East Meadow Herald 07-25-2024

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Kicking back at Fire Fest

The East Meadow Fire Department recently hosted its Craft Beer and Food Truck Festival, drawing an eager crowd of participants. Attendees enjoyed unlimited beer sampling from over 25 local breweries and distilleries and indulged in treats from top food trucks.

Right, Kelly Weeks, Susan Mongello, Samantha Mongello, Victoria Capasso and Alba Dougherty came out to enjoy drinks and a good time. Above, Jessica Spindell and Tristan Bocchi were served beer from Kait Byrnes of Narragansett Beer. For more on the event, and how to join the East Meadow Fire Department, story and more photos, Page 3.

Presenting Sponsor:

East Meadow man facing hate crime charges

Months after antisemitic graffiti was discovered on fences in East Meadow and on the sidewalks in front of the East Meadow Beth-El Jewish Center, an East Meadow man is now being charged with multiple hate crimes, authorities said.

The suspect, identified as Sebastian Patino Caceres, 23, was arraigned before Judge Colin O’Donnell in Mineola on July 16, on charges of thirddegree criminal mischief as a hate crime; six counts of fourth-degree criminal mischief as a hate crime; third-degree criminal mischief; six counts of fourth-degree criminal mischief; seven counts of making graffiti; and possession of graffiti instruments.

monitoring, according to the Nassau County District Attorney’s Office.

In New York state, pretrial services provide a range of support and supervision to individuals awaiting trial to ensure they return to court and comply with any conditions set by the judge.

M y office has no tolerance for these offensive criminal actions that target entire communities and their security.

ANNE DoNNEllY Nassau County district attorney

Patino Caceres pleaded not guilty and was released to pretrial services with electronic

Sometime between April 14 and 15, Patino Caceres allegedly spray-painted several antisemitic phrases on PVC fencing on the rear yards of private properties along Merrick Avenue, authorities said. The graffiti, found on the morning of April 15, included phrases like “Zionism is Nazism” and “F-ck Israel.” The phrases were discovered on plastic sheeting affixed to the fencing protecting a mural of Israeli citizens who were taken hostage by Hamas on Oct. 7, 2023. Debbie Habshoosh, whose

Continued on page 5

Holden Leeds/Herald photos

News brief

State Sen. Steve Rhoads will host a breakfast and resource fair for veterans residing in Senate District 5 at the Church of St. Jude in Wantagh.

Sen. Rhoads to host free veterans breakfast

New York State Senator Steve Rhoads will honor local veterans by hosting a free Veterans Pancake Breakfast and Resource Fair on Saturday, Aug. 3 from 10 a.m. to noon.

This event will allow veterans the opportunity to connect with one another and agencies dedicated to helping veterans. Veterans must reside in Senate District 5 – which includes Wantagh, Seaford, Levittown, Bellmore, Merrick

and East Meadow – or be part of a veteran’s organization in Senate District 5.

The breakfast will take place at the Church of St. Jude, located at 3606 Lufberry Ave in Wantagh. Veterans are welcome to bring one guest. Call Senator Rhoads’ District Office at 516-882-0630 by Friday, July 26 to RSVP for this event.

Congrats to the newlyweds!

East Meadow residents Ricardo Matos Lobo and Valerie Garcia had their wedding officiated by Hempstead Town Clerk Kate Murray at Hempstead Town Hall last month. Residents interested in obtaining their marriage license or scheduling a wedding ceremony should call the Office of the Town Clerk at (516) 812-3014 or visit HempsteadNY.gov/marriage.

Courtesy office of State Sen. Steve Rhoads
Courtesy Town of Hempstead

Community supports EMFD at Fire Fest

The East Meadow Fire Department recently held its Craft Beer and Food Truck Festival, Fire Fest. This festival took place on July 13 and saw a great turnout.

Attendees of this event had the opportunity to enjoy unlimited beer sampling, drinks from over 25 local breweries and distilleries, enjoy treats from top food trucks, while participating in exciting activities.

One activity was axe throwing, set up by Alpha Axe Throwing, Long Island’s first mobile axe throwing company. The objective of this game is to throw an axe from a distance toward a target to score points. The closer the axe lands to the bullseye, the more points you receive.

Throughout the entire festival, attendees were also able to watch a live performance from the John Byrnes Band, a Long Island-native rock ‘n’ roll band with a blues influence.

The U.S. Fire Administration found that the total number of fires in 2022 was reported at approximately 1.5 million, marking an increase from the previous years. This increase of emergencies acting concurrently with the massive decline in volunteers calls for an urgent need for more volunteer firefighters. Events like the Fire Fest allow fire departments to find potential volunteers and gain support, which helps contribute to filling this gap.

The East Meadow Fire Department is devoted to this cause, and they are constantly looking for new members to join them. For those who may be interested in volunteering but feel that they lack experience, the fire department provides all of the required training. There are also numerous benefits, includ-

ing tax breaks, college scholarships, annual health checkups, life insurance, and a service award pension program, all at no cost. For more information on volunteering with the East Meadow Fire Department, visit EastMeadowFD.com, or call (516) 542-4565.

–Jack Schwed
Holden Leeds/Herald photos
The Nassau County Firefigthers Pipe and Drum band at Fire Fest on July 13.
One of Fire Fest’s many local sponsors was Long Island Sands, who had a booth set up inside the main tent.
Christine Messina, Ashley Nevins, Nicole Kelly, Nicole Pappas and Michael Harold sampled a brew from Roger Wanner of Wa Meadwerks.
The John Byrnes Band provided entertainment while people enjoyed beer and other local brews, treats from food trucks and more.

Positive Aspects of Aging

Aging provides its own rewards, which only those who experience it really know, as the following quotes show.

“Getting old is like climbing a mountain; you get a little out of breath, but the view is much better!”

— Ingrid Bergman

“Nothing is inherently and invincibly young except spirit. And spirit can enter a human being perhaps better in the quiet of old age and dwell there more undisturbed than in turmoil of adventure.”

— George Santayana

“The older I get, the greater power I seem to have to help the world; I am like a snowball - the further I am rolled the more I gain.”

— Susan B. Anthony

“Why not just embrace it, go along with it and welcome it?”

—Helen Mirren

“I believe the second half of one’s life is meant to be better than the first half. The first half is finding out how you do it. And the second half is enjoying it.”

— Frances Lear

“Beautiful young people are accidents of nature, but beautiful old people are works of art.”

— Eleanor Roosevelt

“The complete life, the perfect pattern, includes old age as well as youth and maturity. The beauty of the morning and the radiance of noon are good, but it would be a very silly person who drew the curtains and turned on the light in order to shut out the tranquility of the evening. Old age has its pleasures, which, though different, are not less than the pleasures of youth.”

W. Somerset Maugham

“There is a fountain of youth; it is your mind, your talents, the creativity you bring to your life and the lives of people you love. When you learn to tap this source, you will truly have defeated age.”

CRIME bRIEfS

Man facing charges after incident at gym

A Roosevelt man was arrested for an assault that occurred at a Planet Fitness on July 21, around 7:50 p.m.

According to Nassau County Police Department detectives, officers responded to a call for a disturbance at a Planet Fitness, located at 1630 Merrick Road. Officers observed Getho Brevette, 27, fleeing the scene in his car, heading westbound on Merrick Road.

Shortly after, he was involved in an auto accident and left the scene, later returning to Planet Fitness.

ing the course of the arrest, as Brevette was violent and became combative, while resisting arrest.

As officers approached Brevette, he allegedly threw an unknown liquid on them, forcibly removed an officers’ body-worn camera, and threw it on the ground, causing it to break. He then attempted to remove the officer’s weapon. The officers sustained injuries dur-

The officers were taken to a local hospital for treatment and evaluation. Brevette was also taken to an area hospital.

Brevette is charged with two counts of assault, grand larceny, robbery, criminal mischief, resisting arrest, obstructing governmental administration, sexual abuse, forcible touching and leaving the scene of an auto accident. He was arraigned on July 22 at the First District Court in Hempstead.

Brevette was previously arrested July 20 for a robbery at the First Baptist Church of Westbury and was released on July 21.

‘Project 21’ arrests made in Nassau County

Several men were arrested last earlier this week, in a “Project 21” initiative, which targets the sale of alcoholic beverages and tobacco products to minors.

According to Nassau County Police Department officers, the Problem Oriented Policing Unit, with the assistance of underage agents, conducted an investigation, and as a result of the operation, four individuals were arrested.

Paul Martino, 19 of Bellmore, sold products to a minor at Conv N Cigars in Bethpage. Anil Bansal, 51 of Hicks -

ville, sold products to a minor at Ulta, located on Hempstead Turnpike in Levittown. Naveen Nfn, 24 of Bethpage, sold products to a minor at Puff Kulture, also in Bethpage. Mahendrakumar Pate, 39 of Flushing, sold products to a minor at Evolve, located in Farmingdale.

All four men are charged with unlawfully dealing with a minor and were issued appearance tickets, returnable on Sept. 5, to the First District Court in Hempstead.

Getho Brevette

District attorney calls incident an ‘act of hate’

yard backs up to Merrick Avenue, began displaying the photos of the hostages along her fence line last fall. Her husband is Israeli, she told the Herald, and in the six months the flyers had been posted, they hadn’t been touched.

Additional portions of the fence line, where no murals had been hung, were also defaced.

Patino Caceres also allegedly spray-painted “Free Palestine” across the front cement of the East Meadow Beth-El Jewish Center, at 1400 Prospect Ave., officials said.

The incident sparked a wave of concern in the East Meadow community, and hours after the graffiti was discovered, an emergency news conference was held by Town of Hempstead officials in front of the fence line. Town Supervisor Don Clavin called the graffiti “a brazen attack on our friends of the Jewish faith.”

a hate crime, which means it was motivated by bias. She said her office has seen an increase in hate crimes across the county, and was aggressively prosecuting those responsible.

