Key Food’s attorney, Alvin said: “At that time we weren't even flying with F bombs or nothing like that. He just came out and was like I don't want you here. I was like, I just came here for a half a gallon of milk.”

INFLUENCE OF DRUGS OR ALCOHOL

When asked by the attorney if he thought Alvin was under the influence of drugs or alcohol, Emad responded: “He did seem off. I don't know what he was on but he was on something...Just his face, his expression, everything. He just seemed off." The attorney asked Emad if he had ever seen Alvin before this day. Emad answered: "I seen him at the first interaction and in the first interaction he was loud and talkative. The second time the guy was calm. He didn't say much. His eyes were close to shut. Even his body language was just, it wasn't okay. He seemed to be on something.”

Alvin’s attorney asked Emad if he was trained in identifying people who were under the influence of drugs or alcohol. Emad answered that he was not trained, but had seen it many times. According to the Police Report: "Officers attempted to interview ___ on what occurred but had a difficult time understanding ___ due to his speech and appearing to be under the influence of alcohol."

In his deposition, Alvin told the attorney that he had consumed at least 1 beer (Heineken) before returning to the store, and had “probably” taken his prescription medication for depression (Wellbutrin), and prescription medication for blood pressure, (Amlodipine). He could not recall if he had also had a beer before the first time he grocery shopped with his mother hours prior.

When asked by Emad’s attorney if he had taken any other prescription medications that afternoon, Alvin responded: "Well, definitely I didn't take Ambient because I would have been asleep, not at the store and my Xanax."

INTO THE DAIRY ISLE

Further into questioning, the customer’s attorney asked Emad if he had to stop following the customer at any point. Emad answered that the did, in order to tell Barbara to call the police. Barbara was in the front office where she usually is. Mo was also in the office and heard what was going on. According to the deposition, Mo asked Emad what was up, and Emad told him that the customer was back in the store.

Emad picked back up to find the customer in the dairy isle, knowing the police were on their way, but kept a distance. He feared there was a weapon in Alvin’s pocket, stating: “His hand was in his pocket so I didn't know if he had anything in his pocket. So the whole time that hand was always in his pocket, his left hand was in his pocket.”

Emad told the attorney that he continued following the customer to make sure he did not damage anything, and to continue telling him he was not allowed in the store. According to a police report CR-00238-20 filed by JB the next day, after JB was told by Emad and Mo about what happened, the customer allegedly knocked down a display on his way to or through the dairy section.

However, the detective allegedly disregarded that police report days later, saying he couldn’t see the damage in the video, as you’ll read further on in this article. However, in the initial Police Report BL-001734-20 CR-00232-20 by the officer: "Officers did observe multiple grocery items damaged and on the floor of Keyfoods aisle.

In Emad’s deposition, Alvin’s attorney asked him if Alvin had knocked down any displays or picked up any other items. Emad answered that Alvin had not. However, in the video, Emad was holding bags of snacks that Mo says Emad did pick up from Alvin, or that Alvin had dropped to the ground. Emad can be seen dropping the snacks before he approaches Alvin in the final seconds of the video.

As Emad and Alvin were headed down the dairy isle, out of view of the video footage, Mo walked into the dairy isle to try to talk to the customer.

Another employee was also in the deli isle: Willy Cole. Frequent shoppers of Key Food know that Willy often worked in the deli isle, stocking the shelves, arranging items, and checking for expiration dates. At any given moment on any given day Willy could often be found in the deli isle.

However, the customer saw that differently. Alvin told his attorney in his deposition: “So I proceeded down the milk aisle to go grab my milk. And I grabbed the milk. I was going to pay for it, all you know, I have him behind me, the one with the long hair [aka Mo] on the right-hand side of me trying to grab the milk out of my hand and the other guy that was hiding behind the potato chips [aka Willy].”

FEELINGS OF THREATS MADE BY THE CUSTOMER

In his deposition, Mo recalled those early seconds in the dairy isle, where he walked from the front office to the dairy isle: “Emad came and told me that he [Alvin] was back and we went about and we were going to call the police. So we told Barbara to call the police and then I wanted to talk to him [Alvin] to try to see if --- you know, if he would talk to me instead of my brother and if he would just leave with --- in peace. And he would not listen to me, he was just trying to walk through me, and, you know, [saying things] like you can't talk to me, you can't tell me what to do, I'll do whatever I want to do.”

Emad recalled the seconds as well in his deposition. All depositions were taken individually, with no one hearing each other. Emad said: "He [Alvin] just kept on pushing his way through." The attorney asked Emad to clarify the pushing: "Not pushing him [Mo] to the side but kept on going forward even though Mo was standing in front of him."

According to his deposition, Mo tried appealing to Alvin again: “I told him that, like, we don't want your service, can you just --- can we talk. He would not --- he would not want to talk to me. I said, listen, you know, you had an argument with my brother, we do not want your service here. You know, you said what you said, and we don't appreciate it. We are calling the police right now, and we need you to get out. And he would not, he was just walking through me.”

The customer’s attorney asked Mo about Willy, who was in the dairy isle. Mo responded: “Willy was working, he was nothing to do with it. He's clearly working right there.”

Once everyone got into view of the security camera, the final action of this whole day was captured in 20 seconds. Emad testified that he did not hear Alvin talking, but Mo testified that he did. The Highlands Current in his response to this blogger’s Letter to the Editor called that testimony “conflicting.” The newspaper editor said to this blogger: “The Dabashi brothers offered conflicting statements in their depositions as to whether Medina said anything to them when he returned to the store."

The Highlands Current editor may have missed this statement in Emad’s testimony, on page 83 of just Emad’s testimony (page 364 of the court documents that the newspaper has): Emad recalled: “Mostly the encounter at that time talking with each other was Mo and Mr. Medina.”

Alvin can be seen talking in the video. He is saying something to them, even if Emad could not hear it, but Mo did. Alvin can be seen talking in the video.

In term of safety, Alvin’s attorney asked Emad: “Did you believe that he might have had some sort of weapon?” Emad answered: “Yes. I'm not 100% sure if he had something in his pocket, something dangerous, I wasn't sure.”

THE SLAMMING OF THE MILK

Alvin the customer was sharing the video of his take down two years after it happened, and within the same month as signing the settlement for his $95,000 payout. This photo shows Alvin winding up to slam the milk to the floor, where it exploded

When Mo was trying to appeal to Alvin to leave the store, Mo reached in to take the milk from Alvin. In his deposition, Alvin recalled: “So basically, as I'm trying to walk to the cash register just to go pay for my milk -- that's all I wanted to do was pay for my milk -- is when the one with the long hair [aka Mo] grabs my hand to get the milk out of my hand. That's when I tossed the milk to the side, didn't toss it at anyone, just tossed it to the side.”

In the video, Alvin can be seen snapping the milk across his chest in a wind-up, raising it above his head, and then slamming it to the ground, where it exploded. Mo can be seen backing away, while Willy is taking a drink of something he opened from the dairy isle. After Alivin threw the milk to the floor with a lot of force, the milk exploded. This is when Emad grabbed Alvin from behind and put Alvin to the ground.

THE TAKEDOWN

Alvin’s attorney asked Emad what he hoped to accomplish by throwing Alvin to the floor: “Not getting attacked with anything coming out of his pocket,” Emad responded. “My brother getting hurt or anything like that.”

Said Mo of that moment: “We didn't know what he was going to do, so with my brother trying to, you know, protect me or he thought he was going to take out something or anything like that, so he took him down.”

Emad walked away from the scene, and the 20 second video ends. What is not shown, but is described in Emad’s deposition, is Emad leaving the frame to get the police. Just before police arrived, Emad went back check on Alvin. Emad recalled: “He had gotten up. He stumbled a couple of times, dropped the Rice Crispy's and then I assisted him to sit onto the dairy cooler and told him to stay there.” The police arrived 2 minutes later, Emad said. The Rice Crispy’s were a snack that Alvin picked up.

Alvin’s attorney proceeded to again try to paint a picture of 3 against 1 in this situation, with Willy as the third. For those just seeing the 20 second video, and for those seeing the single photo in the Highlands Current, the public wrote their own story of Willy’s involvement.

Alvin’s Attorney: “So in the video of the actual incident it's you, your brother, and Willy all standing around or near Mr. Medina, three against one, right?”

Emad: “Willy wasn't in the picture to begin with. Willy was way out of the picture. He wasn't standing around him. He wasn't getting involved. He wasn't doing anything.”

Alvin’s Attorney: “But he was present?”

Emad: “Present doesn't mean you're involved.”

After Alvin was on the ground, Willy seemed to say something to Alvin and walk away.

FEELINGS AFTER IT ALL

Alvin's attorney then posed a different kind of question to Emad: "Do you think that he got what he deserved for what he did to you and your brother?"

Emad answered: "Not for what he did but for what to expect. I didn't know what to expect especially during the first interaction being threatened and saying about his family, we don't know who his family is and stuff like that so I didn't know what to expect and plus his hand was in his pocket so I wasn't 100% sure so I needed to do something.”

THE GUILTY PLEA

While the Highlands Current article said that Emad “conceded” to his plea, there is more to Emad’s feelings on his plea. The attorney asked Emad if he plead voluntarily. Emad answered: “Yes. With the advice of my counsel. I mean if it was for me I wouldn't just volunteer for that. I would have just kept on going but with my assisting counsel at the time that was advised.”

The attorney pressed on, asking Emad why he didn’t want to plead guilty. Emad answered: “Because I felt like it was self-defense defending me and my brother and the video just shows me hitting him on the floor and not knowing the background of the whole situation and threatening.”

Alvin’s attorney continued with his questioning of Emad’s plea, asking him if the judge asked him “a bunch of other questions” similar to this deposition setting. Emad answered that the judge did not ask bunches of questions, and just wanted to hear the story. So Emad told him the story. The guilty plea meant that Emad gave up his right to a trial by jury, and that Emad’s attorney could have cross-examined Alvin, to ask Alvin bunches of questions, but did not because of the guilty plea.

