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Joseph D’Alessandro/Herald photos
Gary Schultz, far left, Andrea Martello, Laura Schwanof and Fred Nass are local environmental advocates who organized an informational session for community members about the importance of healthy coastlines.
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Joseph D’Alessandro/Herald photos
Gary Schultz, far left, Andrea Martello, Laura Schwanof and Fred Nass are local environmental advocates who organized an informational session for community members about the importance of healthy coastlines.
By JOSEPH D’ALESSANDRO jdalessandro@liherald.com
Environmental advocacy group Wild Ones warned Town of Hempstead residents about the dangers of Long Island’s changing coastlines during an informational session on Feb. 22. Held at the Merrick Library, the presentation was directed to all Long Island residents.
“We feel important issues such as shoreline resiliency should be brought to the attention of our residents,” said Andrea Martone, the Vice President, and Community Leader for Wild Ones’ Town of Hempstead community hub. “This issue will be of major concern to property owners now and in the coming decades of climate change and rising ocean levels.”
was hammered by Superstorm Sandy in 2012, eroding beaches, flooding coastal houses, and causing $19 billion in damage to the New York metropolitan area, according to a report by the New York Special Initiative for Rebuilding and Resiliency. Since then, shoreline communities need better protection to avoid harm.
“After Sandy, a lot of people raised their houses,” Wild Ones Secretary Gary Schulz said. “You bought time. But that’s it. Another big storm, that six feet may not be enough anymore.”
L AuRA ScHwANOf Landscaping architect and senior ecologist, GEI Consulting
The Wild Ones chapter for the New York Metropolitan Area is one of Long Island’s organizations that work to prepare communities for the challenges posed by climate change.
Long Island’s South Shore
Laura Schwanof works for GEI Consulting as a landscape architect and a senior ecologist. She has worked on nature restoration projects for over 30 years. The Wild Ones team met Schwanof at a shoreline resiliency presentation at Hofstra University last year, which inspired them to partner for a community education program.
According to Schwanof, one of the best ways local communities can protect themselves
Joseph D’Alessandro/Herald photos Gary Schultz, far left, Andrea Martello, Laura Schwanof and Fred Nass are local environmental advocates who organized an informational session for community members about the importance of healthy coastlines.
By JOSEPH D’ALESSANDRO jdalessandro@liherald.com
Environmental advocacy group Wild Ones warned Town of Hempstead residents about the dangers of Long Island’s changing coastlines during an informational session on Feb. 22. Held at the Merrick Library, the presentation was directed to all Long Island residents.
“We feel important issues such as shoreline resiliency should be brought to the attention of our residents,” said Andrea Martone, the Vice President, and Community Leader for Wild Ones’ Town of Hempstead community hub. “This issue will be of major concern to property owners now and in the coming decades of climate change and rising ocean levels.”
was hammered by Superstorm Sandy in 2012, eroding beaches, flooding coastal houses, and causing $19 billion in damage to the New York metropolitan area, according to a report by the New York Special Initiative for Rebuilding and Resiliency. Since then, shoreline communities need better protection to avoid harm.
e aware of your surroundings.
L AuRA ScHwANOf Landscaping architect and senior ecologist, GEI Consulting
“After Sandy, a lot of people raised their houses,” Wild Ones Secretary Gary Schulz said. “You bought time. But that’s it. Another big storm, that six feet may not be enough anymore.”
The Wild Ones chapter for the New York Metropolitan Area is one of Long Island’s organizations that work to prepare communities for the challenges posed by climate change.
Long Island’s South Shore
Laura Schwanof works for GEI Consulting as a landscape architect and a senior ecologist. She has worked on nature restoration projects for over 30 years. The Wild Ones team met Schwanof at a shoreline resiliency presentation at Hofstra University last year, which inspired them to partner for a community education program.
According to Schwanof, one of the best ways local communities can protect themselves CoNtiNued oN pAGe 7
Uniondale resident and Bronx native DJ Johnny “Juice” Rosado has joined the Long Island Music and Entertainment Hall of Fame board of directors.
The celebrated Hip-Hop artist and Hall of Fame inductee is a legendary figure in the music industry, and his new role allows him to help shape the future of Long Island’s rich musical legacy, bringing diversity and innovative ideas to the forefront.
“I’m excited to join the LIMEHOF board because it’s essential to archive and celebrate Long Island’s artistry,” Rosado said in a news release about his appointment. “My goal is to help ensure that diverse, groundbreaking artists, who may have otherwise been overlooked, are recognized. By working with other board members, I hope we can better reflect the full spectrum of the creative talent that has come from this region.”
Rosado brings nearly 40 years of experience in the music industry. His multifaceted career includes roles as an Emmy and NAACP Image-nominated composer, award-winning producer, turntablist, musician, b-boy, educator, and mentor. Best known for his work with Public Enemy, he has also contributed to projects with iconic artists like the Beastie Boys, Slick Rick, Mavis Staples, Ben Harper, KRS-One, and DMC.
“Johnny Juice’s remarkable career speaks for itself,” LIMEHOF Chairman Ernie Canadeo said in the release. “His influence on the Hip-Hop community,
combined with his dedication to educa tion and mentoring, makes him a perfect fit for our board. We’re thrilled to work with him as we continue to elevate Long Island’s music scene.”
Inducted into LIMEHOF in 2008 as part of Public Enemy, Rosado has long been a strong supporter of the organization, par ticipating in several of its key events, including the 50th Anniversary of Hip-
Hop celebration and various artist induc
He has also been a passionate advocate for LIMEHOF’s educational initiatives, including working alongside Stevie Van Zandt’s TeachRock program.
Currently on tour with Public Enemy as part of the 2025 Guns N’ Roses tour, Rosado’s career remains as dynamic as ever. In addition to his work in music, he
is a computer scientist, electronic engineer, and a proud U.S. military veteran. He is also an active mentor, helping to nurture the next generation of musicians at the Energetic Enterprise Youth Community Studio in Uniondale. His wide-ranging talents extend to being one half of the duo The Odyssey, whose unique blend of jazz, soul, funk, and Hip-Hop earned them multiple awards, including Best Alternative Video and Video of the Year at the International Independent Music Video Awards in 2020. Rosado is also collaborating with the alternative rock band My World, performing both nationally and locally.
LIMEHOF, founded in 2004, continues to be a vital institution for celebrating and preserving Long Island’s music and entertainment heritage. With more than 130 inductees, the organization provides scholarships, education programs, and awards to students and educators across the region. The museum in Stony Brook, serves as a hub for exploring the impact of Long Island’s musical contributions.
“I’m proud to join the LIMEHOF
By REINE BETHANY
Rev. Dr. William C. Evans made great projects flourish wherever he went.
The son of a pastor father, for whom he was named, Evans grew up in Winchester, Kentucky. After graduating from Metropolitan Bible College in Chicago, he came to New York in 1923. He continued his education in Brooklyn and in Jamaica, chauffeuring to finance his courses.
He helped organize Union Baptist Church, where he became assistant pastor in 1926.
He then led Mount Olive Baptist Church in Oyster Bay for a decade and built the congregation from eight to 300 members.
He took over South Hempstead Baptist Church from its founder, the late Rev. Elijah Coleman, in 1941. Its 30 congregation members were worshiping in an abandoned blacksmith shop.
They had spent $700 (roughly $12,250 in 2025) on a site for a new church, but its earth was riddled with old junk and the site had to be abandoned.
Meanwhile, Evans chauffeured for two prominent men of Garden City and Hempstead.
He progressed from individual chauffeuring to owning three taxicabs that served customers using the Country Life Press stop in Garden City. He himself drove one of the cabs 6:30 to 9:30 a.m. and 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. each day.
Evans and his congregation bought a suitable site for their church at Maple and Beech avenues. News of the project spread quickly.
Rev. William C. Evans, left, built both his congregation and South Hempstead Baptist Church from scratch during the 1940s. Hempstead Chief of Police John Feeley, right, endorsed strongly supported Evans, particularly his work with Hempstead Youth.
People who rode in Evans’ cabs donated generously, as did prominent community professionals: District Attorney James N. Gehrig; Hempstead police justice Alexander Berman; George B. Serenbetz, former police justice and member of the Hempstead Housing Authority, W. Edwin Taeffner, president of the Men’s Association at the Cathedral of the Incarnation, Garden City; Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. Trundle, presidents of the Cathedral Club at the Cathedral of the Incarnation; John L. Feeley, Hempstead Police Depart -
ment chief; and Garden City police commissioner William Gordon Murphy.
David Mackey was chairman of the deacon’s board, and Leroy Coleman, chairman of the trustee board.
With all the community support, plus dedicated planning and hands-on construction work, Evans avoided a mortgage. The basement of the church was completed in 1943. The congregation worshiped there until completion of the superstructure in 1945, all for an expenditure of $50,000, with $10,000 more needed to finish out the plans for the space, including a youth center.
Ultimately, the redbrick walls encompassed seating for 550, a pipe organ, a pastor’s study, a nursery, a kitchen, restrooms, a large auditorium, and a baptismal font that was 10 feet wide and 6 feet deep.
Area churches that lacked such a font came to South Hempstead for baptism ceremonies.
Within a few years, another component of his dream, the Parkview Youth Center, arose adjacent to the church. Later, it was renamed the Percy Jackson Youth Center.
Rev. Evans continued his rigorous schedule of planning, raising funds, conducting weddings and funerals, and maintaining his cab business. He also conducted revival meetings twice a year in Georgia and North Carolina. He earned a Doctor of Divinity degree from Virginia Theological Seminary in 1952.
As the years passed, Beech Avenue was renamed Evans Avenue.
Evans mounted a major event in 1967. John Mackey, the famous Hempstead High athlete, who by then had played three years for the Baltimore Colts in the National Football League, came to South Hempstead Baptist Church for a fundraising event to benefit the youth center.
Mackey was the son of Rev. Walter R. Mackey, founder of Mount Sinai Baptist Church in Roosevelt; by 1967, Walter’s brother Arthur L. Mackey, Sr., had become pastor of Mount Sinai.
The event was buttressed by South Hempstead Baptist’s 75-person choir. By then, the congregation numbered 900. Their hope was to build a community pool.
Though this hope did not apparently reach fruition, the comprehensive activities of mentoring and day care at the Percy Jackson Youth Center were to continue for decades, the spiritual child of a self-demanding man of dauntless vision.
The South Hempstead church building overlooks Peninsula Boulevard, and symbolizes the spiritual resiliency of Hempstead’s Black community.
By CHRISTIE LEIGH BABIRAD
cbabirad@liherald.com
A large crowd showed for the kickoff to Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman’s re-election campaign.
The American Legion Post 1066 in Massapequa was packed on Monday with a number of Nassau County officials in attendance including Nassau County Comptroller Elaine Phillips, and Town of Oyster Bay Supervisor Joseph Saladino who asked the crowd if they’re ready to send a strong message across Nassau County and across America.
Saladino said that the last time the Democrats had control of Nassau County, they hiked taxes and crime soared through the roof, but Blakeman changed all of that.
“We love our families, we love our country, and we have a saying here in Massapequa, we stand for the American flag and we kneel for God,” Saladino said.
Blakeman has been serving for 3.5 years since he defeated incumbent Laura Curran in 2021. He is looking to serve for another four years and this race is said to be one of the closest
Christie Leigh Babirad/Herald
Incumbent Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman announced that he is running for re-election in Massapequa on Feb. 24.
watched races in 2025.
“I’m here to support Bruce, keep Nassau red and keep it safe and more affordable for the middle class,” county resident Amber Anderson said.
Other supporters included American
Legion Post 2736 of East Meadow members Frank Salamino and Carl Hager, who both said that Blakeman is a “good guy.” “Bruce Blakeman is a real gentleman,” said Hager.
