4 THE QUEENS COURIER • AUGUST 30, 2018  FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM 
 Return to normalcy for LIRR Port Wash. line after Labor Day 
 BY ROBERT POZARYCKI 
 rpozarycki@qns.com  
 @robbpoz 
 Aft er a six-week disruption, the Long  
 Island Rail Road (LIRR) is on track to  
 restore the Port Washington Branch,  
 which serves northeast Queens, to full  
 strength immediately aft er Labor Day. 
 New schedules posted on the MTA’s  
 website show that six weekday trains on  
 the branch, which had been canceled in  
 Photo via NYPD111Pct 
 Crook steals  
 $3,000 from  
 a parked car in   
 Douglaston 
 BY EMILY DAVENPORT 
 edavenport@qns.com / @QNS 
 Cops are looking for a thief that  
 broke into a parked car in Douglaston  
 and stole cash from inside it. 
 According to police, at 8:30 p.m.  
 on Aug. 27, an unknown man broke  
 into a car that was parked behind the  
 Mizuni restaurant, located at 231-10  
 Northern Blvd. Once inside, the suspect  
 took $3,000 from a bag that was  
 inside the car. 
 At this time, it is unclear how the  
 suspect gained access to the vehicle,  
 however a tweet released by the 111th  
 Precinct suggests that the car may have  
 been unlocked. 
 Video of the break-in is available  
 on  the  111th  Precinct  Twitter  (@ 
 NYPD111Pct). 
 Anyone with information in regards  
 to this incident is asked to call the  
 NYPD’s  Crime  Stoppers  Hotline  at  
 800-577-TIPS (8477) or for Spanish,  
 888-57-PISTA (74782). Th  e public can  
 also submit their tips by logging onto  
 the Crime Stoppers website or by texting  
 their tips to 274637 (CRIMES)  
 then enter TIP577. All calls and messages  
 are kept confi dential. 
 mid-July, will be restored beginning on  
 Tuesday, Sept. 4. Th  e cancellation was  
 the result of ongoing work at the Harold  
 Interlocking point in Woodside as part  
 of the East Side Access project, which  
 will eventually allow LIRR trains to access  
 Grand Central Station. 
 Th  ree trains in each direction will be  
 restored on Sept. 4. Th ey are: 
 • the 8:21 a.m. eastbound train out of Penn  
 Station, which stops at Woodside and  
 makes all stops on the branch to Port  
 Washington; 
 • the 8:45 a.m. westbound train out of  
 Port Washington, which makes all stops  
 to Great Neck before running express  
 through to Penn Station; 
 • the 4:22 p.m. eastbound train out of  
 Penn Washington which runs express to  
 Great Neck, then makes all stops to Port  
 Washington; 
 • the 5 p.m. westbound train out of Port  
 Washington, which makes all stops on  
 the branch (except at Plandome and  
 Murray Hill), then stops at Woodside  
 and Penn Station; 
 • the 6:44 p.m. westbound train out of  
 Great Neck, which stops at Little Neck,  
 Douglaston and Bayside, then runs  
 express to Flushing-Main Street before  
 stopping at Woodside and Penn Station;  
 and 
 • the 7:01 p.m. eastbound train out of Penn  
 Station, which runs express to Bayside  
 and Great Neck, then stops at Manhasset,  
 Plandome and Port Washington. 
 Additionally, the LIRR will change the  
 timing of 12 additional weekday trains  
 (three eastbound, nine westbound) on  
 Sept. 4. Th  e LIRR had moved these trains a  
 few minutes earlier or later to better serve  
 passengers during the service disruptions. 
 Two trains which the LIRR had added to  
 the line during the disruption period will  
 be canceled: the eastbound express train  
 out of Penn Station at 5:47 p.m., which  
 stops at Great Neck, Manhasset, Plandome  
 and Port Washington; and the 5:21 p.m.  
 westbound local train out of Great Neck  
 File photo/THE COURIER 
 which makes all stops (except Woodside)  
 to Penn Station. 
 Th  e LIRR is implementing new schedules  
 throughout the system that will take  
 eff ect on Sept. 4. All schedules are good  
 through Nov. 11. 
 For further information about Port  
 Washington Branch service, visit mta.info/ 
 LIRR. 
 You can pick up a copy of the new  
 schedules at your local LIRR station, or  
 visit http://web.mta.info/lirr/Timetable/ 
 Branch2/PortWashingtonBranch.pdf. 
 Bayside pol: Improve test prep rather than eliminate SHSAT 
 BY EMILY DAVENPORT 
 edavenport@qns.com / @QNS 
 When it comes to specialized high schools  
 in New York City, it’s not the test that’s the  
 problem — it’s the lack of diversity caused  
 by uneven access to test prep, according to a  
 Queens lawmaker. 
 State Senator Tony Avella is calling on  
 Governor Andrew Cuomo to include funding  
 for the DREAM Program, which focuses  
 on test preparation for students that are  
 underrepresented by entrance exams, in  
 next year’s state budget. 
 “Th  e end goal in including funding  
 for the DREAM Program is to both save  
 the test and increase diversity from lower 
 performing  school  districts,”  Avella  
 said. “By allocating funds to test preparation, 
  students will be better prepared  
 for their future because they will have  
 received the proper educational support  
 earlier in their life. Th  at is why I am calling  
 on Governor Cuomo to allocate $10  
 million to the New York City Department  
 of Education’s DREAM Program.” 
 On June 3, Mayor Bill de Blasio  
 announced his intentions to abolish the  
 Specialized High School Admission Test  
 (SHSAT), citing that the current system  
 prevents black and Hispanic students from  
 getting into these schools. Avella, who is a  
 supporter of the SHSAT, believes the city  
 should address the diversity issue by providing  
 more funding to the DREAM Program. 
 Th  e DREAM Program is comprised of  
 two initiatives: the DREAM-SHSI and the  
 DREAM summer/fall intensive. Students  
 DREAM-SHSI are chosen based on both  
 academic and family income requirements  
 while those in the summer/fall intensive,  
 are recruited based on the school district  
 they attend. 
 Avella believes that instead of taking away  
 the SHSAT, funding the DREAM Program  
 would increase diversity in the specialized  
 high schools by educating children at  
 the lower grades and providing them with  
 the tools necessary to succeed in the later  
 Photo courtesy of the offi  ce of state Senator Tony Avella 
 grades, which in turn will set them up to  
 better succeed on the test. 
 “Test preparation and enrichment actually  
 foster learning and improve educational  
 outcomes to the benefi t of all  
 students engaging in it, including those  
 who ultimately are not successful on the  
 SHSAT,” said Jon Roberts, member of  
 CoalitionEDU. “Test prep essentially is  
 just studying. Instead of being scorned by  
 some, it must be encouraged and facilitated  
 fi nancially where needed.” 
 
				
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