Alvin’s attorney continued on with the implications of the guilty plea questioning:

Alvin's Attorney: "Did he ask you if you were pleading guilty to this misdemeanor assault because you were, indeed, guilty of doing that?"

Emad: "Saying that I applied excessive force and that's the reason why I was guilty."

Alvin's Attorney: "And you agreed to that?"

Emad: "I agreed with it to resolve the case."

Alvin's Attorney: “But did you mean it?”

Emad: "Yes."

Alvin's Attorney: "But you do understand that you could have went forward with the case and had that trial and given the testimony and if you chose to present the self-defense or justification defense to everything that's shown in the video, right, you know you could have done that?"

Emad: "Yes. But I just seen the video and everyone doesn't see it that way." This was the only quote the Highlands Current included in the conclusion of their article. The newspaper then used a quote from Junior Dabashi that Junior changed his mind on and asked them not to include, but according to Junior, the editor Chip Rowe said that the editor insisted on using it.

CHAPTER 5:
The Police Were Allegedly Divided About Their Own Response

Mo was hesitant to go on the record about the police’s response as to how the first incident with Alvin’s alleged verbal abuse was handled, when the Beacon police drove up, Alvin walked by, Emad pointed to him, and the officer did not speak to Alvin.

Even though he was afraid of further abandonment by the police, Mo decided to go on the record with A Little Beacon Blog about this part of the story: “The police were divided over how the first officer handled it,” Mo told ALBB. “The two detectives involved in the case were Brian Lawrence and James Sirrine. We were so cooperative with Brian and showed him all clips needed and he was on our side in the case. Then he turned against us, where James was very helpful and supporting us the whole time. James Sirrine was the one that told us that the police department was divided in the case. Some were saying that the police officer who showed up the first time should have did something and some didn’t care that they thought it was a wrong reaction by my brother and doesn’t want to hear anything else.”

At that time, the Police Chief was Kevin Junjulas. He and Captain Fredericks retired months later in June after the racial reawakening started and organizers marched down Main Street in Beacon all summer. Police Chief Sands Frost stepped in to be the Acting Chief, and after a lengthy process with much considerations given, Chief Frost was selected by Beacon’s Police Chief Search Committee. This was also before the time that Beacon hired a Mental Health Professional, Lashaveous Dicker, to go out on calls with Beacon Police. Chief Frost and longtime Lieutenant Tom Figlia have been working to improve relations with the community ever since.

CHAPTER 6:
Police Take Report From Key Food’s Co-Owner JB Said To Press Charges; It Is Thrown Out; Instead, Emad Is Arrested

The day after the incident, the Key Food Beacon franchise co-owner JB Said went down to the police station to file a Police Report against Alvin Medina, which is filed as CR-00238-20, Blotter No. BL-001734-20. The report states that the detective taking the information about Alvin’s actions, Detective James Sirrine, “completed an arrest warrant for Criminal Tampering 3rd and filed it with the court.”

While JB was not at the store that day, Mo and Emad told him what happened. On their behalf, JB reported: “When [customer] was turned away from the deli he became verbally abusive towards his staff, and began calling them profanities and terrorists. Said states that [customer] then intentionally knocked over several displays of merchandise at the back of the store, causing a large mess inside the store. [Customer] made threats to harm [redacted] and his staff.”

In his deposition, JB told Alvin’s attorney: “He said that --- starting from the incident at the salads he started saying fuck you, mother fuckers, you fucking ‘A-rabs,’ such and such, and he started throwing the middle finger in his face, you know, like when you --- at the clerk in the deli. And Emad told me he's going to fuck you up, you don't know who the fuck we are, fuck you, mother fucking ‘A-rabs.’

JB continued in his testimony for the lawsuit: “He just kept on cursing and cursing over and over. It wasn't the staff cursing. And then I asked --- I made sure to ask Emad did you say anything back and he said I didn't curse back at him or nothing like that, I just told him I don't want his business and that was it, end of conversation. And I don't remember to the T because I wasn't there. I'm just going off what everybody is telling me, what Emad is telling me on that stuff.”

In order to clarify JB’s recollection in his deposition, Alvin’s attorney asked JB if he had watched the video before filing the police report. “The second I understood there was a situation I first thought where they fought was next to the milk, next to the milk is all the way in the back of the store. The video that you showed me is in the front already leaving the aisle, the milk section is all the way in the back. So to my understanding I thought the situation happened there, not in the front. You know, that's why I was thinking the displays or wherever the fight happened was in the back.”

Later, the Police Report that JB filed was withdrawn, or canceled, according to JB. Alvin’s attorney asked JB: “Did there come a time where you withdrew your complaint against Mr. Medina?” The attorney rephrased the question, and asked why Mo did not file the complaint.

JB answered: “Because I thought it was the right thing to do because the situation of what happened. I mean, it's my location, my store. I'm --- most of the managers there is me, I'm always there all the time, so I wanted to do something for the guy that caused us so much problems in the store.”

Alvin’s attorney asked JB if Emad said he felt disrespected. JB recalled: “Not that I know of. He never said the word disrespected, he just said --- he explained it to me as Mr. Medina wasn't--- if he was on some --- that he was drinking or on some kind of drug of some sort. That's what I understood, that he was telling me that the guy was not right at all…On the second encounter he [Emad] was telling me that, that he [Alvin] was definitely on something and it looked like he was coming back just for trouble.”

Alvin’s attorney returned to questioning about the Police Report and JB’s filing of charges. He asked: “Was he [the officer] upset with you when he returned to speak to you?”

JB: “Who, the police officer?”

Alvin’s Attorney: “Yes.”

JB: “No. Why would he be upset with me?”

Alvin’s Attorney: “I was just asking. Did he say anything along the lines of that would be interpreted or construed as questioning your veracity; do you understand what I mean?”

JB: “No, I don't understand. Veracity meaning what exactly?"

Alvin’s Attorney: “I will make it very plain for you. Did he tell you that he thought you were lying or making stuff up the second time he talked to you?"

JB: “The second time I think he talked to me he was explaining to me that he didn't see anything on the camera and I was explaining to him that I was going off what Emad and Moufaq and everybody was explaining to me about the situation and what happened."

Alvin’s Attorney: “And did you stand firm with what you shared with him the first time?"

JB: “Yeah, I explained to him the situation, but he was saying it wasn't credible because the camera system doesn't show that, doesn't show the situation."

Alvin’s Attorney: “So he told you he didn't believe you? Did he say it like that or did he say it the way you just said it ---"

JB: "Yeah, he said it was incredible."

Alvin’ Attorney: "Yeah, well, what did you think of it, what did you think about that?"

JB: “It is what it is. The proof is the proof, you need to see what's in front of you to actually, you know, consider truth."

Alvin’s Attorney: "Did you still believe you were telling the truth?"

JB: Yeah, "I believed I was explaining the situation like it was, but to my understanding, I wasn't a hundred percent accurate with the conversation because I wasn't at the scene, scene of the crime."

Alvin’s Attorney: "Did he tell you after that conversation, that one we're talking about right now, that he was pulling the warrant or withdrawing the criminal charges you wanted to press or something like that?"

JB: "Yes, he was telling me that because he said it wasn't credible enough, there wasn't enough proof to show everything that was going on that we said was going on."

Alvin’s Attorney: "How did that make you feel?"

JB: “I mean, it was okay. It is what it is. I mean, we've got to go with what we see, wheat's in front of us. What can be proven, put it like that. Whatever can be proven is what it should be."

In the Beacon Police Report dated 3/3/2020 22:19 by Wood, Trevor (008), identified as BL - 001734-20 CR-00232-20, police officers did see damaged property. The report stated: “Officers did observe multiple grocery items damaged and on the floor of Keyfoods aisle.” It is not clear why the Detective did not consider this observation made by officers in the earlier Police Report, when he allegedly told JB that damaged displays or groceries were not in the video footage, so did not seem to matter.

CHAPTER 7: A CLOSER LISTEN
Why Being Called “Terrorist” Wasn’t “Heard” In Testimony

After first learning about the incident and later lawsuit in the article in the Highlands Current, this blogger went to Key Food to get a better understanding of what happened. The newspaper article was short, the photo and video only showed the most graphic, heated moments of a much longer story. Both Mo and JB said that the customer had used racial insults that day.

Based on my interview the day after the newspaper article dropped, my first Letter to the Editor to the Highlands Current, I stated that the customer had used Islamaphobic insults. The newspaper’s editor, Chip Rowe, suggested I read the court documents before he published my letter. At my request, Chip emailed the court documents he and his reporter used.

In the court documents, when Mo and Emad were questioned separately by Alvin’s attorney about if Alvin called them “terrorists,” both Mo and Emad answered that he did not. In fact, the customer’s attorney asked Emad several times if Emad felt disrespected. Each time, Emad answered that he did not. Emad expanded: “Why would you feel disrespected if you get into an encounter like that. I didn't think I was disrespected.”

Puzzled, I returned to Key Food Beacon to ask Mo why both he and Emad denied that Alvin called them “terrorists”, if their memories remembered Alvin saying that. It was an uncomfortable question to ask Mo, but he responded quietly: “I don’t hear it anymore. In Oakland, CA, that was chaos.” Mo used to work in bodegas in Oakland before moving to Beacon, NY, as he described to Alvin’s attorney in his deposition. “I know who I am, and I know what they say to me is not true. I am an Imam at the mosque [Masjid Ar Rashid – Islamic Teaching Center] down the street. When I am outside, people yell to me: ‘Go home!’ But I am home.”

Mo continued: “If someone tells me they are going to punch me in the face, I will remember that. That tells me that I should duck; that something might happen to me right now.”

Despite stating that he had shopped at Key Food for several years, Alvin stated and implied several times that he did not know the management at Key Food, who is quite visible both behind and in front of the counter. He referred to them as “the one with the long hair” and other visual indicators. Alvin made it clear in his deposition: “I never paid much attention to the employees there, besides the one with the long hair.”