The crowd cheered loudly as Blake-
man stepped up to the podium and spoke of his accomplishments from lowering the crime rate and taxes, banning masks that supposedly led to hate crimes, prohibiting men from playing on women’s teams and supporting the police.
“We’re not defunding the police, we’re growing the police,” said Blakeman, who also lauded that he signed an executive order that prohibited the county from becoming a sanctuary place.
His expected opponent, Democratic County Legislator Seth Koslow, noted his opposition to Blakeman’s record.
“Under Bruce Blakeman, Nassau taxpayers are paying more and getting less,” Koslow said in a statement. “Taxes are higher, crime is rising, and millions in illegal fees have not been refunded. Instead of helping hardworking families, he is using taxpayer dollars to line the pockets of his political donors and party cronies. Nassau County deserves better. I will fight to put money back where it belongs, in the hands of taxpayers, and ensure our county is safe, affordable, and well-run for everyone.”
The FIFA World Cup may be a year away from reaching the tri-state area, but elite-level soccer action as the Long Island Rough Riders will play the Charlotte Independence in a first-round matchup of the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup on Thursday, March 20, at 7 p.m. at Mitchel Athletic Complex in Uniondale.
The Rough Riders, a team with a history of upsetting Major League Soccer opponents, will face a tough test against Charlotte, a USL League One club.
Town of Hempstead Supervisor Don Clavin urges local fans to rally behind the hometown team.
Not since the
Cosmos, the former team of legendary soccer star Pele, has such elite-level soccer taken the field on Long Island.
To encourage local support, the town and the Rough Riders are offering a 30 percent discount for town residents. Fans can use promo code TOH at checkout at Short.Url. at/n5B3f. Tickers are $10.50 for adults and $8.40 for ages 16 and under.
DaN ClaviN Hempstead town supervisor
“Not since the New York Cosmos, the former team of legendary soccer star Pelé, has such elite-level soccer taken the field on Long Island,” Clavin said in a news release. The Long Island Rough Riders have quite a challenge in taking on the higher-ranked Charlotte Independence, and our boys will need all the support they can get on March 20. We invite all residents to come down and be part of Long Island soccer history!”
The U.S. Open Cup, established in 1914, is the oldest national soccer competition in the United States and features nearly 100 teams from across the U.S. soccer league system, including the MLS, MLS Next Pro and USL Championship. The Rough Riders have a history of surprising top-tier teams, previously defeating the New England Revolution and the New York/New Jersey MetroStars in past tournaments.
“This is a big game for our organization, where we can prove we can play against the best of the best,” Tanner Sands, the Rough Riders general manager said in the release.
“It’s also rare for amateur teams to host this competition, so we’re especially excited to bring this prestigious tournament to Long Island and the Town of Hempstead, where we’re fortunate to run community clinics. We
hope to see everyone there for this unique occasion.”
With the 2026 FIFA World Cup on the horizon, Clavin believes this match can help inspire a new generation of young soccer fans
“From this Long Island Rough Riders contest in the U.S. Open Cup to next year’s FIFA World Cup, these historic events are sure to create a whole new generation of young soccer fans eager to get out on the pitch,” Clavin said in the release.
— Jeffrey Bessen
The need for increased state funding for community colleges was on the menu at the annual Nassau Community College Legislative Breakfast as staff members, including NCC Chief Administrative Officer Maria Conzatti and other college leaders met with and other college leaders met with state elected and appointed officials on Feb. 7.
Held on the NCC campus in Garden City, the event featured remarks from college leadership, students, administrators and elected officials.
Along with Conzatti speakers included Jorge L. Gardyn, chairman of the NCC Board of Trustees; Jerry Kornblu-
th, NCC’s vice president of community and government relations and Jessialy Avilez, president of the NCC Student Government Association.
Nassau Community College serves 14,000 full-time, part-time and continuing education students, awards 67 associate degrees and 25 certificates on its 225-acre campus. Through on-campus and online offerings, the college educates local and international students, and boasts 168,000 alumni. Since 1959, NCC has earned a nationwide reputation for academic excellence and ease of transferability to four-year schools.
— Jeffrey Bessen
By MELISSA BERMAN mberman@liherald.com
First in a month-long series of interviews with influential area women in honor of Women’s History Month. Stacey Feldman is the executive director of the Marion and Aaran Gural JCC.
Herald: Tell me about yourself.
Stacey Feldman: When I was in college, I studied advertising and marketing and after being on a trip to Israel I realized that I wanted to work for the Jewish community. I loved trying to understand what made people buy a brand or why a certain color was successful, product placement, all of that really interests me and then after being in Israel, I realized that the Jewish community needed me more. I wanted to sell being an active member of the Jewish community. I’m doing this since 1990, I started working part-time teaching Hebrew school and from there I moved to New York and became the Teen Director at the Mid-Island Y JCC, worked for Hadassah and Young Judea and then was blessed to have worked for UJA Federation. From UJA is how I ended up working in the Five Towns and ultimately becoming the Executive Director here
at the Gural JCC, in 2023. I love building the community and bringing them together, there are so many types of people and they all come together under one roof.
Herald: What do you do? Why?
Feldman: We have four sites that serve this wonderful community. Everyone knows that we’re the little blue house on Grove Avenue that helps people. In 2017, we purchased Temple Israel, Lawrence so that is what we refer to as the Harrison-Kerr Family Campus. That’s the site where we have the senior center and we operate the largest early childhood center in the community with about 350 kids and a staff of almost 90. In the summer of 2023, in partnership with the Leon Mayer Fund took over the operation of the Mark Ramer Chesed Center, in Hewlett. That is a 3,500 square foot facility of new goods so that a family in need can get linens, new clothing, new house wares and appliances. Our fourth site is the S.H.O.P, in Cedarhurst (Sustenance Hope Opportunities Place) and that is
where we operate the largest kosher food pantry on Long Island, serving over 800 families. We offer a variety of social work support services from that location sand the whole agency.
Herald: What has challenged you in your career so far, and what keeps you going and inspires you?
Feldman: What challenges me currently is never wanting to say no, but for financial reasons sometimes we have to say no. What I grapple with is wanting to serve more and more people on what is a non-profit budget. What keeps me going is the ability now to build a full-service Jewish community center in this area. We’ve been working out of the site on Grove for almost 42 years and it’s exciting to address all of the needs in the community for recreation, socialization, a pool and serving all members of the community.
Herald: What have been the proudest moments in your life?
Feldman: I’m very proud of my fami-
ly, and having a son who just graduated college a year ago, a daughter that just entered college and having a loving and supporting husband. My family gives me the support that I need to work long nights and hours, so without the support from them I wouldn’t be able to do this work. I think our proudest moment professionally is finally working in partnership with Nassau County to find a location so that we can really expand services. We are very excited to build a whole new center that the community can participate in.
Herald: What advice do you have for others? What work is left to be done?
Feldman: My advice to anybody is to follow your passion, work is not work is you are passionate about it. You will enjoy coming to work everyday is you enjoy the work. Whether it’s on a volunteer level, if you can’t do professionally what you’re passionate about then find time to give back and get involved in a non-profit you enjoy. There is always work to be done, as women we’re nurturing and we’re caring, empathetic, we don’t want to leave any stone unturned so we’re always looking for new opportunities.
By ROKSANA AMID ramid@liherald.com
For over a decade, Long Island native Sarah Kate Ellis has led GLAAD, the world’s most influential LGBTQ media advocacy organization. Under her leadership, GLAAD has evolved from a media watchdog into a driving force for cultural change, shaping representation and acceptance of LGBTQ people in media, entertainment, and politics. In an interview, Ellis shares her journey, challenges, and vision for the future.
Herald: How did you get where you are?
Ellis began her career in media, working for major publishing houses like Condé Nast and Time Inc. She quickly discovered her passion for storytelling.
“I loved media instantly,” she said. “I loved telling stories and seeing the power of storytelling and how it can really bring people together.”
However, her family set her on the path toward advocacy.
“My wife and I got pregnant at the exact same time by accident, if that could be,” Ellis said. “It wasn’t planned. We were just trying to start a family. And I think that led more to my advocacy work.”
As digital media transformed the industry, Ellis sought a new challenge. When the opportunity arose to lead
GLAAD, she saw it as a way to combine her passion for media with her commitment to the LGBTQ community.
“I got to do what I love—media advocacy—but for my community,” she said.
“When I started at GLAAD, it was really to modernize the organization based on the changing media ecosystem.”
Now, after 11 years at the helm, Ellis remains committed to ensuring GLAAD continues to be a powerful voice for LGBTQ representation.
Herald: What are your daily responsibilities?
“The media ecosystem has yet again dramatically shifted,” she says. “The average American spends 12 hours a day consuming media. So we’ve never had a larger opportunity ahead of us.”
However, reaching audiences has become more complex.
Ellis: “I really do two key things at the organization,” she says. “One is drive the strategy on how we’re going to build acceptance in the United States and globally for LGBTQ people. The other significant part of my job is fundraising. To do all the work, you need funding.”
One of her key initiatives was establishing the GLAAD Media Institute, which serves as the organization’s think tank, advisory, and education arm. She also launched a rapid response team to address media coverage and public narratives around LGBTQ issues.
Ellis believes GLAAD’s work is more critical than ever as media consumption habits change.
“The biggest challenge is how do we reach people when it’s so delineated?” she asks. “That’s one of the challenges I’m facing now—how do I reach folks in a compelling way that touches them and moves them?”
Herald: What are your memorable achievements?
Over the years, Ellis has celebrated many victories, both personal and professional.
“From a personal perspective, it’s my family, my wife and our kids,” she says. “I’m so proud of my kids. They’re 16 now. They were 4 when I started at GLAAD, so that’s kind of mind-blowing.”
In her work, she is particularly proud of partnerships that have expanded LGBTQ inclusion.
“Here I am at the Super Bowl. We host an NFL-partnered Super Bowl event for the LGBTQ community,” Ellis says. “If you ever said to me 10 years ago that GLAAD and the NFL logo
would be together and working together, I would have never believed you. But here we are.”
She is also proud of GLAAD’s presence at the World Economic Forum, ensuring LGBTQ issues remain part of global discussions.
“If we’re not there speaking on behalf of LGBTQ people, we are left out of the conversation,” she says. “I was proud to be the first LGBTQ organization to get a white badge from the World Economic Forum.”
Herald: What advice can you offer the next generation?
Ellis: “I think my advice is to work hard and with your head up, because everybody says put your head down and work hard,” she said. “But I think you have to keep your head up, stay aware of what’s going on.”
She believes that in an increasingly virtual world, making personal connections is essential.
“I think we’ve become such an isolated society, and people think that we can do things on Zoom, but proximity to power and meeting people and engaging with people personally advances so much more at a rapid pace than meeting on Zoom.”
Both interviews, with Stacey Feldman and Sarah Kate Ellis, continue at liherald.com.
from storms is to prevent further damage to natural coastlines and to support restoration projects.
Beach restoration projects often add sand back to the beaches and reintroduce native species of tough plants that can soften waves and strengthen dunes. Natural beaches and marshes are able to reduce the force of incoming storm waves by 50 percent over short distances — and without these natural barriers, beachfront properties are exposed to greater danger from the sea.
Many marshlands were destroyed when suburbs were developed along the south shore throughout the 20th century, said Fred Nass, Wild Ones President.
Nass, a Merrick resident for decades, has witnessed how the south shore has changed to become less storm resistant with the construction of new homes.
“I thought this would be an excellent program, especially for residents who now have to face the fact that there are detriments to life and property when you’re owning a house along the shoreline,” Nass said.
The other important step is to speak with local elected officials about environmental programs, she said.
