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Each first-grade class entered the beautifully decorated multipurpose room at their designated time during the school day. With their loved ones, they traveled to each of the five stations and participated in winter-themed math games such as the Addition Bump Game, Roll the Snowball, Snowfriend Subtraction and more. The games were a fun way for the first-graders to practice their problem solving and mathematical skills, while also connecting with their family members. The first-grade team at Munsey Park Elementary School hope to make the “Math is Snow Much Fun” game day an annual tradition at the school.
—Submitted by Manhasset Public Schools
Manhasset Public Schools is excited to welcome three new administrators into the district – Mary Callahan, Interim Assistant Superintendent for Business and Operations; Susan Kosser, Interim Director of Elementary Special Education; and Claudia Murphy, District Administrator for Human Resources.
For 21 years, Callahan was the Assistant Superintendent for Business in Port Washington Public Schools and has served as interim superintendent for several Long Island school districts for short term periods. Among her many responsibilities, Callahan will oversee the day-to-day operations of the Manhasset Public Schools’ business office, including oversight of facilities, food services, transportation, payroll and purchasing. She attended Pace University where she earned her bachelor’s degree, New York State Education Department permanent certification, and her master’s degree in Educational Administration.
Kosser joins the district with more than 40 years of experience in the public education
field and an extensive background in special education. She retired from Half Hollow Hills School District as the Director of Special Education in 2003 and since then has continued working with Long Island school districts in administrative roles to support students with disabilities. Most
recently, Kosser was the Interim Director of Special Education/Pupil Personnel Services and the 504 Chairperson in the Cold Spring Harbor School District. She received both her bachelor’s degree in Psychology and Education and her master’s degree in Psychology from Brooklyn College. In
addition, Kosser holds advanced professional certificates in School Administration and Supervision and in School Psychology from C.W. Post and Brooklyn College, respectively.
Murphy recently served as the Director of Human Resources in the Briarcliff Manor Union Free School District. She steps into the District Administrator for Human Resources role which was formerly held by Adam Kuranishi, assistant principal at Manhasset Secondary School. Murphy’s responsibilities include managing the dayto-day operations of the district’s Human Resources office. She earned her bachelor’s and master’s degrees from St. John’s University and her Certificate of Advanced Study Program from SUNY New Paltz. Murphy also holds New York State District Administrator and New York State School Business Administrator Certificates.
The Manhasset Public Schools is thrilled to welcome these exceptional school leaders to the administration team.
—Submitted by Manhasset Public Schools
residents and work on increasing accountability to taxpayers. At this year’s speech, she announced that a five percent tax cut was delivered to the town’s residents in the unanimously passed 2023 Town Budget.
jprisco@antonmediagroup.com
On Friday, Jan. 27, Town of North Hempstead Supervisor Jennifer DeSena gave her second State of the Town Address at Harbor Links in Port Washington. This speech is an annual event in North Hempstead where the town supervisor shares accomplishments and plans for the new year. The speech is accompanied by a luncheon hosted by the League of Women Voters (LWV) of Port Washington–Manhasset.
As the first Republican town supervisor in over 30 years, Supervisor DeSena and the town board started on uneasy terms leading to many public disagreements at board meetings. While the board still disagrees from time to time, they have been able to collaborate for the benefit of the town.
“I am proud of the great work we have done, and while some of our board meetings have been a bit painful at points, we’re in this together, and we’re all committed to doing the people’s work,” said Supervisor DeSena.
At last year’s town address, Supervisor DeSena stressed the importance of transparency and reform.
“My goals for my administration have not changed since my inauguration,” said Supervisor DeSena at the start of her speech.
Transparency
For Supervisor DeSena’s first year in office, she made it a goal to have residents be more informed on what is happening within their town government. She worked with North Hempstead TV, the town’s government access TV channel, to begin rebroadcasting town board meetings.
“These rebroadcasts, which occur at varying times throughout the week, give our residents as much of an opportunity to tune in as possible,” said Supervisor DeSena.
This year, Supervisor DeSena will be working on providing highlights on town projects to be broadcasted on North Hempstead TV.
“The town will bring a number of projects to fruition that residents have been looking forward to,” said Supervisor DeSena. “As work intensifies, residents should expect to see them documented in new programming.”
Previous work as Executive Director of the Manhasset Coalition Against Substance Abuse has made Supervisor DeSena an advocate for substance abuse support. As
promised in last year she established the town’s Substance Misuse Advisory Council.
“[The council] has worked diligently to meet the issue head-on through a number of ways, including free Narcan training seminars in conjunction with Northwell Health,” said Supervisor DeSena. “This council includes important voices in the fight against the drug overdose epidemic,” This year, Supervisor DeSena and the advisory council will “continue to work to address the opioid crisis and navigate the uncharted landscape of legalized recreational marijuana in New York.”
Last year, Supervisor DeSena called for a recommitment by the town to investing in critical infrastructure projects such as improving roads and sewers.
“I am proud to announce today that over the last year, the town has taken major steps to completing a number of long-stalled projects that will improve the quality of life of our residents,” said Supervisor DeSena.
She highlighted a few highly anticipated projects, such as sidewalk repairs and road repaving on Westbury Avenue in Carle Place and the Manhasset sewer connection project.
By utilizing a portion of the town’s remaining American Rescue Plan Act funds, the town will be making a $2 million investment in the future of Carle Place’s downtown, shared Supervisor DeSena.
Residents and businesses have desired the Manhasset sewer connection project along Plandome Road for many years. Throughout 2022, Supervisor DeSena met with stakeholders involved in the project to discuss how to move forward best.
“Details are still being finalized. I have long believed that now was the perfect time
to address it, especially in light of the $5 million grant secured by Assemblywoman Gina Sillitti in furtherance of this project,” said Supervisor DeSena. “Over the last year, the town has secured millions of dollars in grant funding to make projects and programs a reality.”
Town’s Master Plan
North Hempstead’s Master Plan is nearly 35 years old, and Supervisor DeSena feels the plan needs to be updated to reflect the diverse needs of the town’s communities. Supervisor DeSena has spoken to residents from “all walks of life and all corners of the town” to receive feedback on the master plan.
“I believe the time is ripe to bring in a professional planner to help shape the process formally,” said Supervisor DeSena. “There will be a difficult balancing act ahead as we preserve the town we love while considering the possibility of changes to reflect times more accurately.”
From the start of Supervisor DeSena’s term, she has prioritized caring about North Hempstead’s most vulnerable populations.
“We should be doing everything we can to work to make our communities more diverse, inclusive, and equitable because it’s something that will make our communities stronger,” said Supervisor DeSena.
Supervisor DeSena proudly announced the town’s Veterans Advisory Committee’s hard work this past holiday season which collected nearly $10,000 as part of the Veterans Donation Drive.
In last year’s Town Address, Supervisor DeSena vowed to be transparent with
“Our residents already pay some of the highest taxes in the nation, so any tax cut is a great start, and I look forward to building on it come budget time this year,” said Supervisor DeSena.
Another central theme of last year’s Town Address involved fixing the challenges facing the town’s Building Department. Supervisor DeSena proposed a series of actions to reform the department. The plan strikes a portion of the Town Code that created needless interference and shifted accountability away from trained professionals in the Building Department.
With support from residents and the town Building Department Commissioner, a modified version of theproposal passed. Supervisor DeSena has requested that our Nassau County Comptroller’s Office perform a full field audit of the Town’s Building Department.
“This was long overdue and something that no administration had had the courage to do in the past,” said Supervisor DeSena. “I am confident that this impartial assessment by an outside agency will identify and address any mismanagement of departmental operations and any potential misconduct.”
In January 2022, the town lost the Town Comptroller and Chief Deputy Comptroller. The Director of Finance, Paul Wood, has served as Acting Comptroller temporarily for six months.
“Having no formally appointed Comptroller could put our town at risk financially and jeopardize our Triple-A bond rating,” said Supervisor DeSena. “This situation needs to be rectified.”
Another issue that Supervisor DeSena touched on is the town’s Board of Ethics. At last year’s State of the Town, she spoke about the need to install members to the Board of Ethics in defined, staggered terms and stop the practice of allowing them to serve in ‘holdover status’ from previous administrations. Changes to the term rules would ensure the town has a Board of Ethics independent of any outside influence.
Over the last year, four members have been installed into new, defined terms. “I will push for a fully appointed independent Board of Ethics” said Supervisor DeSena.
Supervisor DeSena concluded her town address by describing her first year in office as “wonderful and challenging.”
“The Town of North Hempstead is a great place to live, work, and raise a family. I am certain that as we continue to work together, the best times are ahead of us,” said Supervisor DeSena.
Home is where memories are made, love is shared, comfort is found and storms are weathered.
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The Long Island Power Authority (LIPA) announced a proposal to modernize its electric rates for residential customers in 2024 with a standard Time-of-Day (TOD) Rate and an optional Super Off-Peak Rate. These new rates will help customers save money and support the transition of Long Island and the Rockaways to clean, affordable energy. Customers will still have the option to stay on a flat rate. Customers who try the new rates will receive a 12-month “Bill Protection Guarantee,” which means they will receive a refund if they would have paid less on a flat rate. With the new TOD Rate, customers pay different rates for electricity based on when they use it. Electric rates are higher during weekdays from 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. (peak) but lower all other hours of the day and on weekends and holidays (off-peak). With the Super Off-Peak Rate, rates are further discounted in the (super off-peak) hours from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m.
The plan would immediately reduce rates for more than 80 percent of customers without any changes to how or when they use electricity. Under this proposal, customers would have the ability to save even more money and support a cleaner electric grid by making small changes in their daily routine by conducting energy-intensive activities –such as doing laundry or charging electric cars – in off-peak hours. For instance, a
customer on the TOD Rate could save approximately $4 per month by doing their laundry and $43 per month by charging their electric car during off-peak hours.
“Time-of-Day Rates are an important rate modernization reform that will help lower customer bills and advance clean energy,” said Thomas Falcone, Chief Executive Officer of LIPA. “Once adopted, this plan will save more than 80 percent of customers money while supporting our clean energy transition by reducing carbon emissions and taking the burden off the electric grid during the highest times of demand.”
Most customers will pay the same or less under the TOD Rate or Super Off-Peak Rate without changing their electricity usage
or habits because most customers already conduct most activities during discounted off-peak periods, which make up 88 percent of the hours throughout the year.
To help customers transition to the new plan, LIPA is proposing a one-year Bill Protection Guarantee for a customer’s first year on the TOD Rate (or Super Off-Peak Rate). If after 12 months a customer’s electric bill on the TOD Rate (or Super OffPeak Rate) is higher than it would have been under the Flat Rate, LIPA will automatically refund the difference for the entire 12-month period.
The TOD proposal was developed with input from the New York Solar Energy Industries Alliance (NYSEIA),
the Department of Public Service (DPS), the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA), and consumer advocates such as the Utility Intervention Unit (UIU), and the Public Utilities Law Project (PULP).
LIPA invites all interested stakeholders to provide input on its rate modernization proposals. There will be two public hearings on February 21, 2023, where customers can sign up to speak. LIPA will also accept written public comments until February 27, 2023. Written comments can be submitted by emailing TODpubliccomments@lipower. org. The proposal is scheduled for consideration at the March 29, 2023, meeting of the LIPA Board of Trustees in Uniondale, New York. Consideration by the Board of rate and tariff changes are held in open session, and the public is always invited to attend and speak. For more information on how to attend and participate in public hearings and Board meetings, please visit lipower.org. Should the proposal be approved by the LIPA Board at the March meeting, there will be extensive communication to all customers before they would be transitioned into any new plan, including 90, 60 and 30-day notices, which will include information about the plans and how to optimize their rates as well as the Bill Protection Guarantee.
by the Long Island Power Authority
The deep freeze experienced by most of the country over the Christmas weekend, and in particular the Northeast and mid-Atlantic regions, is a reminder of the impact of severe cold weather on the lives of the most vulnerable. The National Weather Service called it a “once in a generation” storm. We hope they are correct, but we know the climate is changing.
Federal officials have announced an inquiry into the operations of the electrical grid during those extreme weather conditions, which confirmed the importance of our power system to the public’s safety and health.
While we applaud Gov. Kathy Hochul’s efforts in establishing programs to help low-income residents make their homes energy efficient, we do not believe natural gas should be eliminated as an option in new construction, as she proposed this week in her State of the State speech. As we go through the energy transition, the people of New York must be kept in mind. That means maintaining all energy options that are affordable as we move to de-carbonize overall energy supply while maintaining resiliency and reliability.