The portion of East Meadow where the graffiti was discovered has a large Jewish community, McKevitt said, leading him to believe “the location of this hateful act was not chosen by accident.”

Clavin was joined by several members of the town board, religious leaders, County Legislator Tom McKevitt and District Attorney Anne Donnelly, as well as dozens of East Meadow residents.

At the April 15 conference, Donnelly said the incident could be categorized as

Rabbi Aaron Marsh of the East Meadow Beth-El Jewish Center called the incident “an act of intimidation.”

At the end of the news conference, the Town of Hempstead’s Quality of Life Task Force, which removes graffiti, promptly cleaned the spray paint from the fences.

After an investigation, Nassau County Police Department detectives arrested Patino Caceres on April 16. Surveillance camera footage from a nearby parking lot helped police make the arrest.

The suspect was initially charged with seven counts of criminal mischief, possession of graffiti instruments and seven counts of making graffiti, but those charges have since been upgraded to hate crimes.

“This is not just graffiti — it is an act of hate,” Donnelly said last week. “One

a merrick avenue fence line was defaced in april with antisemitic phrases, including ‘Zionism is nazism.” a suspect, Sebastian patino Caceres of east meadow, was arrested shortly after and charged with spray-painting the graffiti. Last week, the charges were upgraded to hate crimes.

that is meant to instill fear in our Jewish communities. But Nassau County refuses to live in fear. My office has no tolerance for these offensive criminal actions that target entire communities and their security.”

The case against Patino Caceres is being prosecuted by Assistant District Attorney James Taglienti of the County

Court Trial Bureau, under the supervision of Bureau Chief Ali Ajamu and the overall supervision of Kevin Higgins, executive assistant district attorney for the litigation division. Attorney James Lynch is representing Patino Caceres. Patino Caceres is due back in court on Sept. 13. If convicted, he faces up to seven years in prison, officials said.

GRADUATE OPEN HOUSE

Tuesday, August 6, 2024 6 p.m.

At Hofstra University, graduate students plant the seeds to advance in their career. Hear from representatives across 200 programs that include business, communications, education, engineering, health sciences, nursing, and psychology, and learn all the ways your success can sprout at Hofstra University. Your future awaits.

For event details and to RSVP, visit hofstra.edu/visit

Jordan Vallone/Herald file
SebaStian Patino CaCereS

Residents across Long Island complain that low-flying airplanes have increased in number since the end of the coronavirus pandemic.

A constant annoyance, a public health issue

The roar of jet engines overhead has become a constant aural backdrop for many residents of Long Island, particularly those living in lower-income neighborhoods. In recent years, a shift in flight paths from nearby airports such as Kennedy and LaGuardia, which together handle roughly 1,400 flights a day, has exacerbated the issue. Residents now endure relentless noise from aircraft flying directly over their homes, disrupting daily life and sparking widespread frustration.

“I’ve lived in Uniondale for 30 years, and I don’t ever remember the noise from the planes being so loud and annoying,” Pearl Jacobs, president of the Nostrand Gardens Civic Association, said. “Now it’s to the point where these planes are going all day and night long, flying across our skyways, and some of these planes are very low.”

Jacobs and other residents believe that the flight path changes disproportionately affect minority communities. The enforcement of noise ordinances dates back to the rise of American urbanization and industrialization, with New York becoming the first major city in the country to implement noise ordinances in 1905 — which often defined the music of Black and Hispanic communities as noise disturbances.

“I strongly believe this is a racial issue,” Jacobs said. “I’m not saying that white communities aren’t having this issue as well, but in Uniondale and other nearby communities, it is all day, all night, and they are constantly going.”

Efforts to address the noise have met with limited success. The Town of Hempstead created the Town-Village Aircraft Safety and Noise Abatement Committee in 1966 to tackle the problem, but local governments have little influence over the Federal Aviation Administration, which controls flight paths. Jacobs’s attempts to draw more attention to the issue have included writing to U.S. Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg, but she has yet to receive a response.

James Vilardi, executive director of the Noise Abatement Committee, emphasized the challenge of getting the FAA to acknowledge and address the problem. The committee’s primary goal is to obtain accurate decibel readings from FAA monitors, because data is averaged across neighborhoods and does not reflect specific impacts.

“If we get the raw data and find that the decibels vio-

Low-flying airplanes can cause serious health issues, increasing stress levels, preventing sleep and in some cases even leading to cardiovascular issues.

late municipal or federal code, we can appeal to the FAA to make changes,” Vilardi explained. The FAA, however, has been largely unresponsive, leaving residents in limbo.

Brookville Mayor Daniel Serota voiced similar frustrations.

“Years ago, when Congressman (Steve) Israel was our congressman, he initiated meetings with regional FAA folks and other mayors to discuss the planes and their heights,” Serota said. “Every Saturday and Sunday, they fly over our villages, and they’re supposed to have a certain height limit, but the pilots never adhere to that.”

Serota detailed the complexities of addressing the issue, including the discretionary power of pilots to determine flight paths based on safety considerations. Despite some agreements to maintain certain altitudes, those measures, he said, often fall by the wayside.

“It’s up to the pilot, and if he feels he needs to go lower or the weather is a certain way, that’s his purview,” Serota said. “We had Covid, which silenced the planes for a while, but now they’re back, flying as low as can be.”

Serota added that despite years of reaching out to airline and public officials, nothing has been done to

solve the issue. He said it is one of the most frequent complaints he gets from Brookville residents.

“On weekends it can be very loud,” he noted. “These big planes, like the double-decker ones with four engines, fly over at sometimes 1,500 feet. You can see the words on the Emirates Airlines planes and hear the noise as if they’re right above your backyard.”

The impact of aircraft noise extends beyond mere annoyance. According to the Civil Aviation Authority and the National Library of Medicine, prolonged exposure to aviation noise can have serious health consequences. Common adverse effects include not only annoyance, but cognitive impairment, sleep disturbance, and cardiovascular disease. Noise pollution has been linked to higher rates of heart disease and stroke, as well as hypertension and disrupted sleep patterns. Studies have also suggested potential effects on birth outcomes and psychological health, although more research is needed to fully understand those impacts.

Annoyance, the most often documented response to noise, can interfere with thoughts, feelings and activities, and lead to resentment and discomfort. Cognitive impairment, particularly in schoolchildren, is another concern, with research from the National Library indicating that high levels of aircraft noise can affect reading comprehension, memory, attention and mood. Sleep disturbance, characterized by awakenings and changes in sleep patterns, can result in next-day fatigue and long-term health issues.

Cardiovascular disease is a significant risk, with high levels of aircraft noise acting as a stressor on the body. Research by the Civil Aviation Authority has found associations between aircraft noise and an increased risk of developing heart disease and stroke. Hypertension, another cardiovascular risk factor, has also been linked to chronic aircraft noise exposure.

Despite the evident health risks, local officials face an uphill battle in addressing the problem.

“We understand that everybody has to share the burden, but it’s a nuisance and a problem,” Serota said. “It’s not for lack of trying; all the elected mayors I know on the North Shore have been very vocal. But the FAA is a big bureaucracy, and when you’re dealing with a bureaucrat, they don’t care.”

The struggle for quieter skies continues, but without greater cooperation from the FAA and a commitment to addressing the issue, Long Island residents will likely remain under the constant hum of aircraft, their health and well-being hanging in the balance.

Photos courtesy Metro Creative

JOIN THE MOVEMENT

Republicans gather at national convention

Milwaukee was the place to be last week for Republicans as the Wisconsin city hosted the 2024 GOP national convention, where former president Donald Trump accepted the party’s official nomination as its presidential candidate and Ohio Senator J.D. Vance became the Republican nominee for vice president.

During the four-day convention, Republicans from across the country hobnobbed and networked, including Woodmere resident Cindy Grosz, Matt Capp, who serves as Rep. Anthony D’Esposito’s communication director, as well as D’Esposito and Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman, who were both delegates representing New York. Delegates are responsible supporting a presidential candidate at the convention.

There were also speeches by celebrities such as former professional wrestler Hulk Hogan, model Amber Rose, Ultimate Fighting Championship CEO Dana White, along with Senators Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio and Tim Scott and North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum.

Post-convention news included the July 21 announcement by President Biden that he was stepping aside. The presumptive front-runner for the Democratic nomination is Vice President Kamala Harris. The Democrats hold their convention Aug. 19-24 in Chicago.

Photos courtesy Cindy Grosz
U.S. Rep. Elise Stefanik, right, who represents the 21st Congressional District in upstate New York and chairs the House Republican Conference, with Grosz at the NYGOP event at the convention.
Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman with Woodmere resident Cindy Grosz at the Nassau GOP gathering during the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee.

Two E.M. students chosen in PSEG contest

PSEG Long Island recently announced the student winners of its fifth annual I Am Em-Powered Energy Conservation Video Public Service Announcement Contest. The top 10 award-winning PSAs were revealed on June 17 at a ceremony at the Long Island Children’s Museum, where the videos of the top 30 finalists are on display through the end of July.

25 students in fourth through seventh grade, along with 10 high school students, were named winners. In addition to certificates honoring their achievements, the winning students and their teachers received Amazon gift cards. Students also received tickets to the museum, and teachers received additional funds to hold a class party to celebrate their star scholars.

More than 3,500 students in nearly 60 schools across Long Island and the Rockaways engaged in I Am Em-Powered’s eco-friendly coursework. The lessons addressed conserving energy, reducing reliance on fossil fuels, and the benefits of renewable energy options — concepts they put into action in their video PSAs.

Among this year’s winners were Victoria Bermeo-Ruiz and Madison Viveiros, both sixth-graders, at Woodland Middle School in the East Meadow School District. Their teacher was Jenna Hughes.