However, in his Police Report days after the incident to file charges against Emad, Alvin identified him as: “the male employee described as being Middle Eastern with a long beard about 30 years of age.” These were more precise details when Alvin was pursuing Emad’s arrested.

“At first, [Detective] Brian said ‘we are with you guys.’ But when he had us down to the station,” Mo recalled to ALBB, after the police invited Emad down to talk about more details, “he [Detective Brian Lawrence] was a different person.”

CHAPTER 8:
Alvin’s Recollection Of What Police Told Him About Emad

According to JB’s testimony, his Police Report to press charges against Alvin got withdrawn. After Alvin filed a Police Report of his own after he got out of the hospital, the police called Emad to come down to the station to answer a few more questions, JB told ALBB in an interview. When they arrived at the police station, Emad was arrested.

According to Alvin’s own testimony, the police had feelings about who was wrong, and seemed to be basing it on the 20 seconds of the video clip, without questioning others. ALBB has reached out to both detectives for their response to how they handled this, but neither have responded. They forwarded ALBB’s request to Beacon’s City Administrator Chris White, who also did not respond.

Alvin stated in his testimony: "I went to the police station to actually make a report, the police officer that was there -- I went there by myself at nighttime, which was hard enough to even walk over there, but that police officer told me, if I were to make a report, they would have to arrest me then go and get the guy."

At the time, JB’s Police Report was active, and the arrest warrant for Alvin was open.

"First thing the detective said before he started the report he was like, Alvin, I don't care what you went there for, what happened at that supermarket, from what we saw in this video, it wasn't fair what they did to you. When you went to the police station two days after, did you make a report? I didn't even get to report because he said if I filed a report, he would have to arrest me then he'll have to go and arrest the guy."

Alvin's Attorney: “So then, do you know how it came about that two days after that detectives contacted you?”

Alvin: “That's when the detectives just contacted me and then they asked me if I was able to make it to the station.”

Alvin's Attorney: “Did you fill out any paperwork with the police?”

Alvin: “Yes, after the detectives came and picked me up, yes, that's when we made the report.”

Alvin's Attorney: “If you didn't make a report that night, two days after you left the hospital, how did the police know what happened?”

Alvin: “I guess from when they went to the supermarket.”

Alvin's Attorney: “And do you know that they went to the supermarket?”

Alvin: “I'm guessing so.”

ALBB emailed both detectives to verify what Alvin said in his testimony. Leutenant Figlia responded with a reminder that as of 12/23/2021, all of ALBB’s questions for the Police Department need to go through City Administrator Chris White. The City Administrator then did not respond.

Chapter 9:
The Restraining Order

After the incident, JB pursued a restraining order against Alvin Medina. The restraining order was granted in Beacon City Court from Judge Timothy Pagones, who was City Court Judge back then. Alvin needs to walk on the opposite side of the street from Key Food when he passes that property.

The COVID-19 pandemic was declared days after this incident. Over the next two years, this lawsuit traveled through its process. Emad went through his court experience pleading guilty to the charge Alvin filed, and later on, all four people gave their depositions. The two parties settled in mediation, and agreed on March 15, 2022 to end the lawsuit for a payment of $95,000.

According to Alvin’s deposition, all of his medical bills had been paid already prior to the lawsuit settling by his Medicare Insurance 1199 Aetna, with the exception of the Beacon Ambulance Corps bill, which he was still submitting.

After the Stipulation of Discontinuance With Prejudice was signed on March 15, 2022, which stated that the lawsuit wa discontinued because a payment was on the way, Alvin began sharing the 20 second video in his video, accusing Key Food Beacon of being homophobic. Alvin riled up his friends, and didn’t seem to tell them in social media that he had already pursued a lawsuit and was awareded $95,000. Alvin let his friends tell him to sue Key Food Beacon.

Last month, Alvin also called Key Food Beacon “dirty,” which again, is an Arab racial insult, as described above. He continued to verbally assult and abuse Key Food Beacon. Which is what started this whole thing.

The end.

RELATED ARTICLES IN THIS SERIES

Community Safety Day Happening From Beacon Volunteer Ambulance Corps

Join the Beacon Volunteer Ambulance Corps (BVAC) for the 6th Annual Community Education Safety Day & EMS Week Celebration on May 15th, 2022 at the Beacon Elks Lodge from 12-4pm. Several safety opportunities are in store for you.

Says Deborah CortesEMT-B and Vice President of BVAC, “This event was created to help educate the community on emergencies and get the opportunity to meet community members as well as they get to know us and other first responders around the county. Another goal is to make them aware of numerous resources that are out there and available for them in the county. We hold this event on the week of May 15th specifically each year because it’s EMS Week! We do take donations if somebody does want to donate. This event is free for persons of all ages and we’re hoping to see everyone out there!”

While there, if you are thinking of getting involved with BVAC, on-site interviews for career and volunteer opportunities will be available as well as free giveaways and activities!

Activities Included In BVAC’s Community Safety Day

  • Free face painting

  • Free balloons

  • Free bicycle helmets & fitting for kids

  • Free car seat inspections (replacement if necessary)

  • CME

  • Teddy bear clinic

  • Seat belt rollover demo

  • Animal ambulance

  • Opioid crisis education

  • Heart/stroke awareness

  • Smoke trailer demo

  • Train track safety

  • David Garcia- human trafficking

  • ATV’s, K-9 Unit, Drone, Rescue boat and Crime scene truck

  • And MORE!

The event will take place on May 15th 2022 from 12pm - 4pm at the Beacon Elks Lodge in Beacon, NY. Find more information here >

Beacon's City Council Announces Passage Of Law Prohibiting Evictions Without Good Cause - Mayor Votes Against - Council's Responses

On Monday, March 7, 2022, Beacon’s entire City Council voted to pass a law prohibiting residential evictions without good cause, known to some as the “Good Cause Eviction Law.” Mayor Lee Kyriacou, who is a landlord, voted against the law. The press release prepared by Beacon’s City Council has been provided in full below.

Beacon’s Eviction Without Good Cause Law accounts for many situations, including requiring landlords to provide good cause to raise the rent above 5% if contested by their existing tenant requesting proof of necessity if the tenant/landlord discussions break down and the landlord pursues going to court to let a judge decide on the legality of the rent increase.

Where Is This Law Coming From?

Beacon is joining in the national movement within the housing crisis for all people to not let long-term rentals be a cut-throat rental market business model anymore. Other municipalities in this area have crafted and signed similar legislation, including Newburgh, Kingston, Poughkeepsie and Albany. Each of those communities, including Beacon, experienced the decimation of many of their historic buildings during the federally funded program Urban Renewal, which ended up mattering when rent regulation laws were enacted. Albany currently has one lawsuit against it, brought on by three landlords and their companies, asking for the law to be rescinded, as reported in the Times Union. There is proposed legislation in New York State Legislature that would enact a similar measure statewide.

It is in part because of that destruction that these communities cannot enact forms of rent stabilization found in New York City today. A new law in New York State, the Emergency Tenant Protection Act of 2019, allows for a declaration of a housing crisis in a locality, but is based on having a number of historic buildings still in tact. However, as has been especially demonstrated in the past several years, laws are created, and laws are walked back upon when levels of harm are represented by groups of people advocating for change.

Residential Real Estate As A Business Model

During this process of legislative debate, advocates for Beacon’s law stressed that housing is a human right and needs more protection. Landlords who showed up to public meetings to speak answered that money they invested in a property is their retirement plan and should not be impeded upon. However, price hikes in any business model usually proves bad for business, and results in a client-business breakdown. Some Beacon landlords showed up to speak in favor of the law.

Even in the short-term rental market, or a client-services market - if a client is used to paying one price over a long period of time - to suddenly hike that price usually ruins the business/client relationship. In the housing market, the long-term landlord may replace the tenant quickly in an unregulated market, but in the equally unregulated service or even the short-term rental industry which has online reviews tied to it, pricing is regulated by online reviews (social pressure), proper business relationships, and providing great service. Because secure housing is such a desperate need, some residential landlords don’t often face social pressure to keep rent increases stable, or provide stellar service in some cases.

Said the lead author of the law, Councilmember Dan Aymar-Blair, to A Little Beacon Blog about the passage of this law: “Tenant-landlord issues are most often resolved out of court and I hope that continues. The law has clear definitions of what constitutes good cause eviction and that framework can be used for discussions before anybody has to go to court. I hope landlords and management companies that depend on abusing tenants for profit margins will see their business model won't work in Beacon.

“I hope that Beacon will next come together to address the lack of affordable housing for all income ranges. Good cause eviction means that tenants can organize and participate without fear of retaliatory evictions and jacked rents.”

Was This Vote Expected This Night?

The week prior, The City Council was not anticipating voting on the law on March 7th. Week after week, the law had been pushed forward by the Council to even get it to the stage of Public Hearing, which is where it was the Monday evening of this week. For months, the City Council heard resistance from its retained legal counsel, Keane and Beane, who also represents developers building rental units in the City of Beacon, to advise the City not to create a law, stating on public record that it would be difficult to defend if a lawsuit was brought against the City. The Council then discussed the possibility of hiring a different law firm to represent a lawsuit in that case, should that happen.

Beacon’s City Administrator Chris White stressed throughout several discussions his concern for “fiduciary” spending of taxpayer dollars on legal costs defending this law. It is not clear on his definition of fiduciary, since he has currently authorized at least $110,000 of taxpayer dollars in the pursuit of terminating employment of a longtime city employee of the Highway Department, in addition to over $50,000 in paid-leave salary for that employee to not work during a labor shortage.

This law was in its second round of Public Hearing, where anyone in Beacon could come speak their mind about it. With this law being discussed on social media and out in real life for several months, it was hard for the community to ignore the effort. Landlords came to speak in favor or against, as did tenants. Advocates for the law even held a holiday caroling/protest in December 2021 at Pohill Park, which marched to City Council to confront the then City Councilmembers during their last days on council before the new members started.