“Become an advocate for environ -
mental change — that’s key,”
Schwanof said. “Be aware of your surroundings. Your property isn’t your
only responsibility, it’s your community as a whole.”
Schwanof encouraged local home -
owners to research what plants are native to the Long Island ecosystem and include them in their landscaping, strengthening the local ecosystem.
Wild Ones is working to make native species plants more accessible to homeowners.
“We’re looking to develop a nursery that we can be able to offer plants that are appropriate to the local environment,” Nass said. “We have a connection now with the Greenbelt Native Plant Nursery on Staten Island, which has a very large amount of collected and stored native seeds. We also have an invitation with the Town of Hempstead conservation and waterways to germinate plants at their greenhouse.”
Wild Ones has other community hubs on Long Island that are pushing for change. Agatha Martello, Wild Ones Community Hub Leader for the Town of Oyster Bay, works in restorative landscaping.
“We’re trying to educate people because they can empower themselves with their own properties,” Martello said. “The proposal of our groups and a lot of scientists is to stop trying to modify the land against what is against nature. What science tells us is we have to work with nature, because we’re always going to lose (against it).”
By MADISON GUSLER mgusler@liherald.com
Congressional Republicans have recently directed the committee on Energy and Commerce, which oversees Medicaid, to cut its budget by at least $880 billion. These cuts would result in millions of Americans losing their health coverage, while providing tax cuts to corporations and the wealthy.
According to Nate Jackson, NY Director of Protect our Care, these cuts would hurt Long Island families, jeopardize funding for hospitals and strain the state health care budget.
Children, new mothers, seniors and people with disabilities across Nassau and Suffolk counties rely on Medicaid to cover essential health care costs.
U.S. Rep. Laura Gillen, a Democrat who represents a majority of the South Shore of Nassau County, and Assemblywoman Michelle Solages joined health care advocates on Feb. 19 to oppose the cuts, and to commit to working to protect Long Islanders’ access to health care.
“The Republican plan to slash Medicaid would devastate Long Island,” Gillen said. “It would mean higher health care costs, hospital funding in limbo, longer wait times to access care for tens of thousands of Long Islanders, and a dramatic decrease in access to vital mental health care.
“We need to be working to protect and strengthen access to health care, not ripping it away from seniors, children and veterans on Long Island who count on Medicaid to access the lifesaving care that they need,” she added, calling for nonpartisan support.
“When we’re talking about an essential service, it’s health care,” said Solages, a member of the Assembly’s Health
Committee. “When we talk about cutting dollars for hospitals, for nursing homes, we’re cutting people to the bone. And so we have to be realistic about what we need to fund. Tax breaks for billionaires is not what Long Island needs.”
Solages discussed the need for health care funding, referring to two Long Island nursing homes that are slated to
close and Nassau University Medical Center, the county’s public hospital, which is in desperate need of financial support.
“We’re talking about people’s lives,” she said. “This is not like a pothole. This is about people’s prescription drugs, their health care, and we’ve got to get realistic in this country about what’s important. People’s premiums have increased. They’re deciding whether to buy food or prescription drugs, and other essential services — rent — and the American people are crying out for relief.”
Cynthia Ngombe, a health care advocate with the Healthcare Education Project, explained that cuts to Medicaid “would shift costs for health coverage to states, putting more pressure not only on the state Medicaid budget, but on other key areas of spending such as education and public safety.”
“Medicaid is under attack from Washington, D.C.,” Ngombe added. “Federal cuts would slash critical services that keep New Yorkers healthy and our communities safe, in areas like maternal health, mental health and the emergency room. All New Yorkers would be impacted, but our Black, Latino and low-income, including rural communities, would be hit hardest by our Medicaid cuts. Access to quality health care is a right. It’s New Yorkers’ top priority.”
Presented by:
Courtesy Ed Lewi Associates, on behalf of Dunkin’
Representatives from the East Meadow Dunkin’ celebrated the grand reopening of the newly remodeled restaurant on Merrick Avenue. The Dunkin’ franchise owner Joe Dazzo was joined by Christine Mooney of the East Meadow Chamber of Commerce, State Sen. Steve Rhoads’s legislative aid Kelly Sepa, Hempstead Councilman Dennis Dunne, business consultant Joe Marando, Ross Schiller of the chamber, Legislator Tom McKevitt and Dolores Rome of the chamber.
Joe Dazzo, the franchise owner, with members of the Nassau County Police Department, including Officers Dominic Padolecchia, Vincent
Community members and Dunkin’ fans gathered on Feb. 13 for the grand reopening of Dunkin’s newly remodeled next-generation restaurant at 329 Merrick Ave., East Meadow.
Dunkin’ franchisee The Dazzo Network hosted a ribbon-cutting ceremony with several local dignitaries, including Nassau County Legislator Thomas McKevitt, Town of Hempstead Councilman Dennis Dunne Sr., officers from the Nassau County Police Department’s First Precinct, representatives from the East Meadow Chamber of Commerce, and staff from the office of New York State Sen. Steven Rhoads.
The first 100 Dunkin’ Rewards members in line at 9 a.m. received a free medium hot or iced coffee for 100 consecutive days through the Dunkin’ app. Others had the chance to spin the Dunkin’ prize wheel for free merchandise.
A program created to provide seniors in the community with essential resources on topics like storm preparation, scam prevention, electrical safety, energy efficiency, and financial assistance was unveiled by PSEG Long Island.
The Senior Connections initiative aims to help older residents navigate these crucial areas to stay safe, save money and avoid common pitfalls.
“We created the Senior Connections program to enhance our commitment to older adults in the community,” Michael Presti, director of customer experience and marketing at PSEG Long Island, said in a news release. “This free program will provide important information to help seniors stay safe and save money at locations that are convenient for them to attend.”
PSEG Long Island will offer seminars led by subject-matter experts, covering a range of topics that are important to seniors. These presentations will be held in collaboration with local community organizations, libraries, schools, senior living communities, and other groups that serve older residents. Both small, intimate gatherings and larger events will be available, and sessions can be conducted in person or virtually, making the program accessible to a wide audience.
The newly remodeled location is open daily from 5 a.m. to 9 p.m. For more information, visit DunkinDonuts.com or subscribe to the Dunkin’ blog at news.DunkinDonuts. com/blog.
—
Jordan Vallone
the
College
Jorge L. Gardyn, NCC
Canzoneri-Fitzpatrick.
Administrative
The program officially kicked off with a safety presentation at the YMCA in Glen Cove earlier this month. Future sessions are scheduled for New Hyde Park and Huntington.
The Senior Connections program is part of PSEG Long Island’s broader
efforts to ensure that all members of the community, particularly vulnerable seniors, have the knowledge and tools they need to remain safe and resilient in the face of everyday challenges, including severe weather, electrical hazards and potential scams.
Seniors and organizations interested in learning more or requesting a seminar can contact PSEG Long Island at communityLI@pseg.com.
— Jeffrey Bessen
c. 1970s, pencil and pastel on paper, is an open-ended composition, depicting race relations.
Above: If Der Be Angels Then Some Must Look Me, c. 2000s, wood and acrylic, examines spirituality by highlighting the divine beauty of the everyday..
By Danielle Schwab
Within the everyday experience, there’s a deeper story to be told. For visual artist Robert Graham Carter, his art unearths the stories of the African American experience through the individuals and environments he depicts, bringing larger narratives to the surface.
Now on display at the Heckscher Museum of Art, visitors can explore over 22 figurative paintings, sculptures and drawings that explore his reflections on childhood, spirituality, the black church, and societal inequities. The exhibition, “Robert Graham Carter: The Art of Reflection,” celebrates not only his talents but his involvement with Long Island’s art scene — particularly the Heckscher, where Carter made history in 1973 as the first African American artist to receive a solo show.
Born in Louisville, Ky. in 1938, Carter witnessed firsthand life during the Jim Crow South. Later, he went to the University of Louisville with many internationally known artists today such as Sam Gilliam, Bob Thompson and Kenneth Young.
“They actually formed an arts collective called the Gallery Enterprises when they were in college. This collective was important because the city was recently desegregated. There were socially not that many opportunities for artists to exhibit their work if they were artists of color,” guest curator Sarah Battle says. “The Gallery Enterprises created those spaces.”
• Now through May 25
• Open Thursday through Sunday, noon-5 p.m.
• Heckscher Museum of Art, 2 Prime Ave., Huntington
• Visit Heckscher.org or call (631) 380-3230 for information on related programming
Carter became known for his striking figurative art — often in mixed mediums —that depicted his life experience as an African American man while drawing inspiration from the people around him.
“He’s going to showcase a memory, or illustrate people — everyday people — in his life that he either wants people to be thinking about, to elevate, or just to offer another perspective on the topic at hand,” Battle, research curator at Louisville’s Speed Art Museum, explains.
Drawing influence from his upbringing, Carter’s works balance personal and universal truths, with a focus on topics that connect to the experiences of African Americans. His art addresses the joy and importance of family, the legacy of segregation, the charm of childhood, the spiritual and corporal force that is the Black church, and the impression of Blackface on American culture.
“Figures are the carriers of my thoughts, messages, or ideas, they are my stories,” Carter explained in an email. “For me, it’s the best way to tell the story or to give value or a sense of texture to a meeting or setting.”
In his untitled pencil and pastel drawing from the 1970s, Carter shows his mastery through his depiction of two children, one white child and one African American child with empty thought bubbles above their head as they gaze at each other.
“This piece inspired the education team at the Hecksher to create an activity for people to think about the sorts of conversations these two children could be thinking or saying to each
other, and what sorts of ways these conversations might have changed over time,” Battle says.
Carter also found a niche in using wood in his creations.
“It started with me being attracted to the brightness of the paint and the subdued quality of the wood,” Carter went on in his email. “I thought color placed against this kind of texture and tone would stand out. If you had a bright blue or bright red against a dull gray, the gray would make the color even stronger.”
His use of texture is on full display in his “If Der Be Angels, Den Sum Mus Look Like Me, 2000s,” where Carter postulates spiritual inclusivity within the religious narrative.
“This piece is of an angel. The wings of the angel are made up of these wood slits. They’re painted in bright colors that make it appear that the wings are very full and threedimensional,” Battle says.
“They’re just layers of these wood pieces that create such beautiful interiors or beautiful figures.”
Carter moved to Long Island in 1968 and joined Nassau Community College where he taught in the art department for over 50 years. Archival itemsl such as newspaper clippings and letters included in the exhibit show the impact of his identity as an educator and artist in the local art scene — and throughout the country.
“When I retired, a formal written notice was required. In my notice, I wrote an anecdote ‘I explained the problem, and no one understood it. I explained the problem again, and no one understood it. I explained it a third time, and I understood it.’ It’s a short gimmicky way of saying I am bettered for having taught others,” Carter further explained.
His legacy of creating and inspiring art here and beyond is a testament to his enduring craft.
“This is a wonderful opportunity for the local arts community if they don’t know his work already, to see a number of great examples, as well as draw more national attention to his living legacy,” Battle adds.
“This exhibition not only offers visitors a chance to see art made throughout Carter’s career, but it also makes space to honor his living legacy as an artist educator. This solo show highlights some of his early influences in Louisville, Kentucky as well as his impact on artists in Nassau County and beyond.”
He has plenty of stories to tell — with more to come. An undisputed expert in the fine art of making hit music, Jim Messina’s legacy of musical genius spans five decades, three super groups, a vibrant solo career and scores of producing and engineering credits. a musician whose career has shaped the sound of multiple generations. From his start with Buffalo Springfield to defining the Country Rock genre with Poco and then forming the iconic duo Loggins & Messina, his influence on music is undeniable. With hits spanning over five decades, he’s a true craftsman of his art. Now touring with a talented band, Messina performs songs from every stage of his career: Buffalo Springfield, Poco, Loggins & Messina, and his solo projects. ouring the country and playing sold-out shows, Jim says that he’s enjoying discovering who he is, where he’s been and — most significantly — where he’s going.