In the fourth through eighth grade category, 82 teachers in 29 school dis -

Two East Meadow students were honored by PSEG for their submission in a public service announcement video contest. Families packed into a reception at the Long Island Children’s Museum last month, where the students were recognized.

tricts participated, with teachers invited to enter three PSAs per class into the contest. A total of 208 videos were submitted for judging. The high school program, which was a smaller cohort, included 347 students who participated in the coursework. In the high school category, three winning videos were chosen. Along with the announcement ceremony, the finalists were honored at a reception at the museum to celebrate their achievements. More than 250 people, including over 50 students, their

teachers, and families attended the event to honor the young environmentalists and view the gallery of their works.

“We are so proud of these young students who created PSAs to educate others on concepts of clean energy, reducing reliance on fossil fuels, and conserving energy,” Michael Voltz, PSEG Long Island’s director of energy efficiency and renewable energy, who co-hosted the event, said. “It was great to share in these kids’ special moment and to meet and thank the teachers who implement-

ed the coursework with them.”

“It was an honor to meet these young conservation advocates and watch their creative videos with them in person,” Michael Presti, PSEG Long Island’s director of customer experience and marketing, added. “It was wonderful to have their parents and teachers join us as we unveiled the students’ work in the Long Island Children’s Museum.”

Sponsored by PSEG Long Island, the I Am Em-Powered program is provided free to students in the company’s service area, which includes Nassau and Suffolk counties and the Rockaways. The STEMrelated coursework, created by educational consultants D. Barrett Associates, provides lessons on energy conservation, energy efficiency, and renewable energy in alignment with current educational standards on these topics. Videos entered into the contest by the teachers were judged according to a strict grading rubric.

Along with the I Am Em-Powered video gallery, posters created by first through fourth graders who completed PSEG Long Island’s Safety Sleuth program are also on display at the museum. The posters depict situations and offer tips on how to be safe around electricity in and outside the home. More than 2,100 students in 19 school districts participated in this educational program.

Courtesy PSEG Long Island

Remembering impact of singer Harry Chapin

Hundreds of people crowded the lawn that sits in front of Harry Chapin Theatre to honor the venue’s namesake, the late singer-songwriter-activist Harry Chapin. This tribute took the form of a concert on July 14, featuring The Harry Chapin Band, which includes some of Chapin’s former bandmates, and Will Sing For Food, a musical group that performs concerts for charity.

Chapin, who lived in Huntington Bay, has left an everlasting mark on altruism throughout Long Island, most especially reflected in his foundership of Long Island Cares, a food bank devoted to feeding those who lack food security. However, this barely scratches the surface of his impact on social activism.

In the mid-1970s, during the peak of his musical popularity, he spent much of his time and effort on activist initiatives. Perhaps his largest act of activism during this period was his co-foundership of the organization WhyHunger with radio personality Bill Ayres.

WhyHunger continues to help hundreds of thousands of people to this day. In 2023, they provided over 932,000 people with a continuous source of nutritious food and other essential services within their communities.

Chapin’s daughter Jen carries on his work at the organization, serving as chair of the board of directors.

“He saw hunger and poverty as an insult to America,” Jen said. “What we do is identify and support grass-roots solutions. We work with 7,000 groups. We help fund everything from soup kitchens to after-school programs for low-income kids, and job training.”

When Chapin died in 1981 from a tragic car accident, he was en route to a free benefit concert at Eisenhower Park. For this reason, Harry Chapin Theatre was not only named in his honor, but an annual tribute concert is held to finish what he came there to do.

Long Island Cares continues to carry on his legacy by maintaining his fervent commitment to social activism. During the coronavirus pandemic, everyone was isolated from the world. Those who were already struggling with food insecurity had it even worse than before. Adapting to these difficult circumstances, Long Island Cares stepped in and set up popup distribution centers, which offered “Grab and Go” emergency food boxes. Despite facing resource limitations, the organization ensured that not a single family went hungry.

Unfortunately, due to reduced support in recent years, they still face this issue. However, there are various ways Long Islanders can help, including, but not limited to, donating online, buying memorial gifts, purchasing a commemorative brick on the Chapin Legacy Walkway, or hosting a food drive.

Nassau County resients who stopped by the concert on July 14 were invited to make a nonperishable food donation, and enjoy the free concert, which was part of the county’s summer series in

Singer-songwriter Harry Chapin founded Long Islancd cares, a regional leading food bank for those in need. Those who attended the concert, including Dan Walsh from Patchouge, were asked to bring food donations.

Eisenhower Park. Despite the heat, Long Island Cares collected 1,501 pounds on nonperishable food items, and $676 in monetary donations for individuals and families in need.

For more information on the food bank and Chapin’s legacy, visit LICares.org.

Tim Baker/Herald photos
Will Sing For Food, a group that performs at charity events, also performed.
Brian and Theresa Redlein with Long Island Cares at the concert on July 14.
It was a packed house at Eisenhower Park’s Harry Chapin Theatre for the annual tribute concert, honoring the life and legacy of the venue’s namesake, Harry Chapin.

STEPPING OUT

‘Cold Beer on a Friday Night’

Whether

Capture the flavors of summertime cuisine up a tasty bash

firing up the grill for a pool party, barbecue or even just a weeknight meal, one thing’s for sure: summertime means grilling season. Grilling takes many forms: your crowd may prefer the standard fare of burgers and hot dogs to flame-kissed vegetables and the artistry of a perfectly done steak. However, the possibilities don’t end there.

By mixing and matching traditional grilled classics with options that have a variety of textures and flavors, you can shake up your at-home menu and add new favorites to your routine this grilling season.

It’s easy to go from casual to elegant in a snap. The traditional faves always have their place, but if you’re looking for a different type of barbecue, add some finesse to your menu with other ideas, by re-imagining your grilling style.

Spicy Mustard Chicken Kebabs

With their easy preparation and quick cooking time, kabobs are a simple way to enjoy many of your favorite fresh flavors.

• 1/4 cup plus 1 tablespoon spicy brown mustard

• 2 tablespoons olive oil

• 1/4 teaspoon garlic powder

• 1 tablespoon white wine vinegar

• 1 pound raw boneless skinless chicken breast, cut into 1-inch cubes

• 1/4 teaspoon each of salt and black pepper

• 1 medium red onion, cut into 1-inch chunks

To make sauce, place 3 tablespoons mustard in medium bowl. Add oil and garlic powder, and whisk until uniform. Cover and refrigerate.

To make marinade, in small bowl, combine vinegar with remaining 2 tablespoons mustard. Stir until uniform.

Season chicken with salt and pepper. Place chicken and marinade in large sealable plastic bag. Remove as much air as possible and seal. Gently knead marinade into chicken through bag. Refrigerate for 1 hour.

Meanwhile, if using wooden skewers, soak 4 in water for 20 minutes to prevent burning. Alternately thread marinated chicken and onion chunks onto 4 skewers. Bring grill to mediumhigh heat.

Brush both sides of kebabs with sauce. Grill kebabs for 5 minutes with grill cover down.

Flip kebabs and grill for 6 to 8 minutes, or until chicken is cooked through. Enjoy.

Cabbage Steaks With Bacon & Blue Cheese

These cabbage steaks blend sweet and slightly sour notes with savory crumbles of cheese for a dish that pleases every one of your taste buds.

• 6 slices bacon

• 1 package McCormick Grill Mates Smoky Applewood Marinade

• 3 tablespoons vegetable oil

• 2 tablespoons cider vinegar

• 2 tablespoons maple syrup

• 1 head green cabbage, cut into 3/4-inch thick slices (about 6 steaks)

• 1/2 cup crumbled blue cheese

• 2 tablespoons thinly sliced green onions

Cook bacon in large skillet on medium heat until crisp. Reserve 1 tablespoon of the drippings.

Crumble bacon; set aside. Mix marinade mix, oil, vinegar, maple syrup and reserved bacon drippings in small bowl until well blended. Place cabbage steaks in large resealable plastic bag or glass dish. Add marinade; turn to coat well.

Refrigerate 30 minutes or longer for extra flavor. Remove cabbage steaks from marinade. Reserve any leftover marinade.

Grill cabbage steaks over medium heat 5 to 6 minutes per side or until tender-crisp, brushing with leftover marinade. Serve cabbage steaks topped with blue cheese, crumbled bacon and green onions.

Mediterranean Vegetables

Fresh veggies tossed with rice vinegar and garlic make a tasty, nutritious side.

• 3 tablespoons rice vinegar (seasoned)

• 1/4 cup olive oil

• 1 teaspoon salt, plus extra, to taste

• 1/2 teaspoon pepper, plus extra, to taste

• 1 tablespoon, plus 1 1/2 teaspoons, fresh parsley, chopped

• 1 1/2 teaspoons fresh garlic, minced

• 1 cup fresh zucchini, sliced into 1 3/4-inch long, 1/4-inch thick planks

• 1 cup fresh green pepper strips

• 1 cup fresh red pepper strips

• 8 fresh stalks asparagus, slicing off 1/4 inch from bottom of stalk

• 1 fresh portobello mushroom, sliced into 1/2-inch squares

• 1 cup fresh eggplant, diced into 1/2-inch squares

Heat grill to 375 F.

In large bowl, mix together rice vinegar, olive oil, salt, pepper, parsley and garlic to create marinade. Clean vegetables then place them in marinade in small batches. Toss to coat then place in foil pouch. Pour remaining marinade over vegetables and seal pouch.

Bake in oven or over indirect heat on grill 25 minutes. Add salt and pepper, to taste, after removing pouch from heat.

Chef’s tip: Open pouch after 20 minutes of cooking and allow vegetables to crisp slightly under direct heat for remaining 5 minutes.