During the Christmas cold, Con Edison asked its 1.1 million natural gas and 3.5 million electric customers in New York City to conserve both natural gas and power with temperatures dropping only to 15 degrees Fahrenheit, not the subzero temperatures experienced in other parts of the country. National Grid made similar requests of its Long Island and New York City customers, as did Duke Energy in Ohio and Kentucky.
Natural gas is the most efficient and lowest-emission fossil fuel for heating and cooking, and for making electricity through very efficient gas-fired turbine plants. Increased natural gas use displacing coal and oil over the past four decades has dramatically lowered the nation’s emissions from electricity generation. Natural gas-fired generation is also the lowest-cost and most reliable backstop for the inherent variability of output from renewables.
As we go through the energy transition, the people of New York must be kept in mind. That means maintaining all energy options that are affordable as we move to de-carbonize overall energy supply while maintaining resiliency and reliability.
New England’s system operator warned it had “insufficient reserve supplies” and called on its members to “voluntarily curtail power” due to the strain on the power grid. New England had to resort to using oil to supply 40% of the power over the weekend.
While all this might sound like a gas supply problem, it is actually due to a lack of adequate pipeline capacity into the area. Tremendous reserves of natural gas nearby are not being produced due to insufficient pipeline infrastructure to move gas supplies into the heavily populated mid-Atlantic and Northeast areas.
As we move toward more renewables to meet our environmental goals, sound energy policies must ensure adequate supplies of clean natural gas to meet these inevitable coincident peak demands in both the natural gas and electric energy sectors. A clean energy policy must balance three factors - reliability, affordability, and low emissions. The United States has lowered its emissions more than any other country by replacing coal with natural gas for power generation, with renewables playing an increasing role. The maintenance and reinforcement of the natural gas delivery system, which operates in an environmentally sound manner, should be a priority in the transition to a lower-carbon energy system.
Natural gas is a low-carbon fuel, and it can play a critical role in supporting our shift to renewable energy reliably and manageably. Let’s make sure we keep the public in mind and provide a managed transition to a low-carbon future.
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More Access Free admission, parking and preview parties
More Savings
Discounts on art classes, programs and 10% off in the museum store
More Enrichment
Lectures, performances, tours, family activities and much more
Visit 1,000 Museums Free Supporting members ( $150) enjoy admission privileges while they travel and VIP invitations while they’re here. Visit NARMassociation.org to see participating museums
Purchase a Membership Scan code, visit the museum, or go online to NassauMuseum.org
SEE
NOWTHROUGHMARCH 5
Open Tuesday-Sunday 11 am-4:45 pm
To place an item in this space, send information two weeks before the event to editors@antonmediagroup.com.
Town Board Meeting
This year’s Town Board meetings will be held on Tuesdays at 7 p.m. The meetings are also broadcasted live on the Town’s website beginning at its regularly scheduled time at 7 p.m. Residents who are interested in viewing the meetings can visit: www.northhempsteadny.gov/ townboardlive. For the latest updates including information on meeting locations, please visit: www.northhempsteadny.gov.
Book Discussion
Join in person at the Manhasset Library or online to discuss The Dangerous Truth About Today’s Marijuana with author Laura Stack, who will be joining virtually. Learn more about Johnny Stack’s story, the research, and Laura’s vision to dramatically decrease adolescent marijuana use, mental illness, and suicide, to allow our youth to live productive, happy lives. Pick up your copy of the book at the circulation desk at the Manhasset Public Library. To dial in using your phone, call 1 (872) 240-3212, and use access Code: 663-315-285.
Redistricting Hearings
The 2023 Public Hearing tour of the New York State Independent Redistricting Commission will take place in 12 locations throughout the state. Virtual and in-person testimony is available for all hearings. The hearing for Nassau County will take place at Nassau Community College (SUNY) in the College Center Building, Rm 252/253, located at 1 Education Drive in Garden City.
American Red Cross Lifeguard Certification Course
North Hempstead Town Board has announced a 4-week lifeguard certification course that will be held at Michael J. Tully Park beginning March 6. Classes will be held on Mondays and Wednesdays from 4:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. with a special deep-water skills test at Eisenhower Park on Saturday, March 18 from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. Individuals ages 15 and older can sign up for the American Red Cross Blended Lifeguard Training Course. Those who register must pass the pre-test requirements to participate in the class. Admission will be on a first come, first serve basis. After passing the pre-test, participants must pay a $325 fee to cover the course, book, and class materials. The pre-test will be held on Monday, February 13 from 4:30 to 7:30 p.m. Upon the conclusion of the course, participants will have the
opportunity to register and take the Nassau County Lifeguard Certification Test. For more information on lifeguard positions, pre-test requirements, or the course, please call (516)739-3055.
Project Independence: Bridge Class
Come learn to play Bridge at this beginner-friendly class. Every Wednesday from 12 to 2 p.m. at the North Hempstead “Yes We Can” Community Center at 141 West Garden Street, Westbury. Call 311 or (516)869-6311 to register or for more information.
Project Independence: Bingo And BP
& WEDNESDAY, MAR. 8 AND 9
America’s Boating Course
There are several upcoming safe boating courses and seminars presented by the United States Power Squadrons. America’s Boating Course is being offered via zoom and in person March 7. Contact Michael Richter at (516)526-8177 or mikerichter22@ gmail.com for the zoom session. This course begins at 7:00 p.m. Contact George Winsper at (516)698-5399 or gwins12345@aol.com for the Glen Head session at the North Shore Middle School on Glen Cove Ave in Glen Head. The class begins at 7:30 P.M. These sessions are $60.
A fun hour of bingo with a bonus of blood pressure screenings and health counseling. At the Roslyn Community Center auditorium, 53 Orchard Street, Roslyn Heights. Call 311 or (516)8696311 to register or for more information.
Calligraphy
Every Saturday from 10 to 11:30 a.m. in the lower level Meeting Room at the Manhasset Public Library, 30 Onderdonk Ave., Manhasset. Contact Ting Wong at (516)708-1287 or email tingdaiwong@gmail.com.
You Are Not Alone
If you or someone you know is in crisis or feeling suicidal, call the Long Island Crisis Center 24/7 hotline: (516) 6791111. The 988 Suicide and Crisis line is also available 24/7 by dialing 988 or 1-800-273-8255.
Our unmatched care is now available in more locations, so your heart is always in the right place.
St. Francis Heart Center is now available at more Catholic Health practices and hospitals across Long Island, including Good Samaritan University Hospital, Mercy Hospital, St. Catherine of Siena Hospital and St. Joseph Hospital. This means you have easier access to the most advanced treatments for cardiac diagnostic and therapeutic interventions, no matter where you live on the island.
For a location near you, visit chsli.org/heart
aolsen@antonmediagroup.com
From the first notes of the intro (As your body grows bigger/Your mind must flower/It’s great to learn/’Cause knowledge is power!) children of the ‘70s and ‘80s and beyond will recognize the irresistible, educational earworms that make up Schoolhouse Rock. But who would think to set multiplication tables or the legislative process to music? Fifty years ago, that’s just what David McCall, Bob Dorough, and George Newall did. Their series changed the landscape of children’s animated programming, earning them four daytime Emmy wins and a further four nominations.
McCall, frustrated that his sons could memorize the lyrics to Rolling Stones songs but not their multiplication facts, complained to Newall, one of the creative directors at his ad agency. He wondered if the subject in question could be set to music. This set Newall on a search for just the right musician to put a tune to the times tables. His quest led him to Dorough, a prolific and quirky jazz musician who had once written a song based on the “Do not remove under penalty of law” written on the mattress tag. Their song writer acquired, they gave him the assignment.
Two weeks later, he came back with “Three is a Magic Number,” which blew Newall and McCall away.
The song was so catchy and inspiring that the agency’s art director and cartoonist, Tom Yohe, started drawing up characters and scenes. Though their original plan was to try and produce an educational record album, it soon became clear that they had much more on their hands. This creative team presented their series of short films to then-director of children’s programming at ABC, Michael Eisner, who just happened to be meeting with legendary animator Chuck Jones at the time. Newall recounted the story to The New York Times in 1994: “After we played the song and Tom showed them the storyboards, Eisner looked at Jones and said, ‘What do you think?’ “And Jones said, ‘I think you should buy it right away.’”
After we played the song and Tom showed them the storyboards, Eisner looked at Jones and said, ‘What do you think?’ “And Jones said, ‘I think you should buy it right away.”
technology. They also expanded their team to include Lynn Ahrens and Jack Sheldon. Ahrens had been working at the agency as a secretary, work that she found incredibly boring, so she started bringing her guitar to work. Between tasks she would play and write songs. This caught the attention of Newall, who asked her to write a song for Schoolhouse Rock. She wrote “The Preamble,” a song that set the beginning of the Constitution to music. Ahrens sang the version that went on the air in October 1975. She wrote or performed on songs throughout the rest of the original series. In a 2014 interview with Noblemania, Ahrens credited this chance for everything that came after in her work. “That opportunity led to a career as a copywriter, followed by freelance careers as a TV writer, a jingle writer, a television producer of many network shows for young people and ultimately a musical theatre writer. It all started there.”
Jack Sheldon, a performer from the Merv Griffin Show, lent his distinctive voice to songs like “Conjunction Junction” and “I’m Just a Bill.” Despite his many years as Griffin’s sidekick, his voice is perhaps most well-known from these performances.
were removed from the air shortly before the show’s 30th anniversary and a special DVD release.
A musical theatre adaptation of the show, titled Schoolhouse Rock Live!, premiered in 1993. It featured a collaboration between artists Scott Ferguson, Kyle Hall, George Keating, Lynn Ahrens, Bob Dorough, Dave Frishberg, and Kathy Mandry, utilizing some of Schoolhouse Rock’s most famous songs.
Disney is running a Family Singalong in celebration of this milestone anniver sary. This will be the fifth installment of the Singalong series and is hosted by Ryan Seacrest. It airs on Feb. 1 on ABC and will be available to stream on Hulu and Disney+ later in the month. All of the original episodes are available for streaming on the platform as well.
Performances during the special include:
Black Eyed Peas — “Three Is A Magic Number”
Derek Hough and Hayley Erbert — “Figure 8”
Jason Biggs and Jenny Mollen — “I’m Just a Bill”
Julianne Hough – “Interplanet Janet”
The Muppets and Fortune Feimster — “Unpack Your Adjectives”
1.
7.
8.
After the initial series about multiplication, the group produced songs about grammar, civics, science and computer
The original five series ran from 1973 to 1984. The Walt Disney Company acquired Schoolhouse Rock in 1996 with their purchase of ABC. The show returned in the early 1990s with a series about money, and again in the early 2000s with shorts about the electoral college, voting for president, and a full series about the environment. These songs were not broadcast on TV and were only available through DVD or iTunes. Reruns of the original five series played on broadcast television until 2000, when they
NE-YO — “Verb: That’s What’s Happening”
Raven Symoné and Kal Penn — “Interjections”
Retta — “Ready or Not, Here I Come”
Shaquille O’Neal and Boys & Girls Club of Atlanta — “Conjunction Junction”
The stars from Disney’s Broadway pro ductions of Newsies, and “A Noun is a Person, Place or Thing”.
jscotchie@antonmediagroup.com
“We’re living in Ted Kennedy’s America.” That witticism was offered by Joe Sobran in the wake of the 1987 defeat of Robert Bork to the Supreme Court. Senator Edward Kennedy (D---MASS) led the charge, declaring in a demagogic tirade that in “Robert Bork’s America,” women would be forced into back-alley abortions, blacks regulated to the back of the bus, school children denied the teachings of evolution, and “rogue police” breaking down anyone’s doors.
A qualified and articulate jurist, Bork never deserved the demagoguery slung his way. The man, however, had little support from the Ronald Reagan White House. Bork was defeated and liberals dominated the court for the next three decades.
Ted Kennedy’s America? Who can doubt it? In the early 2000s, Kennedy took on same sex marriage as a fighting cause. Conservatives snickered at this crazy old man. Who’s laughing now? The same Wall Street Journal, National Review, commentary-style conservatism that once opposed and ridiculed the gay rights agenda now supports Kennedy’s views on marriage.
