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N E W S P A P E R
VOLUME SIXTEEN, ISSUE 14
24 PAGES
THURSDAY, MAY 15, 2014 HALF HOLLOW HILLS
The Paramount Spotlight
Hills Community Meets Its Candidates Long Islander News photo/Arielle Dollinger
Rusted Root makes it fourth Paramount appearance next Friday, May 23, performing with The Wailers.
RustedRoot ReturnsWith TheWailers By Peter Sloggatt psloggatt@longislandernews.com
They’re Pittsburgh guys, but there will always be an unbreakable connection linking Rusted Root to The Paramount. When The Paramount first opened less than three years ago, Rusted Root was the first act to play there. The concert served as a “softopening” for the Huntington concert venue, which gave management an opportunity to test technical systems and work out the kinks before going (Continued on page A15)
Seven of the eight candidates for the Half Hollow Hills Board of Education tried to convince community members why they should vote for them at a Meet the Candidates night on May 7. By Arielle Dollinger adollinger@longislandernews.com
Seven of the eight candidates running this election season for spots on the Half Hollow Hills school board took the stage of the Candlewood Middle School Auditorium last week to answer community members’ questions as the May 20 election approaches. The candidates, save for Matthew Glaser, who said he could not attend due to an “unavoidable work conflict,” addressed questions about Common Core, school closures and a topic that became what seemed to be an unexpectedly-heated one – the possibility of recording to meetings
to post them online. Incumbent Diana Acampora said that the concept was “interesting” but, while she thinks it should be considered, she feels that education should be a “hands-on experience.” “The interaction that can be achieved from actually being in attendance is kind of like the difference between watching a sporting event on TV and actually being in the stadium,” she said. “It loses something in the translation.” First-time candidate Adam Kleinberg’s position in favor of posting meetings online was met with applause. “These incumbents had three years to enact something like this,” he said. “We’re
pretending like this is a new concept in 2014? Not only should we be putting the meetings online, our entire policy book should be online… Go on any other school district website, you’ll find their policy book; you won’t find it here.” And as far as “hands-on experience” goes, Kleinberg said that the sort of “hands-on experience” meeting-goers receive may not be ideal. “When somebody asks a question of the board at a public board meeting, and they’re met with blank stares, and somebody just staring at their attorney looking for the answers. I don’t think that’s the hands-on experience anyone of us is looking for,” (Continued on page A17)
TOWN OF HUNTINGTON
Town On Hook For Sex Scandal Bill Appellate court upholds ruling ordering town to pay Harbormaster’s legal fees By Danny Schrafel dschrafel@longislandernews.com
The Town of Huntington could be on the hook for what could be a multi-million dollar legal bill tied to a lurid sex scandal that gripped Huntington in the early 2000s. A panel of judges on the New York State Supreme Court Appellate Division’s second department ruled unanimously May 7 to throw out the town’s appeal of a May 9, 2012 order by State Supreme Court Justice Joseph Farneti. The ruling affirmed an arbitrator’s or-
der for the town to pay the legal fees of Harbormaster William Perks following his sexual harassment suit against former Huntington Councilwoman Susan Scarpati-Reilly. Town spokesman A.J. Carter said Monday that “special counsel is reviewing the decision and deciding how next to proceed.” Because of the unanimous ruling, the town does not have an automatic right of appeal to the Court of Appeals, New York’s highest state court, and justices on that bench must agree to hear the case if the town mounts a final appeal.
Should the Appellate division’s ruling stand, the amount due to Perks for services provided by his attorney, Northport-based Edward Yule, will then be determined. After the State Supreme Court ruling two years ago, Yule said in a Long Islander News report he’s owed $2.9 million, plus 9-percent interest since the arbitrator’s ruling was issued in February 2009, and he’s gearing up to fight for the town to pay him that sum. The case began more than a decade ago (Continued on page A14)
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