Jimmy Kenny and the Pirate Beach Band bring their beachy vibe back to the Paramount stage. With summer in full swing, enjoy their“Ultimate Beach Party Tribute” to Kenny Chesney, Jimmy Buffett and Zac Brown Band. Parrotheads, No Shoes Nation and the Zamily: it’s 5 o’clock somewhere so raise ‘em up and sing along. The Long Island based band — guided by Paul C. Cuthbert (aka Jimmy Kenny) on lead vocals/ acoustic guitar, with Linn DeMilta (aka Lovely Linn), lead and backing vocals, Luis Rio, lead guitar/backing vocals, Frank Stainkamp, keyboard/ backing vocals, Dan Prine, bass, and drummer Mike Vecchione, have been celebrating the beach/country sounds for over a decade to the delight of their audiences.

Friday, July 26, 8 p.m. $35. $25, $20, $15. The Paramount, 370 New York Ave., Huntington. Tickets available at Ticketmaster.com or ParamountNY.com.

The Hilarious Hitmen

Sal Governale, Richard Christy and Billy Mira, radio personalities known for their prank calls and comedy, keep the laughs coming as “The Hilarious Hitmen.” The dynamic trio brings a modern twist to humor, drawing inspiration from the classic styles of Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis. Christy’s extraordinary drumming skills set the heartbeat for their performance, while Governale’s charisma and comedic genius keep audiences in stitches. Not to be outdone, Mira’s impressions and vocal range captivate everyone. Get in on the laughs when they bring their to Harry Chapin Theatre at Eisenhower Park, for a lively evening that blends big band comedy with audience participation and delightful surprises. Audiences can’t get enough of their refreshing and new take on music and comedy, making their performances an unforgettable experience that leaves you craving for more.

Saturday, July 27, 7 p.m. Free admission. Harry Chapin Lakeside Theatre, Eisenhower Park, East Meadow. For information, visit NassauCountyNY.gov.

Spicy Mustard Chicken Kebabs Cabbage Steaks with Bacon & Blue Cheese Mediterranean Vegetables

THE Your Neighborhood

Aug. 4

Dance Theatre of Harlem

The acclaimed dance company visits Long Island on its 2024 tour, appearing on the Tilles Center stage Sunday, Aug. 4, 7 p.m. With a storied history, the first Black classical ballet company, co-founded by dance icon and international superstar Arthur Mitchell, has toured the world, engaged communities and introduced young minds and bodies to the power of dance. With all its renown, this boundary-breaking, dynamic organization has maintained Mitchell’s core belief that ballet belongs to everyone. Now a singular presence in the ballet world, DTH presents a powerful vision for ballet in the 21st century. The 18-member, multi-ethnic company performs a forward-thinking repertoire that includes treasured classics, neoclassical works by George Balanchine and resident choreographer Robert Garland, as well as innovative contemporary works that use the language of ballet to celebrate Black culture. Through performances, community engagement and arts education, the Company carries forward Dance Theatre of Harlem’s message of empowerment through the arts for all. The dynamic program includes “Higher Ground,” with choreography by Robert Garland, featuring Stevie Wonder tunes; “New Bach,” also choreographed by Robert Garland, with music by J.S. Bach; “Take Me with You,” choreographed by Robert Bondara, featuring Radiohead; also Robert Garland’s “Return,” with James Brown and Aretha Franklin tunes. Tickets are start at $64; available at TillesCenter.org or (516) 299-3100. LIU Post campus, 720 Northern Blvd., Brookville.

Movie Night

Enjoy a family film outdoors on Eisenhower Park’s big screen, Wednesday, July 31, dusk, at the Harry Chapin Lakeside Theatre. See the recent 3D animated musical fantasy “Trolls 3: Trolls Band Together.” The film serves as the threequel to Trolls, the sequel to Trolls World Tour, and the continuation of DreamWorks Trolls franchise. Eisenhower Park, Lakeside Theatre, East Meadow. For information, visit NassauCountyNY.gov.

July 28

Alliance MC Annual Life Ride 2024

Alliance Motorcycle Club holds their annual Life Ride, at Eisenhower Park, Field #1, on Sunday, July 28, at noon. Event includes an escorted parade run and an after party with music, food, and raffles. Registration to join the ride costs $20. Proceeds benefit Phoenix House, a national nonprofit drug and alcohol rehabilitation organization. For more information, visit @ AllianceMCNY on Facebook.

CONCERTS

Family concert

Three-time Grammy nominee Brady Rymer bring his unique brand of infectious, highenergy rock ‘n’ roll to children and families with his longtime Little Band That Could, to East Meadow Public Library, Thursday, Aug. 8, 6:30 p.m. His trademark smile lights up his live performances and shines brightly in his 12 award-winning albums, illuminating the joy he finds in bringing people together with his music. Registration required. 1886 Front St. Register at EastMeadow.info or call (516) 794-2570.

Summer Party 5k

Cherish the last moments of this summer with a run and afterparty at EliteFeats’ Summer Party & 5K Run at Eisenhower Park, Field #2, Thursday, Aug. 22, starting 6:30 p.m. The party will include food, drinks, and music. Check-in for the race begins at 5:30 p.m. This event costs $15 for the general public. Free for club and staff members. It is asked that all attendees meet near the Duck’s Red Shed. It is also suggested that those who are interested in staying for the after-party bring a change of clothes. For more information, visit Events.EliteFeats.com.

Dramatic Play

Theatre Playground returns to Long Island Children’s Museum with “Dramatic Play!,” Monday, July 29, 1 p.m., taught by Lisa Rudin, Director of Theatre Playground. In this interactive, theater-inspired workshop, children will act out an original story and help choose how it unfolds. Music, props, and sound effects create a theatrical world where participants are immersed in the story.

Children express themselves as they create characters, explore different worlds, stretch their imaginations and build selfconfidence.This week’s theme: Undersea Adventure. Costumes encouraged. $5 with museum admission. Museum Row, Garden City. (516) 224-5800 or LICM.org.

League of Women Voters East Nassau General Meeting

The League of Women Voters of East Nassau invites all to its next general meeting, Wednesday, Aug. 21, 7 p.m., at Levittown Public Library. Participate in an engaging discussion. 1 Bluegrass Lane, Levittown. For more information, visit LWVEastNassau.org.

Storybook Stroll

Bring the kids to Old Westbury Gardens for a storybook adventure, Saturday, Aug. 3, 10:30-11:30 a.m. Stroll the gardens and listen to Michaela Goade’s “Berry Song.” Later create a unique take home craft. For ages 3-5. Old Westbury Gardens, 71 Old Westbury Rd., Old Westbury. For information visit OldWestburyGardens.org or contact (516) 333-0048.

Irish Night

Irish American Society of Nassau, Suffolk & Queens is hosting a night of Irish festivities at Harry Chapin Lake Side Theatre, East Meadow, Monday, Aug. 5, starting at 7 p.m. For more information, visit IrishAmericanSociety.org.

Having an event?

Bingo at Beth-El

Get your game on at a weekly bingo game at East Meadow Beth-El Jewish Center starting at 6 p.m. Prizes, progressive games, bell jar prizes and refreshments will be provided. Proof of vaccination is required. 1400 Prospect Ave., in East Meadow. For information, contact (516) 4834205.

Pet Adoption Program

Adopt your “fur-ever” friend this summer. There’s no better time to adopt a new pet than during the ”summer of love” at the Town of Hempstead Animal Shelter. Now through Sept. 1, all pet adoption fees are waived and include free spaying/ neutering, vaccinations and microchipping. There is a $10 license fee for dogs.

Check out the friendly faces of the dogs and cats before stepping foot in the shelter online at HempsteadNY. gov/179/Animal-Shelter or on the shelter’s Facebook page at Hempstead Town Animal Shelter. For more information, contact (516) 785-5220.

Items on The Scene page are listed free of charge. The Herald welcomes listings of upcoming events, community meetings and items of public interest. All submissions should include date, time and location of the event, cost, and a contact name and phone number. Submissions can be emailed to thescene@liherald.com.

On exhibit

Nassau County Museum of Art ‘s latest exhibition “Seeing Red: Renoir to Warhol,” reveals the many meanings, connotations, and associations of this powerful color in art. Evoking strong emotion, red can represent the human condition. Its myriad variations have come to signify authority as well as love, energy and beauty. Red warns us of peril and commands us to stop, but it can also indicate purity and good fortune. Red boldly represents political movements and religious identities. From the advent of our appreciation for this color in antiquity to its continued prominence in artistic and popular culture, this exhibition will span various world cultures through a range of media. It features more than 70 artists, both established and emerging, ranging from the classical to the contemporary. American portraitists such as Gilbert Stuart imbued red in their stately paintings of prominent individuals to conjure authority.

Robert Motherwell, Ad Reinhardt, and other major abstract painters displayed a deep fascination with red in their commanding compositions that evoke a sense of chromatic power. And, of course, Andy Warhol is known for his bold and imposing silkscreened portrait of Vladimir Lenin saturated in bright red to his signature Campbell’s Soup Cans. On view through Jan. 5. Nassau County Museum of Art, 1 Museum Dr., Roslyn Harbor. (516) 484-9337 or NassauMuseum.org.

‘Walkin’ After Midnight’

Plaza Theatrical presents a showstopping tribute to the legendary Patsy Cline, Sunday, Aug. 11, 2:30 p.m. Through a colorful tapestry of iconic songs and witty personal storytelling, Carter Calvert uses her award-winning vocal talents to create this captivating musical tribute. Calvert, a Broadway star and title character in Always… Patsy Cline (opposite Emmy Award winner Sally Struthers), has gained rave reviews and triumphant accolades for her heartfelt portrayal of this legendary country recording artist.

She vocally captures Cline’s musical stylings pitch-perfectly in mega hits including “Crazy,” “I Fall To Pieces,” “She’s Got You” and “Walkin’ After Midnight.” Both captivating and endearing, this fastpaced entertainment delights audiences of all ages. It’s performed at Plaza’s stage at the Elmont Library Theatre, 700 Hempstead Tpke., Elmont. $40, $35 seniors. Elmont. For tickets, call (516) 599-6870 or visit PlazaTheatrical.com.