John A. Farrell’s biography is the first full-length treatment of Kennedy since his death in 2009. It can be a tortured read on a tortured life. Not hagiography, the volume still ends in triumph. A Life is for those fans of Camelot who wish to relieve the Kennedy saga in all its tragedy and glory.
Ted Kennedy was born to the breed. His father, Joseph Sr., a wealthy banker, had wanted to make the leap into politics. The man lived for power. However, his tenure as U.S. Ambassador to Great Britain, where he bitterly opposed America’s entry into World War II, sank any hopes. The torch was passed to Joe Junior, who also had a taste for politics. Muscular and confident, Joe Junior could never comb gray hair. He died in action during the war.
It was now onto Jack, Bobby, and Ted. In 1960, the youngest Kennedy worked as a West Coast coordinator for JFK’s winning presidential campaign. He
dreamed of a life in Arizona, far from the political world. That could never happen. The 1962 Massachusetts senate race beckoned. After Nov. 22, 1963 and June 6, 1968, Ted Kennedy’s own presidential run was an inevitability. It was as if destiny was out of his hands. When that 1980 challenge to President Jimmy Carter failed, Kennedy returned to the senate, where he had found a home.
Most of the book is a rendering of Kennedy’s many initiatives and triumphs: Proposing an opening to mainland China, cancer research, health care (where he worked with President Richard Nixon), AIDS research, liberal immigration, the vote for 18-year olds, the defeat not only of Bork, but earlier of both Clement Haynsworth and Harold Carswell to the Supreme Court, the nuclear freeze movement and oddly, acting as a courier for messages from the Reagan White House to the Mikhail Gorbachev Kremlin. It was to Kennedy that Gorbachev revealed his intention to withdraw from Afghanistan.
There is Kennedy the man. After the assassinations of his two older brothers, the burden of an entire family was on his shoulders. He carried that load for the next 40 years. On one weekend in December 1973, Kennedy had to tell his eldest son, Edward Jr., that a cancer would require the amputation of the young man’s right leg. That same day, he rushed off to a local Catholic church to usher Kathleen Kennedy, RFK’s eldest daughter, down the altar in matrimony.
political moments stand out. Farrell cites Kennedy’s floor leadership on the 1965 immigration bill. That bill, long a goal of President Kennedy, probably would have passed anyway. In truth, it was the president’s assassination that revived the bill. Still, the younger Kennedy’s hand was on the most significant legislation in American history.
Ted Kennedy’s own presidential run was an inevitability. It was as if destiny was out of his hands. When that 1980 challenge to President Jimmy Carter failed, Kennedy returned to the senate, where he had found a home.
Then there is Mary Jo Kopechne. On the night of July 18, 1969, Kennedy, while driving the young woman home from a reunion party of RFK staff members, hit the small Dyke Bridge in Chappaquiddick, MA, traveling, at some estimates, at up to 20 MPH. Too fast. He did dive into the water time and time again, trying to save Kopechne. Was it possible? Did he act soon enough? The controversy dogged the man for decades. It destroyed his presidential hopes, but not his political career. After 1968, Massachusetts badly needed a Kennedy in statewide office.
The author ends with the eventual triumph of Obamacare, a capstone on the senator’s career. To me, two
In 1965, it wasn’t yet clear that the Democrats would lose their grip on white working-class voters. In time, they did. Kennedy knew the 1965 bill would mean the end of European immigration, including his fellow Irish, into the U.S. No matter. The loss of the white working class has been made up for by millions of new Democratic Party voters from the ranks of Asian and Latino immigrants. President Lyndon Johnson was not the only pol to claim, wrongly, that the bill would not change the population makeup of the U.S. Kennedy made similar remarks. Who cares? It assisted the liberal cause in monumental ways. Farrell, however, gives only a few paragraphs to the 1980 immigration bill, one that expanded family reunification and increased legal immigration exponentially. During the 1980s and beyond, America has experienced the greatest demographic upheaval in modern history. Here, Farrell is not optimistic over the consequences. The other issue is the 1974 Boston busing crisis---a real American carnage. In 1970, Kennedy was under heat from the Kopechne tragedy. That year, during a re-election campaign, Irish South Boston stood with the man. Kennedy appreciated that tremendously.
In the early 1960s, Kennedy supported civil rights, but opposed school busing. In the fall of 1974, the bill came due. Black students from Roxbury, under court order, were bused to South Boston. Kennedy spoke at high schools in both Roxbury and South Boston, then made a beeline to Washington. He was sitting in his senate office when the school buses rolled.
drive the Irish out of the public schools and out of Boston all together.
“What can I do?” Kennedy, now busing proponent, asked. How about standing in the South Boston High School front entrance? Kennedy could have rented an apartment in Southie and enrolled his three children in the local public schools now being forcibly integrated, rather than sending them to a northern Virginia private academy.
This is more important than economics. In 1970, Irish Boston stood with their wayward son. Four years later, Kennedy sold his own people down the river. South Boston High School, once the pride of the Irish working-class, no longer exists. And we’re still living in Ted Kennedy’s America.
September 1974 represented the revenge of that city’s Anglo-Saxon elite. For decades, they smarted under Irish rule. By using the black population up from the South, their fellow co-religionists at least, for busing purposes the WASP could now
busing
Irish
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attention on social media, and had surpassed its 25,000-signature goal by January 26.
Karl V. Anton, Jr., Publisher, Anton Community Newspapers, 1984-2000
Publishers of Glen Cove/Oyster Bay Record Pilot
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With nearly a full month of U.S. Congressional participation behind him, Representative George Santos (NY-03) seems to be staying the course in terms of smiling in public, making headlines, and being mostly (but not always) reticent about criticism and allegations against him.
However, such reticence from Santos and many of his peers in the House hasn’t stopped veteran actor, activist, and Star Trek: The Original Series star George Takei from taking a stand.
In late January, Takei started a petition calling for Santos’ resignation, calling the 34-year-old apparent Republican a “pathological liar” and “[a]nother George in the news.”
The petition, entitled “Get That ‘Other’ George Out of Congress,” quickly picked up
“I’m posting this petition because while there are very few things Democrats and Republicans can agree on, one of them should be that someone who has lied about everything in his life—his education, his jobs, his marriage, his finances, even being a college champion volleyball player, say what?—has no business being in Congress,” Takei wrote in the description of his online petition.
“I know we need two-thirds of Congress to agree, and that’s a tall order in a narrowly divided House. But if we don’t demand it, we’ll never get it.”
Whether or not they sign onto Takei’s petition, Nassau County voters do seem like they’re still feeling the sting of the Santos situation.
To put it in terms of Star Trek: The Next Generation, it seems fair to say that some
see SANTOS on page 10A
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Governor Kathy Hochul’s 2023 State of the State speech and accompanying 275 page book omitted any reference to the proposed $3.6 billion LIRR Port Jefferson electrification project.
The Metropolitan Transportation Authority’s February 7th Public Hearing for potential Federal Transit Administration funding of their 2023 Program of Projects also omits funding to advance this project. The FTA will be providing close to $1.8 billion under various formula and competitive discretionary grant programs in 2023. Here is the link to the MTA February 7th Public Hearing for their upcoming 2023 Program of Projects.https://new.mta.info/ document/103001. By not including this project in the February 7th Public Hearing, is it the MTA’s intent to continue delaying consideration for electrification?
What ever happened to the MTA planning feasibility study funded under the prior $32 billion 20152019 Capital Plan to look into the feasibility of electrification?
Additional funding to advance the project beyond the planning study is not included in the MTA current $51 billion 2020 - 2024 Five
Year Capital Plan. The next step would be finding several million to pay for a federal National Environmental Protection Act (NEPA) review. This is necessary to preserve future eligibility for FTA funding. The most obvious source of funding from Washington would be requesting permission from the FTA to enter its national competitive discretionary Capital Investment Grant (CIG) New Starts Core Capacity Program. Has the MTA asked this of the FTA? Will this project be included in the next FTA CIG report submitted to Congress by March 2023 for federal fiscal year 2024?
We will not know if the project is included in the proposed MTA 2025 - 2044 Twenty Year Capital Needs Assessment Plan until it is released in October 2023. Port Jefferson electrification is competing against twenty other system expansion and enhancement projects that the MTA is considering.
Electrification of the Port Jefferson branch has been advocated since the 1960s by generations of elected officials with no success. In 1970, electrification was extended from Mineola to Huntington. In the 1980s, discussions took place between the MTA, LIRR, Suffolk County and many elected officials over which branch should be electrified first. The Ronkonkoma branch was selected over the Port Jefferson branch.
Without electrification east of Huntington, Port Jefferson branch riders will not have a one seat ride to Grand Central Madison via the $12.6 billion East Side Access project. There is insufficient height clearance to accommodate duel mode locomotives in the 63rd Street tunnel needed for access to Grand Central Madison.
Sands, the world leader in developing integrated resorts, is proposing a multi-billion-dollar investment at the current site of the Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum. This groundbreaking, world-class hospitality and entertainment project will be transformational for the Long Island economy, creating thousands of quality union jobs and generating millions of dollars in tax revenue.
Sands is committed to developing long-term partnerships with local businesses. For Long Island-based manufacturers, distributors, wholesale suppliers and other companies servicing the hospitality and entertainment industries, the Sands project will be an unprecedented opportunity to grow your business and be part of what will surely become an iconic centerpiece of the Long Island landscape.
Thousands of daily LIRR riders from diesel territory will still have to change at Jamaica for travel to Grand Central Madison or Atlantic Avenue Brooklyn.
Future opportunity for funding to progress this project beyond a planning study will be under upcoming MTA 2025 - 2029, 2030 - 2034 and 2035 -2039 Five Year Capital Plans. The estimated cost today is $3.6 billion, and will continue to grow over time. This is necessary to pay for design and engineering, environmental review, land acquisition for construction of power sub stations,
expansion of commuter parking, potential relocation and/or consolidation of existing stations, new stations and platforms, new electric Multiple Unit car storage yard, new track, third rail and signals. From start to finish could require fifteen to twenty years. before electrification of the Port Jefferson branch is completed. —Larry Penner is a transportation advocate, historian and writer who previously served as a former Director for the Federal Transit Administration Region 2 New York Office of Operations and Program Management
jcorr@antonmediagroup.com
Angels in America: A Gay Fantasia on National Themes, is a two-part, Pulitzer prize-winning play written by Tony Kushner. It was first performed in 1991, and it follows a gay man who was abandoned by his lover when he contracts HIV, the crumbling of a closeted Mormon’s marriage whose wife is slowly entering a nervous breakdown, a mother’s search for her son in the big city and a nurse who tends to a corrupt lawyer who battles the ghosts of his past.
EastLine Theatre, based in Wantagh, will be putting both parts of this show on at the BACCA Center in Lindenhurst throughout the month of February. It is believed to be the first performance of Angels in America on Long Island.
Long Island Weekly on Jan. 20 sat down via Zoom with Nicole Savin, Eastline’s co-artistic director, Danny Higgins, the director of “Angels in America,” actress Thea Kraus who is playing character Harper Pitt and actor Logan Clingan, who is playing character Prior Walter.
“[Angels in America] is one of the greatest plays ever written,” Higgins said. “It is ambition, for what it requires, and the possibility of doing it in our local community, which is has never been done, checked a lot of boxes for us. EastLine is celebrating its 10 year anniversary. All
roads led to Angels in America.”
It’s been a longtime coming for all those involved with “Angels in America,” as the planning for the production began a year ago. Auditions were held in July, and rehearsals, with just how lengthy this production is, began in September. And two weeks ahead of the Feb. 4 premiere, cast and crew moved into the BAACA Center for technical rehearsals.
“I think it’s exciting,” Clingan said when asked how they felt being weeks away from the premiere. “These characters are just once in a lifetime opportunities to play and even just from the first rehearsal, it slowly gets more anticipating as time goes on.”
Kraus echoed Clingan’s point, adding that its just as nerve wracking as it is exciting. She described her character, Harper Pitt, as an “agoraphobic Valium addict” and wacky.
“She’s sort of one of the people whose always on the outskirts of society,” Kraus said. “She approaches it with such, ‘yep, that’s who I am and there’s nothing I can do about it, and my life is falling apart in front of my eyes and there’s nothing I can do about it, but I’m handling it.’ And while she doesn’t do it gracefully, she does it. And that’s what matters.”
Clingan discussed their opening scene with their character, Prior Walter, who is telling their partner that he has AIDS.