Friday, Feb. 28, 8 p.m. $69, $59, $49. Jeanne Rimsky Theater at Landmark on Main Street, 232 Main St., Port Washington. Tickets available at landmarkonmainstreet.org or (516) 767-6444.
You know him, you love him, and now you can catch Kevin James when his “Owls Don’t Walk” tour arrives here. As only Kevin can, he covers a range of topics from motivating children to put down their video games, to why he doesn’t trust technology, and how many tater tots he can fit in his mouth. James sure has come a long way since his early days on the local comedy scene. After being discovered at the 1996 Montreal Comedy Festival, he signed a development deal to create his own sitcom. “The King of Queens” premiered in 1998 and ran for nine seasons, earning him an Emmy nomination. From there, his acting career blew up — in film and TV.
Sunday, March 2, 7:30 p.m. $99.50, $79.50, $69.50, $49.50. The Paramount, 370 New York Ave., Huntington. (800) 745-3000 or Ticketmaster.com or ParamountNY. com.
The Joni Project visits the Tilles Center stage, Thursday, March 20, 7:30 p.m., to celebrate the iconic Joni Mitchell. The musically sophisticated band is fronted by Long Island’s remarkable multi-instrumentalist and singer Katie Pearlman, who impressively plays Joni’s songs in their original open guitar tunings, and also includes jazz and jam band mainstays Dave Berg (guitar), Dan Ehrlich (bass), Alan Lerner (drums), Mark Mancini (keyboards), Steve Finklestein (percussion), Premik Russell Tubbs (saxophone and flute) and Victoria Faiella (backing vocals). Collectively, they’ve performed with members of the Grateful Dead, The Band, The Doors, the Neville Brothers, and many others.
Together, they bring fresh interpretation to Joni’s legendary tunes from their many eras and genres —particularly from the time of her stunning and dynamic collaboration with Jaco Pastorius, Pat Metheny and Michael Brecker. But The Joni Project celebrates it all - from Both Sides Now, Big Yellow Taxi, Chelsea Morning and Help Me, to Raised on Robbery and Free Man in Paris! Perlman faithfully performs in true Joni style, her tunings remain as fresh today as they were when first performed. LIU Post campus, 720 Northern Boulevard, Brookville. Tickets available at tillescenter. org or (516) 299-3100.
Adelphi University Performing Arts students present the musical adaptation of “The Spitfire Grill,” now through Sunday, March 2. Based on the 1996 film by Lee David Zlotoff, this is a heartwarming and inspirational musical tale of redemption, perseverance and family. It follows a troubled young parolee yearning for a fresh start who follows her dreams to Wisconsin, based on a page from an old travel book, only to find a small town with a gritty heart aching with longing and regret. Unexpectedly discovering the healing power of community while working at the Spitfire Grill, Percy reawakens the entire town’s capacity for rebirth, forgiveness and hope.
Set to a melodic folk-inspired score, it’s a joyous celebration of human kindness. $30, with discounts available for seniors, students Adelphi alumni and staff. Adelphi University Performing Arts Center, 1 South Ave., Garden City. (516) 877-4000 or Adelphi.edu/pac.
The influential proto-punk/garage band The Dictators performs at My Father’s Place, Sunday, March 2, 7-9 p.m. My Father’s Place at The Roslyn, 1221 Old Northern Blvd., Roslyn. For tickets/ information, visit MyFathersPlace. com or call (516) 580-0887.
Art Explorations
Converse, collaborate and create at Family Saturdays at Nassau County Museum of Art. The drop-in program continues, Saturday, March 1, noon-3 p.m. Kids and their adult partners talk about and make art together. While there, enjoy reading and play in the Reading Room, and contribute to The Lobby Project, a collaborative art installation. Registration required. 1 Museum Dr., Roslyn Harbor. Visit nassaumuseum.org to register or call (516) 484-9337.
Best of Broadway: ‘Looking Forward, Looking Back’ Adelphi University Performing Arts students celebrate the music that shaped Broadway during their semi-annual Best of Broadway concert, Sunday, March 9, 4 p.m. The talented students bring to life the magic of Broadway with music from classic and contemporary musicals.
This edition includes selections from celebrated composers and lyricists, including Kander and Ebb, Alan Menken, Jason Robert Brown, and many more! It will be livestreamed for those unable to attend in person. Performing Arts Center, 1 South Ave., Garden City. (516) 877-4000 or Adelphi.edu/pac.
Sands New York proudly celebrates Black History Month by honoring the achievements, resilience, and contributions of Black communities throughout history. This month is an opportunity to reflect on the impact of Black leaders, innovators, and changemakers who have shaped our American society and industry.
Sands recognizes that diversity is not just something to acknowledge—it is a fundamental strength that drives innovation, inclusivity, and progress.
Sands’ commitment to diversity extends beyond celebration; it’s embedded in the way they do business. Sands actively supports minorityowned local businesses, fostering opportunities for growth and collaboration within our communities. Through
meaningful partnerships, inclusive hiring practices, and continued investment in supplier diversity, they strive to create an environment where everyone has the opportunity to thrive.
This Black History Month, Sands reaffirms their dedication to equity, inclusion, and uplifting the voices that have long been at the heart of progress, including our own Senior Vice President, and former Governor of the State of New York, David Paterson.
Paterson shared his thoughts on the significance of Black History Month and the opportunities Sands is creating in
his home community:
"Black History is American history—and this month is a time to honor the legacy of those who came before us and to ensure that progress continues for future generations. For me, it’s also deeply personal—it’s about recognizing the resilience, talent, and contributions of Black Americans who helped to build strong, diverse communities, especially right here in Nassau County, a place I’ve always called home.”
“Sands is creating real opportunities for economic empowerment, career growth, and diversity in industries that have long lacked representation,” he continued. “I’m proud to be part of a company that not only celebrates Black history but actively invests in a more inclusive future."
Las Vegas Sands was again recognized on the Dow Jones Sustainability™ Indices, with placement on both DJSI World and DJSI North America for the fifth consecutive year.
Sands China Ltd., the company’s Asian subsidiary, was named to DJSI World and DJSI Asia Pacific for the third consecutive year.
Sands and Sands China are the only two companies out of 18 invited to participate in the Casino and Gaming category listed on DJSI World this year. Sands is the only company in the Casino and Gaming category listed on DJSI North America, and Sands China is one of only two companies in the Casino and Gaming category listed on DJSI Asia Pacific.
Corporate Sustainability Assessment. It represents the top 10% of the largest 2,500 companies in the S&P Global Broad Market Index based on long-term economic, environmental and social criteria. DJSI North America and DJSI Asia Pacific represent the top 20% of the 600 largest North American companies and the top 20% of the 600 largest companies in the Asia Pacific developed region in the S&P Global Broad Market Index based on the same criteria.
The Sands New York team has gone above and beyond in their outreach to the community, working to build bridges with every chamber, every nonprofit, every organization that might be impacted by their project. Not only have they sought to mitigate any potential issues, but they are working to craft a proposal that will be truly inclusive, and create long-term positive impacts.
Lashawn Lukes, President of the Hempstead Chamber of Commerce
DJSI World comprises global sustainability leaders identified by S&P Global through the
“To close this year with our fifth consecutive placement on DJSI speaks to the tremendous collaboration within many areas of our company, all working hand-in-hand to advance our environmental, social and governance initiatives,”
Katarina Tesarova, senior vice president and chief
Continued on page 4
Sands sustainability practices include energy efficiency, the use of renewable energy, water conservation and eliminating unnecessary single-use plastics and packaging waste. This type of corporate sustainability commitment is exactly what Long Island needs.
Adrienne Esposito, Executive Director of Citizens Campaign for the Environment
on Jan. 31st, the UON2D Global Art Foundation, in collaboration with Harvest Christian University and the Hempstead Chamber of Commerce, hosted an evening of celebration, inspiration, and networking at Jericho Terrace in Mineola.
The event honored individuals and organizations making a meaningful impact in the arts, education, and business communities. Attendees were treated to a night filled with talent and creativity, leaving them inspired by the incredible work being done to foster a more connected and empowered society.
Sands New York, a proud sponsor of
the event, reinforced its commitment to supporting initiatives that uplift communities and celebrate artistic expression. Their dedication aligned with the mission of the UON2D Global Art Foundation, which harnesses the power of art to bridge cultures and empower individuals.
The event also highlighted the missions of Harvest Christian University and the Hempstead Chamber of Commerce, both of which are dedicated to education, business development, and community engagement.
“We were thrilled to come together and recognize the incredible individuals
and organizations driving progress in our community,” said Tracey Edwards, Corporate Social Responsibility Offer for Sands New York.
“This event was not just about celebration—it was about not-for-profit capacity building, strengthening connections, and opportunities to collaborate building a brighter future for all.”
With opportunities to network, engage with thought leaders, and celebrate artistic and educational excellence, the evening was truly an unforgettable experience. Guests left feeling inspired and motivated to continue making a positive impact in their respective fields.
To learn more about the Sands as the world’s preeminent developer and
The Uniondale Community Council hosted its annual Uniondale Community Dinner Dance, a night dedicated to celebrating individuals who have worked tirelessly to make Uniondale a thriving, safe, and vibrant community. Held at Verdi’s of Westbury on January 31st, the evening brought together local leaders, residents, and supporters for a night of recognition, unity, and celebration.
As a sponsor of the event, Sands New York emphasized its commitment to supporting Uniondale and investing in its future. Former New York State Governor and Sands Senior Vice President David Paterson reflected on the importance of community leadership, stating, “Uniondale is a shining example of what happens when dedicated individuals come together to uplift their community. Sands is honored to support this event and celebrate those who make a lasting impact.”
The evening was filled with heartfelt speeches, lively entertainment, and an undeniable spirit of togetherness. As the Uniondale Community Council continues its mission of advocacy and empowerment, the event served as a reminder that strong communities are built by those who dedicate themselves to the service of others.
The Long Island Fight for Charity celebrated another remarkable year, capping off its efforts with closing ceremonies that highlighted the generosity and community spirit of the region. This year’s event raised $130,000 to benefit several Long Island charities, including the Long Island Community Chest and EAC Network. As an event sponsor, Sands New York is thrilled to congratulate and thank the boxers for their hard work and training. Cumulatively, this event has now raised over $2 million for Long Island since its inception.
sustainability officer, said. “We greatly value DJSI as a benchmark for our performance as well as its valuable feedback. To receive recognition on these lists is a fantastic endorsement, but we also learn from the process every year.”
Sands has leveraged the S&P Global Corporate Sustainability Assessment along with a number of external benchmarks and industry standards to shape its corporate responsibility programs and establish ESG targets, which have helped the company gain recognition through DJSI as well as other corporate responsibility rankings. Most recently, Sands was included on Newsweek’s America’s Most Responsible Companies. The company ranked 60th out of 600 companies included on Newsweek’s list and first in the hotels, dining and leisure industry.
Among the many targets Sands has set to drive its corporate responsibility progress during its 2021-2025 ESG reporting
cycle are three primary ambitions aimed at increasing the company’s impact in the areas of workforce development, community service and carbon emissions reduction. These ambitions map to Sands’ People, Communities and Planet corporate responsibility pillars.
Under the People pillar, Sands aims to invest $200 million in workforce development by 2025. As of the end of 2023, Sands had invested $68 million in workforce development initiatives, bringing the company’s cumulative investment to $181 million since 2021.