Obamacare remains vulnerable, Solages warns

Despite repeated partisan legal challenges aimed at its demise, the Affordable Care Act, widely known as Obamacare, has not only survived, but become an indispensable part of the American health care system. This year, a record number of Americans — an estimated 21 million — are insured through its marketplaces, which have redefined baseline expectations for consumer coverage in the health care system. Yet despite its 14 years of proven durability, Assemblywoman Michaelle Solages, a Democrat, remains warily concerned about ACA’s future.

Solages was blunt in her assessment of what, or rather who represents the biggest political risk to undoing the health care law — former President Donald Trump.

At a news conference in Valley Stream last week, Solages, and leaders of the 1199SEIU United Healthcare Workers East labor union and Protect Our Care, a nonprofit health care advocacy group, forcefully articulated their concerns, underscoring how the law has served as a crucial safety net for New Yorkers, and warned that its termination could be disastrous.

“As we interface with the affordability crisis, it’s important to acknowledge there are reforms at work, from the

Affordable Care Act to the Inflation Reduction Act, to ensure that people have access to health care,” Solages said.

“Now we are seeing constant attacks on these reforms, whether it’s federal representatives trying to take away provisions that ensure people with pre-existing conditions have access to health care or cull prescription pricing relief.”

Trump, the Republican presidential nominee, sought to roll back or repeal significant elements of the law when he was president, but did not succeed. On

BRUCE A. BLAKEMAN

FAMILY NIGHT MOVIES

the campaign trail this year, certainly aware of the law’s popularity and lasting power, he has made vague promises to replace it with a superior alternative if he returns to the White House.

Solages also cited proposals by Republicans to cap and cut federal Medicaid spending and introduce a block grant system in which states would have to bid for federal funding to secure benefits.

“Instead of direct funding to the states, they want states to enroll in a

Hunger Games-like competition for coverage,” said Solages. “We can’t compete for coverage when it comes to healt care,” which will inevitably shrink the Medicaid program and leave many uninsured.

For more than a decade, there has been grumbling about the cost and sustainability of health care coverage under ACA by conservative critics.

Many maintain, as they have for years, that coverage plans under ACA can still be too expensive for some middle-class Americans because of high insurance premiums, burdensome costsharing requirements, and narrow health insurance networks that limit people’s choice of doctor and hospital.

And with the sting of inflation and rising health care costs, the insured may still struggle to afford higher-thanexpected co-payments or deductibles.

While Solages acknowledged that New Yorkers are grappling with growing medical debt and prohibitively expensive prescription prices, reducing investments in existing reforms will only exacerbate these problems, not solve them.

“From womb to tomb, all New Yorkers interact with the health care system, and when you erode health care, you impact the most vulnerable New Yorkers,” she said. “We need to raise our voices against unfair cuts to health care.”

NEW YORK’S WRONGEST RUNNING COMEDY!

Courtesy Office of Assemblywoman Michaelle Solages Assemblywoman Michaelle Solages and health care advocates warned against dismantling the Affordable Care Act, emphasizing its crucial role in providing coverage for 21 million Americans and protecting vulnerable populations, amid ongoing political threats to its future.

Public Notices

LEGAL NOTICE

NOTICE OF SALE

SUPREME COURT

COUNTY OF NASSAU, US

BANK TRUST NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, NOT IN ITS INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY BUT SOLELY AS OWNER TRUSTEE FOR VRMTG ASSET TRUST, Plaintiff, vs. MICHELLE DEANGELIS, ET AL., Defendant(s).

Pursuant to an Order Confirming Referee’s Report and Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered on June 5, 2024, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction on the front steps on the north side of the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 on August 20, 2024 at 2:00 p.m., premises known as 712 Morris Court, East Meadow, NY 11554. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Hempstead, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 50, Block 554 and Lot 20. Approximate amount of judgment is $496,728.97 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index #617604/2022. Cash will not be accepted. This foreclosure sale will be held on the north side steps of the Courthouse, rain or shine. COVID-19 safety protocols will be followed at the foreclosure sale. If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, the Court Appointed Referee will cancel the sale.

Jane P. Shrenkel, Esq., Referee Knuckles & Manfro, LLP, 120 White Plains Road, Suite 215, Tarrytown, New York 10591, Attorneys for Plaintiff 148053

LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF NASSAU, US BANK TRUST NATIONAL ASSOCIATION AS TRUSTEE FOR CABANA SERIES V TRUST, Plaintiff, vs. ROBERT WINKLER, Defendant(s). Pursuant to an Order Confirming Referee Report and Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered on June 11, 2024, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction on the front steps on the north side of the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 on August 20, 2024 at 2:00 p.m., premises known as 524 Pontiac Road, East Meadow, NY 11554. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being at North Bellmore, Town of

Hempstead, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 51, Block 479 and Lot 12.

Approximate amount of judgment is $719,717.83 plus interest and costs.

Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index #616227/2022. This foreclosure sale will be held on the north side steps of the Courthouse, rain or shine. COVID-19 safety protocols will be followed at the foreclosure sale. If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, the Court Appointed Referee will cancel the sale.

Matin Emouna, Esq., Referee Friedman Vartolo LLP, 85 Broad Street, Suite 501, New York, New York 10004, Attorneys for Plaintiff Firm File No.: 222115-1 148051

Court Appointed Referee shall cancel the foreclosure auction.

Foreclosure Auctions will be held “Rain or Shine.”

Peter M. Rubin, Esq., Referee File # NY202200000447-1 148036

Place A Notice Call

LEGAL NOTICE CASE NO. 21527

RESOLUTION NO. 726-2024

Adopted: July 2, 2024

Councilmember Goosby offered the following resolution and moved its adoption: RESOLUTION ESTABLISHING AND SETTING ASIDE CERTAIN PARKING SPACES FOR MOTOR VEHICLES FOR THE SOLE USE OF HOLDERS OF SPECIAL PARKING PERMITS ISSUED BY THE COUNTY OF NASSAU TO PHYSICALLY HANDICAPPED PERSONS.

UNIONDALE EMERSON STREET - south side, starting at a point 250 feet east of the east curbline of Liberty Street, east for a distance of 20 feet.

(TH-242/24)

(NR) VALLEY STREAM SOUTH EVERETT STREETsouth side, starting at a point 244 feet east of the east curbline of Beverly Place, east for a distance of 20 feet.

(TH-234/24)

Doing good does you good Student COLuMn

ILEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE

SUPREME COURT

NASSAU COUNTY

MORTGAGE ASSETS

MANAGEMENT, LLC, Plaintiff against PAMELA PRENTISS F/K/A

LAWRENCE STEINBERG, et al Defendant(s) Attorney for Plaintiff(s) Stern & Eisenberg, P.C., 20 Commerce Drive, Suite 230, Cranford, NJ 07016 and 1131 Route 55, Suite 1, Lagrangeville, NY 12540.

Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered May 28, 2024, I will sell at public auction to the highest bidder at North Side Steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court at 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 on August 19, 2024 at 2:00 PM.

Premises known as 20 Cypress Lane East a/k/a 20 East Cypresss Lane, Westbury, NY 11590. Sec 45 Block 384 Lot 2. All that certain plot, piece, or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being at East Meadow, Town of Hempstead, County of Nassau and State of New York.

Approximate Amount of Judgment is $365,014.89 plus interest, fees, and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index No 613639/2022. The foreclosure sale will be conducted in accordance with 10th Judicial District’s Covid-19 Policies and foreclosure auction rules. The Referee shall enforce any rules in place regarding facial coverings and social distancing. If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, then the

WHEREAS, pursuant to Resolution No. 722-2024, adopted June 18th, 2024, a public hearing was duly held on the day of July 2nd, 2024, at the Town Meeting Pavilion, Hempstead Town Hall, 1 Washington Street, Hempstead, New York, on the proposed establishment and setting aside of a certain parking space for motor vehicles for the sole use of holders of special parking permits issued by the County of Nassau to physically handicapped persons, in accordance with Section 202-48 of the Code of the Town of Hempstead, all as set forth in said resolution; and WHEREAS, after due consideration, this Town Board finds it to be in the public interest to establish and set aside a certain parking space for motor vehicles for the sole use of holders of special parking permits issued by the County of Nassau to physically handicapped persons; NOW, THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, that in accordance with Section 202-48 of the Code of the Town of Hempstead, the following parking spaces be and the same hereby is set aside for the sole use of holders of special parking permits issued by the County of Nassau to physically handicapped persons:

EAST MEADOW

BELLMORE ROAD - east side, startingat a point 18 feet opposite the southwest curbline of 1st Avenue, north for a distance of 20 feet.

(TH-246/24)

ELMONT

116th ROAD - south side, starting at a point 113 feet west opposite the northwest curbline of 239th Street, west for a distance of 18 feet.

(TH-225/24)

JAMES STREET - south side, starting at a point 216 feet east of the east curbline of Butler Boulevard, east for a distance of 20 feet.

(TH-220/24)

; and, BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that the Town Clerk shall enter this resolution in the minutes of the Town Board and shall publish a copy of this resolution once a newspaper having a general circulation in the Town of Hempstead and shall post a copy hereof on the signboard maintained by her, and file in her office affidavits of such publication and posting.

The foregoing resolution was seconded by Councilmember Dunne and adopted upon roll call as follows: AYES: SIX (6) NOES: NONE (0) 148125

LEGAL NOTICE

NOTICE OF ADOPTION OF TOWN OF HEMPSTEAD LOCAL LAW NO. 51-2024

PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that, pursuant to Article 9 of the New York State Constitution, the provisions of the Town Law and the Municipal Home Rule Law of the State of New York, both as amended, a public hearing was duly called and held July 2nd, 2024, by the Town Board of the Town of Hempstead on the proposed adoption of Town of Hempstead Local Law No. 51-2024, and following the close of the hearing the Town Board duly adopted Town of Hempstead Local Law No. 51-2024, amending Section 197-5 of the Code of the Town of Hempstead, to include “ARTERIAL STOPS” at various locations.

