How the weather could impact Election Day 2022

A busy election cycle means millions of voters will cast ballots that will determine the balance of power for the next two years, but political experts say Mother Nature might have a say in which races may see a higher turnout.

On Tuesday, all 435 seats in the House of Representatives are up for grabs, and voters will decide on 35 seats in the Senate.

Many of the races are considered to be a dead heat, and it could come down to turnout that will decide who controls the legislative branch.

Dr. David Richards, an associate professor and political chair at the University of Lynchburg, is watching a slew of races closely and said that the smallest impacts could significantly influence who will claim victory.

“Higher turnout means inevitably you have less of the party faithful. The smallest of factors could impact turnout, and that even includes the weather,” Richards said.

A collaborative study published in The Journal of Politics found that the correlation between bad weather and voter turnout may be more than a fluke theory that is trotted out as a talking point every November.

The first visible lunar eclipse will be visible on Election Day in the U.S. takes place.
Fox Weather

The authors found that voter participation dropped off about one percent per inch of rain, and snowfall decreased turnout by nearly half a percent for every inch of accumulation. 

Research published in the journal Frontiers in Psychology found that voter turnout increased by 0.14% for every 1.8 °F jump in temperature.

Additionally, the research found that warmer temperatures generally increased the likelihood that voters kept the incumbent party in power.

“Generally, the trend of more and more early voting means weather on Election Day plays a smaller and smaller role, but there are some caveats. The less dedicated often now wait until Election Day if they vote at all, meaning any weather setback, like rain or cold, will be more likely to put off these more casual voters,” Richards stated.

Here are the five things to know about the forecast for Election Day.

It’s going to be warm in most of the country

Most communities east of the Rockies will see temperatures either at or above average due in part to a massive ridge of high pressure.

Any weather setback, like rain or cold, will be more likely to put off more casual voters," Richards stated.
Any weather setback, like rain or cold, will be more likely to put off more casual voters,” Richards stated.
Fox Weather

Temperatures in the 60s could reach as far north as South Dakota, and the Ohio Valley is expected to see temperatures reach the 70s on Election Day.

Richard believes the warm weather could help keep turnout high in several eastern states but warns due to early voting, there will come a point when turnout begins to taper off well ahead of the scheduled precinct closing times.

“In Pennsylvania, Georgia and Florida voting has been strong, but because of sheer numbers, turnout on Election Day will be lower because you run out of interested voters at some point,” Richards said.

There will be a lunar eclipse

History will be in the making in the skies as the first visible lunar eclipse on a major Election Day in the U.S. takes place.

The moon will briefly be covered by the Earth’s shadow as the sun and the moon align with our planet.

The eclipse is expected to begin around 5:17 a.m. EST and peak just before 6 a.m. on Tuesday.

The celestial event will be over before the polling precincts open at 7 a.m. on the East Coast, but Richards warns people might hark back to the saying there “must be a full moon” if something unexpected happens in the political world.

A non-tropical low-pressure system is could develop over the southwest Atlantic and areas off the coast of the Southeast.
Fox Weather

People regularly associate odd occurrences with the full moon, but there is little truth to the folklore.

“Studies have found minor effects on circadian rhythms. Significant enough they have found patterns but not significant enough that force people got nuts or something similar to that,” Richards said. “If people are paying attention to it, they’re going to say, ‘okay, here’s an election where these two events are happening.’ It is an interesting coincidence but nothing more than that,” Richards said.

A storm system will keep the Southeast coast unsettled

A non-tropical low-pressure system is expected to develop over the southwest Atlantic and meander off the coast of the Southeast.

Depending on the exact location of the low and a pressure gradient that forms north of the center, blustery conditions and scattered showers are expected to develop.

If the low ventures close to shore, scattered showers from the Carolinas to Florida are possible.

The impacts will be more of the nuisance variety and cause nor’easter conditions along the coast.

Severe weather is not anticipated, but winds could keep Tuesday blustery.

The FOX Forecast Center said the National Hurricane Center is monitoring the potential disturbance for the chance of tropical or subtropical development, but even if the system earns a name, the impacts are expected to remain the same.

West Coast could deal with various forms of precipitation

A significant storm system could be underway across the Rockies and the West that could cause some turbulent weather.