“From there on out, Prior is physically going through a downward spiral, but tries the best to not let that hurt him emotionally and still has this positive, beautiful light that continues to radiate throughout the play, even when his boyfriend leaves him,” Clingan said. “He’s kind of suffering through this alone. He still finds light through these people he never met before,
through Harper and through [the character Hannah Pitt]. I think thats what I love about the role the most is that the trajectory is going through the darkest thing you could ever imagine going through, but still not letting it consume you.”
On the process of putting together this production, Higgins said that it first, it felt unobtainable in what it requires of the cast and the production team, who Higgins said is happily getting very little sleep.
“We have really tried to make Long Island the heart of our organization,” Savin reflected. “We feel that we as an island deserve culture, as high quality theater that the city can get and what’s different about is... that we are really trying to do works that you would otherwise not see on Long Island.”
To get tickets to see both parts of Angels in America, visit eastlinetheatre.org.
History of Zorn’s
Best chicken wings
Cheese please
Football fans might be surprised at the matchup, but one thing is not surprising: America’s love for chicken wings. This is never more apparent than on the final game day, when wings are at their hottest. Last year, Americans were anticipated to devour 1.42 billion wings while watching the the two final teams battle for the Lombardi Trophy, according the National Chicken Council’s (NCC) Wing Report.
“There will be no wing shortage,” said NCC spokesperson Tom Super. “Like almost anything else you buy right now, wings might be a little more expensive, but they’ll be stocked. I just wouldn’t wait until kickoff to be in line or order online.”
Last year, wholesale wing prices were down 19 percent from a mid-year high, according to USDA data. Retail wing prices are up about $0.30 per pound on average from the same time last year. Why the uptick? Many costs, like the price of chicken wings, have increased because of unusually high demand, record input costs, labor shortages that have reduced the supply of many goods, and government spending programs that have flooded the economy. Greater demand and less supply equals higher prices, ultimately resulting in the highest inflation that the country has seen in 40 years.
“Demand for chicken wings has been through the roof since the beginning of the pandemic,” Super added. “A shift from sit-down restaurants to takeout and quick service has boosted chicken wing consumption. Restaurants like wing joints and pizza places were built around takeout and delivery, and as long as people are sitting around watching TV and maybe drinking a beer, wings will remain in the game.”
To help meet increased demand last year, some chicken producers diverted birds traditionally marketed as whole birds for parts instead, like wings. More good news is the end-December frozen wing inventory totaled 73.2 million pounds, up 70 percent from last year, which should provide some cushion. Chicken companies, retailers and restaurants have planned ahead for the Big Game.
Maybe one day we can settle the debate over flats versus drums, but for now, editors at Anton Media Group, along with some of the most credible “Foodies” of the Facebook page Long Island Foodies, have shared their top picks for best local wings, in no particular order:
Anthony’s Coal Fired Pizza
• 137 Old Country Rd., Carle Place; 516-877-7750
• 3430 Sunrise Hwy., Wantagh; 516-679-2625
• 8063 Jericho Tpke., Woodbury; 516-367-2625
Brews Brothers Grille
• 183 Franklin Ave., Franklin Square; 516-216-5008
Brooklyn Wing House
• 2441 Jericho Tpke., Garden City Park; 516-636-5191
Changing Times Pub
• 1247 Melville Rd., Farmingdale; 631-694-6462
Croxley’s Ale House
National Chicken Council
• 129 New Hyde Park Rd., Franklin Square; 516-326-9542
• 190 Main St., Farmingdale; 516-293-7700
• 7 S. Park Ave., Rockville Centre; 516-764-0470
EGP Oceanside
• 2823 Long Beach Rd., Oceanside; 516-766-9547
Elsie Lane
• 29 Jericho Tpke., New Hyde Park; 516-302-8412
• 295 Main St., Huntington; 631- 824-6236
Greek Xpress
• 182 New Hyde Park Rd., Franklin Square; 516-502-6126
• 59 Main St., East Rockaway; 516-593-4949
• 37 Great Neck Rd., Great Neck Plaza; 516-570-6814
• 437 S. Oyster Bay Rd., Plainview; 516-433-8070
Haunted House of Hamburgers
• 330 Fulton St., Farmingdale; 516-777-1031
J. Paul’s Terrace Cafe
• 239 Merrick Rd., Oceanside; 516-536-1806
Jackie Reilly’s
• 3964 Hempstead Tpke., Bethpage; 516-731-7544
The Main Event
• 799 Old Country Rd., Plainview; 516-935-5120
• 1815 Broadhollow Rd., Farmingdale; 631-522-1030
Majors Steakhouse
• 284 E. Meadow Ave., East Meadow; 516-794-6600
NY Flying Wings
• 554 Stewart Ave., Bethpage; 516-433-2463
Smokin’ Al’s
• 847 Merrick Rd., Massapequa Park; 516-799-4900
Spanky’s Food Factory
• 2458 Jericho Tpke., Garden City Park; 516-280-8440
Via Roma Pizza
• 1764 Merrick Ave., Merrick; 516-868-2311
Wings Over Farmingdale
• 221 Main St., Farmingdale; 516-756-9464
Zorn’s of Bethpage
• 4321 Hempstead Tpke., Bethpage; 516-731-5500
—Compiled by Christy Hinko
Ingredients
4 pounds chicken wings, tips removed
3/4 cup store-bought basil pesto
1 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes
1 lemon, zested and juiced
Preparation
1. Heat oven to 400 degrees.
2. Place wings in a single layer on a baking sheet. Place in oven and bake for 25-30 minutes or until wings are well browned and crispy.
3. While wings are roasting, combine pesto, red pepper flakes, lemon juice, and lemon zest (the peel without any of the white pith) in a bowl large enough to hold all wings.
4. When wings are finished, remove from oven and place in pesto mixture. Toss to coat well.
Nutritional information, per serving: 420 calories; 27 g fat; 7 g saturated fat; 5 g carbohydrate;
2 g fiber; 40 g protein. Serves four.
—National Chicken Council
Zorn’s has been making delicious homemade food since 1940 when Peter Zorn opened his first retail store on Long Island. His vision was to offer wholesome, made-from-scratch meals using the freshest ingredients that busy families could take home with them, creating one of New York’s first take-out services. We are proud to be listed on the New York State Historic Business Preservation Registry which honors businesses that have been in operation for at least 50 years and have contributed to their communities’ history.
In the 1930s, prior to the retail business in Bethpage, the Zorn family owned seven poultry farms on Long Island selling chickens and turkeys to wholesalers in Queens and the Bronx. At the time the Bethpage area was primarily farmland.
A short time after, he added his soon-to-be-famous southern fried chicken and bar-b-que spare ribs. This turned into a thriving take-out business. His menu kept growing as he met his customers’ needs. Before long he had a complete catering menu serving Long Island families all year long. Take-out meals and catering were new concepts in the 1950s and became very popular on Long Island. Many tried to imitate this concept, but Zorn’s Poultry Farms was always number one.
Today Zorn’s is owned and operated by Merrill S. Zorn, Peter Zorn’s only granddaughter, who grew up working in all aspects of the family business.
“We use the same recipes and cooking methods as my grandfather. Some of our traditions are looked upon as old-fashioned by today’s standards, but this is how we maintain our high quality and consistency. The value of our generous portions, personalized customer service, quality ingredients, and our family recipes have made our business a success,” said Merrill. “There is always a Zorn in the kitchen making sure that the original recipes passed down from my grandparents, are still prepared with the same quality and pride that they were 80 years ago!”
Zorn’s of Bethpage has transformed several times over the past 80 + years. For decades it was home to a functioning poultry farm and thousands of chickens and turkeys. In 2019, Merrill took on a massive undertaking by moving the entire business into a brand new 8,000 sq. ft. store at the same address in Bethpage. She was personally involved in the design of the new building and listened to customers’ ideas and suggestions
resulting in a beautiful new space with a dining area inside and out, as well as bathrooms for their patrons.
The new building pays tribute to the history of Zorn’s with historic photos and memorabilia used as décor.
“We kept our story alive not just for our family, but for our community and our staff, and we couldn’t be happier with how well the transition went, and all the love and support we were shown throughout the process,” Merrill added.
Nothing blasts the winter blues like gathering your favorite fans to watch the Big Game.
Good friends, a giant flat screen TV and fantastic food make it worth everyone’s while to come out of hibernation. Remember, though, under those football jerseys and team tees is your beach body — and yes, Memorial Day is just three short months away.
Happily, there are options that will get you swimsuit ready without skimping on Game Day flavor. Of course, there’s always the standard veggie platter (skip the dip!). But gathering with friends to watch the Big Game is a time-honored tradition that comes with its own special menu, at the top of which is an American favorite: Buffalo wings.
Named for their birthplace of Buffalo, New York, these bad boys are a staple of Game Day gatherings everywhere. But six of them will set you back more than 400 calories. Add ranch or blue cheese dressing and in you’re in for at least a couple hundred more.
This year, shake out the fat and calories by pairing spicy Buffalo taste with another American classic: popcorn.
A healthful whole grain (fiber), naturally low in fat, popcorn delivers the satisfying crunch your guests crave. This easy-to make Buffalo Ranch Seasoning Mix lets you sprinkle the crowd-pleasing flavor of wings on top of a heart-healthy snack that won’t bring regrets on the scale come Monday morning. Touchdown!
Perfect for game time and super easy to make, you’ll be the hit at any tailgating party. Yield: about 2 tablespoons seasoning mix
Ingredients
1 tablespoon ranch dressing or dip mix (from a 1 ounce package)
1 tablespoon seafood spice mix (or celery salt)
1 teaspoon garlic powder
1 teaspoon powdered sugar (or sugar)
1/8 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1/4 teaspoon vegetable oil
6 quarts popped popcorn
Cooking spray, optional
Directions
In a small bowl, blend ranch dressing mix, spice mix, garlic powder, powdered sugar and cayenne pepper. Sprinkle with vegetable oil and blend until well incorporated. Place popcorn in a serving bowl and spray lightly with cooking spray. Sprinkle seasoning mix over popcorn to taste and toss. Store leftover seasoning mix in an airtight container for future use.
Nutrition Facts
45 calories
2.5 g total fat
0 g saturated fat
0 mg cholesterol
35 mg sodium
5 g carbohydrates
1 g fiber
0 g sugar
1 g protein
20 mg potassium
—The Popcorn Board
How to cut cheese may seem obvious, but there are many ways to improve your cheeseboard with a bit of creativity around your cheeses. Here, we’ll explore some ways to cut your cheese and the possibilities it opens up. But to get started, we recommend watching Chef Greg Gable’s video on how to make a perfect cheeseboard (www.cheeselovershop.com).
Different cheeses require different cutting techniques, to keep the cheese’s shape intact. For example, hard cheese needs to be cut with a sharp knife (or you simply won’t manage to cut it). However, if you try to cut a soft, ripened cheese with a sharp knife, the rind may stick to the edge, and your cheese may end up losing its shape. For soft, ripened cheese, use a knife with no edge, such as a butter knife. In the same vein, a crumbly cheese tends to stick to the blade, even with hollow-edged knives. The best way to keep its shape intact and ensure better visual appeal is to use a wire slicer.
Often, cheese is cut into slices, pretty much like a pie. However, you can choose to slice it horizontally, which gives you three main benefits:
• It makes the creamy paste more apparent, which gives a unique visual appeal, for example, to Saint André cheese.
• It allows some hard rubs, such as a granola rub, to be used on your cheese;
while this type of rub doesn’t normally stick to the rind, it will stick to the paste of your cheese.
• For your gratins and the like, a horizontal cut allows the rind to be spread more evenly, for a better crust.
If you want to cut your cheese horizontally and still serve it in a practical format to your guests, you can combine the two cuts, and cut the cheese into slices after separating the two halves. This combination is appealing for the flower-shaped Dorothy’s cheeses, in order to make beautiful petal-shaped slices.
Some cheeses are better served whole, to be cut at the table. However, most cheeseboards look prettier if the hard cheeses are pre-cut. Depending on the shape of your slices, the best choice for presentation may differ. For rectangular cheeses, present your slices spread in an arc, like a fan of playing cards. For triangular slices, try stacking them up—just make sure that every edge faces the same way for a better effect.
Gable is the research chef for Savencia Cheese USA. Visit www.cheeselovershop. com to read more from Gable.