Dated: July 2, 2024

Hempstead, New York BY ORDER OF THE TOWN BOARD OF THE TOWN OF HEMPSTEAD

DONALD X. CLAVIN, JR.

Supervisor

KATE MURRAY Town Clerk 148124

LEGAL NOTICE

NOTICE OF ADOPTION OF TOWN OF HEMPSTEAD

LOCAL LAW NO. 50-2024

PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that, pursuant to Article 9 of the New York State Constitution, the provisions of the Town Law and the Municipal Home Rule Law of the State of New York, both as amended, a public hearing was duly called and held July 2nd, 2024, by the Town Board of the Town of Hempstead on the proposed adoption of Town of Hempstead Local Law No. 50-2024, and following the close of the hearing the Town Board

n a world filled with rapid global change and tragedy, it is difficult for many to understand the importance of small deeds. However, small deeds go a long way to make the world a brighter place. A 2023 American Psychiatric Association poll asked Americans about how small acts of kindness made them feel. 89 percent said showing someone else an act of kindness made them feel either significantly, somewhat, or a little better, and 90 percent said receiving an act of kindness made them feel better as well. In a world where we are disconnected from each other due to the technology we use, the physical interaction of small good deeds is necessary to building a better future.

The act of “doing good” can allow people to grow. In an article called “It’s Good to Be Good: Science Says It’s So” by Stephen Post, a professor from Stony Brook University, discussed “helper therapy,” in which helping others is deemed essential to helping oneself. This concept is seen ideally in self- help groups, such as twelve step programs for recovering alcoholics. Data derived from a study mentioned in the article discussed how they found that recovering alcoholics engaged in helping other alcoholics achieve sobriety were significantly less likely to relapse in the year following treatment. This example shows the idea of self improvement, in which good deeds not only benefit others but oneself.

The act of good deeds can also establish a sense of community. This idea can be best seen through adolescents who volunteer. The University of Nevada, Reno released an article called “Young Volunteers: The Benefits of Community Service” which said benefits of youth volunteering was learning to respect others, learning to be helpful and kind, and becoming more patient.

These concepts are important building blocks for people to grow as a person, and they can establish personal connections when working on the same goal. Whether it be collecting books for libraries in need or planting trees for the community for a school assignment, the common act of doing a good deed can strengthen bonds between people.

Additionally, the Mental Health Foundation addresses that random acts of kindness can be especially important to reduce stress and improve emotional well-being. A simple opening of the door for a person entering a building or a loaning of your favorite book to a friend can potentially go a long way during rough and difficult times. According to the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs on Mental Health and Development, depression is ranked third in the global burden of disease, and is projected to rank first in 2030. This issue can stem from major world issues, stigma, and discrimination, problems that people cannot solve overnight.

Nevertheless, to lighten the burden that many may face when pursuing obstacles, it is always important to lend a helping hand, to establish community. Small acts of kindness are simple: making someone laugh, sending someone a handwritten note, signing up to volunteer, offering to walk your neighbor’s dog. These deeds may not create vast global change, but it reminds society why the world keeps spinning in the first place. Who knows, doing good for others may actually do yourself good along the way.

Mahira Ahmed is a recently graduated East Meadow High School senior, who worked as an intern with the Bellmore, Merrick and East Meadow Heralds as part of her senior experience class.

duly adopted Town of Hempstead Local Law No. 50-2024, amending Section 202-1 of the Code of the Town of Hempstead, to include and repeal “PARKING OR STANDING PROHIBITIONS” at various locations.

Dated: July 2, 2024

Hempstead, New York BY ORDER OF THE TOWN BOARD OF THE TOWN OF HEMPSTEAD

DONALD X. CLAVIN, JR.

Supervisor

KATE MURRAY Town Clerk 148123

Business Intelligence Analyst wanted by 3W Auto Accessory Inc. in Oceanside, NY. Must have a Bachelor’s degree in Statistics, Data Science, or business-related major. Duties: Collect and analyze data from various sources, uncovering insights into sales, inventory, and market trends; Create interactive reports and dashboards, aiding decision-making by presenting key performance metrics; Forecast sales, conduct market research, and optimize inventory levels; Segment customers for targeted marketing and evaluate sales team performance; responsible for Data security and compliance, along with continuous improvement. Yearly Salary will be $80850 to $90000. Mail Resume to 3W Auto Accessory Inc., Attn: Qi Zhou, 3401 Lawson Blvd, Oceanside, NY 11572.

TEACHER AIDES

Salary Ranges from $17 per hour to $21 per hour Night Availability is a Must. Please Email Resume to careers@liherald.com or Call (516)569-4000 x239

DRIVING INSTRUCTOR Company Car/ Bonuses. Clean Driving Record Required, Will Train. Retirees Welcome! $20 - $25/ Hour Bell Auto School 516-365-5778 Email: info@bellautoschool.com

EDITOR/REPORTER

Part Time & Full Time. The award-winning Herald Community Newspapers group, covering Nassau County's North and South Shores with hard-hitting news stories and gracefully written features, seeks a motivated, energetic and creative editor/reporter to join our dynamic (and awesome) team! This education and general assignment reporting position offers a unique experience to learn from some of the best in the business. Historically, reporters who have launched their careers with us have gone on to The New York Times, Newsweek, Newsday, the New York Daily News, New York Post, CNN, BBC, NBC News and The Daily Mail, among many others. We look for excellent writers who are eager to learn, enhance their skills, and become well-established and respected journalists in our industry. Salary range is from $20K to $45K To apply: Send a brief summary in the form of a cover letter describing your career goals and what strengths you can bring to our newsroom, along with a resume and three writing samples to mhinman@liherald.com

MAILROOM/ WAREHOUSE HELP

Long Island Herald has IMMEDIATE openings for a FULL-TIME & PART-TIME mailroom/warehouse helper in Garden City. We are a busy print shop looking for motivated and reliable individuals to assist in various duties in the shop. Forklift experience is a plus and heavy lifting is required. Hours vary, so flexibility is key. Salary Ranges fromo $16 per hour to $20 per hour. Email resumes or contact info to careers@liherald.com

MEDICAL RECEPTIONIST: PART TIME, Must be Fluent in English and Spanish, Must Have Good Computer Skills, Able to Learn New Programs, Pleasant Phone Voice, Good People Skills, Salary Negotiable. 516-726-0309 or Email Resume to coreybickoff294@gmail.com

Looking for an aggressive self starter who is great at making and maintaining relationships and loves to help businesses grow by marketing them on many different advertising platforms. You will source new sales opportunities through inbound lead follow-up and outbound cold calls. Must have the ability to understand customer needs and requirements and turn them in to positive advertising solutions. We are looking for a talented and competitive Inside Sales Representative that thrives in a quick sales cycle environment. Compensation ranges from $33,280 + commissions and bonuses to over $100,000 including commission and bonuses. We also offer health benefits, 401K and paid time off. Please send cover letter and resume with salary requirements to ereynolds@liherald.com Call 516-569-4000 X286

OUTSIDE SALES

Richner Communications, One of the Fastest Growing Media, Event and Communications Companies on Long Island is Seeking a Sales/Marketing Candidate to Sell our Print Media Products and our Digital, Events, Sponsorships. Earning potential ranges from $33,280 plus commission and bonuses to over $100,000 including commissions and bonuses. Compensation is based on Full Time hours Eligible for Health Benefits, 401k and Paid Time Off. Please Send Cover Letter and Resume with Salary Requirements to rglickman@liherald.com or Call 516-569-4000 X250

Homes

Grand Center Hall Colonial

CEDARHURST NO FEE Private Entrance, Modern 1BR, 2BR, 3BR, CAC, W/D, Storage, Wall To Wall Carpeting, Indoor Parking Space. Starting At $1450 For One Bedroom When Available. (516)860-6889/ (516)852-5135/ (516)582-9978

As you pull up to this

LYNBROOK: 2 BR, Off Street Parking, No Pets, $3,100. 516-599-3174

WANTAGH 1 BEDROOM, Full Kitchen, Full Bath, Livingroom/Kitchen Combo, No Smoking No Pets. $1650. 516-731-3763.

Plots

BETH DAVID CEMETERY: Elmont, NY.

ROCKVILLE CENTRE SUNNY Private Entrance,Walk In Closet, Walking Distance South Nassau Hospital, Share Bath, 516-913-0804.

3 Plots. Separate Or All Together. Graves 18, 25, and 32. Purchase Separate $3999; Purchase Together $9999. Negotiable. Call 845-641-7316

ONE BURIAL PLOT FOR SALE at Beth David’s in Elmont. Asking for $6,500. Please contact Michele Flanigan at 518-546-9550

Formal dining room. Den/family room and guest quarters. Taxes: $15,107 East Meadow $705,000 Lakeville Lane. Ranch. 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms. Finished basement. Eat-in kitchen with granite countertops and pantry. Open layout. Master bedroom with walk-in closet. Taxes: $10,270.09

Elmont $640,000

Norfolk Drive. Cape. 3 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms. Finished basement. Eat-in kitchen with granite countertops. Formal dining room. Many updates including bathrooms. First floor master bedroom. Cozy fenced-in yard. Taxes: $13,272

Hewlett $670,000

Peninsula Boulevard. Ranch. 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms. Finished basement. New eat-in kitchen with shaker cabinets, high-end Samsung appliances and island, also sliding doors to private fenced-in yard. Move-in ready with new siding and roof. Taxes: $14,237.40

Lido Beach $1,430,000

Biarritz Street. Cottage. 3 bedrooms, 2.5 bathrooms. Eat-in kitchen with granite countertops. Den/family room and home office. High-end finishes include cathedral ceiling and wet bar. Taxes: $19,573.89

Malverne $920,000

Foster Avenue. Colonial. 3 bedrooms, 1.5 bathrooms. Movein ready stunning home in convenient Westwood neighborhood. Eat-in kitchen with granite countertops and pantry. Updates include skylight. Walk to Westwood LIRR. Taxes: $16,869.06

Merrick $1,200,000

Loines Avenue. Colonial. 4 bedrooms, 3.5 bathrooms. Finished basement. Gourmet eat-in kitchen with granite countertops and pantry. Formal dining room. Den/family room, home office and guest quarters in bonus finished attic. High end finishes include cathedral ceiling and wet bar. Entertaining style backyard with heated saltwater pool and pool house with 3 portico doors. 2 car garage. Security system.