Under its Communities pillar, Sands has set a target to contribute 250,000 Team Member volunteer hours by 2025 to advance causes in local regions. By the end of 2023, Sands Team Members had logged 222,823 volunteer hours in support of local nonprofits and community issues since 2021.
The company’s primary ambition under the Planet pillar of its corporate responsibility platform is to achieve a 17.5% reduction in
carbon emissions by 2025. As of the end of 2023, Sands’ carbon emissions-reduction performance was 50% below the base year, despite resort visitation returning to pre-pandemic levels, which drove energy consumption increases.
Sands will update on 2024 progress made toward these ambitions in its next ESG report published in spring 2025.
The DJSI, including DJSI World, were launched in 1999 as the pioneering series of global sustainability benchmarks available in the market. The index family is comprised of global, regional and country benchmarks. The S&P Global Corporate Sustainability Assessment is an annual evaluation of company sustainability practices and covers over 13,000 companies globally. It measures performance on a wide range of industryspecific economic, environmental and social criteria that are relevant to the growing number of sustainability-focused investors.
Thanks to your help, Sands New York has submitted over a thousand letters of support for the Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) ahead of public comment closing on January 21st, 2025.
Our commitment to creating a transformative project for Long Island remains stronger than ever, and we are deeply grateful for your partnership throughout this journey.
Residents and leaders in the community have attended several public meetings showing their support for the Sands New York project.
NG Civic meets
Nostrand Gardens Civic Associations holds its monthly meeting,Monday, March 3, 7 p.m., at the Van Ness firehouse. Civic leaders speak and discuss issues of community importance. 154 Uniondale Ave. Uniondale.
Uniondal BOE meets Uniondale school district’s Board of Education holds a work session, Tuesday, March 4, in Uniondale High School’s Little Theater, beginning at 7 p.m. 933 Goodrich St., Uniondale.
On Toni Morrison
Sign up is under way for a discussion on the impact of Toni Morrison on American literature as well as her influence on younger writers led by Hedda Marcus, a facilitator for the Anti-Racism Project of Long Island, Thursday, March 6, 7-8:30 p.m., at Uniondale Public Library. 400 Uniondale Ave. For more information, visit UniondaleLibrary.org or call (516) 489-2220.
Learn CPR
Registration is now open for an
Jupiter String Quartet returns to Adelphi University Performing Arts Center, Friday, Feb. 28, 8 p.m. The intimate group of violinists Nelson Lee and Meg Freivogel, violist Liz Freivogel (Meg’s older sister), and cellist Daniel McDonough (Meg’s husband, Liz’s brotherin-law) are brought together by ties both familial and musical.
The ensemble brings its well-honed musical chemistry to three works shaped by bold musicality and deeply meaningful thematic inspirations, including Warmth from Other Suns by Carlos Simon; String Quartet No. 3, Glitter, Doom, Shards, Memory by Shulamit; and String Quartet No. 13 in B-flat Major, Op. 130 with the Grosse Fuge by Ludwig van Beethoven. 1 South Ave., Garden City. (516) 877-4000 or Adelphi.edu/pac.
Long Island Children’s Museum welcomes families to its stage, Friday, Feb. 28,-10:15 a.m., noon, 6:15 p.m.; Sunday, March 2, 2 p.m.; also Wednesday and Thursday, March 5-6,10:15 a.m. and noon.It is 3017 in this futuristic, musical retelling of “Cinderella.” She’s now a space engineer looking to revolutionize space travel. The Prince holds a space parade and she saves it by helping fix the Prince’s spaceship, also showing the Prince her new hyper warp speed engine.
But first, she’ll have to keep her evil stepmother from throwing a wrench in her plans! $11 with museum admission ($9 members), $15 theater only. Museum Row, Garden City. (516) 224-5800 or licm.org.
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.
Nassau County Museum of Art’s latest exhibition, the original “Deco at 100” coincides with the 100th anniversary of the 1925 Paris International Exhibition of Modern Decorative and Industrial Arts (Exposition internationale des arts décoratifs et industriels modernes) which publicly launched the movement. The direct follow-up to the well-received 2023 exhibit,
“Our Gilded Age,” it comparably links the period’s signature innovation in the decorative arts, Art Deco, to the fine arts.
The exhibit encompasses significant cultural advancements during Long Island’s Roaring Twenties/Jazz Age movement, including votes, jobs, and the automobile for women, the beginnings of suburbia with commutation for work, and planned residential communities, which all defined the era, while the following decade brought economic reversals and the WPA program. Works by Louis Comfort Tiffany, Fernand Léger, Guy Pène du Bois, Gaston Lachaise, Elie Nadelman, and Reginald Marsh, among others, along with art deco stylists of poster art and graphics, and photography will convey the Art Deco spirit along with its furniture, decorative arts, and fashion.
Like “Our Gilded Age,” the social scene of Long Island’s Gold Coast, and its personalities — both upstairs and downstairs — will be portrayed, along with the ongoing relationship with the immediate urban context of New York with its skyscrapers and deco-styled architecture. On view through June 15. Nassau County Museum of Art, 1 Museum Dr., Roslyn Harbor. (516) 484-9337 or NassauMuseum.org.
Sands Point Preserve is the backdrop to explore the elegant Gold Coast home that’s the centerpiece of the estate, Sunday, March 9, noon-1 p.m. and 2-3 p.m. Visit the grand rooms inside the massive 50,000-square-foot Tudor-style mansion, the former summer residence of Gilded Age financier Howard Gould and later Daniel and Florence Guggenheim. Tours are limited in size and tend to sell out. Arrive early to purchase tickets. $10. Sands Point Preserve, 127 Middle Neck Road. For information, visit SandsPointPreserveConservancy.org or call (516) 571-7901.
By Jordan Vallone & luke Feeney of the Herald
The Trump administration has rescinded its approval of New York City’s congestion pricing program, in an attempt to halt the initiative.
The program, which began on Jan. 5, imposes a $9 toll on vehicles entering Manhattan south of 60th Street during peak hours, aiming to reduce traffic congestion and generate revenue for the Metropolitan Transportation Authority.
Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman noted his support for the federal government’s decision at a Feb. 19 news conference in Mineola. Blakeman recalled President Trump pledging to end congestion pricing at a rally last October.
“President Trump is fulfilling a promise that he made at Madison Square Garden during (his) campaign,” Blakeman said.
Gov. Kathy Hochul argued that regardless of anyone’s stance on congestion pricing, the decision is an attack on New York’s sovereignty as a state.
“New York hasn’t labored under a king in over 250 years,” she said at a news conference at Grand Central Terminal, also on Feb. 19, response to the administration’s move, “and we sure as hell won’t start now.”
Janno Lieber, chief executive and chairman of the MTA, said that a lawsuit had already been filed to keep the congestion-pricing program in place.
U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy criticized the toll as burdensome to working-class Americans and small-business owners, noting the lack of free highway alternatives. New York officials had projected $500 million in annual revenue from the tolls, intended to support $15 billion in debt financing for mass transit improvements.
According to a letter sent to Hochul from the federal transportation office, Duffy rescinded the government’s approval of the plan under the federal Value Pricing Pilot Program, an initiative established to explore the potential of various pricing strategies in reducing traffic congestion. Managed by the Federal Highway Administration, the program allows state and
local governments to implement pilot projects that test the effectiveness of tolls and other pricing mechanisms in managing roadway usage and alleviating congestion. The congestion-pricing plan was developed under the VPPP.
The MTA, Hochul said, was prepared for a challenge, and she expressed confidence in the lawsuit it filed to counteract the decision.
“If in some world (the administration is) successful, the next time you’re stuck in traffic, the next time your train is delayed, the next time you’re in a flooded station because infrastructure repairs were not made, I want you to think of this,” the governor said. “We know where the blame goes.”
The Town of Hempstead had filed a lawsuit against the MTA and the state in opposition to the congestionpricing plan. Supervisor Don Clavin praised the decision by the Trump administration, arguing that congestion pricing is nothing more than “a money grab and a slap in the face to working-class commuters.”
State Sen. Alexis Weik, a Republican who represents portions of Nassau and Suffolk counties, also supported the administration’s decision.
“I’m glad to see that President Trump is supportive of New Yorkers,” Weik said in a statement emailed to the Herald, “because their governor is not. This is a win for New York.”
State Sen. Steve Rhoads, a fellow Republican who represents communities in Nassau, echoed Weik’s sentiments, and was critical of Hochul’s efforts to keep congestion pricing in place.
“Rather than continuing to pursue her unlawful ‘commuter tax,’” Rhoads told Herald reporters, “the governor should suspend these tolls immediately and take swift action to put commuters’ interests first instead of her own.”
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LEGAL NOTICE
SUPREME COURTCOUNTY OF NASSAU.
EQUINNE LLC, Plaintiff -against- RACHEL
AUGUSTIN, NATHALIE
AUGUSTIN, et al
Defendant(s). Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered herein and dated July 17, 2024, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction on the North Side steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court “Rain or Shine” located at 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY on March 11, 2025 at 2:00 p.m. premises situate, lying and being at the Village of Hempstead, Town of Hempstead, County of Nassau and State of New York, bounded and described as follows: BEGINNING at a point on the westerly side of Friske Place, distant 55 feet southerly from the corner formed by the intersection of the westerly side of Fiske Place with the southerly side of Robin Wood Avenue; being a plot 100 feet by 45 feet by 100 feet by 45 feet.
Section: 36 Block: 115 Lot: 169, 170 and 268. Said premises known as 7 FISKE PLACE, UNIONDALE, NY 11553
Approximate amount of lien $239,992.80 plus interest & costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment and Terms of Sale. Index Number 609970/2022.
ELLEN DURST, ESQ., Referee
Scott A. Rosenberg, P.C.
Attorney(s) for Plaintiff 151 Tanners Pond Road, Garden City, New York 11530 {* UNIONDALE*} 151361
LEGAL NOTICE
SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF NASSAU --- Index No.
802372/2024
Date Summons Filed: 11/22/2024
DOTILDA LANGLEY
HEADLEY, Plaintiff designates Nassau County as the place of trial. The basis of venue is Plaintiff’s residence. Plaintiff, SUMMONS -againstPlaintiff resides at 1043 Midland Street, Uniondale, NY 11553.
VERNAL ALWIN HEADLEY, Defendant.
-X ACTION FOR DIVORCE
To the above named Defendant: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to answer the complaint in this action and to serve a copy of your answer on Plaintiff’s Attorney within twenty (20) days after the service of this summons, exclusive of the day of service, where service is made by delivery upon you personally within the State of New York, or within thirty (30) days after completion of service where service is made in any other manner. In case of your failure to appear or answer, judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in the complaint.
Dated: November 22, 2024
Jan Gomerman, Esq. Attorney for Plaintiff 807 East Jericho Turnpike Huntington Station, NY 11746 631-549-1777 151492
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT: NASSAU COUNTY. L&L ASSOCIATES HOLDING CORP, Pltf. vs. RAYMOND R. PRILLER, if he be living, if he be dead, his respective heirs-at-law, next of kin, distributees, executors, administrators, trustees, devisees, legatees, assignees, lienors, creditors, and successor in interest, and generally all persons having or claiming under, by, or through RAYMOND R. PRILLER, if he be dead, whether by purchase, inheritance, lien or otherwise, including any right, title or interest in and to the real property described in the complaint herein, all of who and whose names and places of residence are unknown to the plaintiffs, et al Defts. Index #614732/2023. Pursuant to judgment of foreclosure and sale entered January 27, 2025, I will sell at public auction on the north side front steps of the Nassau County Courhouse, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY on March 14, 2025 at 2:00 p.m. prem. k/a Section 34, Block 523, Lot 410-412. Sold subject to terms and conditions of filed judgment and terms of sale. Foreclosure auction will
be held “rain or shine.” If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, then the court appointed referee will cancel the sale.