—Savencia Cheese USA
ASK ABOUT CUSTOMIZED PACKAGES
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Available: February 10 – February 14, 2023
COUPLES RETREAT $499 *
• Deluxe King or Double Bed Accommodations
• Prix Fixe Dinner for Two
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• Bottle of Champagne
*Dinner reservation is required.
ROMANCE PACKAGE $349*
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*Dinner reservation is required.
For reservations and information call (516) 773-2000 or visit www.innatgreatneck.com
30 Cutter Mill Rd., Great Neck, NY 11021
Who doesn’t love sharing a sweet treat with a loved one on Valentine’s Day. With February also being American Heart Month, here are a few ways you can show your loved ones, and their hearts, some love with sweet, heart-healthy ideas.
For candy bar lovers—stuffed dates can taste like your favorite one.
To make them, simply split the date in half and remove the pit. Stuff the inside with peanut butter and drizzle the top with melted chocolate. Then, sprinkle on peanuts and pop into the fridge until the chocolate has hardened.
The combination of fiber, protein and healthy fat can also help make a meal or snack more filling and satisfying, and you’re getting all three here. You can swap out the peanut butter for any nut butter of choice or for an allergy friendly swap, use sunflower butter.
Dates can also be used to make betterfor-you brownie bites.
Blend dates with oats, nut butter and
cocoa powder for a chocolatey treat with less added sugar than your typical brownie. Plus, you’ll also be getting some hearthealthy fiber from the dates and wholegrain oats. Many whole grains, including oats, contain a type of fiber, called beta glucan, which may help lower cholesterol levels.
another Valentine’s favorite, but often contain ingredients that our hearts don’t love, such as added sugar. Instead of chocolate frosting, frost your cupcakes with chocolate hummus.
Chocolate hummus is rich, creamy and has that delicious chocolatey sweet flavor you’re looking for, but nearly three times less added sugar than a typical chocolate frosting.
You can also use chocolate hummus as a sweet dip for a snacking board. A mix of berries, almonds, pretzels and chocolate hummus is a fun way to pair sweet and savory treats.
Blueberry Pie Foil Packet can be made in less than 20 minutes.
Mix blueberries, applesauce and cornstarch in one bowl, and olive oil, cinnamon, granola and salt in another. Spoon the blueberry mixture into cooking spray-lined aluminum foil and top with granola mixture. Fold the foil over the filling and cook in the oven at 350 degrees for about 10 minutes, or until the blueberries have burst.
Granola: The first ingredient in this granola is whole grain oats which are a heart healthy pick. Many whole grains, including oats, contain a type of fiber, called beta glucan, which may help lower cholesterol levels.
Blueberries: Berries are packed with heart-healthy fiber and antioxidants.
Sweet treats like cake or cupcakes are
About 80 percent of Americans don’t meet recommended fruit intakes, so fruit-forward desserts are a great way to satisfy a sweet tooth, while also bumping up daily fruit intake. This simple
—Tina McGeough is a registered dietician for Stop & Shop.
Sunday, March 5 - 10 AM-4 PM
Come bake our famously delicious hamantaschen. OUR DOORS ARE OPEN TO ALL!
Please scan the QR code to let us know you are coming.
Drop in any time on Sunday from 10-4 Special Hours
10 am Mini & Me (the pre-school set)
Every child that signs up will receive a special Purim crown and make their very own Hamantaschen!
11 am Bubbe & Me
Bring your grandparents, grandkids or we’ll supply you with one (but just for an hour)!
1 pm Margarita & Me
Come for a cocktail or a mocktail.
Port Jewish Center is a warm and welcoming Reform congregation, 20 Manorhaven Blvd., Port Washington, NY
Although winter has been overly kind this season, the weekend farmer’s market in Great Neck has moved inside the Great Neck House through the end of March in order to help vendors continue to bring the goods to market. Shoppers are showing their appreciation for this sheltered event by continuing to frequent the market, week after week.
The venue may be small, but there is no shortage of neat treats and cool finds such as doggie bandanas, kitty bowties, essential oils, farm-fresh vegetables, intriguing horseradish blends, barbecue sauces and rubs, baked goods, gourmet pickles and cheeses, specialty coffees and local honey.
Some of the recent vendors include:
• Brian’s House of Spices
• All Baked Up of Sayville
• The Illegal Baker of Huntington
• Zippy Pets
• Qua Zay Culinary Services
• Italian Wife Bakes of Brooklyn
• The Cheese Guy of Yonkers
• Koltuk’s Honey, LLC
• Dobler Farms of Deer Park
• Horman’s Best Pickles of Glen Cove
• Diesel Cold Brew of Brooklyn
• Johnny Breads
• Brooklyn Essence, LLC
It is seemingly so popular with vendors also, many on a bi-weekly rotation, in order to accommodate all of the selling space requests. If you find something you love, check with the vendor to find out their next scheduled selling date, to coordinate your follow-up shopping adventure.
The indoor winter market, a collaborative event between Great Neck Park District and Deep Roots Farmers Market, runs Sundays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. through March 26 at Great Neck House (14 Arrandale Ave., Great Neck).
Visit www.gnparks.org for details.
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A new study has revealed that Chinese food is the most internet-searched cuisine in the United States, according to Google search data.
The research, conducted by experts at www.foodfirefriends.com, analyzed Google search data related to the 40 most popular cuisines in the world in different U.S. states, to find out what cuisines Americans search for (and eat) the most.
Known all over the world, Chinese food is certainly one of everyone’s most loved
cuisines. With an average of more than 3.35 million searches per month in the U.S. only, Chinese is Americans’ absolute favorite food.
With an average of 1.22 million Google searches in the USA, Mexican is Americans’ second most favorite food. Known for its spices and hot sauces, this cuisine is sought-after and appreciated globally.
Thai food is third in the ranking. With
more than 823,000 monthly Google searches in the USA, Thai remains one of Americans’ first choices when it comes to foreign cuisines.
Registering an average of 673,000 Google searches, Indian food is the fourth most Googled food in America.
Another Asian cuisine features in fifth. Showing an average of 246,000 Google searches in the U.S., Korean food is the
fifth most popular cuisine in the States, followed by Japanese (with an average of 201,000 Google searches per month in the U.S.), and soul food (201,000).
Greek, Italian and Hawaiian food follow in the ranking with an average of 165,000, 165,000 and 90,500 searches in the U.S.
The study was conducted by foodfirefriends.com, which is dedicated to helping users grill and barbecue better, by offering practical guides, recipes, and advice on all aspects of outdoor cooking.
—Food Fire FriendsThis fully gutted Colonial at 8 Mullon Ave. in Baxter Estates sold on Dec. 5 for $990,000. This property features an open layout living space and generously proportioned rooms throughout, boasts four bedrooms and four bathrooms. Upon entering, you are welcomed by the bright and airy living and dining rooms with a fireplace. The gourmet kitchen features a breakfast bar with a granite top, custom cabinets, premium stainless steel appliances, and a sliding door leading to the backyard and guest house with an extra garage. The second floor features the master bedroom with ensuite bathroom and a walk-in closet and two additional bedrooms and a full bathroom. The full basement provides spacious space for recreation and storage. It is connected to the garage with a separate entrance. The property is conveniently located in the heart of the sought-after section of Port Washington, one block from the train station, parks, shopping, dining and more.
This home at 48 Hillview Ave. in the Baxter Estates section of Port Washington sold on Dec. 28 for $777,500. Its charming front porch greets you to this three bedroom Village Colonial located less than a mile to downtown shops and restaurants. Enter into light-filled living room with brick wood burning fireplace and detailed leaded glass windows. The dining room leads to kitchen complete with gas cooking, Corian counters and Merilatt cabinetry. The second floor encompasses the bedrooms including the spacious master bedroom. The home has two bathrooms. The home has a detached one-car garage, new central air conditioning and hardwood floors throughout. It is conveniently located to all amenities including being located within a half of a mile to the train station. It is approximately three miles from the town beaches.
This winter is projected to be a cold and bitter one, with many regions already experiencing record chills and snowfall. The Firefighters Association of the State of New York (FASNY) reminds New Yorkers to follow some essential safety tips when heating their homes this winter.
Fire departments usually see an uptick in home fires during the winter. Carbon monoxide (CO) exposure and poisonings also increase during these months.
“There is an increased risk of home fires and carbon monoxide poisoning this time of year as residents use space heaters, portable heating sources, gas furnaces, and fireplaces to heat their homes,” said FASNY President Edward Tase, Jr. “We encourage New Yorkers to take proper precautions when they heat their homes this season.”
According to the National Fire Prevention Association, heating equipment is the second leading cause of home fires and the third leading cause of home fire deaths. Space heaters are the type of equipment most often involved in home heating equipment fires, accounting for more than two of every five fires (44 percent), as well as the vast majority of deaths and injuries in home fires caused by heating equipment.
Homeowners should keep space heaters a safe distance from combustible materials, such as curtains, bedding, and
upholstered furniture. To prevent CO exposure and poisoning, avoid the indoor use of unvented gas-burning appliances, unvented gas or wood-burning stoves, and unvented fireplaces.
Home heating tips
• Keep anything that can burn at least three feet away from heating equipment.
• Have a three-foot “kid-free zone” around open fires and space heaters.
• Never use your oven to heat your home.
• Install stationary space heating equipment, water heaters or central heating equipment according to the local codes and manufacturer’s instructions by qualified professionals.
• Have heating equipment and chimneys cleaned and inspected every year by a qualified professional.
• Turn portable heaters off when leaving the room or going to bed.
• Use the right kind of fuel specified by the manufacturer, for fuel-burning space heaters.
• All fuel-burning equipment should be vented to the outside.
• Make sure the fireplace has a sturdy screen to stop sparks from flying into the room. Ashes should be cool before putting them in a metal container. Keep the container a safe distance away from your home.
• Test smoke alarms at least once a month.
Homes shown here represent closed sales, sold by a variety of agencies and are selected for their interest to readers by the Anton Media Group editor. Except where noted, data and photos are provided courtesy of Multiple Listing Service of Long Island, Inc. and Zillow.
locals might feel like they voted for Data but got Lore instead.
• In late January, Bowen Yang portrayed Santos in the congressman’s younger drag persona and in his current sweater-and-tie look on Saturday Night Live.
• Reps. Gregory Meeks and Joe Morelle of New York, the ranking members on the House Foreign Affairs Committee and the House Administration Committee, respectively, have pushed to deny Santos access to classified materials. Axios noted, “Santos is not likely to be regularly exposed to classified information as a member of the Small Business Committee and the Science, Space and
Technology Committee, but lawmakers still face few barriers in accessing classified information.”
• On January 24, after bringing coffee and donuts for reporters waiting at his office, “Santos’ political operation filed a flurry of amended campaign finance reports, telling the feds, among other things, that a $500,000 loan he gave to his campaign didn’t, in fact, come from his personal funds as he’d previously claimed,” reported The Daily Beast. “But new campaign finance filings first reported by [the site] did not shed light on where the funds actually came from,” noted The Guardian
• On Twitter, Santos weighed in on Iran: “I support the freedom protesters in #Iran 100%. I will do everything in my power to help end the reign of terror plaguing their lives. #Freedom”
Las Vegas Sands announced the launch of SandsNewYork.com, a new website created to share information on the project, encourage community collaboration, and directly engage local Long Islanders on their ideas, questions, and concerns.
“Sands is excited to take another meaningful step in connecting with community members. It has been a lot of fun to connect with our grassroots community leaders, some of which I grew up with and graduated high school with, and have real conversations on this transformational project, former New York State Governor and Sands Senior Vice President David Paterson said. “We welcome more community conversations that lead to even deeper local partnerships.” The website includes a page for small business owners, briefly describing the company’s local priorities and procurement processes, as well as a form for those seeking supplier opportunities. Additionally, it includes a Community Voices page, where quotes are displayed from local leaders and stakeholders who are supportive of the project, and in favor of community collaboration on
the proposal.
“We are not here to convince, we are here to collaborate. We are thrilled at the unprecedented amount of support we have received on this project from the local communities and we look forward to hearing from more Long Islanders who want to get involved,” said Ron Reese, senior vice president of global communications and corporate affairs for Las Vegas Sands. “SandsNewYork.com gives them a direct line to our team on the ground, and will empower communities to take advantage of all the opportunities this project represents.”