Self-Fulfilling Prophesy Of Rent Hikes Before The Law Passed

After at least one tenant came forward to public City Council Meetings to speak in favor of the law, word circulated that some landlords had begun raising rents in anticipation of the free-for-all rent hike situation getting regulated.

That Beacon tenant reported at the next Public Hearing, that after she spoke in public at a City Council Meeting, she had subsequently asked her landlord to fix something necessary in her apartment, whereby she received by text from her landlord saying that he would fix it. In the same text, he declared he was also raising her month-to-month rent by $600/month. This hike, after an agreed upon hike of $100/month over the summer, resulted in a $700/month hike within one year, she told A Little Beacon Blog. This renter is White, works in the non-profit sector, and volunteers to teach classes in a corrections facility in the evenings.

Usually, if the City Council expects to vote on a legally binding resolution the night of the closing of a Public Hearing, the Resolution is noted in the official Agenda for the City Council, and a vote is taken that evening. This can be fore anything simple like having a Public Hearing for allowing firefighters to live further away from Beacon, hearing from the community, and then voting affirmatively right after if the public doesn’t bring overwhelming objection.

But this vote wasn’t on the evening’s agenda after the Council closed the Public Hearing, yet they discussed putting it on the agenda during the opening of the meeting. A Little Beacon Blog asked Councilmember Dan if the Council expected to vote that evening. He answered: “Yes. When we started to hear that landlords were retaliating against renters, we had no choice. Seeing that the outstanding amendments would have weakened the law and allowed this retaliation to continue for another month, we pressed forward.”

When asked if he was surprised to see it not initially on the agenda, Councilmember Dan answered: “No, it wasn’t an issue.” You can listen to how they all discussed putting the vote on the agenda at the beginning of the City Council Meeting here.

When Did This “Eviction Without Good Cause” Movement Start?

In the Before Times, during the pre-pandemic days, and during the former administration under Mayor Randy Casale, rents were already on the rise in Beacon. Former Councilmember Terry Nelson suggested pursuing the Emergency Tenants Protection Act of 2019. During that administration, where Lee Kyriacou was then a Councilmember, the common response by then Mayor Casale and some councilmembers to Councilmember Terry’s urging was that rents would self regulate under market conditions.

When the new administration came in, with former Councilmember Lee Kyriacou winning the election to become Mayor, the new Mayor Lee Kyriacou gave a platform for the Emergency Tenant Protection Act of 2019 to be considered, after Councilmember Terry continued to bring it up. Mayor Lee would state that he was doubtful that Beacon qualified for the tenant protection. Yet he dedicated space at a public Workshop Meeting for expert opinion to explain why Beacon did not qualify.

The Emergency Tenant Protection Act of 2019 requires a locality to know its rental vacancy rate, and of those, that the buildings are ones built between February 1, 1947 and December 31, 1973. Many of Beacon’s buildings that were of that age had been bulldozed during the federally ordered Urban Renewal period. You can get an introduction to Urban Renewal from the blog Newburgh Restoration, who describes it as a “tragedy” when mentioning how 1,300 buildings were demolished there, 9 streets “plowed under,” and “The city’s African American community was uprooted, with thousands of businesses and residents displaced.” A similar situation happened in Beacon. The Emergency Tenant Protection Act of 2019 requires that these buildings still exist to qualify.

During the time of Beacon’s Emergency Tenant Protection Act of 2019 discussion, Mayor Lee also stated that Beacon does not have a housing survey to know its vacancy rate. He did not imply that Beacon was in a hurry to conduct such a study. However, he did support spending at minimum of $50,000 on a Parks and Recreation study to be told what people want from a central Community Center. Two such centers used to exist in Beacon, and Beacon’s current tiny Parks and Rec building at 23 West Center Street is bursting at the studs with services and volunteerism.

The City Council’s pursuit of more tenant protections continued, with Councilmember Dan Aymar-Blair pushing to have a Good Cause Eviction Law considered. Councilmember Dan took the lead on drafting the law with other Councilmembers and the City’s retained law firm, Keane and Beane.

A Little Beacon Blog reached out to former Councilmember Terry Nelson to get his take on the passage of this law, and if he thought his early efforts helped from years ago. He responded: “It’s not really for me to say if my efforts helped, but I would like to think they did. It’s always a good thing when renters get the protections they deserve. But any law only works when there is effective enforcement. Attention must be paid to the level of enforcement of the new law.”

What Some City Council Members Said Upon Voting

Before casting his vote of Yes, Councilmember George Mansfield, who consistently voiced concern about leaving renal rates in the hands of a judge on a case-by-case basis, said this to explain his vote in favor of the passage of the law:

“This is a complicated issue, and I appreciate everyone who has come out during the course of this discussion.

“I'd like to first say that Keane and Beane, our lawyers, have represented this community and looked out for them for as long as I've been on council - or maybe I've been here longer than Keane and Beane has, but. So I truly respect your advice and consider that greatly in my decision.

“I also think, that I can see through our discussions, that we have an opportunity to respond to Albany - that there might be an opportunity - I don't feel like we are risking an expensive lawsuit going forward - that we can respond.

“I would have preferred to wait for the Albany decision to come down. But I think we have time to respond between maybe passing this and actually going to quote and the cost of litigation associated with that.

“One of my goals when we pass a law such as this is to help as many people and to hurt as few people in the decision. And in the end, no one is fully happy, and no one got fully what they wanted out of these discussions.

“I think that there is an urgency right now, certainly listening to some - part of the urgency is created not only by the greed, but by the fear of this law being passed. I think that is what is happening to some people. Landlords are raising rents objectionably and unconscionably right now. They've been known to do that in the past as well.

“My decision tonight will be based on helping as many people and hurting as few people going forward. Thank you all for being part of this conversation.

Mayor Kyriacou had this to say before casting his lone vote of No:

“The issue that I have respect to authority is that I have been sitting on Council for a long time. The nature of how City's get their authority from the State is not supported in this area. I'm sorry, but that is what it is. You all may have a different view, and I'm very respectful of that view.

“The second of my concern is, if we are picking away to help renters, and I think we do need to help renters, pitting one part of the community against the other is the wrong way to do this, and this does exactly that. Which I find that just sad.

“I know we want to help renters. Again, the County has announced a rental support program for people in low-income. That I think is the correct approach. It's something that we all as a community pay taxes to support, and I'm supportive of that. Pitting one part of the community against the other is the wrong way to go. I'm just saddened as I listen to us just dividing ourselves.

“The ones that I am focused on helping is low-income renters. There are plenty of renters that have come to Beacon who are fully capable of paying the full rents that are out there now. That's why those rents are out there. If we afford them the same rights, they will push low income renters out, and that's the group I really, really wish to help. I don't think this law is structured correctly do to so. Those are my concerns.”

In answering the Mayor, Councilperson Justice McCray gave their answer before voting in favor of the passage of the law:

“To that point, this law is designed to keep people in their homes, so I don't see how this would push low-income renters out,” Justice said.

“Just to talk about eviction:

“Evicted individuals are 11% to 15% more likely to experience a loss of employment and medical insurance as compared to individuals who have not been evicted (Harvard University)

“Children victimized by eviction are typically forced to transfer schools; a traumatic destruction of stable educational and peer relationships that has been shown to have a lasting negative impact on childhood development. (National Education Policy Center)

“All adult populations, once evicted, experience higher-all cause mortality, increased instances of emergency room visits, higher rates of addiction and relapse, depression, and suicide. (National Library of Medicine)

“Cost-burdened households spend more than 30% of their income on rent, and severely cost-burdened households spend more than 50% (Disrupted)

“I came onto Council as a community organizer working in social and racial justice. Passing Good Cause is crucial for bringing racial justice to housing. More than two-thirds of Black families in New York State rent. Among renters, Black households are the most vulnerable to eviction, the most likely to experience discrimination from landlords, and the ones most likely to be displaced when neighborhoods change.

“High rents and gentrification have had a devastating impact on Black communities in New York State. In my social justice work over the past couple of years, I’ve built connections with Black members of our community who lived here for years, and because they weren’t protected by this law, they’re gone. I don’t get to walk around the corner and share meals with them anymore. If you’ve been here for not even 10 years, you’ve seen the active displacement of Black people in Beacon. Good Cause is an important step in promoting community stability and combating displacement.

“According to a study published last week by the Pratt Center for Community Development Urban Democracy Lab, Legal Aid Society, Housing Justice for All, and the Community Service Society: “Black Households In New York Are 3x As Likely To Face Eviction As White Households”

“Councilmembers and community alike have stated that housing is a human right. It’s not just a philosophy. Universal Declaration of Human Rights Article 25: Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of himself and of his family, including food, clothing, and housing…

“I support Good Cause Eviction.”

The Press Release From The City Council After The Vote

Below is the press release from the City Council, that has not yet been published to the City’s website yet. In earlier discussions as the law was debated, City Administrator Chris White asked the Keane and Beane attorney if the law, if voted on, could be delayed to be published to the City Code and delay enforcement, to which the attorney answered that it could. It has not been stated as to the date that this law will be published to the City Code.

BEACON, NY MARCH 8, 2022 - In last night’s City Council meeting, the Beacon City Council passed their hard-fought “good cause eviction” law tonight with the support of all six City Council members. By providing Beacon’s housing court with a framework for what constitutes an eviction with good cause, the City Council hopes to end the leniency of eviction proceedings against tenants, allow greater access to due process, and mitigate the displacement of residents. The law builds upon the fact that housing is a human right and that apartments and houses are not just commodities, they are homes.

“To clear up misconceptions, this law does not change that evictions require the courts. What it does is sets relevant standards for the proceedings that protect tenants,” said Wren Longno, Ward 3 Councilmember.

Specifically, grounds for eviction with good cause include:

  • Non-payment of rent

  • Substantial lease violations

  • Property damage

  • Committing a nuisance

  • Refusal of access

  • Illegal activity

  • Bad-faith refusal to sign a written lease

  • If the landlord wants to move themselves or a family member into the rented unit.