LINDA S. AGNEW, Referee., LEVY & LEVY, Attys. for Pltf., 12 Tulip Dr., Great Neck, NY. #102093 151573
LEGAL NOTICE STATE OF NEW YORK SUPREME COURT: COUNTY OF NASSAU U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS LEGAL TITLE TRUSTEE FOR TRUMAN 2016 SC6 TITLE TRUST, Plaintiff, v. MICHAEL CARROLL, ET AL, Defendants.
NOTICE OF SALE IN FORECLOSURE PLEASE TAKE NOTICE THAT In pursuance of a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered in the Office of the County Clerk of Nassau County on January 22, 2025, I, Oscar A. Prieto, Esq., the Referee named in said Judgment, will sell in one parcel at public auction on March 24, 2025 at North Side Steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Ct. Dr., Mineola, NY 11501, at 02:00 PM the premises described as follows: 617 Wellelein Road Uniondale, NY 11553
SBL #: 36-140-19
ALL THAT TRACT OR PARCEL OF LAND situate in the Town of Hempstead, County of Nassau, State of New York.
The premises are sold subject to the provisions of the filed judgment, Index No. 011317/2011 in the amount of $700,140.60 plus interest and costs. The aforementioned auction will be conducted in accordance with the Court System’s COVID-19 mitigation protocols and as such all persons must comply with social distancing, wearing masks and screening practices in effect at the time of this foreclosure sale. Woods Oviatt Gilman LLP
Attorneys for Plaintiff 500 Bausch & Lomb Place Rochester, NY 14604 Tel.: 855-227-5072 151731
To place a notice here call us at 516-569-4000 x232 or send an email to: legalnotices@liherald.com
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING BY THE BOARD OF APPEALS
Pursuant to New York State Town Law Article 16, New York State Public Officers Law Article 7, and the Town of Hempstead Building Zone Ordinance, NOTICE is hereby given that the BOARD OF APPEALS of the Town of Hempstead will hold a public hearing in the Old Town Hall, 350 Front Street, Room 230, Second Floor, Hempstead, New York on 3/5/2025 at 9:30 A.M. to consider the following applications and appeals:
THE FOLLOWING CASES WILL BE CALLED STARTING AT 9:30 A.M. 127/25. - 128/25. UNIONDALE - Eric Jex & Juzlyn Noboa, Variances, height, lot area occupied, front yard average setback, construct 2-story addition, 2nd story additions a portion which is open below & roofed over open porch all attached to dwelling; Variance, lot area occupied, maintain 2-car detached garage., W/s Greengrove Ave., 150’ S/o Braxton St., a/k/a 226 Greengrove Ave. ALL PAPERS PERTAINING TO THE ABOVE HEARING ARE AVAILABLE FOR INSPECTION AT THE BOARD OF APPEALS, TOWN HALL, 1 WASHINGTON STREET, HEMPSTEAD, NY 11550.
This notice is only for new cases in Uniondale within Town of Hempstead jurisdiction. There are additional cases in different hamlets, towns and villages on the Board of Appeals calendar. The full calendar is available at https://hempsteadny.go v/509/Board-of-Appeals The internet address of the website streaming for this meeting is https://hempsteadny.go v/576/Live-StreamingVideo Interested parties may appear at the above time and place. At the call of the Chairman, the Board will consider decisions on the foregoing and those on the Reserve Decision calendar and such other matters as may properly come before it.
151838
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF ADOPTION OF TOWN OF HEMPSTEAD
LOCAL LAW NO. 11-2025
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 February 4th, 2025, by the Town Board of the Town of Hempstead on the proposed adoption of Town of Hempstead Local Law No. 11-2025, and following the close of the hearing the Town Board duly adopted Town of Hempstead Local Law No. 11-2025, amending Section 202-1 of the Code of the Town of Hempstead, to include “PARKING OR STANDING PROHIBITIONS” at various locations. Dated: February 4, 2025 Hempstead, New York BY ORDER OF THE TOWN BOARD OF THE TOWN OF HEMPSTEAD DONALD X. CLAVIN, JR. Supervisor KATE MURRAY Town Clerk 151849
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that pursuant to Section 202-48 of the code of the Town of Hempstead entitled, “Handicapped Parking on Public Streets,” a public hearing will be held in the Town Meeting Pavilion, Hempstead Town Hall, 1 Washington Street, Hempstead, New York, on the 11th day of March, 2025, at 10:30 o’clock in the forenoon of that day, to consider the adoption of a resolution 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 at the following locations: ELMONT
LUCILLE AVENUE - east side, starting at a point 88 feet north of the north curbline of Theodora Street, north for a distance of 20 feet.
(TH-36/25)
SEWANEE AVENUEwest side, starting at a point 386 feet south of the south curbline of Atherton Avenue, south for a distance of 18 feet.
(TH-24/25)
SEAFORD
LOCUST AVENUEsouth side, starting at a point 275 feet west of the west curbline of Guildford Park Drive, west for a distance of 15 feet.
(TH-1/25)
UNIONDALE
BRAXTON AVENUEsouth side, starting at a point 188 feet east of the east curbline of Uniondale Avenue, east for a distance of 20 feet.
(TH-34/25)
WANTAGH
MCDONALD AVENUEwest side, starting at a point 150 feet north of the north curbline of Campbell Avenue, north for a distance of 20 feet.
(TH-33/25) and on the repeal of the following locations previously set aside as parking spaces for physically handicapped persons: (NR) FLORAL PARK 239TH STREET - west side, starting at a point 110 feet north of the north curbline of Superior Road, north for a distance of 16 feet.
(TH-580/24 - 2/4/25) (TH-580(B)/24) MERRICK HARVARD AVENUEsouth side, starting at a point 298 feet east of the east curbline of Central Parkway, east for a distance of 20 feet.
(TH-260/15 - 9/8/15) (TH-31/25) (NR) WESTBURY WESTLEY ROAD - south side, starting at a point 138 feet east of the east curbline of Fairfield Avenue, east for a distance of 20 feet.
(TH-332/20 - 1/5/21) (TH-47/25) ; and, BE IT FURTHER ALL PERSONS INTERESTED shall have an opportunity to be heard on said proposal at the time and place aforesaid.
Dated: February 25, 2025
Hempstead, New York BY ORDER OF THE TOWN BOARD OF THE TOWN OF HEMPSTEAD DONALD X. CLAVIN, JR. Supervisor KATE MURRAY Town Clerk 151856
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF NASSAU U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, NOT IN ITS INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY BUT SOLELY AS TRUSTEE FOR THE RMAC TRUST, SERIES 2016-CTT, Plaintiff AGAINST MICHAEL MCKENZIE AKA MICHAEL L. MCKENZIE, ET AL., Defendant(s) Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered June 27, 2022, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the North Side steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 on March 27, 2025 at 2:30PM, premises known as 674 Henry Street, Uniondale, NY 11553. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being at Uniondale, Town of Hempstead, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 50, Block 119, Lot 552-556. Approximate amount of judgment $518,021.92 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index #611774/2017. John G. Kennedy, Esq., Referee Gross Polowy, LLC 1775 Wehrle Drive Williamsville, NY 14221 18-003000 84514 151810
LEGAL NOTICE SUPREME COURTCOUNTY OF NASSAU. CITIMORTGAGE, INC., Plaintiff -againstPIERRE LISSADE, et al Defendant(s). Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale dated May 17, 2024 and entered on May 28, 2024, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction on the North Side steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court “Rain or Shine” located at 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY on March 28, 2025 at 2:00 p.m. premises situate, lying and being at Uniondale, Town of Hempstead, County of Nassau and State of New York, bounded and described as follows: BEGINNING at a point on the Northeasterly side of Park Avenue, distant 132.39 feet Northwesterly from the corner formed by the intersection of the
Northeasterly side of Park Avenue with the Northwesterly side of Smith Street; being a plot 100 feet by 60 feet by 100 feet by 60 feet.
Section: 50 Block: 419 Lot:17
Said premises known as 791 PARK AVENUE, UNIONDALE, NY 11553
Approximate amount of lien $353,209.87 plus interest & costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment and Terms of Sale. If the sale is set aside for any reason, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the deposit paid. The Purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Mortgagor, the Mortgagee or the Mortgagee’s attorney. Index Number 601597/2020.
JANE SHRENKEL, ESQ., Referee
David A. Gallo & Associates LLP Attorney(s) for Plaintiff 47 Hillside Avenue, 2nd Floor, Manhasset, NY 11030 File# 7777.045 {* UNIONDALE*} 151793
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF NASSAU
U.S. Bank National Association, as Trustee, successor in interest to Bank of America National Association, as Trustee, successor by merger to LaSalle Bank National Association, as Trustee for Merrill Lynch First Franklin Mortgage Loan Trust, Mortgage Loan Asset-Backed Certificates, Series 2007-3, Plaintiff AGAINST The Estate of Virginia Yearby, et al., Defendant(s) Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered January 14, 2025, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the North Side steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 on March 27, 2025 at 2:00PM, premises known as 709 Nostrand Avenue, Uniondale, NY 11553. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of North Hempstead at Uniondale, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section: 50, Block: 359, Lot: 1. Approximate amount
Nassau County police arrested Jorge J. Ramos, a Queens resident, in connection with a sex trafficking operation that occurred in the county from July 2024 to February 2025.
According to detectives, the investigation into suspected prostitution at multiple locations across Nassau County led authorities to Ramos, 55, who was arrested without incident at his residence, at 42nd St. in Astoria.
Ramos is charged with sex trafficking and two counts of promoting prostitution. He pleaded not guilty and is out on bail. A temporary order of protection was issued. His next court
date is Feb. 27. As of press time, no defense attorney was listed.
The investigation was conducted in collaboration with Immigration Customs Enforcement and the FBI’s Human Trafficking Task Force. Law enforcement officers uncovered that Ramos is an undocumented immigrant.
Police are asking anyone who thinks they could be a sex trafficking victim to call Nassau County Crime stoppers at 1 (800) 244-8477 or 911. All calls are confidential.
— Jeffrey Bessen
Two men are wanted for stealing a pizza from a delivery driver on Nostrand Avenue in Uniondale at 1:41 a.m. on Feb. 22, Nassau police said.
The driver, 23, using his 2018 Honda was delivering a Papa John’s pizza to a residence, then two young men came from a side of the home, police said. They struggled with driver and then brought a black handgun and demanded the pizza.
As the driver retreated to his car the driver door glass was shattered. The driver victim suffered a cut to his head. He was taken by
of judgment $519,361.71 plus interest and costs.
Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index #607294/2023. For sale information, please contact XOME at www.Xome.com or call (844) 400-9633. Scott H. Siller, Esq., Referee Frenkel Lambert Weiss
Weisman & Gordon, LLP 53 Gibson Street Bay Shore, NY 11706 01-072713-F02 84372 151804
I’m frequently asked if you can change a relationship if only one person is trying. My unequivocal answer: YES! Of course, it’s not going to be as simple or easy as having two cooperative partners, but here’s an example of what can happen.
First, if you’ve been knocking yourself out trying every possible way you can think of, to get the other person to change, give it up. You’ve explained what’s bothering you. You’ve repeated yourself many times, nagging, demanding, crying, having a fit, threatening, punishing, becoming silent and resentful. Where has that gotten you? You’re just as frustrated as ever. So, save your energy and give up trying to make the other person change.
Nassau County police ambulance to an area hospital for treatment. The subsequent investigation revealed that a BB gun shattered the vehicle glass.
Both men are described as black, 5-8 in height, 18- to 20years-old, wearing all black clothing.