Taxes: $23,818.67

Rockville Centre $1,650,000

quarters. Ensuite master bedroom with

Contractors seem to have plans of their own

Q. We are getting estimates for a small bump-out at the back of our house to add a breakfast room, and the estimates have been much higher than we were led to believe. We met with a contractor before we hired an architect, and he gave us a number, but suggested we get plans made, which we did. In addition to doing an estimate from the plans, the contractor said we should pay him for the estimate if we don’t use him because of the time he took. His card actually says “Free estimates.” Between the price, which went way up, and the fact that he wants money, even if he doesn’t get the job, we aren’t going to even consider him, but is this common, that he should have such a higher price and also want to get paid? Incidentally, he added a lot of things that aren’t in the plans and aren’t what we spoke about.

A. This scenario is common, and I often warn people that they should, preliminarily, try to get a ballpark estimate, just to be sure they can do the project before getting started with plans. It always helps to have the contractor and architect speak, so we’re all on the same page.

Most often, though, what ends up happening is a kind of disillusionment when the plans are done and the contractor’s numbers are much higher than discussed. I’m amazed at how many contractors, without a phone call or meeting, try to change the project, question the engineering or structure, or try to work around the architect after all the time and consideration given to planning. It’s rare to have a contractor not make statements about the structure, even though I have rarely dealt with a contractor who can show expertise, with a license in engineering, to alter the design. Many just want to make it simpler to build without ever having to recognize the long-term issues of high winds, heavy snow or building codes.

On the other hand, one individual tried to upsell the job, claiming that piles were needed on a home where there was a basement and no other pilings. In order to add underground pilings to the price, a deep soil test, showing the character of the supporting earth, would need to be done. The home is over 100 years old and shows no signs of settling, so the inclusion of piles, without even consulting the licensed professional, is unwarranted.

It’s true that contractors have a hard job doing estimates, especially because the prices of lumber and other commodities change. They can spend many weeks calling around to suppliers and checking pricing, only to have their integrity questioned. This can lead to increasing numbers to account for potential material price changes. While you can’t expect the cost to remain the same, it is fair to ask, at the beginning, for a higher-end number so the outcome isn’t so different. Good luck!

© 2024 Monte Leeper

Readers are encouraged to send questions to yourhousedr@aol.com, with “Herald question” in the subject line, or to Herald Homes, 2 Endo Blvd., Garden City, NY 11530, Attn: Monte Leeper, architect.

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Congestion pricing may be paused, but the fight continues

From Buffalo to Montauk, New Yorkers of every color, creed and religion find themselves struggling to stay afloat amid the ever-increasing tax burden imposed on them, especially by the legions of out-of-touch bureaucrats who wield power in Albany. For too long, Long Islanders seeking financial relief from our state capital have found instead that many of their elected leaders in Albany are all too eager to nickel-anddime hardworking taxpayers as a solution to the fiscal mismanagement rife across government-operated entities as well as those directly tied to New York state, including the Metropolitan Transportation Authority.

There is no doubt that the MTA is a vital resource for New Yorkers, but the dereliction of duty by the agency’s lead-

When legendary quarterback

Tom Brady announced his retirement (for the first time), I was the editor in chief of my college’s news magazine, the Campus Slate, at the New York Institute of Technology. We covered a wide range of subjects, driven by the interests of our reporters, and one of my staff writers asked me if he could write something summarizing his thoughts on what it was like to watch “the greats” — the famed athletes of his childhood — retire. I liked the idea, and it came together nicely. Although I wasn’t the biggest sports fan in my youth, I could relate to the story.

But for me, the epitome of athleticism didn’t come in the form of an epic home run or, in Brady’s case, so many game-winning touchdowns. For me it was the whoosh of a soccer ball hitting the net at the back of the goal.

Like millions of other youth around the U.S., I grew up playing soccer, and some of my fondest memories from my

ership has led to staggering budget deficits and wasteful spending, to the point where it now costs the MTA roughly $3 billion a year just to service its enormous debt. Recognizing the unsustainable nature of this spending spree, the MTA conspired with Gov. Kathy Hochul and New York Democrats to siphon more cash from commuters via a congestion pricing plan, which is nothing more than a thinly veiled commuter tax.

that part of Manhattan altogether — like many in the trucking and carting sector.

Will Gov. Kathy Hochul simply restart the plan after November’s election?

Charging drivers who enter Lower Manhattan via car a fee in addition to the tolls already collected on many bridges and tunnels is nothing short of highway robbery, and New Yorkers resoundingly rejected this latest Democratic cash grab. Indeed, residents of every political stripe have voiced their concerns about this new tax, which would see the average commuter fork over an additional $4,000 for the privilege of entering Lower Manhattan, and force many businesses to raise prices or shy away from conducting business in

I was proud to stand alongside fellow Republicans, and some common-sense Democrats, to raise the alarm across the tristate area about this anti-business mandate. What’s more, I introduced bipartisan federal legislation to reject congestion pricing and to ensure that this disastrous plan did not come to fruition. After repeated public calls to Governor Hochul and the Democrats in the State Legislature to scrap the plan, the people were heard, and Hochul “paused” the implementation of congestion pricing at the 11th hour last month.

But the timing seemed suspect.

Poll after poll across New York told the same story: Congestion pricing was an awful plan, and voters were prepared to take their frustration to the ballot box. It isn’t hard to connect the dots and conclude that Hochul only delayed implementation of congestion pricing

because, on the federal level, Democrats feared that it would imperil their campaigns in competitive House districts leading up to the November election — including the one for my seat. I find it hard to believe that New York state and its governor invested significant money in constructing the new tolling infrastructure across Manhattan only for Hochul to have a change of heart at the last minute.

So it is vital that while commonsense, anti-congestion pricing advocates have the wind at our backs, we press on and demand further reassurances — in law — that this plan will not simply be restarted once the all-important fall election season has concluded.

It is extraordinarily important that New Yorkers stand united in continued opposition to Hochul’s disastrous congestion pricing plan, and demand more concrete protections against the implementation of this debilitating scheme as we move forward. I will be sure to keep up the fight in Washington as your voice on Capitol Hill.

Anthony D’Esposito represents the 4th Congressional District.

These Olympics, let’s remember to champion all athletes

adolescence and teenage years are of my days on the field.

So when I think of the greats, I don’t think of people like Derek Jeter or Brady. I think of women like Abby Wambach, Megan Rapinoe, Hope Solo, Tobin Heath and Carli Lloyd, among many others.

In this country, female athletes don’t get the same attention, or respect, as their male counterparts, and that’s almost understandable. Men’s sports have built entire industries from the ground up over the past century.

But there is much to be said about how hard women have worked to make sure they can have their moments of glory. Kathrine Switzer famously ran the Boston Marathon before women were allowed to; thousands have fought the wage gap that still affects sports today; and, of course, superstars like Serena Williams have cemented the idea that women athletes deserve the spotlight, too.

W hen I think of the greats, I think of Megan Rapinoe, not Tom Brady.

that over the past few years, the U.S. women’s soccer team has gone through changes. They performed poorly at last year’s World Cup, losing early in the tournament to Sweden. And in the lowest of moments for some of our players, many of whom are previous World Cup winners and Olympic gold medalists, they were not welcomed back to our country with open arms.

Instead they were hit with this: “WOKE EQUALS FAILURE,” which Donald Trump posted to his Truth Social account last summer.

“Nice shot Megan, the USA is going to hell!” (This was in reference to a penalty kick Rapinoe missed in the game against Sweden.)

I’m old enough to have thick skin, to read things like Trump’s comments and brush them off with an eye roll. But I can’t help but think about the little girls whose shoes I was once in. I think it’s fair to say they’d be genuinely affected by seeing something like what Trump wrote. I think about how difficult it must be for them to see their heroes, their greats, subjected to cruelty.

The Paris Olympic Games begin this week. There will be many female athletes, not just soccer players, representing our country. Their successes and their setbacks — their journeys — are so important. We need to remember that.

It’s always nice to see our athletes win, and our teams bring home gold. But if they don’t? Think about what you say before you say it, and think about who you’re saying it to.

Women’s soccer isn’t the same, and I’m not sure at what point it became cool to tear down some of our country’s best athletes, but alas, it is our reality.

All teams, in every sport, have their ups and downs, and I’d agree with many

It should come as a surprise to no one that conservative America hates the women’s national team. Why? Simply because for decades, its players have expressed “progressive” opinions about equal pay, social justice and LGBTQ rights, among other things that are largely unliked by the far right. When the women are winning, the keyboard warriors are quiet. But when they lose? Well of course it’s because of their political and social beliefs.

As we cheer for those athletes, let’s remember that their worth isn’t measured solely by their victories, but also by their power to inspire. Let’s be careful in what we say, and ensure that our words foster encouragement, not disillusionment, for the next generation of greats.

Jordan Vallone is a senior editor who writes for the Bellmore, East Meadow and Merrick Heralds. Comments? jvallone@liherald.com.