  • Additionally, rent increases above 5% will require a justification before a judge in cases where the tenant objects to the increase. The law intends to end the practice of arbitrary evictions and steep rental increases which are de facto evictions.

“Beacon is a popular place to live, and with good reason, but increased rents of 20% or more have become common which is simply impossible for most people.” said Councilmember At-Large Paloma Wake “While this law does not directly address affordable housing per se, we know that stable housing has compounding benefits for the entire city. When basic needs are met, individuals can be more active and thriving members of our community.”

Since Councilmember Dan Aymar-Blair for Ward 4 first introduced the law in August 2021, neighboring communities of Newburgh, Poughkeepsie, and Kingston passed their own similar versions of the law.

While no legal action has been taken against these municipalities, over several workshops, the City Council discussed the potential of a lawsuit brought by landlords. The City Council concluded that the risks posed to the city by a lawsuit were low, particularly the threat of legal expenses.

“Passing Good Cause is essential for bringing racial justice to housing,” said Ward 2 Councilmember Justice McCray. “More than two-thirds of Black families in New York State rent; and among renters, Black households are the most vulnerable to eviction, the most likely to experience discrimination from landlords, and the ones most likely to be displaced when neighborhoods change. If you’ve been here for not even 10 years, you’ve seen the active displacement of black people in Beacon. Black households in New York are three times as likely to face eviction as white households. Good Cause is an important step in promoting community stability [preserving diversity] and combatting displacement.”

Similar laws are still being considered around New York State, including New Paltz and Ithaca. A statewide bill is also actively under consideration.

“Tenants can now organize and speak up about their living conditions without fear of retaliatory evictions and jacked rents,” said Aymar-Blair. “Now that the folks who depend on affordable housing can fearlessly join the conversation, the City Council is ready to turn its attention to creating new affordable housing for low-income residents and working families.”

Molly Rhodes, Ward 1 Councilmember said, “We hope this can be a launching point where both tenants and landlords feel inspired to come together to help the city craft future housing policies and vision.”

From:

City of Beacon Councilmembers Dan Aymar-Blair, Wren Longno, Justice McCray, Molly Rhodes, and Paloma Wake

“Pitting One Part Of The Community Against The Other” - Governing Laws Already Do This

One of Mayor Lee’s stated concerns is for avoiding this legislation is to avoid “pitting one part of the community against the other,” implying tenants vs landlords. This type of “pitting” has already existed in the form of legislation in New York State, especially so in New York City and parts of Albany, Erie, Nassau, Rensselaer, Schenectady, and Westchester counties where rent control is still in effect, according to the Residential Tenants Rights Guide. These members of the community are already pitted against each other when the landlord pursues going to court to evict a tenant - if it reaches that point, and the tenant doesn’t self-evict.

A Little Beacon Blog has spoken to people who work in different areas. Families who have the same job year after year - fixed income if you will - who cannot afford a large rent increase - and then need to move out of Beacon to Wappingers or Newburgh to find comparable rent. Nurses. Home care workers. Self-employed creators. Service-industry folks like bar tenders and restaurant managers can barely afford to live in Beacon, yet they work here. Some commuting from counties over. “Artist lofts” are very limiting for who qualifies to live in those units, and can be discriminatory.

It is unclear who these low-income people are that Mayor Kyriacou says he advocates for, since the people he seems to say can pay these rising rents may be from certain private sectors, or people who rent apartments as second get-away homes, or are never home because their jobs who can afford this rent send these new Beacon citizens to other locations to do their jobs. Or, are the blessed collection of employees who can work remotely from home.

Beacon's Parade of Green is On - Rain, Snow, Sleet or Shine - Honoring Anthony Lassiter, Grand Marshall 2022

Parade of Green committee volunteers painting the town with green, yellow, orange and blue shamrocks. Pictured from left: Rick Brownell, Bitsy, and Annie McElduff.

DAY: Saturday, March 12th
TIME: 12noon for the public (floats and cars line up earlier at 11am)
LOCATION: Starts at Pohill Park (near Bank Square) ends at Dummy Light (1 East Main near Trax)
RAIN OR SHINE

With weather apps calling for 100% chance of something wet this Saturday, March 12, 2022, Beacon’s Parade of Green is on with no rain date. Said one of the parade organizers, Kimberlee Markarian in response to Councilmember George Mansfield’s question of if the parade is rain or shine during this week’s City Council Meeting: “It is rain or shine! Which is so amazing! We went through a whole lot of things in the last couple of years. A little rain…we got it!”

The parade route is from Pohill Park (the corner of Main Street, 9D and South Avenue at Bank Square), runs down Main Street, and ends at the Dummy Light (near 1 East Main near Trax Coffee and the Chocolate Studio). Main Street will be closed (but all shops and restaurants open!), so the parade floats, cars and walkers will have full access to roll through. The parade starts at 12pm from Pohill Park.

Be sure to visit Meyers Old Dutche for their special “Shamrock” drink inspired by the parade. Later on, find a calm and cozy spot inside of Two Way Brewery for their live music, featuring the TMcCann Band starting at 7pm (food also available from the Flying Jibb)

Honoring Anthony Lassiter, Grand Marshall For 2022 Parade Of Green

Photo Credit: Parade of Green

The Parade of Green is honoring Anthony Lassiter, was born February 1947 in Beacon. He attended Beacon High School where he was on the football, wrestling, and baseball teams. He graduated high school in 1966 and was drafted into the US Army in the spring of 1967.

Private Lassiter was trained to be an Army electrician. His primary responsibilities included building helicopter landing pads for Cobra gunships. Additionally, Specialist Lassiter was assigned to the "burial detail firing squad" where he performed the 21-gun salute at the funerals of fallen heroes.

Ultimately, Specialist Lassiter was sent to Republic of South Vietnam. Shortly after being promoted to Sargent, Lassiter and his Company were attacked by hostile forces. Lassiter was injured in that attack and was awarded a Purple Heart. He received an Army Commendation Medal for his distinguished service and was honorably Discharged from the Army in November 1969.

In January 1970, he went to work at IBM in East Fishkill. After several years, he became a manager. One of his favorite assignments was recurring college students to work for IBM. He worked at IBM for the next 30 years. Anthony married Patricia Lassiter. Together they raised 2 sons: Justin and Aaron, and have 8 grandchildren. Mr. Lassiter is now retired.

Anthony Lassiter serves his church and assists throughout the community in multiple volunteer activities. Anthony served on the City of Beacon Planning Board for 15 years, and continues to serve on the City of Beacon Housing Authority Board of Directors. He is a member of the American Legion Post 203, the Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 666, the Beacon Community Lions Club, and is a member of the Military Order of the Purple Heart.

Anthony is a long standing volunteer at the St. Andrew's / St. Luke's Food Pantry. For many years, he has served on the Spirit of Beacon Day Committee, and in 1991, was chosen as the Spirit of Beacon Volunteer of the Year.

Anthony is registered with Donate Life Organ Donation, and actively encourages others to register. As a civic minded individual who strives to serve this community and is dedicated to his fellow veterans, Anthony's commitment is limitless. This list only touches on his accomplishments.

The Army Commendation received by Lassiter proclaimed: "The loyalty, initiative, and will to succeed that Specialist Anthony V. Lassiter demonstrated at all times, undoubtedly made him one of the finest soldiers in this command." It can be concluded that Anthony Lassiter's loyalty, initiative, and will to succeed make him one of the finest citizens in this City of Beacon.

Sales Tax Eliminated For Clothes & Shoes Under $110 In Dutchess County - Plus - Forfeited Beacon Sales Tax Renegotiated Without Disclosing Beacon's Collection To Public

Starting March 1st, 2022 residents and visitors shopping in Dutchess County will not pay sales tax on individual clothing or footwear items costing less than $110. This cut in sales tax was first announced in October 2021, and adopted when Dutchess County passed its budget in December 2021. Sales tax generated from Beacon continues to be forfeited to Dutchess County - meaning the City of Beacon does not collect the money generated from sales tax to spend at its digression.

For decades, the decision for Beacon, Poughkeepsie and other municipalities in Dutchess County has been to funnel sales tax money to Dutchess County, and receive negotiated payments from Dutchess County in return. The dollar amount of sales tax generated from Beacon has not been disclosed by Dutchess County or New York State, as reported by A Little Beacon Blog, and continues to not be disclosed during Beacon’s recent negotiations with Mayor Lee Kyriacou in 2022 and signed legislation to continue the practice.

But First - The Benefit For Shoppers

According to Dutchess County’s press release from Dutchess County Executive Marcus Molinaro sent 2/28/2022: “The sales tax exemption on clothing and footwear was adopted as part of the 2022 County Budget which provided for and is part of several efforts to deliver sustained tax relief to Dutchess County residents with more than $20 million in annual tax relief, including the largest property tax decrease in County history.”

“Starting Tuesday, residents and visitors will now pay less when they need to make essential clothing and footwear purchases. Combined, we are delivering $20 million in sustained tax relief.”

This means that every item in a store that is clothing or footwear and is under $110 will not be charged sales tax. Shops that ring their sales up manually will need to remember to do this when writing out the receipt. Shops that use point of sale (POS) systems and bookkeeping software like QuickBooks will have an easier time of assigning what products within their inventory have sales tax attached.

Different Sales Taxes Attached To Each Purchase In New York State

There are different taxes attached to retail sales. “In New York State, clothing, footwear, and items used to make or repair exempt clothing which are sold for less than $110 per item or pair are currently exempt from the State’s 4% sales tax,” according to Dutchess County’s press release.

“Consumers currently pay the Dutchess County sales tax rate of 3.75% and the 3/8th% Metropolitan Commuter Transportation District (MTA) tax, for a total of 4.125% tax on these purchases,” the press release outlined. “Effective March 1st, 2022, Dutchess County becomes one of only 9 counties in New York to eliminate county sales tax on clothing and footwear items under $110, and the only county in the mid-Hudson Valley region to do so.”

