Seaford Herald Citizen

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Seaford

HERALD Citizen

Community thanks firefighters

Downed wires cause blaze

Scout makes safety clasps

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Vol. 68 No. 17

APRIl 23 - 29, 2020

House hopeful hosts webinar on Covid-19 has certainly given her that chance. This was the second information session Gordon has Jackie Gordon, a Democratic hosted since it began. Last candidate for the House of Rep- month, she took part in a conferresentatives in New York’s 2nd ence call for local small business Congressional Disowners with Erica trict, hosted a CovidC h a s e - G r e g o r y, 19 public informadirector of the Small tion webinar on Business DevelopApril 16. She was ment Center at joined by Dr. Keasha Far mingdale ColGuerrier, Northwell lege, who offered Health’s director of tips on applying for quality, leadership disaster business and advocacy and a loans and other fedfamily medicine speeral programs. cialist. After welcoming The 2nd District viewers to last includes most of week’s videoconferSeaford and Wantence, Gordon noted agh. Gordon is seekthe importance of ing to succeed retirhaving these kinds ing Republican Rep. of sessions during Peter King, of Seathe pandemic. She ford. acknowledged resi“I’ve said that I KeASHA dents’ growing conwanted to join the cern about the duraAr my after I saw GueRRIeR, tion of the lockdown that commercial on M.D. of nonessential busiTV where it said, nesses, and ex‘We do more before 9 plained that adhera.m. than most people do in a ing to social distancing guideday,’” Gordon said. “I wanted to lines was beneficial and would run for Congress for the same continue to be. reason that that commercial She introduced Guerrier and states.” listed some of her credentials, The coronavirus pandemic Continued on page 9

By J.D. FReDA

jfreda@liherald.com

t

Timothy Denton/Herald-Citizen

SoCIAlly DIStANCeD SeNIoR citizens lined up outside Iavorone Brothers in Wantagh. Like many grocery stores, it has reserved the early hours for seniors.

Food foraging more difficult

Shortages beginning to appear in some stores By tIMotHy DeNtoN and J.D. FReDA tdenton@liherald.com; jfreda@liherald.com

It was early Monday morning, and despite the hour, senior citizens were lined up in impressive numbers, prepared to take advantage of the store’s early-bird, seniorsonly admission. Most stores now open early, offering seniors the first 90 minutes of their business days. One North Wantagh chain grocery is typical, opening to those 60 and older from 6:30 to 8 a.m. Iavarone Broth-

ers, on Wantagh Avenue, offered the 9-to-10 a.m. hour for senior customers. Inside the North Wantagh store, shoppers moved with quiet efficiency. The store had marked off one-way aisles and placed plastic coverings on keypads and other objects shoppers were likely to touch. These were changed regularly by the cleaning crew, which was provided by an outside contractor hired by the parent company. Grocery shopping, that most prosaic of day-to-day activities, has begun to feel

like hazardous duty in Seaford and Wantagh, and while markets of all sizes struggle to keep their employees and their stores safe and their premises stocked and disinfected, they are facing challenges unlike any before. At Salpino Food Market, on Merrick Road, on the border of Wantagh and Seaford — and with a second location in North Bellmore — one day bleeds into the next, with constant demand for more product. “They, as well as their Continued on page 3

here is a very specific way to take it off and put it on. I would advocate against the general public wearing N95 masks.


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