Police are asking anyone with information on the incident to call Nassau County Crime Stoppers at 1 (800) 244 –8477. All calls are confidential.
— Jeffrey Bessen
Second, decide how you will respond differently, not only to get the other person to change, but primarily to take care of your own needs. When you make a change, even a small one, you automatically change not only yourself, but also something about how your relationship works.
Consider the following example. Jacqui entered my office feeling miserable. “My marriage is at a low point. I love my husband, but he rarely talks to me. I ask him how his day was; he’ll grunt ok, then flip on the TV. He shuts me out of his life and doesn’t want to hear about my day. I’ve asked him to come to therapy with me, but he refuses. What can I do?”
that she was trying too hard to get Don to change. Now it was time for her to focus on making a change for herself. I suggested she stop asking him questions, stop initiating conversations, and cut out the talk time. If she felt the need to talk with someone, she could call her friends, her mom, her sister, or her kids. Since she also had expressed a need to do more things, I suggested she join a gym or take an adult-ed class. Immediately, Jacqui resisted. She believed that these changes would make things even worse because they’d increase the distance between her and her husband. I reminded her that the purpose of these changes was not to get closer to Don but to take care of herself, to meet her needs, to be more in control.
After a while, Jacqui decided to give my suggestions a try. After getting involved in a pickleball league a ceramics class, and talking more with friends, she noticed that she was feeling happier, and less resentful even though Don, true to form, was still his non-communicative self. Then months later, Jacqui noticed that Don was less withdrawn. He admitted to feeling lonely and left out. He complained that she had gotten busy with things outside the home, and he’d like her to spend more time with him.
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF NASSAU Citibank N.A., Plaintiff AGAINST Cheryl A. Glenn, et al., Defendant(s) Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered April 22, 2024, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the North Side steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive,
Mineola, NY 11501 on April 2, 2025 at 2:30PM, premises known as 781 Union Drive, Uniondale, NY 11553. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Hempstead, at Uniondale, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section: 50, Block: 370, Lot: 23. Approximate amount of judgment $356,173.08 plus
interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index #609626/2019. Jane Shrenkel, Esq., Referee Frenkel Lambert Weiss
Weisman & Gordon, LLP 53 Gibson Street Bay Shore, NY 11706 01-091851-F00 84534 151808
Jacqui had tried everything she knew to get her husband to talk to her. In addition to constantly asking him questions, she was always trying to initiate more conversations hoping to get him involved. Figuring that it might be easier for him to talk late at night, without the kids and other distractions, she scheduled talk time twice a week, when she and her husband would go for a walk or just sit on the deck and talk.
This scheduled talk time, however, backfired. It soon became obvious that even then Don was not communicative. As a result, Jacqui felt even more upset, abandoned and totally unloved, even though Don said he loved her but just wanted to be left alone after a hard day’s work.
The first thing I told Jacqui was
Jacqui was amazed that Don was now coming to her with a request to spend more time together. She was careful, however, not to drop her activities and go back to the way things used to be. Instead, she responded casually but positively saying, “You’re right. I have been out a lot. And enjoying myself too. But if you’d like to spend more time together, I’m open to that. This Thursday evening’s a good time for me. Would that work for you too?”
©2025
Linda Sapadin, Ph.D., psychologist, coach, and author specializes in helping people improve their relationships, enhance their lives, and overcome debilitating anxiety, procrastination, and depression. Visit her website at PsychWisdom.com.
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Q. We have been planning a large renovation of our home but have put off construction for the past two years due to family circumstances. Now, as we’re ready to move forward, we’re wondering, with everything going on right now, is this a good time to build?
A. It is a good time to build. There are obviously many factors involved in choosing when to start, including costs, permits, the right fit for a contractor relationship, the logistics of where to go while work is being done, where to store things — it’s a long list. But there are many reasons not to hesitate, assuming you have all the necessary plans, approvals and money.
The labor force has been shrinking for many years — especially skilled labor and the workers that skilled laborers need to do a job. Associated Builders and Contractors, a nationally recognized industry trade association, began reporting in January 2024 that an additional 504,000 workers would be needed just to complete current construction in the United States. This year, the association is reporting that 454,000 more workers will be needed. Where will they come from, considering that there are fewer people going into constructionrelated fields?
The Federal Reserve’s Beige Book, which (at least for now) compiles reports on local economics, stated last October that “it remains difficult to find workers with certain skills in some industries such as technology, manufacturing and construction.” As I meet on construction sites, I talk with contractors who are all voicing their frustration that they need trained and skilled workers. Since that problem is getting worse, you may use it as the biggest reason to move ahead sooner than later.
Material prices are predicted to rise as well. One contractor blamed the cost of copper for the higher price of bathroom construction. We compared the cost, seven years ago, of rough plumbing going up, then, from $3,500 to $4,500 dollars. Last week we discussed the cost for the same work, just for supply and installation of the piping, without the fixtures, at $9,500 on average. Lumber from our neighbors to the north and steel from overseas are going up. Typically, by the end of January each year, material prices increase slightly. This year those increases were noticeably greater.
Holding off on your construction job probably isn’t a good idea, based on history. When the economy is booming, prices rise because of supply and demand. When things slow down, manufacturers and trades may have to charge even more just to keep the workforce they gave raises to when things were better or even just to stay in business, to cover their expenses to meet overhead costs. This answer isn’t intended to cause panic, but the statistics are right in front of you, on your smartphone, to follow trends and realize that nobody is going to work for less, and it may be hard to find materials or labor at the prices you hoped for. Good luck!
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Throughout my career in public service, I’ve steadfastly championed government efficiency, easing the burden on taxpayers, and eliminating waste, fraud and abuse. It’s critical that we continue to examine all levels of government for potential savings, and hold our agencies to the highest standards.
As Hempstead town supervisor, I rooted out waste and corruption, enabling the town to cut taxes, but I did this with transparency and in a deliberative fashion. This is what the American people expect and deserve.
While I support efforts to rein in government spending and waste, I’m deeply concerned by the impact of some of the recent funding freezes and firings that will hurt Long Islanders and throw vital services into chaos.
Just days ago, nearly 20 percent of the World Trade Center Health Program’s staff was abruptly terminated due to staffing cuts at the Department of Health and Human Services. Eliminat-
Like any resident of Oyster Bay, I’ve always had a fascination with our hometown president, Theodore Roosevelt. He seemed like such a larger-than-life character, a writer who was a soldier, a hunter who was a politician, and a statesman who truly cared for, and understood the needs of, the common man.
ing staff members who are working to ensure that 9/11 first responders and survivors receive the care they deserve is outrageous. This is a family matter on Long Island: Every one of us likely knows someone who was impacted by the Sept. 11 attacks. Nearly 7,000 of my constituents in the 4th Congressional District are eligible for the health program, including those who helped our nation when we needed it most.
EThe idea that our government would ever abandon these heroes is unthinkable. I’m glad that President Trump’s administration listened to the New York delegation’s bipartisan outrage and is now rehiring affected staff and working to undo these errors. This is a priority for Long Islanders and all New Yorkers.
leagues to urge the National Institutes of Health to reverse their planned cuts to research institutions across New York state, including Hofstra and Adelphi universities.
fforts to rein in spending in Washington are producing too much chaos.
I’m also closely tracking the developments around federal grant funding freezes. Already we have heard that proposed cuts will have drastic impacts on the universities and nonprofits that are carrying out groundbreaking research and providing critical services on Long Island. I recently joined a bipartisan group of my New York delegation col-
These cuts threaten our progress on lifesaving medical research, and make it harder for Long Islanders suffering from cancer and other serious illnesses to participate in clinical trials that could save lives. I’m glad the administration reversed course on the indiscriminate federal funding freeze proposed earlier this year, which I warned could directly impact our law enforcement agencies’ ability to carry out their jobs and threaten public safety in our communities. I remain concerned, however, about cuts to grant programs, including those for services for survivors of domestic violence and for veterans, and for other nonprofits on Long Island doing important work.
Long Islanders have also raised concerns about the potential cuts to Medicaid, which would have a devastating effect on Nassau County. Last week I heard from many health care organizations and hospitals in my district, and
joined health care advocates for a roundtable discussion of the drastic impacts that Medicaid cuts would have here. More than 100,000 of my constituents, including children and nursing home residents currently covered by Medicaid, could lose access to health care, and costs would rise for tens of thousands more Long Islanders.
We need to protect and strengthen access to health care, not rip it away from seniors, children and veterans on Long Island who rely on Medicaid. This is a bipartisan priority for residents threatened by these cuts. I’ll continue the fight to ensure continued access to health care, and I’m calling on my Republican colleagues to join me in that cause.
The administration has publicly stated that if mistakes are made during its cuts, they’ll be corrected. The White House and its allies in Congress should stand by that promise. They should seek to avoid frenzied mistakes going forward. I agree that we must tighten the belt of government and ensure that taxpayers’ dollars are being utilized efficiently and effectively, but our nation deserves transparency and organized, lawful action instead of the current chaos.
Laura Curran represents the 4th Congressional District.
executive branch to keep moneyed interests out of politics, despite pushback from members of his own cabinet and party.
Which is why it is so disappointing that the new presidential administration seems so invested in tearing down everything that Roosevelt achieved. And no, that’s not hyperbole. President Trump has said numerous times that America was richest during the Gilded Age, from about 1870 to the 1890s, and that he hopes to bring us back to that level of prosperity. Except that prosperity was a lie, built on the backs of working-class employees who slaved away for limited wages and had no protections, while that generation’s top 1 percent got richer and richer. Roosevelt saw the damage this corrupt system was doing to the country, and earned the nickname “Trustbuster” for his fearlessness in breaking up the early monopolies. He used the power of the
Contrast that with Trump, who, rather than regulating big businesses, has invited them into his cabinet, and even more terrifying, into the country’s inner record system. Elon Musk, the J.P. Morgan of the 21st century, has been given the keys to the castle and is currently ransacking our public records, from Social Security to Medicaid and more.
Furthermore, Trump has signed one executive order after another weakening regulatory agencies such as the Federal Trade Commission — which was created in response to the Roosevelt administration’s lawsuit against Morgan’s monopoly. Rather than working to make big business more civicminded and protect regular Americans from its excesses, Trump is enabling the worst aspects of capitalism in this country, enriching the few at the expense of the many.
p resident Trump seems hell-bent on tearing down everything T.R. achieved.
once other methods of diplomacy had been exhausted. TR’s embrace of “soft” power, and its importance in foreign relations, was a hallmark of U.S. foreign policy for much of the last century. Trump, on the other hand, appears to be more easily herded than any previous president, let alone Roosevelt. His administration’s shameful aboutface on Ukraine shows his inability to see the benefit of supporting a free, democratic nation unjustly invaded by Russia’s oligarchic president, Vladimir Putin. That, and Trump’s apparent sycophancy toward Putin, Xi Jinping, Kim Jong-un and other autocrats, contrasts sadly with Roosevelt’s ability to play the autocrats of his age against one another without forsaking American honor and dignity.
similar organizations is a fundamental aspect of our soft power, which offers another, often more elegant, solution to global threats than simply sending in our military.
Roosevelt was also famous as a diplomat, with his best known-quote describing his approach to foreign policy, to “speak softly and carry a big stick.” That meant maintaining a strong military presence, but only using it as a threat
Trump’s attempted destruction of USAID and similar agencies shows a further lack of understanding of soft power, and the limitations businessmen can have when switching to public service. Not everything needs to be profitable to be useful, despite what Trump and Musk may say. USAID not only saves lives, but also reaffirms the fundamental belief among Americans, our allies and even our enemies that we are a country of fundamentally good people. The goodwill we earn internationally from this and
But what would really break Roosevelt’s heart is Trump’s apparent disregard for our nation’s natural beauty and the extraordinary people who steward it. Roosevelt was known as a conservationist, and protected roughly 230 million acres of public land during his presidency, including 150 national forests and more than 40 federal bird sanctuaries. Trump, meanwhile, has gutted our National Park Service and the United States Forest Service — founded by Roosevelt — and has repeated made clear his desire to open public land to oil drilling while deregulating environmental restrictions that big businesses face. His refusal to acknowledge the role humans play in climate change and his unwillingness to hold oil, coal and similar industries accountable would, I have no doubt, make the Bull Moose apoplectic.