Those counties are or have been: Chautauqua County, Chenango County (outside the following) Norwich (city), Columbia County, Delaware County, Dutchess County, Greene County, Hamilton County, Tioga County, and New York City.

The sales tax exemption is a per-item exemption and doe snot include the 3/8th% MTA tax.

According to the press release, Dutchess County retailers were notified of the upcoming sales tax change by the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance. Specific details of the exemption are available online Publication 718-C – Sales and Use Tax Rates on Clothing and Footwear.

Details Of Type Of Clothing Exempt

According to the legislation, “the exemption applies only to clothing and footwear worn by humans. It also applies to most fabric, thread, yarn, buttons, snaps, hooks, zippers, and similar items that become a physical component part of exempt clothing, or that are used to make or repair exempt clothing.”

Items not included in the exemption include costumes or rented formal wear; items made from pearls, precious or semi-precious stones, or imitations; athletic equipment; or protective devices, such as motorcycle helmets.


What This Means For Sales Tax Collected From Beacon

New sales tax sharing agreement for 2023-2032 have been negotiated and are being signed into law. The dollar amount of sales tax generated from stores in Beacon has not been disclosed to the public by Mayor Kyriacou, who very briefly briefed the City Council at a Workshop meeting in February 2022, and more in depth at the following meeting, where the renegotiated rate was unanimously voted Yes on.

According to Dutchess County’s 2/28/2022 press release announcing this new sales tax cut: “The clothing and sales tax exemption goes into effect as the County is working with the Cities of Beacon and Poughkeepsie to update the current sales tax sharing agreement, which provides millions of dollars in sales tax revenue to local municipalities each year. The current agreement expires in 2023, and requires the authorization of each City Council, the County Legislature, and the NYS Comptroller.

“The agreement allows Dutchess County Government to continue to collect a 3.75% County Sales and Use Tax, with the Cities of Poughkeepsie and Beacon surrendering their right to receive one-half of the non-state sales and use tax (which equals 1.5%) collected within their respective municipalities. (The agreement is among these three parties because under state law, only county and city governments have the right to impose a local sales tax; towns and villages do not have that right.)

“The new agreement will be a streamlined agreement that eliminates the complicated formula for sales tax growth contained in the current agreement. The new agreement, which will run from 2023 to 2033, will be a simple percentage formula. Each of the cities will see a graduated increase in the percentage of sales tax received over the term of the agreement, with the City of Poughkeepsie increasing their percentage of sales tax collected from the current 4.59% to receiving 6.02% by 2030. The City of Beacon will go from its current 2.00% to receiving 2.62% by 2030. Local towns and villages will continue to share 9.5% of total county sales tax collected.

“Over the last 10 years, we have distributed more than $300 million in sales tax to our 2 cities, 20 towns and 8 villages. This new agreement increases the percentage of sales tax the two cities will receive, while ensuring the towns and villages sales tax revenue is protected and grows as sales tax receipts grow,” County Executive Molinaro said.

“The City of Beacon Council voted to approve the new agreement on Tuesday, February 22nd. The City of Poughkeepsie Council is expected to vote on the agreement on March 14th. It will then go to the Dutchess County Legislature for vote at the April board meeting.”

Generated Sales Tax Grew In 2021

According to a press release made by Dutchess County Executive Marcus Molinar’s office on 10/13/2021: “Dutchess County has seen revenues rebound strongly in 2021, with sales tax receipts well exceeding original projections year-to-date and continued federal reimbursement for many of the COVID-19 expenses as well as American Rescue Plan (ARP) funding. This has enabled the County to fill many of the positions that had been held vacant this year and restore full position funding in the 2022 Executive Budget, expand and enhance programs, while also reducing the property tax levy – the amount collected from property taxpayers.”

While Dutchess County indicates that they know the sales tax number generated to them by surrounding municipalities who have forfeited their right to collect their own sales taxes, the totals for each municipalities continues to not be disclosed by Dutchess County, or Beacon’s Mayor Lee Kyriacou, if that number was disclosed to him while negotiating with the county on the rate.

Dutchess County Legislature Chairman Gregg Pulver said, “At a time when many costs are going up for families, I am very proud that Dutchess County Government is doing all we can to lower costs for our residents. This sales tax exemption helps people hang on to their hard-earned money and also makes Dutchess County an even more attractive shopping destination for visitors. We have worked hard to make smart, conservative fiscal decisions over the years so we can keep providing savings to our citizens.”

Knowing the sales tax number generated by each municipality would help all Dutchess County residents know if their municipality were getting a good deal from the County when being cut a check to be used at each municipality’s digression, in addition to being provided services by Dutchess County.

Mask Comes Down From The Face With The Hat Mural On Building On Main Street - People Remember The Mask In Photos

The person in the hat, a mural in Beacon at 314 Main Street. Days or weeks prior to this photo, the artist had installed a mask on the face. The mask is gone now. Below, find people’s photos of when the mask was up, taken in homage to helping Beaconties stay safe. Today, COVID-19 case counts are down, and vaccination rates are up. Hopefully they stay that way.

Back in 2015, which is 7 years ago, A Little Beacon Blog ran a contest for people to identify where a tiny corner of a photo was around town. It was called the “Where Is This?” Contest. It was a favorite activity for our readers, and it’s time to bring it back! At the time, a tiny snapshot of this photo was the clue, and a Beaconite named Michelle Rivas, who is currently a librarian at the Beacon Public Library, identified it first.

Since then, the mural of the person in the bowler hat at 314 Main Street (intersection of N. Chestnut) has become iconic. Not for it’s photogenic draw as a selfie-stopper for anyone visiting Beacon to get their photo taken in front of this mural, but for what was added to the mural: the mask. After COVID-19 was declared, and face coverings were mandated for public spaces, the artist installed a powder blue lattice mask on this face, trimmed in sunflowers. The move was made during a time of growing frustration with having to wear a mask as a safety measure to reduce the spread of COVID-19.

And just like that…the mask has been discarded. Sunflowers from the mask installation on the person in the hat mural on the building at 314 Main Street and N. Chestnut Street.

Little by little, more and more selfies emerged on Instagram of people with the masked version of the mural. By the end of February 2022, face mask mandates started coming down. While walking on Main Street one morning, the trimming of sunflowers was spotted sitting by trash cans. No one knew what that meant in that moment, but the entire lattice-based installation of the mask was also gone. A sign? A statement from the artist that they too are removing their mask policy, as restaurants and schools are, now that they are given the choice instead of being mandated by federal or local government? Local shops, eateries and gyms are all reviewing their policies, emailing their customers, and moving forward into what hopes to be a safe situation for what was once normal.

More importantly, now that COIVID-19 case counts have plummeted, vaccination rates are increasing (still room to increase! Kids need their doses, and everyone needs their boosters (talk to your doctor for your own needs if you have concerns).

A Little Beacon Blog has asked the world (jk, the community of residents and visitors to Beacon) to send in their selfies with the masked version of this mural. Or not the selfies - the scene could look different on different days. We will provide photo credit to each photo submitted and published. Email yours to editorial@alittlebeaconblog.com.

And this doesn’t means it’s over. The mask might come back. Get vaccinated! People can wear a mask if they are comfortable doing so.

Beacon Trivia: The stores currently in this building are Last Outpost Store (a great boutique with mens and womens apparel, home collectibles and house-designed jewelry) and Yanarella (a great inclusive dance studio for kids and adults). Prior to Last Outpost Store was The Dance Bag. Memories!


Photo Credit: Maureen, taken September 2021

Photo Credit: Anvin Alexander @anvinalexander

Photo Credit: Anonymous


Photo Credit: Ginny Moore “Hope this helps!”

Photo Credit: Megan Meister: “Summer 2020 while enjoying a wonderful weekend in Beacon.
Love your blog by the way!”

Photo Credit: Maura Simeone

Ice Storm Pelts Dutchess County - Covers Beacon In Sheet Of Ice

Those who have school-age children and enjoy making predictions on when there will be a snow day closure may have taken particular satisfaction in this Friday Snow Day (two weeks ago Thursday was a snow day as well). Yesterday (Thursday) was predicted to rain all day, with temperatures dropping overnight, leading to pelting freezing rain for the entire Friday. The Beacon City School District (BCSD) called the snow day Thursday evening, with a reminder Friday morning.

Horrors! Ice froze trash cans shut. Parked cars were sealed in a shell of ice.

Beacon was covered in ice. No school bus would be out in it. Dutchess County public transportation was running, and Beacon’s Post Office workers were once again out in their snow gear delivering the mail by hand. All Sport in Fishkill announced a delayed opening, and then an early closure. The Family Justice Center in Newburgh announced a delayed opening for 11am, and then gave up and told employees to work remote.

Anyone who didn’t get their piles of snow from the street or corners saw it frozen back into place as the sleet covered it in freeze mode. Central Hudson kept customers informed by email, Twitter and Instagram, showing footage of iced-over trees completely falling over under the weight of the ice, snapping power lines as they went.

Central Hudson posted photos of fallen trees. Here is a video of trees falling.
Photo Credit: Central Hudson

According to Central Hudson: “Locally, as of 8:30 a.m. on Friday, approximately 31,000 Central Hudson customers were without power with the majority of outages located in Ulster County. With sleet, freezing rain and wintry weather are expected to continue into the afternoon, additional outages are expected to occur during the day. Restoration activities are expected to extend into Saturday and possibly Sunday.”

This number rose to 50,550 homes without power by the afternoon. ALBB’s own Program Manager, Teslie Andrade, was without power in Newburgh until 4:30pm. Mutual aid was requested from Indiana, northern Pennsylvania and upstate New York to arrive to assist, with more possibly on the way. In total, Central Hudson expects to have a field force of more than 400 line and tree professionals.

With freezing conditions, pipes in homes are bound to freeze and then could burst, causing a big, expensive mess. People are encouraged to drip their faucets if they lose power, run out of oil to heat their homes, or generally risk an area being too cold to insulate the pipes.

Central Hudson tweeted tips today on how to prevent freezing pipes.