AnTHonY D’EsposiTo
JoRDAn VALLonE

HeraLd editoriaL

Face mask bill must strike a delicate balance

amid ongoing debates about public safety and individual rights, the Nassau County Legislature is poised to make a significant decision that could have an impact on both.

Republican Legislator Mazi Pilip has proposed a bill that would make the county one of the first in the metropolitan area to ban face masks that conceal a wearer’s identity.

The proposal, backed by all 12 Republican county legislators, aims to unmask those responsible for violent acts during protests, imposing fines of up to $1,000 and potential jail time for violators.

A similar measure was proposed by State Sen. Steve Rhoads last month, after six young men wearing masks attacked another man at the Academy Charter School graduation at Hofstra University.

The Pilip bill is a reaction to violence involving people wearing masks in recent months during protests at universities including Columbia, George Washington and Yale. Pilip said that when they cover their faces, people can act as brazenly as they wish, which is unacceptable, and the idea behind the proposal is to curb violence and hold perpetrators accountable.

A laudable goal — but this well-meaning legislation may compromise public health and civil liberties, particularly when face masks are used as intended. They became an essential public health

Letters

Jerry Kremer should rethink congestion pricing

To the Editor:

tool during the coronavirus pandemic, and are not just a means of personal protection, but also a potential collective shield that helps reduce the transmission of airborne viruses.

Several studies have demonstrated the effectiveness of masks in curbing the spread of infectious diseases, thereby saving lives. To undermine this practice, even with the pandemic seemingly behind us, could have dire consequences for public health, especially as we ponder future outbreaks of other diseases.

The proposed bill includes exemptions for those wearing masks for health or religious reasons, but the enforcement of those exemptions would raise significant concerns. While the Republican presiding officer of the County Legislature, Howard Kopel, said he doubted anyone would intervene when an older person wears a mask for health reasons, there appear to be broader worries. The New York Civil Liberties Union has voiced concerns that the legislation paints a target on the backs of people of color, and protesters who disagree with government policies.

Those sentiments are echoed by Democratic Legislator Debra Mulé, who highlights what she sees as the ambiguity surrounding the bill’s implementation and enforcement.

Historical and current events have shown that laws with vague enforcement guidelines often disproportionately impact marginalized communities. Even the appearance that some were

Re Jerry Kremer’s recent column, “It’s time to give the governor a break”: I strongly disagree with Kremer’s opinion about Gov. Kathy Hochul’s cancellation of congestion pricing. This money would have been of great benefit to those of us who ride the Long Island Rail Road and the New York City transit system. It would also have helped to reduce air pollution in New York City, a big problem.

As we’ve seen in the weeks since the governor canceled this program, there is no Plan B for funding the Metropolitan Transportation Authority’s capital program, despite her absurd statements to the contrary. There is a real risk of losing significant federal funding for the Second Avenue subway. Also, muchneeded new electric train cars for the LIRR will likely now be indefinitely delayed.

I’m guessing that Kremer doesn’t ride the railroad and experience some of the very old M-3 passenger cars, which break down frequently. The now canceled capital program would also have improved accessibility at LIRR stations, not to mention helping

being unfairly targeted by a face mask law would not only undermine trust in public institutions, but also exacerbate existing social and racial tensions.

Gov. Kathy Hochul’s consideration of a mask ban on New York City transit, and similar proposals from other state legislators, indicate a broader trend toward restricting mask use that, if taken up by individual counties as well and not carefully managed, could become the focus of endless litigation and, yes, masked protests. Legislators’ focus should instead be on fostering a safe environment without infringing on individual rights or compromising public health. Rather than outright bans, there should be a nuanced approach that balances safety with the right to wear masks for legitimate reasons. Enhancing security measures at protests, improving surveillance to identify perpetrators of violence without compromising the anonymity of peaceful demonstrators, and fostering better communication between law enforcement and the public could be more effective strategies.

Legislation that restricts the use of masks must be carefully crafted to avoid unintended consequences that affect citizens’ freedoms or can be seen as discriminatory. As the County Legislature considers Pilip’s bill before a scheduled Aug. 5 vote, it should seek input from a wide range of stakeholders before finalizing it, in an effort to protect both public safety and individual rights.

opinions

We are not a nation of one religion

my earliest memories of church are of getting dressed up and heading to St. Dominic’s, in Oyster Bay, with my family. We’d dab our fingers with holy water, make the sign of the cross and walk into the pews, where I would immediately grab a hymnal and start looking through it, hoping we’d get to sing some of my favorites, like “The Lord of the Dance” or “We Three Kings.”

As I grew up, I continued to enjoy many aspects of religion, from getting into (very amateur) theological debates with my friends to the sense of community and belonging it can provide, even as my belief in God slipped away.

While I don’t go to church too often anymore, I still have a special place in my heart for the magic, the importance and the splendor of religion, especially Christianity. The history of religion is one of the highest of highs and the lowest of lows, and led to some of the most phenomenal art, literature and philosophy that humanity has ever produced.

But I’ve been deeply disheartened by some political stunts that have taken place around the country in the name of religion. None more so than the recent efforts by Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry to require all public classrooms in the state to display the Ten Commandments. This comes at a time when there are calls for America to “return” to being a Christian nation, and for Christianity to play a more prominent role in our government, with many echoing the sentiments of Colorado Rep. Lauren Boebert that “I’m tired of this separation of church and state junk.”

were in fact deists, with no personal connection to any one church. George Washington attended a different denomination’s service every week, while many suspected Benjamin Franklin of being a secret atheist.

a nd you need look no further than the Constitution to be reminded of that.

That “junk” Boebert so eloquently refers to is one of the defining pillars of the Founding Fathers’ vision for our country. Because despite what Christian nationalists argue, the United States has never been a Christian nation, and was expressly founded on the idea that any people, with any religious beliefs, could find a home here, even if reality has not always reflected those ideals.

Some argue that the founders were themselves Christian, and that religion played a huge role in the creation of the nation. What this conveniently ignores is the fact that many of them

Letters

to buy new diesel train cars and locomotives, which are approaching the end of their useful lives.

Kremer noted the economic cost of congestion pricing, and perhaps some adjustments could be made. But not funding our transit system is a terrible idea, and it will absolutely result in higher costs to taxpayers in the end.

I once thought of Mr. Kremer as a fairly progressive and effective legislator, but I guess that’s all in the past now that he’s a lobbyist.

In contrast, Kevin Kelley’s column, “Our future should include transit-oriented development,” makes a lot of sense. We urgently need housing and transportation here on Long Island. Kremer’s negative comments about transit funding accomplish nothing, except to play to the short-term interests of uncaring politicians.

I suggest he think about this, and reevaluate his position.

Road violence vs. gun violence: no comparison

To the Editor:

Nassau County knows that life-threatening recklessness behind the wheel has become terrifyingly common. In fact, 20 times more people are killed in the county by drivers than by shooters. yet elected officials, led by County Executive Bruce Blakeman, are doing little or nothing to reduce traffic violence. Instead, in a stunning example of skewed priorities, Blakeman and his political allies stir public fears of the comparatively tiny threat of gun-related crime.

In 2022 — the most recent year for which statistics are available — traffic violence claimed 81 lives in Nassau County. That same year, a total of four people in the county were killed by armed assailants.

And the roads are becoming ever more deadly.

“Traffic fatalities in New york have grown at an alarming rate since the pandemic,” state Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli said in a report last month.

Speeding and drunk or distracted driving are among the leading causes of this upsurge. But the Nassau County Police Department issued 66 percent fewer speeding tickets in 2022 than in 2019, the year prior to the pandemic. DWI arrests have also sharply decreased.

“In Nassau County,” Blakeman declared in March, “we back the blue, and we fund our police.” He boasted that more than 200 officers have been added

Thomas Jefferson even went so far as to reply to a letter by the Danbury Baptist Association by declaring, “When (the Church has) opened a gap in the hedge or wall of separation between the garden of the church and the wilderness of the world, God hath ever broke down the wall itself, removed the Candlestick, etc., and made His Garden a wilderness as it is this day. And that therefore if He will ever please to restore His garden and paradise again, it must of necessity be walled in peculiarly unto Himself from the world …”

Even earlier, Roger Williams, a Puritan minister and the founder of Rhode Island, was banished from Massachusetts for his “erroneous” and “dangerous opinions,” for preaching against the king and for the separation of church and state. Williams feared that the co-mingling of religion and government would not only lead to oppression, but would damage the integrity of the church.

Favoring one religion over others goes directly against the Constitution itself. The Establishment Clause, a key component of the First Amendment, states that “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.” While the exact meaning of “establishment” has been debated by legal scholars for centuries, the broad understanding has traditionally been that the government cannot, and should not, promote one religion over any other.

Religion is a wonderful thing. It brings people together, and encourages us to consider our place in the universe. I’ll be the first to stand up when people of any religious denomination in this country are being oppressed for their beliefs.

At the same time, we cannot allow any religious ideology to influence the functioning of our government, because once we start telling people how to live, love and think based on our religious beliefs, we are no longer upholding religion, but tyranny. As a wise carpenter from Nazareth said in Matthew 22:20, “Render unto Caesar the things which are Caesar’s, and unto God the things that are God’s.”

Will Sheeline is a senior reporter covering Glen Cove, Glen Head, Oyster Bay and Sea Cliff. Comments? WSheeline@ liherald.com.

Framework by Tim Baker

to the county’s police force since he took office in 2022. That rhetoric, and those statistics, mean little to the families of children and adults killed in preventable crashes. And almost all motor vehicle fatalities can indeed be prevented with safer road

designs and tighter enforcement of traffic laws. Nassau County public officials must stop ignoring this worsening threat to the lives of their constituents.

At last Saturday’s next-to-last Food Truck Festival — Wantagh
KEvIN J. KELLEy Atlantic Beach
Anyone who travels by

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