Forecast models show rain in lower valleys and snow in higher elevations.

The weather system will enable a continued stormy pattern and help the cooler weather prevail for large parts of the region.

The Desert Southwest is one of the few areas that will likely escape significant impacts from the precipitation, but temperatures will be below average.

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NY probing NYC pediatrician for alleged vaccine record fraud

An Upper West Side pediatrician disciplined in 2007 in an unprecedented case of faking vaccine records has been hit with another state probe for allegedly doing it again, The Post has learned.

A parent said he reported Dr. Mark Nesselson to the state Office for Professional Medical Conduct after seeing a falsified vaccination for his child allegedly prepared by the doctor.

The father said his daughter had not been seen by the pediatrician on the day recorded for one of the vaccines in 2021, which was on an official form provided by Nesselson.

The doctor also gave the family a form for insurance reimbursement that indicated an office visit had taken place that day for the shot when it had not, the dad said.

The purported phony record included MMR, polio vaccine and other standard shots for toddlers. It was allegedly created by Nesselson for the child’s mother, presumably to be used for school admissions, according to a copy of the parent’s complaint to the state.

One father said his daughter (not pictured) had not been seen by the pediatrician (not pictured) on the day recorded for one of the vaccines in 2021, which was provided by Nesselson.
Shutterstock / Uryupina Nadezhda

Proof of vaccination is mandated for day care or attending school in New York.

The father said his family doled out about $4,300 to Nesselson over two and a half years, although some of that did cover legitimate office visits with the pediatrician.

The OPMC acknowledged the parent’s complaint in March 2022, according to a copy of a letter seen by The Post. The dad said he was later interviewed by investigators.

“It’s important that doctors act like doctors,” the furious dad said.

In 2007, a state disciplinary board placed Nesselson on probation for three years after he admitted to faking vaccination forms. He was fined $10,000 and allowed to treat patients under a monitor.

The state investigated him again in 2011, looking at whether he was complying with the terms of the previous order, records show. At that time, he signed an agreement saying he would adhere to the probation for 36 months, records show.

The vaccination record, allegedly created by Nesselson, was presumably to be used for school admissions.
© 2007 David Allio

Nesselson did not return a request for comment. The state Department of Health said it could not comment on investigations.

DOH “takes instances of potential medical misconduct seriously and acts appropriately to protect the health and safety of patients,” a spokesman said. 

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Zeldin won’t let hecklers stop his anti-crime remarks at site of NYC rape

Hecklers tried to disrupt a Friday appearance by Republican gubernatorial candidate Lee Zeldin in Manhattan  — but their shouts failed to silence his anti-crime broadsides against Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul.

During a news conference near the scene of the Thursday morning rape of a tourist jogging in Hudson River Park, Zeldin said, “It is important that we are doing everything in our power to make our streets and our subway safe.”

“Now, unfortunately, Kathy Hochul doesn’t want to be here talking about these issues,” he said. “She wants to send her supporters to make sure that we aren’t talking about fighting crime.”

Zeldin also blasted Hillary Clinton for accusing Republicans of trying to keep voters “scared” while she campaigned for Hochul with Vice President Kamala Harris on Thursday night.

In response to a question from The Post, Zeldin said Clinton and Hochul should be telling New Yorkers, “I understand your concerns. I want to do absolutely everything in my power to be able to fix it. Here are my solutions and I’m committed to getting it done.”

“But instead, a strategic decision was made by them, that they didn’t want to talk about crime, that they wanted to talk about other issues,” he said.

“Why is it that the polls are close? What you are hearing right now is why the polls are close. Last night, when you listened to that rally, that is why the polls are close.”

Although the small band of protesters from the progressive “Rise and Resist” group made noise throughout Zeldin’s 20-minute appearance, he managed at one point to get them to change their tactics.

When Zeldin said, “They want to drown out the conversation,” the activists instead started cheering and clapping.

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Ex-NYC Transit chief Sarah Feinberg assaulted near subway stop

Former NYC Transit president Sarah Feinberg was randomly assaulted near a subway stop in Chelsea, The Post has learned.