Beacon Restaurants Open On Mondays

Bank Square
129 Main St.
Your friendly place on the West End Main Street for a latte, craft beer, or Mast Brothers Hot Chocolate. Also have snacks like yogurt, granola bars, and homemade donuts when they are making them.

Open Monday - Friday 6am - 9pm
Saturday from 7am - 10pm
Sunday from 7am - 9pm


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Tito Santana Taqueria
142 Main St.
(845) 765-­2350

Tito Santana Taqueria is a California-style Mexican fare with really fresh food you'd expect to find in a taqueria! From guacamole to fish tacos to cheesy quesadillas. They also serve beer and cans of wine! Stop in! The taco etiquette: Always order more than you can eat.
PS: Inspired Vegan & Gluten-Free options make Tito Santana Taqueria the place to be!

Open daily from 11am - 9pm (Closed on Wednesdays)


Artisan Wine Shop
180 Main St.
Beacon's most delightful wine shop specializes in pairing wine with food.

Open Monday - Saturday 10pm - 8pm & Sunday 12 - 6pm.


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Meyer's Olde Dutch
184 Main St.
(845) 440-6900

This burger joint bought and replaced Poppy's and you can get the scoop! Look for Dirty Fries, creative cocktails, chicken sandwiches, and more.

Open Sunday thru Thursday for Food 11:30 am until 9 pm; bar until 10 pm; Friday and Saturday Food 11:30 am until 11:00 pm; bar until midnight.


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Beacon Bread Company
193 Main St.
(845) 838­-2867
You'll find not just their delicious, fresh baked bread, but you can stop in for warm french onion soup, grilled cheeses and other sandwiches, cheese danishes, brownies. Vegan options are available!

Open Monday-Friday 8am - 5pm (Closed Wednesdays)


BJ's Soul Food Restaurant
213 Main St.
Beacon's stop for soul food including fried chicken, ribs, oxtail, and mac and cheese that rivals Stouffers. Enjoy a generous slice of a homemade three-layer frosted cake. Serves beer.

Open daily 7:30am - 9pm & Sundays 7:30am - 7pm


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Homespun Foods
232 Main St.
(845) 831­-5096

Delicious spot for breakfast, lunch or sweet snacks (like carrot cake or chocolate mousse). Be sure to ask about their deep dish french toast with real maple syrup, which had formerly was only baked on the weekend, but now may be served daily in Homespun's new morning hours for breakfast, starting at 8am. Also serves oatmeal, yogurt, quiche, sandwiches, cheeses and beer.

Open Monday from 10am - 4pm & Thursday-Sunday 10am - 7pm
Closed on Tuesday & Wednesday.


Isamu Sushi
240 Main St.
Beacon's most modern and hip-looking sushi restaurant with a waterfall wall that kids love. Seats large party. Serves wine and beer.

Open daily 11am - 10pm & Sundays 12pm - 10pm


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Ziatun
244 Main Street
(845) 765-8268
Authentic Palestinian-Arabic-Middle Eastern food that serves vegan & vegetarian options as well as traditional meat dishes that include lamb and beef. Local blogger at Beacon Bits was quite taken with the flavors you'll find there, including mint, sumac, toasted pita, and more. After being open for 6 weeks, Ziatun (pronounced Zay-toon) made it to a Top 10 List at The Culture Trip. It is one of the restaurants from Kamel Jamal (you know him from Tito's, Beacon Bread Company, and W.T.F Beacon), and the child of Palestinian immigrants, born in a refugee camp in Jordan, you are sure to taste his passion for the Palestinian home-cooking and enjoy your dining experience.

Monday + Thursday-Saturday 11 am - 9pm
Tuesday + Wednesday 11 am-4pm
Sunday 11am - 8pm


Max's On Main
246 Main St.
Enjoy Max's for lunch and dinner! A favorite around these parts is their crab meat cakes when they are available as a special. A dependable staple is their potato skins, which are a rare appetizer in these parts. And we know this because we are potato skin aficionados.

Open Monday-Thursday 12pm - 10pm
Friday & Saturday 12pm - 11pm
Sunday 12pm - 9pm


Fu Xing Chinese Restaurant
250 Main St.

Open Sunday 12pm - 10pm
Monday-Thursday 11am - 10:30pm
Friday-Saturday 11am- 11am


Scarborough Fare
257 Main St.
While not a restaurant, Scarborough Fare sells the olive oil, vinegar, pickles, pasta and sauces you need to make your own meals.

Open Monday, Wednesday - Friday 11am - 5pm
Saturday 11am - 6pm
Sunday 10am - 5pm


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Hudson Valley Food Hall
Eateries Inside: Mizz Hattie’s BBQ, Momo Valley, Shmuck’s Sweet Stuff, The Roosevelt Bar, El Nica, Barb’s Fry Works

288 Main St
The Hudson Valley Food Hall & Market showcases a variety of cuisines and local chefs from the Hudson Valley. In addition to food vendors, the hall houses The Roosevelt Bar, with a cocktail program showcasing local spirits from the Hudson Valley.

Open daily from 12pm - 9pm except Tuesdays


Happy Valley
296 Main St.

Open Monday - Thursday 12pm - 12am
Friday & Saturday 12pm - 1am
Sunday from 12pm - 11pm


The Studio @ Beacon
301 Main St
In addition to being a Spin/Boxing studio, they have a refreshing Smoothie Bar with an amazing selection of smoothies which will refresh and energize you. You can call in advance and place your order! See their menu.

Monday 5:30am–8:30pm
Tuesday 5:30am–11am, 5pm–8:30pm
Wednesday 9am–11am, 5pm–8pm
Thursday 6am–11am, 5pm–8pm
Friday 9am–1:30pm
Saturday 8am–12:30pm
Sunday 8am–1pm


Glazed Over Donuts
315 Main St.
The sundae of donuts, the aroma of this donut shop, located in the navy blue building on Main Street near the Howland Public Library, can be smelled from blocks away, even into the residential area behind Rite Aid.

Monday, Wednesday, Thursday & Sunday 10am – 5pm
Friday & Saturday from 10am - 6pm
Closed Tuesday


Roma Nova
6 Eliza Street (on a side street off Main Street)
This little pizza/taco combo is a favorite for some. It may be quick place to swing by and pick up a taco while you're out.

Open Monday - Thursday 11am - 8pm
Fridays 11am - 9pm
Saturday 12pm - 8pm
Closed on Sunday


Beacon Natural Market
348 Main St.
The Deli Menu at Beacon Natural Market is an easy, tasty and healthy source for a work lunch or early dinner. A new menu is posted each week at their website, and you'll find creative dishes to select from, including Red Curry Chicken Soup, Mixed Green Salad with Golden Raisins and Walnuts, as well as Smoked Salmon Hash or a vegan Seitan Sausage & Peppers main dish.

Open Monday - Saturday from 10am - 6pm & Sunday from 10am - 5pm


Beacon Pantry Cafe & Market
382 Main St.
Beacon Pantry is a specialty market for meats, cheeses, fish, crackers, jams, honey, granola, ice cream, and so much more. Known for carrying French and Italian delectables.

The Market is open Monday - Sunday from 10am - 6pm
The cafe is open Saturday & Sunday from 10am - 4pm and Monday - Friday from 11am - 4pm


Big Mouth Coffee Roasters
387 Main St.

Open Monday - Friday from 7am - 6pm
Saturday 8am - 7pm
Sunday 8am - 5pm


Draught Industries
394 Main St.
Draught's motto will give you an indication of what's it's like inside this little hallway of a bier garden in the middle of Main Street, and why it could be top of your list for beer: "Some people collect art. We drink it. 20 rotating Draughts & 2 rotating Beer Engines."

Open Monday 2pm - 10pm
Tuesday - Thursday 12pm - 10pm
Friday & Saturday from 12pm - 12am
Sunday 12pm - 10pm


Yankee Clipper Diner
397 Main St.
If you need broad food selections from veggies to meat to seafood, Yankee Clipper is a Beacon staple that will seat you comfortably for any meal. If you've seen the movie "Nobody's Fool" with Paul Newman, you'll recognize Yankee Clipper in a scene. Find a huge menu that includes Italian, Southwestern, and enjoy a few dishes with a Greek flare such as a gyro or chicken slouvaki. Serves beer and wine.

Open daily from 7am - 10pm


The Beacon Daily
29 Teller Ave.
Bringing you Fine Food, Craft Beer, Coffee, and Pie! Open daily and serving breakfast all day, their Brekkie sandwiches with home made English Muffins are a huge hit! Fast becoming a local and visitor favorite.

Open Monday - Thursday 10am - 6pm
Friday - Sunday 8am - 6pm


Kitchen & Coffee
418 Main St.
A beautiful cafe and eatery serving baked goods, salads and soups that are all gluten free and really good.

Open daily from 7am - 7pm


Carters Restaurant & Lounge
424 Main St.
A high-end yet very comfortable restaurant in one of Beacon's most historic buildings, with a menu that changes with the seasons.

Open Monday - Saturday from 11am - 12pm
Sunday from 11am - 8pm


Brother's Trattoria
465 Main St.
Find pizza here of course, but also many more entrees of fish, steak and chicken. A favorite pizza is "Grandma's", a Sicilian style garlic cheese pizza with fresh tomato. Also ask about their gluten free pizza.

Open daily from 11am - 10pm


The Bagel Shoppe
466 Main Street
The Bagel Shoppe has been offering the best bagels in the area from their Fishkill location since 1998. Now serving breakfast and lunch, Beaconites now have a location closer to home!

Open Monday - Wednesday from 6am - 3pm
Thursday - Sunday from 6am - 4pm


Beacon Falls Cafe
472 Main St.
This American Bistro restaurant has a cozy and comfortable atmosphere with its quaint, old mountain town decor and super friendly staff. They offer plenty of delicious comfort food and beer options for diners.

