Seaford Herald Citizen

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Seaford

HERALD Citizen

Parents demand schools reopen

Sen. Brooks: How safe are we really?

Janitors protest for higher pay

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VOL. 68 NO. 26

JUNE 25 - JULY 1, 2020

Turnout low in primary race to replace King By TIMOTHY DENTON tdenton@liherald.com

Christina Daly/Herald-Citizen

EVENT ORGANIZER ARIANA Levin, 16, rallied marchers in Cedar Creek Park at the end of a long Juneteenth march from Amityville last Friday — the first march in Seaford since the wave of protests began a month ago.

Seaford march observes Juneteenth, celebrates BLM By TIMOTHY DENTON tentn@liherald.com

Seaford celebrated Juneteenth last Friday, as some 150 people from Nassau and Suffolk counties marched from Amityville Memorial High School to Cedar Creek Park. It was Seaford’s first Black Lives Matter march. The 6.2-mile procession was organized by Ariana Levin, a rising junior at Walt Whitman High School in Huntington Station, who was

joined by a dozen cosponsors from the school, she said. Levin and her colleagues publicized the event via social media. The march was accompanied by a substantial police presence, and law enforcement was clearly prepared for trouble: Armored vehicles could be seen parked under trees beside the Seaford-Oyster Bay Expressway. But despite the tension, the march was without incident. Still, “We had more hecklers

than in most of the other marches I’ve been in,” said Susan Muller, of Wantagh, who characterized the hecklers as “white supremacists.” Among the dozen marches Muller said she had taken part in, one on June 12, in East Meadow, which was marred by violence, was perhaps the most frightening, she said. Friday’s hecklers mainly “just yelled racist comments” along a route that CONTINUED ON PAGE 3

Tuesday’s primaries contained few surprises, as former Vice President Joe Biden and President Donald Trump cruised to easy leads in the presidential contest. In the 2nd Congressional District race to succeed Rep. Peter King, Democrat Jackie Gordon, a former Town of Babylon supervisor, and Bayport Republican Assemblyman Andrew Garbarino held comfortable margins over their respective challengers, Patricia Maher, the Democratic nominee in 2014, and Massapequa Assemblyman Mike LiPetri. Turnout at the polls was exceptionally low, according to election workers in Seaford, Wantagh and Levittown. At press time, only 20,500 had voted in person, out of a total of more than 315,000 — or roughly 6.5 percent — of eligible

voters in the district. Nassau County election officials had not released results by 10 a.m. on Wednesday,. By state law, counting of absentee ballots could not begin until seven days after June 23, the last date by which the ballots could be postmarked to count in the election. The state was waiting a week to ensure that all absentee ballots were returned and counted, said Bonnie Garone, counsel to the Nassau Democratic election commissioner. It was unclear at press time what percentage of the electorate voted by absentee ballot, and how many such ballots were mailed in on Tuesday. Garrone noted that counting of absentee ballots should be faster than in past years, as the Board of Elections now has a set of high-speed tabulation machines that should expedite the process.

Preliminary results Democrats

Republicans

Jackie Gordon

7,310 Andrew Garbarino 5,749

Patricia Maher

2,529 Mike LiPetri

3,094


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