Two Letters Westchester Election 2021: Sisca for Rye Town Justice, and Give Voters a Choice in North Castle

Letter:

Peter Sisca is my friend and neighbor, and he is running for Rye Town Justice. He has 20 years of experience serving this community as a judge and is the only candidate for judge in this election who can claim such experience.
Not only does Peter bring significant experience as a judge to the table, but he also brings 36 years of practicing law.
Prior to joining his father in private practice, Peter represented the Westchester County Department of Social Services in child abuse and child sexual abuse cases as an Assistant County Attorney in the Westchester County Attorneys’ Office.


In private practice, Peter was a law guardian representing children in Family Court for many years and represents all different types of people in many different matters, treating each of them with the same respect that he shows each person who sets foot into his courtroom.


Before adjudicating any matter, he listens carefully to all sides, researches the law, and renders compassionate and fair justice. It is this type of person, this type of judge, that Rye Town should elect on November 2nd.

Rick Hyland, Rye

To the Editor:
Give voters a choice!! The two-party system depends on contested elections. If you live in the Town of North Castle, you will have only one choice for Town Supervisor this year: Democrat Mike Schiliro.
Make no mistake. I am not taking issue with Mr. Schiliro, who happens to be a popular pu
blic official who learned well how to be a successful politician from his brother, who served in the Obama administration—so popular that it is unlikely any opponent at this time could unseat him. I am not yearning for his defeat. My point is that both political parties owe the voters a choice, no matter how popular the incumbent. By both political parties picking and choosing the races they make results in bipartisan cronyism. Party leaders are shortchanging the democratic process.
Any incumbent, no matter how tenured or how formidable, should be accountable on Election Day. The only way to do that is for the opposing party to field a candidate who will make the incumbent justify his or her records. Any other form of challenge, from the press to dissatisfied constituents, holds no substance if voters can’t act on it at the polls.
Ironically, Mr. Schiliro is a case in point. He is part of a reform group that, just a few years ago, seemed to have little chance at cracking North Castle’s vaunted Republican machine. Yet he and other reform candidates persisted in their challenge, and today they claim a loyal constituency of their own. Even so, it is Mr. Schiliro’s turn to defend his record and win continued voter support—or at least it should be.

Mr. Schiliro is a tough challenge for any Republican, but political grips can be broken, as Mr. Schiliro has proven in North Castle. How discouraging it must be for North Castle residents when the loyal opposition becomes no opposition at all.


Yours truly, Anthony J. Futia, Jr, North Castle