—Submitted by Las Vegas Sands
This is a theme puzzle with the subject stated below. Find the listed words in the grid. (They may run in any direction always in a straight line. Some letters are used more than once.) Ring each word as you find it and when you have pleted the puzzle, there will be 14 letters left over. They spell out the alternative theme of the puzzle.
ARIES (March 21-April 19). Young children can have di culty distinguishing between subjective worlds in their heads and the objective world we share. ey sometimes believe their thoughts can directly cause things to happen. It’s not all wrong. oughts do change things, but only when combined by action, as you’ll prove this week.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Getting where you’re supposed to be will not require you to be assertive this week, so you can relax knowing that if it’s the right door, it will open for you without work. It’s safe to make yourself like water, nding the path of least resistance. You’ll interact especially well with Scorpio and Pisces.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Many of the week’s interactions are based in an implicit social contract, the details of which may be di erent to each person involved. Since the speci cs of a “deal” are never talked about, it takes a lot of paying attention to gather and live up to what they are. You win loyalty making every e ort in this regard.
CANCER (June 22-July 22). Who is on your side? You, hopefully. Who else? Look around to see who is onboard with support for your goals. More importantly, who is onboard with support of you, just as you are, goals notwithstanding? Your support system should include people who don’t require you to be or do anything to be loved.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You can’t grow as a person without growing in awareness. New possibilities open when you can see, feel and know more. You welcome all chances to improve, even if they involve a moment of humility. No one said it would be comfortable. e opportunity to learn what you were doing wrong and correct it is a gift.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). What you pursue will run from you, and that’s just nature. e animals get around it. e lion stalks, the alligator sinks below the surface, the spider works on auspicious positioning then waits. You’ll think of your own less than obvious method of getting your prize and be quite e ective this week.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You eventually gure out what you’re supposed to do and do it. Whatever sort of false starts, missteps and confusion that happens before that is simply what it took to bring you onto the journey. How you got there will be a dim and inconsequential memory. It’s what you do when you get there that matters.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Your way will be made light this week, mostly by your own excellent attitude. You may compromise because it would be harder for the others involved to do the same. Still, it won’t be worth it unless you can do it gladly with love and nonchalance. Don’t put yourself in a position to be resentful further down the road.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You’re so good at getting along with di erent types of people that you will nd yourself in the role of a human bridge between people who otherwise wouldn’t get along without you. In the spirit of tolerance, you’ll set a ne example and bring harmony to the scene.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). e limits and rules you’ve set are quite reasonable considering your scene and the sort of people in it, therefore you won’t have to do much to enforce your boundaries. But this isn’t a “set it and forget it” kind of plan. Check back as things change. Be ready to make new systems for di erent seasons.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). ere are many wonderful things that come with you being you, just how you are right now and exactly how your mind and body are in this moment. Focusing on your uniqueness as an asset will put you in the mindset to maximize your gifts. e world will want to celebrate you, so let them.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Just in case someone out there is wondering how they can be a better friend to you, model the behavior you’d most love to receive. You’ve been there for yourself all along and know exactly how you want the world to support you. e more you give yourself what you need, the quicker others will be to follow suit.
ere’s a peace, a grace, a slow ease to the unfolding of this year. Serenity isn’t a butter y you’ll have to chase with a net because, in your many contemplative moments, it will land on your still shoulder. You will invent what helps you and end up helping many others. Mutual love and respect lead to adventurous plans with your favorite people. More highlights include a favorable international exchange, the sale of something old and an event you throw that’s the talk of the town.
Solution: 14 Letters
Alpha Atoll
Cove Cruise
Dalby
Dancing
Dawn Eton
Fine
Fraser Island
Gore
Hats
Humidity
Solution: 14 Letters
2023 Australian Word Games Dist. by Creators Syndicate Inc.
This is a theme puzzle with the subject stated below. Find the listed words in the grid. (They may run in any direction but always in a straight line. Some letters are used more than once.) Ring each word as you find it and when you have completed the puzzle, there will be 14 letters left over. They spell out the alternative theme of the puzzle.
FROM KING FEATURES SYNDICATE, 300 W. 57th STREET, 41st FLOOR, NEW YORK, NY 10019
Solution: Tropical escape
Creators Syndicate
CUSTOMER SERVICE: (800) 708-7311 EXT. 236
CONTRACT BRIDGE — BY STEVE BECKER
737 3rd Street Hermosa Beach, CA 90254 310-337-7003 info@creators.com
FOR RELEASE SUNDAY, FEB. 5, 2023
Date: 2/1/23
By Steve BeckerAt the second table, declarer did not cover the ten of clubs with dummy’s jack at trick one, following low instead. East had to play the eight (an honor would have cost a trick), whereupon South contributed the deuce!
West could do no better than to exit with a trump, whereupon South won, drew trump and played the ace and another club to establish the suit. When East now returned the diamond ten, declarer rose with the ace, led a club to the nine and discarded his remaining diamond on dummy’s last club to make his game.
lead — ten of clubs.
deal occurred in a team-offour match. Both North-South pairs reached four spades, and both Wests led the ten of clubs.
At the first table, declarer made the natural play of covering the ten with the jack. East played the queen, and South won with the ace and drew the opposing trumps. He then led a small club, hoping to quickly establish a discard for his diamond loser.
But East took the club nine with the king and returned the ten of diamonds. Whatever South did from this point on, he had to lose a diamond, a heart and another club to East’s eight for down one.
In finding the winning play, declarer reasoned that West’s lead was either a singleton or from the doubleton 10-8, marking East with both club honors. West was therefore virtually certain to have the king of diamonds for his two-heart overcall.
Next, whether West had one or two clubs, no harm could come from refusing to play the jack on the first trick. If East produced an honor card, declarer could win the trick, while if East produced the eight — proving that the ten was a singleton and that South would have to lose two clubs no matter what he did — the trick could be conceded in order to keep West on lead. This gave declarer the time he needed to set up the clubs before the opponents could establish a diamond trick.
Tomorrow: Famous Hand. ©2023 King Features
Enter digits from 1 to 9 into the blank spaces. Every row must contain one of each digit. So must every column, as must every 3x3 square.
Answer
issue’s
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On Sunday, January 15, five veterinarians plus vet techs & helpers volunteer their time & talents so 44 feral cats that had been trapped and brought in by people who signed up could be spay/neutered & vaccinated.
The same people help the cats recover post-surgery before returning them to where they were caught. This is the most cats Last Hope has done in one clinic since before COVID.
This effort is made possible in part by a $10,000 grant from the Bissel Pet Foundation to expand the trap, neuter and release program for members of the public who are helping feral cats.
With this generous grant , Last Hope will be able to subsidize 400 additional vouchers so cat caretakers do not pay full price for each of these feral cats to be spay/ neutered and vaccinated.
Last Hope will receive a $25 stipend for each of 400 vouchers we issue through our Fix-A-Feral program so Long Island residents can afford to spay/neuter and vaccinate community cats they are feeding and caring for outdoors.
This grant will lower the price Last Hope pays per cat so we can help more cats and people.
—Submitted by Last Hope Animal Rescue
North Hempstead Town Supervisor
Jennifer DeSena and Council Members
Robert Troiano, Jr. and Veronica Lurvey recently attended the NAACP’s Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. program at the “Yes We Can” Community Center in New Cassel on
January 16. The event was put together by the NAACP Westbury/New Cassel Branch #2184. Musical and dance routines were performed by local students.
—Submitted by the Town of North Hempstead
Congratulations to Kirsten Maurischat, Grand Prize Winner of the Manhasset Chamber of Commerce 2022 Holiday Poster Contest. The theme for this year’s poster contest was based on the original artwork “All Roads Lead Home” painted by Manhasset resident Alan Morris.
Pictured is Poster Contest Chairperson Nancy Morris, Nancy Morris State Farm Agency, presenting Kirsten, a fifth-grader at Shelter Rock School, with her grand prize at the Chamber’s recent Installation Luncheon held January 18.
(Photo by Manhasset Chamber of Commerce)
North Hempstead Town Supervisor
Jennifer DeSena and the Town Board will be hosting a Lunar New Year Celebration to welcome the Year of the Rabbit. The event will be held on Friday, February 10, 2023 at Mary Jane Davies Green, across from Town Hall at 220 Plandome Road, Manhasset. This free event is open to all. Festivities will include a lion dance troupe from the Chinese Center of Long Island, performances by the New York Chinese Chorus and Herricks Chinese Sing-ALong Group. The Great Neck Chinese Association will have a Chinese calligraphy demonstration. Additionally, there will be
God of Fortune characters from the Great Neck Chinese Association and Manhasset American Chinese Association.
There will be special Lunar New Year giveaways from the multiple organizations including Chinese Center of Long Island, Grace Roslyn Association for Chinese Enrichment (GRACE), Manhasset American Chinese Association, and Great Neck Chinese Association. Tidal Tea from Great Neck will be providing bubble tea at the event.
As part of the celebration, the Town will also be hosting a lantern art exhibit at the event. North Hempstead students can create their own lantern which will be on display in the park on the day of the event. Participating students can bring their
creations with them on the day of the event. This year’s community partners will include: the Chinese American Association of North Hempstead (CAANH), the Chinese Center for Long Island, Inc. (CCLI), the Grace Roslyn Association for Chinese Enrichment (GRACE), the Great Neck Chinese Association (GNCA), the Herricks Chinese Association (HCA), Herricks Korean Community (HKC), Manhasset Association of Chinese Americans (MACA), Korean Community Services (KCS) and WAC Lighting.
—Submitted by the Town of North Hempstead
While it’s a brand new year, scammers are still up to their old tricks, pretending to be PSEG Long Island or prominent area utilities and threatening to immediately turn off service for nonpayment. PSEG Long Island urges customers to understand scammers’ tactics and do the right thing if confronted with a demand for payment: Get the truth from the real PSEG Long Island at 1-800-490-0025.
“This year, make a resolution that’s easy to keep: If someone threatens to immediately shut off your power, call the number that’s printed on your bill to verify before acting,” said Lou DeBrino, PSEG Long Island’s vice president of Customer Services. “Scammers do everything they can to create the impression of an urgent problem in the hopes that you panic and miss all the clues that they’re not who they appear to be.
PSEG Long Island wants customers to be alert to the possibility of a scam, take a moment to think, and then contact us directly using the phone number on their bill if they’re still not sure.”
More than 2,500 scam calls were reported to PSEG Long Island in 2022. Many of these scammers are demanding immediate payment via web-based electronic payment services. PSEG Long Island does not accept external, web-based electronic payment services (outside of payments through MyAccount) as a method of payment.
What customers should know about payment scams
Scammers impersonating PSEG Long Island most frequently threaten to shut off power immediately unless payment is made.
Many scammers use phone “spoofing” technology to make their number display on your phone as “PSEG Long Island.”
PSEG Long Island will never request that customers use one specific method of payment.
Scammers typically want their victims to transfer money via a web-based electronic payment service, a prepaid debit card, or even Bitcoin, sometimes asking people to buy a prepaid card at
(Getty Images)
the nearest convenience store and then to read them the PIN over the phone.
PSEG Long Island does not accept web-based electronic payment services, prepaid debit cards or Bitcoin as payment. Sometimes phone scammers will demand a deposit for a
priority meter installation. PSEG Long Island does not require a deposit for meter installations. If a customer has doubts about the legitimacy of a call or an email — especially one in which payment is requested — they should call the company directly at 1-800-490-0025.
Occasionally, scammers may go door to door impersonating PSEG Long Island employees, flashing a fake ID and/or claiming to be a utility collection representative. The impostors may wear “uniforms” or affix false company signs to their vehicles. The scammers generally ask for personal information, which real utility representatives do not do, or offer bogus discounts. Again, if customers have any doubts, they should not let the person in, and should call 1-800-490-0025 to verify.
PSEG Long Island employees
must carry a company ID and present it when requested. If customers have doubts, do not let the person into the house and call 1-800-490-0025 to have a customer service representative verify that an employee has been dispatched to the location. An actual PSEG Long Island employee will respect the customer’s decision and remain outside. If the person
escalates their efforts to enter the home, customers should consider calling 911.
Fake websites
Some scammers purchase web domains that closely resemble the actual URL of a utility and create a fraudulent replica of the legitimate website. Their plan is to dupe users who click on
these fake sites via search results, or type in an inaccurate web address. Once on the spoofed site, a visitor is presented a number of bill payment options, all pointing back to an outside bill pay site.
PSEG Long Island always uses the “.com” domain. Its real website can be found at www. psegliny.com.