Open Monday & Tuesday 10am - 4pm
Thursday 10am - 8pm
Friday 10am - 9pm
Saturday 9am - 9pm
Sunday 9am - 4pm
Closed Wednesday


The Chocolate Studio
494 Main St.
The Chocolate Studio (formerly Gourmetibles) is perfectly suited for birthday parties for kids of all ages. They make their delicious treats in their own kitchen, including custom cakes, made to order. The aroma may hook you in for the night. They also make our own Cake Pops, French Macarons, chocolate covered Bacon, chocolate covered pretzels and lots more.

Open Monday - Saturday 10am - 6pm (except Tuesdays - closed)
Sunday 12pm - 5pm


Vegetalien
504 Main St.

Open Monday, Wednesday, Thursday from 10am - 5pm
Friday, Saturday, Sunday from 10am - 6pm
Closed on Tuesday


Sukhothai
516 Main St.
Sukhothai creates traditional Thai dishes, such as Pad Thai and Som Tam. They offer to spice each entree is to your taste, available in 1–5 in degrees of hotness.

Open Sunday - Thursday 1130am - 930 pm
Friday & Saturday 1130am - 1030pm


Melzingah Tap House
554 Main St.
From the owners of The Barking Frog and the Public House, Kevin and Dana Collins, this revival of an old restaurant location is a welcome addition to the East End of town near the mountain. Stop in and look for a special fish and chips.

Open Monday - Thursday 12pm - 11pm
Friday 12pm - 12am
Saturday 12pm-3pm & 4pm-11pm
Sundays 11am-3pm & 4pm-1-pm


Trax Coffee Roasters
1 East Main Street

Open daily from 7am - 7pm.


Barb's Butchery
69 Spring St.
Local butcher trained with some of the best in the Hudson Valley, and works with farms within a 200 mile radius of the shop, ensuring that you get local meat every time. You'll not only get cuts of meat, but ask for any special home-stuffed sausages or braises they have put together that day. Barb's Butchery is known for their weekly lunch specials which can include Thick Slab Bacon BLT with Garlic Aioli or Fried Chicken and Waffles, so stay hooked on their Facebook page for updates.

Open 8am-6pm daily.


Barking Frog
435 Fishkill Avenue
Awesome Pub & Restaurant located in historic Beacon, NY. Stop in and enjoy our full bar, fantastic food, and friendly pub staff!

Open daily from 12pm - 11pm


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Eat Church Food Truck
511 Fishkill Avenue
Eat Church is food as punk as truck. Eat Church is a celebration of community. Let us commune to give thanks and praises for the bounty of the Hudson Valley. Rock. Roll. Eat. Amen. They are a food truck that operates with the mission that community is built through the interaction of eating and drinking with one another. They provide multiple opportunities for these experiences through rotating menus or "revues" in which they will visit varying ideas about food and how we all come together to eat it.

Available daily at Marbled Meat Shop grab-n-go fridge!

Immersive Climate Theater Experience Comes To Long Dock Park: "Climate Change Theatre Action 2021"

SOON IS NOW is an immersive climate theater experience paired with activism presented in Scenic Hudson's Long Dock Park Beacon, NY on Saturday afternoon October 23rd, as part of the Climate Solutions Week (October 17-24) sponsored by Sustainable Hudson Valley. Theatrical performers showing their activism through spoken word and movement, and many of your favorite climate justice and education groups have come together to present solutions in a theatrical way called Climate Change Theatre Action 2021.

Hudson Valley and NYC based artists will read a selection of plays commissioned by Climate Change Theatre Action, a worldwide series of performances of short climate change plays presented biennially to coincide with the United Nations COP meetings. In addition, actors will read a portion of full length play and eco-parable, Escapegoat, by May Treuhaft-Ali. There will be poetry readings by Edwin Torres and Tom King, music by Elizabeth Clark (Seeds Under Nuclear Winter: An Earth Opera) and visual art and activism. Additional participants include: Hudson River Playback Theatre, Katiana Rangel, Twinkle Burke, Andrew Brehm, Chloé Hayat, abigail jean baptiste, Eric Magnus, Jean Brennan. Beacon Conservation Advisory Committee, Sustainable Hudson Valley, Fareground, Clearwater, Climate Reality Hudson Valley & Catskills chapter and others will be present to provide ways for the community to take action.

Schedule:

1pm Activism & Art: Environmental groups present to provide actions & Beacon based artist Jean Brennan will share FRUIT&ROT, an imprint centered around art and ecology.

2:00pm Performance Walking Loops: Sign ups begin at 1:30pm for the 3 walking tours of micro-performances that will take you along the wooded paths, tall grasses, and beach areas of the park. Tours start at 2pm, 2:15pm, and 2:30pm and last approximately one hour. 20 ppl max each tour and first-come, first-served. These tours are not catered towards young children. We can provide masks. Wear comfortable shoes!

2:15pm Sitting/Standing Performances: performances by Hudson River Playback Theatre, Edwin Torres, and Twinkle Burke will take place around the perimeter of the green field next to the Long Dock. These 3 performances are open to all including young children! They will take place in a loop and last until approximately 3:30pm. Bring your folding chair!

Parking Recommendations

Parking in Long Dock is limited. Walking, carpooling and the Free Beacon Loop Bus are encouraged. The Loop Bus drops you at the train station, and you can walk over to Long Dock. The best place to park is in the train station on the side closest to the Hudson River, where all spots are free on the weekends!

About The Producers

This event is part of Hudson Valley Climate Solutions Week organized by Sustainable Hudson Valley. Produced by Eve Morgenstern, Brian Mendes and Connie Hall. Contact: Eve Morgenstern for more information, evemorgenstern@gmail.com.

Use of Long Dock Park for this event has been provided by Scenic Hudson (scenichudson.org). The leading environmental organization focused on the Hudson River Valley, it is dedicated to creating environmentally healthy communities, championing smart economic growth, protecting working farms, opening up riverfronts to the public and preserving the valley’s beauty and natural resources. Since its founding in 1963, Scenic Hudson has permanently protected 25,000 acres of irreplaceable landscapes and created or enhanced more than 40 parks.

Look For Signs

Several graphic designs have been created to represent this initiative. You may see crossovers of them in social media and in other news outlets. Keep your eyes out, and read the messages to learn more.

Beacon School Lunch Is Going Local For National Farm To School Month

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On October 14th, elementary students will be served pasta with NYS beef meat sauce, tossed salad with Common Ground Farm greens, local cucumbers, and NYS apples and pears!

Middle and high school students will be served loaded baked potatoes with school made NYS chili, NYS potatoes, tossed salad with Common Ground Farm greens, local cucumbers, and NYS apples and pears!

More About The Partnership Between Common Ground, Land To Learn, and The Beacon City School District

According to Sember Weinman, Executive Director of Common Ground Farm, told A Little Beacon Blog that they started working with the Beacon City School District leading Farm to School education programs in 2012 and began developing a relationship with food services director, Karen. They started a Vegetable of the Month taste test that allowed Common Ground and partner organization Land to Learn (was Hudson Valley Seed at the time) to encourage students to try fresh seasonal vegetables while the cafeteria expanded their veggie side dish menu options.

In 2016 Common Ground gave Karen a U-Pick membership that helped her to understand farm operations. They began donating lettuce and other greens to the schools in spring of 2016, and in 2017 worked on a micro purchase agreement to sell to the schools and participate in the bid process. Karen conducted a site visit and made several food safety recommendations, which Common Ground implemented.

Common Ground Farm focuses on lettuce because it has a short grow time and is very popular with students, but also sells smaller amounts of items that can be showcased through the Vegetable of the Month program like cucumbers, kale, carrots and tomatoes. 

Common Ground Farm thinks that nutritious food is a right regardless of economic background. They see public school as a way to reach a diverse cross section of the community. They were already leading education programs in the schools so it seemed like a really natural fit to begin working with the schools as a distribution point as well.

The Time Has Come To Replace The Clutter In Your Home; ALBB Has Some Suggestions

Got a clutter problem? Replace clutter with beautiful dried bouquets from Flora Good Times! Once your fresh bouquet runs out, pick the flowers that dry the best. Put those in a vase from Hudson Beach Glass or Raven Rose and place on desired clutter spot.

Challenge: you *must* file away the clutter items, and replace the fire alarm that is sitting there instead of in its protective spot in the kitchen. And lay more adhesive sandpaper for the mail person on the front porch steps so they don’t slip in the rain or otherwise (find at Bretts Hardware)

Find more vases and flower destination boutiques in A Little Beacon Blog’s Shopping Guide!

The 'Library Of Things' Collection Is Available Now From The Howland Public Library

The Howland Public Library has been working hard on its debut collection of things other than books, movies and magazines: the “Library of Things” collection, which is comprised of physical items for loan like binoculars, a ukulele or a Nintendo Switch.

”This collection was developed to meet the needs of our diverse and growing community,” said its curator, Kristen Salierno, who is the Director of the library. “There are three main accomplishments this collection will achieve. The first is that it will support a sharing economy that fosters sustainability efforts. With patrons sharing items, that means less waste. The collection also offers an opportunity to ‘try before you buy,’ to save money, and to test out something they might not have had access to otherwise. Finally, it supports the goal of providing equity to all members of our community. Those who might not be able to afford these items can still experience them through borrowing.“

The collection supports the library's mission to "provide free and equal access to information, education, enrichment, and personal growth experiences." The library's goal with this collection is to support lifelong learning and provide community members with opportunities to learn through the collection’s themes of Explore, Play, Create, and Connect. Explore the world with museum passes or STEAM discovery kits. Play videogames, a round of tennis, or a game of chess. Create a masterpiece with our Arts and Crafts kits. Connect to the world with WiFi hotspots or a camera.

The Library of Things collection was funded through a generous grant from the Mentmore Fund of the Common Counsel Foundation. The Friends of Howland Public Library also support the ongoing maintenance of this collection. For now, donations of "things" to the Library of Things collection are not being accepted.  

Any community member who is 18 years or older, a resident of the Beacon City School District, and has a library card in good standing can borrow from the Library of Things. To view the full collection, visit their website at beaconlibrary.org.