Feinberg, who appealed for more cops assigned to the subways last year amid a crime surge, was sucker-punched at the corner of West 21st Street and 6th Avenue, near the F train at 23rd Street at 1:15 p.m. Oct. 20.

The attacker was walking the wrong way in a bike lane and suddenly turned around and punched Feinberg in the face, a source familiar with the case said.

The motive was unclear, though there’s a pattern of thugs participating in a sick “knockout game” by attempting to viciously render an unsuspecting innocent victim unconscious with a single blow.

Feinberg called 911 and when cops didn’t immediately respond, she walked to the local precinct and filed a criminal complaint, a source said.

The NYPD has a videotape of the incident and is investigating, the source said.

Her face was swollen but she did not seek medical attention.

“Obviously I’m grateful the assault was not more serious but I don’t think there’s any question there’s just far, far too much of these kinds of attacks, and much more serious ones, happening,” Feinberg told The Post on Friday.

Feinberg was sucker-punched at the corner of West 21st Street and 6th Avenue.
Google Maps

The NYPD confirmed the alleged assault.

Its report said Feinberg, 45, was waiting for the light at West 21st and Sixth when a male, believed to be in his 40s, punched her with a closed fist in the nose and forehead area, unprovoked, causing pain.

The attacker was described as about 5 feet 8 inches and about 150 pounds, the report.

While MTA NYC Transit president last year, Feinberg publicly sparred with then-Mayor Bill de Blasio, demanding that he increase police patrols in the subway system to stem a spate of violence on the rails.

Crime has emerged as a top issue in the race for governor pitting incumbent Democrat Kathy Hochul against Republican rival Long Island Rep. Lee Zeldin.

Hochul and Mayor Eric Adams announced a plan last week to boost police patrols in the subways to stem the violence, with the state footing the bill for overtime.

Zeldin has hammered Hochul over crime on the rails and for other controversial criminal justice reforms, including the cashless bail law. He was endorsed Friday by the 3,900-member Subway Supervisors Association.

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Eric Adams offers few details after NYC ‘criminal justice summit’ with DAs

Mayor Eric Adams on Sunday touted to the media his two-day “mayoral summit on criminal justice’’ that he just held with city district attorneys — but fuggedabout him offering any major details.

Aside from downplaying the role that the state’s controversial bail-reform laws may have on rising city crime, Hizzoner and his team threw around terms such as “infrastructure’’ and “urgent action items,’’ which left more questions than answers.

“We’re having an issue around the infrastructure of our criminal-justice system,” Adams told reporters during a conference call, referring to the discussions between his office and district attorneys, law enforcement agencies, judges and advocates over the weekend. “This antiquated infrastructure is impacting on the ability of New Yorkers seeking justice on both ends of the spectrum.”

City Hall plans to form working groups with the various participating entities to focus on pre-trial discovery, mental health and “urgent action items,” officials said.

But Adams provided few details about what the criminal-justice system exactly needs to change, other than his wish to create a “centralized portal” for pre-trial discovery and to reduce the amount of time defendants spend waiting for their comparatively brief trials.

Mayor Eric Adams didn’t share major details about what was discussed at his “mayoral summit on criminal justice” this weekend.
Mayoral Photo Office

Officials also hope to introduce what they called “care vans” to greet defendants as they come out of their first court appearances and offer them mental-health resources, Chief Counsel to the Mayor and City Hall Brendan McGuire said.

“We’re obviously just coming out of this, and so we’re still formulating the list of urgent action items,” McGuire told reporters.

City Hall held the summit just two days after the mayor blamed the news media for fueling a “narrative” that New York City and its massive subway system are unsafe. Violent crime was up 39% in August citywide compared to 2019, according to NYPD.

Adams said the city has an issue with the “infrastructure of our criminal-justice system.”
Christopher Sadowski

Yet Hizzoner on Sunday downplayed the role of bail reform in the city’s crisis of crime and recidivism, echoing comments from earlier in the weekend that there are “many rivers in the sea of violence.

“Any time we engage in this conversation around the criminal justice system, people highlight one term, and that is ‘bail reform,’ ” the mayor said.

“There are so many other aspects of the justice system that we were able to talk through and discuss.”