How actual PSEG Long Island reps handle phone calls
Customers should also know what PSEG Long Island will and won’t discuss over the phone. A genuine PSEG Long Island representative will ask to speak to the Customer of Record. If that person is available, the representative will explain why they are calling and provide the account name, address and current balance. If the person on the phone does not provide the correct information, it is likely the customer is not speaking with a PSEG Long Island representative.
If the Customer of Record is not available, the PSEG Long Island representative will not discuss the account at all and ask that a message be left for the Customer of Record to call 1-800-490-0025.
PSEG Long Island is a member of the Utilities United Against Scams (UUAS) collaborative.
PURPOSE: THE FILING OF NEW TARIFF AMMENDMENTS TO P.S.C. NO. 1 GAS TO COMPLY WITH THE COMMISSION’S ORDERS DATED JANUARY 19, 2023, IN P.S.C. CASES 4-M-0565 AND 20-M-0266.
TEXT: Notice is hereby given that Keyspan Gas East Corporation d/b/a National Grid has led new tari amendments with the Public Service Commission to comply with the Commission’s Order is dated January 19, 2023, to become e ective February 1, 2023.
Keyspan Gas East Corporation d/b/a National Grid (“KEDLI”) led tari revisions in response to a New York State Public Service Commission (“PSC”) Order Authorizing Phase 2 Arrears Reduction Program. Phase 2 of the Arrears Reduction Program provides automatic relief through direct bill credits to residential non-Energy A ordability Program (“EAP”) and small-commercial customers who have eligible arrears and who did not receive relief under the Phase 1 program, by issuing a one-time bill credit to reduce or eliminate accrued arrears through May 1, 2022. The PSC Order also establishes the Arrears Management Program (“AMP”) Phase 2 Surcharge to recover costs of these bill credits e ective February 1, 2023.
Notice is hereby given that starting on February 1, 2023, the AMP Phase 2 Surcharge will commence on customer bills and will be included in the Delivery Revenue Adjustment line. The AMP surcharge is located on the KEDLI website. For Residential customers: https://www.nationalgridus.com/Long-Island-NY-Home/Bills-Meters-and-Rates/ ?regionkey=nylongisland&customertype=home and Business customers https://www.nationalgridus.com/Long-Island-NY-Business/Bills-Meters-and-Rates /?regionkey=nylongisland&customertype=business
Copies of the proposed revisions are available for public inspection and can be obtained on the Company’s website at https://www.nationalgridus.com
UUAS, a consortium of more than 145 U.S. and Canadian electric, water, and natural gas utilities and their respective trade associations, has helped to create awareness of common and new scam tactics and to cease operations of nearly 5,000 toll-free numbers used against
utility customers by scammers. For more information on various payment scams reported in the PSEG Long Island service area and around the country, visit https://www.psegliny.com/ myaccount/customersupport/ scamsandfraud.
—Submitted by PSEG
The Manhasset Great Neck Camera Club will hold a meeting on Monday, February 13, 2023 at 6:30 P.M. at the Manhasset Public Library, located at 30 Onderdonk Ave, Manhasset, NY 11030. This meeting will feature a “Competition Evening” where skilled club members will have their work judged by master photographer Paul Bernstein who will also provide instructive technical comments, as the photos are shown on a large screen. Paul is a former President of the Professional Photographers Society of NY State, 2015-2016.
A “Meet and Greet” takes place between 6 - 6:30 P.M. Our meetings are open to all. We are a welcoming group of photographers in an active club and can assist all classes and skill levels of digital photographers, from iPhone, Point & Shoot, Beginners, and Advanced. Visit our web site MGNCC.ORG which has links to the “Color Wheel”, our club newsletter, and a wealth of photography information. For further information, please email mgncc@optonline.net.
—Submitted by the Manhasset-Great Neck Camera Club
REFEREE’S NOTICE OF SALE IN FORECLOSURE SUPREME COURTCOUNTY OF NASSAU
U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE, SUCCESSOR-IN-INTEREST TO BANK OF AMERICA, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE, SUCCESSOR BY MERGER TO LASALLE BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION., AS TRUSTEE FOR ZUNI MORTGAGE LOAN TRUST
2006-OA1 MORTGAGE
LOAN PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES
2006-OA1, Plaintiffagainst - NANCY BATTAGLIA-MICKLES, et al Defendant(s).
Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered on February 3, 2017. I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction on the North Side steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court located at 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, N.Y. 11501
“Rain or Shine” on the 21st day of February, 2023 at 2:30 PM. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the Incorporated Village of Plandome Heights, County of Nassau and State of New York.
Premises known as 2 Shore Road, Manhasset, NY 11030.
(Section: 3, Block: 171, Lot: 312)
Approximate amount of lien
$903,742.38 plus interest and costs.
Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed judgment and terms of sale.
Index No. 004468/2008.
Ralph Madalena, Esq., Referee.
McCalla Raymer Leibert
Pierce, LLC
Attorney(s) for Plaintiff
420 Lexington Avenue, Suite 840 New York, NY 10170 Tel. 347/286-7409
For sale information, please visit Auction.com at www. Auction.com or call (800)
280-2832
Dated: December 20, 2022
During the COVID-19 health emergency, bidders are required to comply with all governmental health requirements in effect at the time of sale including but not limited to, wearing face coverings and maintaining social distancing (at least 6-feet apart) during the auction, while tendering deposit and at any subsequent closing. Bidders are also required to comply with the Foreclosure Auction Rules and COVID-19 Health Emergency Rules issued by the Supreme Court of this County in addition to the conditions set forth in the Terms of Sale.
2-8-1; 1-25-18-2023-4T#237306-MAN
Notice is hereby given that commencing on February 21st, 2023, will sell at public on-line auction the tax liens on certain real estate, unless the owner, mortgagee, occupant of or any other party in interest in such real estate shall have paid to the County Treasurer by February 16th, 2023 the total amount of such unpaid taxes or assessments with the interest, penalties and other expenses and charges against the property.
Such tax liens will be sold at the lowest rate of interest, not exceeding 10 percent per six-month period, for which any person or persons shall offer to take the total amount of such unpaid taxes as defined in Section 5-37.0 of the Nassau County Administrative Code.
Effective with the February 2019 lien sale Ordinance No. 175-2015 requires a $175.00 per day registration fee for each person who intends to bid at the tax lien sale.
Ordinance No. 175-2015 also requires that upon the issuance of the Lien Certificate there is due from the lien buyer a Tax Certificate Issue Fee of $20.00 per lien purchased. Pursuant to the provisions of the Nassau County Administrative Code at the discretion of the Nassau County Treasurer the auction will be conducted online. Further information concerning the procedures for the auction is available at the website of the Nassau County Treasurer at: https://www.nassaucountyny. gov/526/County-Treasurer
Should the Treasurer determine that an in-person auction shall be held, same will commence on the 21st day of February 2023 at the Office of The County Treasurer 1 West Street, Mineola or at some other location to be determined by the Treasurer.
A list of all real estate in Nassau County on which tax liens are to be sold is available at the website of the Nassau County Treasurer at: https://www.nassaucoun tyny.gov/527/AnnualTax-Lien-Sale
A list of local properties upon which tax liens are to be sold will be advertised in this publication on or before February 08th, 2023.
Nassau County does not discriminate on the basis of disability in admission to or access to, or treatment or employment in, its services, programs, or activities. Upon request, accommodations such as those required by the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) will be provided to enable individuals with disabilities to participate in all services, programs, activities and public hearings and events conducted by the Treasurer’s Office. Upon request,
information can be made available in Braille, large print, audio-tape or other alternative formats. For additional information, please call (516) 571-2090 ext. 1-3715.
Dated: January 25, 2023
THE NASSAU COUNTY TREASURER Mineola, NewYork TERMS OF SALE
Such tax liens shall be sold subject to any and all superior tax liens of sovereignties and other municipalities and to all claims of record which the County may have thereon and subject to the provisions of the Federal and State Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Civil Relief Acts. However, such tax liens shall have priority over the County’s Differential Interest Lien, representing the excess, if any, of the interest and penalty borne at the maximum rate over the interest and penalty borne at the rate at which the lien is purchased.
The Purchaser acknowledges that the tax lien(s) sold pursuant to these Terms of Sale may be subject to pending bankruptcy proceedings and/or may become subject to such proceedings which may be commenced during the period in which a tax lien is held by a successful bidder or the assignee of same, which may modify a Purchaser’s rights with respect to the lien(s) and the property securing same. Such bankruptcy proceedings shall not affect the validity of the tax lien. In addition to being subject to pending bankruptcy proceedings and/or the Federal and State Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Civil Relief Acts, said purchaser’s right of foreclosure may be affected by the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act(FIRREA),12 U.S.C. ss 1811 et.seq., with regard to real property under Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation(FDIC) receivership.
The County Treasurer reserves the right, without further notice and at any time, to withdraw from sale any of the parcels of land or premises herein listed. The Nassau County Treasurer reserves the right to intervene in any bankruptcy case/litigation where the property affected by the tax liens sold by the Treasurer is part of the bankruptcy estate. However, it is the sole responsibility of all tax lien purchasers to protect their legal interests in any bankruptcy case affecting their purchased tax lien, including but not limited to the filing of a proof of claim on their behalf, covering their investment in said tax lien. The Nassau County Treasurer and Nassau County and its agencies, assumes no responsibility for any legal representation of any tax lien purchaser in any legal proceeding including but not limited to a bankruptcy case where the purchased tax lien is at risk.
The rate of interest and penalty at which any person purchases the tax lien shall be established by his bid. Each
purchaser, immediately after the sale thereof, shall pay to the County Treasurer ten per cent of the amount for which the tax liens have been sold and the remaining ninety per cent within thirty days after such sale. If the purchaser at the tax sale shall fail to pay the remaining ninety per cent within ten days after he has been notified by the County Treasurer that the certificates of sale are ready for delivery, then all amounts deposited with the County Treasurer including but not limited to the ten per cent theretofore paid by him shall, without further notice or demand, be irrevocably forfeited by the purchaser and shall be retained by the County Treasurer as liquidated damages and the agreement to purchase shall be of no further effect. Time is of the essence in this sale. This sale is held pursuant to the Nassau County Administrative Code and interested parties are referred to such Code for additional information as to terms of the sale, rights of purchasers, maximum rates of interest and other legal incidents of the sale.
Furthermore, as to the bidding,
1. The bidder(s) agree that they will not work with any other bidder(s) to increase, maintain or stabilize interest rates or collaborate with any other bidder(s) to gain an unfair competitive advantage in the random number generator in the event of a tie bid(s) on a tax certificate. Bidder(s) further agree not to employ any bidding strategy designed to create an unfair competitive advantage in the tiebreaking process in the upcoming tax sale nor work with any other bidder(s) to engage in any bidding strategy that will result in a rotational award of tax certificates.
2. The tax certificate(s) the Bidder will bid upon, and the interest rate(s) bid, will be arrived at independently and without direct or indirect consultation, communication or agreement with any other bidder and that the tax certificate(s) the Bidder will bid upon, and the interest rate(s) to be bid, have not been disclosed, directly or indirectly, to any other bidder, and will not be disclosed, directly or indirectly, to any other bidder prior to the close of bidding. No attempt has been made or will be made to, directly or indirectly, induce any other bidder to refrain from bidding on any tax certificate, to submit complementary bids, or to submit bids at specific interest rates.
3. The bids to be placed by the Bidder will be made in good faith and not pursuant to any direct or indirect, agreement or discussion with, or inducement from, any other bidder to submit a complementary or other noncompetitive bid.
4. If it is determined that the bidder(s) have violated any of these bid requirements then
their bid shall be voided and if they were the successful bidder the lien and any deposits made in connection with said bid shall be forfeited.
Dated: January 25, 2023
THE NASSAU COUNTY TREASURER Mineola, New York 2-1; 1-25-2023-2T-#237560MAN
LEGAL NOTICE
Inc. Village of Plandome is hereby given that the Tentative Assessment Roll of the Inc. Village of Plandome for the fiscal year beginning June 1, 2023 and ending May 31, 2024 will be available for inspection in the office of the Village Clerk, 65 South Drive, Plandome NY on Wednesday, February 1, 2023 during business hours. 9:00am 3:00pm.