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Ex-NYPD Commish Ray Kelly slams Mayor Adams on crime

Former NYPD Commissioner Ray Kelly slammed Mayor Eric Adams on Sunday, accusing him of dropping the ball on rampant crime in the Big Apple and insisting, “This isn’t brain surgery.

“We were the safest big city in America just a few years ago,” Kelly told host John Catsimatidis on WABC 770 AM radio’s “Cats Roundtable.”

“This isn’t brain surgery,” the former top cop said. “You go back and look at the things we were doing then and you re-implement them. But apparently, the mayor doesn’t want to do this.

“He doesn’t want to [bring back] anti-crime units, he doesn’t want to use stop and frisk.”

Kelly took particular issue with runaway subway and bus crimes in the five boroughs, saying the deployment of transit cops has to be “re-examined” by “an outside agency.”

Big Apple transit crime has spiked this year, with nine homicides in the system so far.
Christopher Sadowski

On Saturday, Adams and Gov. Kathy Hochul said they plan to flood the subways with more MTA and NYPD cops through overtime shifts, as well as add additional surveillance cameras, to try to get a handle on the soaring crime.

The city also will create new 25-bed units at two psych centers to get more mentally ill out of the underground and into proper shelter, the pols said.

The plan came days after Adams blamed the media for creating a false “perception” that city transit isn’t safe — an assertion roundly criticized.

“Every day you read about a crime in the transit system, and it just reinforces the notion that it’s too dangerous to travel on the subway,” Kelly said.

“I think they need a fresh look at the transit system because we know the subways are the lifeblood of New York,” he said. “People are still not going to get on them.”

New York City subway crime has run rampant this year, with nine subway system homicides so far and a 39% leap in violent crime in the system as of August compared to 2019, stats show.

Kelly served as police commissioner in the early 1990s before moving on to several federal posts in customs enforcement and anti-terrorism assignments under then-President Bill Clinton.

In the mid-1990s he headed up a task force to quell unrest in Haiti — and he addressed the continued unstable state of that country on Sunday’s radio show.

Former NYPD Commissioner Ray Kelly says Mayor Eric Adams has to do more to quell rampant violence in the five boroughs, particularly in the subways.
NY Post Brian Zak

“Haiti is a basket base,” Kelly told Catsimatidis. “It’s the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere, if not the world. They have no functioning government.”

He said the United Nations “is going to be the main vehicle to help Haiti.

“Everything moves slower as far as Haiti is concerned,” he added. “They are in a very, very bad way.”

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NYPD says teen stabbed in NYC, 3 people in custody

Three teenagers are in custody for the stabbing of a 13-year-old in the south Bronx on Saturday night, cops and sources said.

Police responded to an assault on the corner of Castle Hill and Westchester Avenues at 8:20 p.m., according to the NYPD. The victim is expected to survive, cops said.

Though police were unable to confirm the victim’s age, sources said it was a 13-year-old.

Three 17-year-olds are now in custody but it’s not clear if they have been charged, sources said.

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32nd annual Tompkins Square Halloween Dog Parade in photos

This bodega cat had a real identity crisis in the East Village Saturday.

Mimi, a white Bichon, arrived at the 32nd annual Tompkins Square Halloween Dog Parade as a “bodega cat,” part of an elaborate costume that featured the cute pup dressed as a feline perched on a store shelf full of potato chips next to an ATM.

Owners Kat Liu and Kevin Condardo completed Mimi’s look with the most stylish accessory in town: a stack of copies of The Post.

Mimi joined the Big Apple’s most creative canines, including one dressed as Jesus Christ and others as a lanternfly and pizza rat, pitter-pattered their way around the Alphabet City park with their proud owners, showcasing their festive threads and accessories.

Boston terrier JoJo reigned pup-reme, dressed as the King of England.

“I don’t really agree with the new king of the UK, so I thought I’d just go ahead and name my own king of the UK so there he is,” his owner Pooja Sunder, 32, said laughing. 

Fourteen-year-old ZZ, a Maltipoo, was dressed to the hilt as reality star Kim Kardashian.

The pup was “channeling Kim Kardashian wearing Balenciaga in the tape dress at Paris Fashion Week 2022,” said her owner, Ilene Zeins.

The Lays chip bag which she attached a handle to “was inspired by the pocketbook that Balenciaga just came out with,” the 60-year-old explained.

Prizes were given out in categories such as “Best NYC Costume, “Best Costume on Wheels” and “Best Celebrity Themed Costume.”

Former NFL referee Dan Schachner, who referees the Puppy Bowl, hosted the festivities. 



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Heartbroken NYC dog owner calls out Mayor Eric Adams, NYPD to find pup’s killer

The heartbroken Park Slope woman whose dog was killed by a madman in Prospect Park has a desperate plea for Mayor Eric Adams to catch the creep.

“You claim that the buck stops at you when it comes to the NYPD,” Jessica Chrustic said Saturday. “I am shocked and disheartened that, months after I was assaulted and my dog was killed in Prospect Park, there continues to be no real resolution or justice in this matter. Indeed, it’s fair to say that I have been victimized twice; once by my assailant, and again by the NYPD’s negligence.”

Chrustic said she was traumatized again Friday when she went out by herself to try to find the assailant after someone alerted her to a sighting in the park.

‘I’m kept awake at night by the thought that my assailant will continue to put others more vulnerable than myself at risk — a senior citizen walking in the park, another pet, a child. Does someone need to get killed before the NYPD is able to do their job?” she asked, addressing the mayor.

Chrustic went looking for the assailant herself Friday.
Handout

Chrustic said it took the NYPD 40 minutes to arrive Friday after she told them the vagrant had been spotted. The man sprayed her with a bottle of urine on Aug. 3 and hit her and her dog, Moose, with a stick. The golden retriever mix died days later.

“When I left the house, two people had already called 911. I was thinking I would get to the park and they would be there any second,” she said. She didn’t think she’d end up trailing the man through the park.

The Brooklyn burial spot for Chrustic’s golden retriever mix, Moose.

When Chrustic located the vagrant, he came at her with what she thought was mace and then a stick. She ran for her life.

“I don’t even know what else to say anymore. I don’t know what else to do,” she said. “I have done basically everything I can to make [NYPD’s] job as easy as possible. I can’t do their job for them.”

The attack roiled Park Slope, which saw a Guardian Angels-style patrol group forming and just as quickly disbanding. Other sightings of the vagrant also did not result in an arrest.

The NYPD said it canvassed the area Friday, but did not find the suspect and that the investigation was ongoing.

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Queens man Martin Motta pleads guilty to WWI vet cold-case slaying

A Queens man pleaded guilty to manslaughter in the killing and dismemberment of a World War I veteran more than 45 years ago.

Martin Motta, 75, entered a guilty plea Tuesday in the gruesome cold-case slaying of George Clarence Seitz, whose partial remains were discovered in the backyard of a Richmond Hill home in March 2019, the Queens District Attorney’s office announced.

Prosecutors said Motta fatally stabbed Seitz in the head after stealing approximately $7,000 to $8,000 from him in 1976.

Seitz’s body had been dismembered at the neck, shoulders and hips, according to the Queens DA’s office.

Investigators spent two years working to identify the skeletal remains — a pelvis and partial torso — that were buried under concrete before they were able to positively identify Seitz as a match through DNA tests with the help of the FBI.

George Clarence Seitz went missing on Dec. 10, 1976.
Queens DA

“This long-cold case marks the first successful application in New York City of forensic genetic genealogy,” Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz said. “No matter how much time has passed, we will use every tool at our disposal to achieve justice.”

Seitz, who was 81 at the time of his death, had gone missing on the morning of Dec. 10, 1976.

George Clarence Seitz’s remains, consisting of a pelvis and partial torso, are dug up.
Queens DA

He was last seen leaving his home in Jamaica, Queens to go get a haircut. Investigators learned that Seitz was a regular customer of Motta at the barbershop and linked him to the murder through witness interviews and record searches across five states, according to the Queens DA.

Motta, of Jamaica, is expected to be given 20 years in prison at his sentencing on Nov. 7, according to the Queens DA.

“For the gruesome murder of a World War I veteran, the defendant eluded arrest for more than 46 years,” Katz said.  “Now he is headed to prison thanks to the collaboration between the NYPD and our Cold Case Unit.”

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