On Tuesday, February 14, 2023 from 12:00pm 4:00pm, The Board of Assessment Review will be available at the aforementioned location to receive complaints relative to said 2023-2024 Tentative Assessment Roll. By order of the Board of Trustees. Barbara Peebles, Village Clerk/Treasurer.
Date January 25, 2023. 2-1-2023-1T-#237878-MAN
LEGAL NOTICE
PUBLIC HEARING VILLAGE OF FLOWER HILL BOARD OF TRUSTEES
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE, that the Incorporated Village of Flower Hill will hold a Regular Meeting and the following new public hearings on Monday, February 6. 2023 at 7:30 p.m. at Village Hall, 1 Bonnie Heights Road, Manhasset, NY:
1. Proposed Local Law A -2023 “Regulating Signs in the Right of Way”
2. Proposed Local Law B2022 “Amend section 172-11 “Property Maintenance”
3. Proposed Local Law C-2023 “Amending Chapter 235, Wireless Telecommunication Facilities” This meeting is open to the public. Persons who may suffer from a disability which would prevent them from participating in said hearing should notify Ronnie Shatzkamer, Village Clerk, at (516) 627-5000 in sufficient time to permit such arrangements to be made to enable
such persons to participate in said hearing. By Order of the Board of Trustees
Ronnie Shatzkamer, Village Administrator Flower Hill, New York
Dated: February 1, 2023
2-1-2023-1T-#238072-MAN
LEGAL NOTICE
BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS
February 16th, 2023, 8:00pm
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE
that the Zoning Board of Appeals of the Inc. Village of Plandome Manor will hold a public hearing on Thursday, February 16th, 2023, at 8:00 p.m. Pursuant to Chap. 417 of the Laws of 2021. This meeting will be held in-person at Village Hall, 55 Manhasset Avenue, Manhasset, NY 11030.
BZA2022-10 Application of Mr. and Mrs. Quinn, 30 Elm Sea Lane, Manhasset, is requesting a variance for the following to increase the maximum allowable floor area from 6,178 S.F. to 6,342 S.F. is proposed; Variance to reduce the minimum required open space ratio from 65% To 63.33% is proposed.
BZA2022-2 Application of Mr. Pilavas, 280 Stonytown Road, Manhasset, is requesting a variance for a proposed dwelling that does not comply with Chapter 225 (Zoning)
Section 225-7 of the Village Code of the Village of Plandome Manor, Sky Exposure Plane and Section 225 Attachments 3 4. The sky exposure plane is interrupted in the side yard. BY ORDER OF THE
ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS
MARIO HARRIS, CHAIRMAN
KATHERINE HANNON, VILLAGE CLERK
Dated: January 27th, 2023
2-1-2023-1T-#238140-MAN
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
Town of North HempsteadBoard of Zoning Appeals
Pursuant to the provisions of the Code of the Town of North Hempstead, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Board of Zoning Appeals of said Town will
meet at Town Hall, 220 Plandome Road, Manhasset, New York, on Wednesday, February 15, 2023 to consider any matters that may properly be heard by said Board, and will hold a public hearing on said date to consider applications and appeals.
The following cases will be called at said public hearing starting at 10:00am.
APPEAL #21348 1285 Northern Boulevard, LLC (BMW of Manhasset); 1275 1285 Northern Blvd. and 22 Norgate Rd., Manhasset, Section 3, Block 53, Lots 38, 53, 54 942; Zoned Business-A/Residence C
Conditional use 70-126(D) and Variances 70-103(A) (1), 70-103(F), 70-132(A), 70-203(G), 70-212(B), and 70-229(A) to construct a new one-story building for use as an automobile dealership which is a conditional use (parking, storage and sale of automobiles) with not enough parking, no loading or unloading areas, with no landscaped buffer against an adjoining residential district, with storage of vehicles too close to the front property line (with no screening provided) and within the required front yard, and not in compliance with a prior BZA decision (not in compliance with restrictive covenant). Plans are available for public viewing at https://northhempsteadny.gov/bza. Persons interested in viewing the full file may do so by any time before the scheduled hearing by contacting the BZA department via e-mail at BZAdept@northhempsteadny.gov.
Additionally, the public may view the live stream of this meeting at https:// northhempsteadny.gov/ townboardlive.
Any member of the public is able to attend and participate in a BZA hearing by appearing on the scheduled date and time. Comments are limited to 3 minutes per speaker. Written comments are accepted by email up to 60 minutes prior to the hearing. Timely comment submissions will be made part of the record.
DAVID MAMMINA, R.A., Chairman; Board of Zoning Appeals 2-1-2023-1T-#238173-MAN
In an inspiring story about neighbors helping neighbors, the local fixture, Raindew Manhasset, and its owner, Kevin Bordeman, are providing tremendous support in ordering and delivering products at cost to Port Provides, powered by The Nicholas Center.
The Nicholas Center, a local Port Washington nonprofit that provides exceptional programming to adults with autism who have aged out of the school system, recently launched Port Provides, powered by The Nicholas Center. This program acts as an emergency supply chain to provide food and daily necessities to over 1,400 Port Washington men, women, children, infants, and senior citizens.
This program acts as an emergency supply chain to provide food and daily necessities to over 1,400 underserved Port Washington men, women, children, infants, and senior citizens. These individuals, living at or below the poverty line, would not otherwise have their basic needs met. Participants of The Nicholas Center, a local nonprofit delivering exceptional programming to adults with Autism, order, sort, bag, and deliver: meat, diapers in all sizes, wipes, feminine hygiene products, soap, laundry detergent, dishwashing liquid, toothpaste and brushes, paper towels, and toilet paper.
These individuals, living at or below the poverty line, would not otherwise have their basic needs met. The Nicholas Center participants order, sort, bag, and deliver meat, diapers in all sizes, wipes, feminine hygiene products, soap, laundry detergent, dishwashing liquid, toothpaste and brushes, paper towels, and toilet paper. The packages are delivered to 5 local food banks and organizations including the Lutheran Church of Our Savior, who then hand them out to 1,400 local underserved people.
The dry goods are all sourced by Raindew. The packages go to 5 local food banks and organizations including the Lutheran Church of Our Savior, who then distribute them to 1,400 local underserved people. The program, which was begun by the Community Chest of Port Washington during COVID, is an inspiring example of neighbors raising up neighbors—working hand-in-hand to solve hunger and need right here in our own backyard. Although some funding has been received from the Community Chest and the Mother Cabrini Health Foundation, The Nicholas Center is asking for community support to keep this vital program going.
The program, which was begun by the Community Chest of Port Washington during COVID, is an inspiring example of neighbors raising up neighbors – working hand-in-hand to solve hunger and need right here in our own backyard. Although funding has been received from the Community Chest and the Mother Cabrini Health Foundation, The Nicholas Center is asking for community support to keep this vital program going. Donations can be made to a Nicholas Center GoFundMe on tncnewyork.org
Every dollar contributed is fully tax-deductible and will directly go to purchase and deliver the supplies. The Nicholas Center also invites the community to participate in this program through Mitzvah projects, diaper drives, Girl and Boy Scout troop projects, and the like. To find out how you can help, please contact Brooke Mellett at brookemellett@nicholascenterusa.org or 516-767-7177, ext. 412.
Donations can be made to a Nicholas Center GoFundMe on tncnewyork.org Every dollar contributed is fully tax-deductible and will directly go to purchase and deliver the supplies. The Nicholas Center also invites the community to participate in this program through Mitzvah projects, diaper drives, Girl and Boy Scout troop projects, and the like. To find out how you can help, please contact Brooke Mellett at Brookemellet@nicholascenterusa.org or at 516-767-7177, ext. 412.
—Submitted by The Nicholas Center
North Hempstead Town Clerk Ragini Srivastava, Town Supervisor Jennifer DeSena and the Town Board are proud to announce the return of the popular Valentine’s Day Marriage Vow Renewal ceremony. The event, now in its fourteenth year, will allow couples who wish to celebrate their milestone anniversaries to reaffirm their commitment. The renewal ceremony is scheduled for Tuesday, Febr. 14, at 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Harbor Links Golf Course in Port Washington.
A lunch and champagne toast will be served following the ceremony at a cost of
$18 per person. Due to overwhelming demand and limited seating, you must reserve a place in advance. For more information, please call 311.
—Submitted by the Town of North Hempstead
Supervisor Jen DeSena of North Hempstead joined with her partners in Nassau County government, Oyster Bay Town Supervisor Joseph Saladino and Supervisor Don Clavin of Hempstead, to denounce an ill-conceived progressive proposal that would impact Long Island suburbs and single-family home zoning. The latest proposal by Governor Hochul, seemingly a repeat of last year’s plan to turn suburban neighborhoods into overcrowded urban centers, would result in thousands of apartments and high density housing flooding every community, as well as spot zoning in which large scale apartment buildings could pop up next to single-family homes.
“We must save our suburbs from this ill-conceived plan as it would overcrowd classrooms, greatly increase traffic and cars parked on our streets, strain emergency services and threaten the environment,” said Supervisor Saladino. “While some Albany leaders want to blame the local of affordable housing for the mass migration leaving our State, we all know the real reason people are fleeing New York is
crushing taxes, rising crime and government overreach which threatens individual rights.”
The three Town Supervisors joined local neighbors to voice their concerns of how the Governor’s urbanization plan would negatively impact the environment, traffic,
parking, emergency services, police protection, local utilities and schools. They also asked the public to join them in contacting state officials to demand that this proposal not be included in the Governor’s budget.
“Removing the rights of residents to have a say over their communities is a direct
threat to democracy, especially when you silence the voices of residents and replace their say over development projects with an unaccountable, bureaucratic board located hundreds of miles away in Albany,” Supervisor Saladino added.
—Submitted by Town of Oyster Bay
jprisco@antonmediagroup.com
At night on Saturday, Jan. 21, a car traveling northbound on North Plandome Road crashed into a tree in a single-car accident. The car caught on fire with the driver inside.
Port Washington resident Thomas McNamara, Esq. emailed the Port Washington News detailing the accident and sharing that Town of North Hempstead Councilwoman Mariann Dalimonte assisted in controlling the situation before first responders arrived.
The Port Washington News reached out to Councilwoman Dalimonte to comment on her involvement in the aftermath of the car accident.
“I was in my kitchen in my pajamas when all of a sudden, the whole house shook,” said Councilwoman Dalimonte. “I jumped up and ran outside to the car on fire.”
The loud accident drew the attention of
many residents of North Plandome Road. Someone had already called 911 when Councilwoman Dalimonte got outside. Immediately, she jumped into problem-solving mode and helped manage the situation.
“I asked one neighbor to direct traffic and bring cars up Reid Avenue and another neighbor to bring traffic down Huntington Road,” said Councilwoman Dalimonte. “I told them not to let any cars in here.”
Councilwoman Dalimonte asked her neighbors for a fire extinguisher and a neighbor brought one out to the scene.
“There was gas leaking, the car hit the tree then bounced from the tree into the telephone pole,” said Councilwoman Dalimonte. “I told everyone to step back. I got the fire extinguisher and put the fire out.”
Councilwoman Dalimonte and her friend, Debbie Harari, made sure there was no one else in the car. The interior of the car was black, and it was dark outside, making it hard for Dalimonte and Harari to see in the car. They opened the back doors and felt around to ensure the driver was the only occupant of the car.
“I held onto that fire extinguisher because I didn’t know if the car would spark again,” said Councilwoman Dalimonte. “I kept on looking on the ground because the car was low, making sure nothing caught on fire
again. It was a scary situation.”
The Port Washington Fire Department and Police Department arrived shortly after the fire was out. Residents got to the side of the road to make room for the first responders to take control of the situation.
First Assistant Chief Matthew Kerin was the first on the scene, followed by Chief of the Department Brian Waterson.
“Multiple PWPD units and myself arrived within minutes,” said Chief Kerin. “As we approached the scene, we observed that the vehicle was no longer on fire, and the occupant had already been removed from the vehicle.
“Immediate care was started for the
occupant, who was subsequently transported by a PWFD ambulance to North Shore University Hospital in Manhasset for further evaluation,” said Chief Kerin. At the time of publication, there is no information available to the public about his well-being.
The PWFD and PWPD squads both took control of the accident site seamlessly.
“The swift and extraordinary actions of Councilwoman Dalimonte, in extinguishing the fire and removing the occupant, made all the difference in what could have been a potentially tragic outcome,” said Chief Kerin.
“Our fire department and our police department are absolutely amazing,” Councilwoman Dalimonte said.
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