I’ve spent countless hours poring over biographies, watching documentaries and listening to podcasts about Roosevelt. While I obviously never met him, and have never met Trump, I can say with certainty that Trump is no Teddy Roosevelt.
Will Sheeline is an editor covering Glen Head, Locust Valley, Oyster Bay and Sea Cliff. Comments? WSheeline@liherald.com.
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imagine going to a party with friends, or attending your high school reunion or a wedding. You see a lot of familiar faces, and some new ones. Everyone is having a good time sharing memories, and you drink into the night.
By the end, you realize you’ve had too much to drink. Walking doesn’t come as easy, and your words are a bit slurred. No worries. It’s nothing that others haven’t done before. You take precautions, don’t drive. Surely you’ll get home safe.
Except you don’t.
Instead, you are sexually assaulted or raped. The evening before is a blur and you can’t quite put the pieces together, but you know something went horribly wrong. You go to the police to file a report, but suddenly you’re the one being interrogated. Officers start asking you if you had any alcohol or drugs last night, and they may even give you a Breathalyzer test. But that shouldn’t matter, right? Someone committed a crime — full stop.
In New York state, however, there is no law in place that protects survivors of sexual assault if they were voluntarily intoxicated during the crime.
It seems absurd that this is not already law in a state as progressive as New York, especially when compared with conservative states like Alabama and South Carolina, which have laws in place protecting sexual assault survivors who are voluntarily intoxicated.
The bill before the New York State Assembly (A.101), sponsored by dozens
To the Editor:
of elected officials, aims to amend the law “to allow sex crimes charges to be brought in cases where the victim had become voluntarily intoxicated if a reasonable person in the defendant’s position should have known that the victim was incapable of giving consent due to intoxication.” It has languished in the Assembly since a similar bill was introduced in the State Senate by then Sen. Alessandra Biaggi in 2020, and passed two years later.
“Voluntarily” is the crucial word.
Those who oppose the law are afraid the language will allow for false accusations involving voluntary intoxication among consenting adults, specifically if someone regrets the decisions they made the night before and claims they were not in their normal mental state to give consent.
But advocates argue that those extreme and uncommon situations diminish the seriousness of sexual assault and rape, no matter the situation, and have presented cases to support their cause. We agree with those advocates. There is never an excuse for rape or sexual assault — nor for victim blaming or victim shaming.
In 2017, choreographer Bijan Williams, who worked with high-profile entertainers Beyonce and Jay-Z, was arrested on charges of rape and false imprisonment when a 17-year-old girl called 911 and accused him of raping her in a Manhattan hotel room. Williams was 34 old at the time, and both were under the influence of alcohol. Williams pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor of sup-
Re last week’s editorial, “In civil discourse, everyone deserves respect”: Those of us who agree must realize that this is a contested proposition, currently facing open challenge by those who declare it an invalid premise. To many, “respect” is a virtue only when it is a synonym for obedience, when “persuasion” may include violence, and “disagreement” is a tool useful for exposing enemies, not for discussion but for vicious doxxing.
Various history months face official obliteration, propaganda terms like Gulf of America, “gender ideology” and “patriotic history” are being devised, their use enforced by lawsuit.
Coerced conformity to stereotype attempts to erase individual expression. Our president claims kingship, uses the royal “we,” disparages diversity. Few such bigots are convertible, so our resolve must be keep them from power through our majority of votes.
James Russell Lowell, in 1873, described our situation: “I have always been of the mind that in a
plying a minor with alcohol, and the rest of the case was dropped.
In 2021, The Washington Post published, “A Minnesota man can’t be charged with felony rape because the woman chose to drink beforehand, court rules.” The headline stemmed from a 2017 case in which a woman consumed several shots of alcohol and a prescription pill before accompanying an unknown man who invited her to a party. She was raped, but because she was intoxicated voluntarily, and the state law only protected those who were mentally incapacitated due to intoxication administered by someone without a person’s consent, the man was not charged.
Victim blaming is all too common for survivors of sexual assault and rape, and while the scars may be invisible, they run deep.
Survivors of sexual assault are 10 times more likely to attempt suicide, according to 2020 research by the National Sexual Violence Resource Center. Others are plagued by a lifetime of psychological and emotional issues that interfere with their ability to handle everyday activities like holding a steady job.
While criminals walk away with a relative slap on the wrist, survivors continue to suffer from the crimes perpetrated against them, and in many cases they are relegated to carrying the shame heaped on them by society.
Our elected leaders in Albany must pass A.101 now, and close the voluntary intoxication loophole.
new york in 2022 told school districts they would be barred from purchasing gasoline- or diesel-powered buses after 2027, and instead would have to buy electric buses at more than double the cost. “The purchase of new electric buses will help grow the market,” officials later pledged, “which will in turn help reduce prices.”
Unfortunately for taxpayers, those reductions aren’t materializing — in part because state officials put the prices, and future increases, on cruise control.
The state Office of General Services, which negotiates contracts on which local districts are expected to piggyback, reached a five-year deal in December 2022 with nine bus dealers, and tied the price schedule to the federal Producer Price index for “truck and bus bodies.” That’s notable on its own because the index doesn’t reflect changes in battery or electric motor costs — the components that make electric buses so costly.
new york’s arrangement left school bus prices rising automatically. a handful of bus models were added to the
price schedule in the first year after getting state Department of Transportation approvals, but nothing has changed since — except for the price hikes, which totaled 3.7 percent over the past 12 months. inflation-related provisions are common in government procurement, especially in multi-year deals. But it’s remarkable that the state hasn’t been able to woo more players into the market or work out lower prices.
slooking specifically at the OGS prices for the ubiquitous Type C buses (which make up two-thirds of school buses statewide), five manufacturers with electric models are listed. That’s more than the three listed for gasoline or diesel buses, and should have set the stage for greater competition and downward pressure on prices. What’s more, OGS reserved the right to negotiate lower prices or rebid the contracts altogether “in the event of a decrease in market price.”
the added cost of buying electric buses instead of replacing them — is on track to total more than $9 billion by 2035, when state law requires districts to park the last of the fuel-burning units. and it’s become increasingly clear that the total cost of compliance will be far larger.
tate officials, in classic Albany form, never issued any cost estimate.
sel buses long after 2027.
So far, the agency hasn’t, and the price gap between gasoline/diesel and electric units is widening. in January 2024, the lowest price for a 46-seat Type C bus was $134,353, compared with $388,265 for electric, a difference of $253,912. This year, the premium is up to $263,360. That premium alone — that is,
democracy, manners are the only effective weapon against the Bowie knife.” Resolute in manners, wary, registered to vote.
BRian Kelly Rockville Centre
To the editor:
Re Peter King’s column last week, “Recalling the presidents i’ve met”: Former Congressman King continues his attempt to gaslight Herald readers by including the current occupier of the White House on his list of former U.S. presidents he’s collaborated with over the last several decades. a s if Donald Trump’s attack on U.S. democracy and scorched-earth approach is comparable to the political ideology of any former president, Republican or Democrat. King attempts to gloss over Trump’s abhorrent behavior by reminiscing about an invitation King’s grandchildren received to visit the White House. Why is King trying to normalize the first 30 days of this chaotic presidency by recalling mundane details about
Trump — and including him on a list of former presidents who, by contrast, had a very clear and unwavering love for this republic? Why omit mention of Trump’s flurry of nonsensical executive orders, blanket pardons of the criminals who attacked our Capitol, mass firings of federal employees, attempted eviscerations of the Cia and the FBi, elimination of the Department of education, and countless threats of retribution against perceived enemies? Because normalization of outrageous tactics is a tool of MaGa’s propaganda machine — much like the Third Reich systematically rationalized its attacks on the free press and takeover of the military as necessary evils in order to take control of an ailing and dysfunctional government. MaGa’s use of this tactic is deceptive and dangerous, and King seems to be a willing cog in the wheel. at the very least, in the interest of standing up for his former constituents, King should question Trump’s blatant surrender of our government systems — which include our personal and private information — to e lon Musk, under the guise of DOGe, and acknowledge that it is (at the very least) an overstep by an administration that is suddenly in the hands of an unsanctioned group of non-elected private citizens.
Despite the fact that it’s the largest unfunded mandate in a generation, state officials, in classic albany form, never issued any cost estimate for the electric bus policy before approving it as part of the 2023 state budget.
last October, the State education Department found that at least 42 percent of districts “will need some electric service update or upgrade to meet their bus charging needs,” while just 3 percent said they won’t. another 39 percent haven’t yet made an assessment.
State officials still haven’t estimated the total added grid-related costs, but some districts face costs in the tens of millions of dollars as they contemplate necessary substation upgrades and additional or upgraded distribution lines, or potentially relocating their bus depots. and since distribution-level upgrades must be planned (and approved by the state utility regulator) years in advance, school districts will likely need to keep buying gas and die-
Districts face other major sources of uncertainty. instead of gasoline or diesel, they will buy more electricity, the cost of which is poised to rise as the state prematurely shutters natural gasfired power plants. The administration of Gov. Kathy Hochul has indicated that the per-mile costs of electricity will be lower than fuel, but has otherwise been mum on the subject.
Most school districts will use bonds to pay for their bus upgrades, and financing costs have surged since the electric bus mandate was adopted. Schools are counting on state and federal incentives to defray their costs. These include one-time proceeds from the 2022 environmental Bond act, as well as various federal incentives sure to come under scrutiny as the feds grapple with ballooning debt costs and the potential expiration of parts of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs act.
in this last case, Hochul and state lawmakers are likely to blame congressional Republicans and the Trump administration for forcing them to postpone the electric bus mandate. But it’s difficult for albany to blame Washington for a policy’s cost and feasibility problems when albany didn’t first determine the policy’s cost or feasibility.
Ken Girardin is director of research at the Empire Center for Public Policy. He can be reached at ken@empirecenter.org.
Framework by Tim Baker
not even Trump’s supporters voted for elon Musk.
Congressman, it’s never too late to say, “ i misjudged him.” i t’s never too late to say, “ i was wrong.” a nd it’s
never too late to hold someone accountable.
In 1993, Anita Rothenberg of Valley Stream was first admitted to Mount Sinai South Nassau’s ER in Oceanside and treated for a heart attack at the age of 37. She recovered, raised a family and worked as a teacher on Long Island for the next 29 years. Then, in November of 2022, an angiogram showed three blocked arteries. She underwent triple bypass surgery a few days later at Mount Sinai Fuster Heart Hospital in Manhattan and completed her cardiac rehabilitation close to home at Mount Sinai South Nassau.
Mount Sinai South Nassau o ers comprehensive heart care for Long Islanders, and has received the following ratings and quality awards:
• Rated High Performing in heart attack and heart failure from U.S. News & World Report ® for 2024-2025
• Healthgrades America’s 100 Best Hospitals for Coronary Intervention™
• Healthgrades Coronary Intervention Excellence Award™
• Healthgrades Five-Star Recipient for Coronary Interventional Procedures
• Named among the top five percent in the nation for Coronary Interventional Procedures by Healthgrades
L ea r n mo r e a t mountsinai.org/southnassauheart
In 1993, Anita Rothenberg of Valley Stream was first admitted to Mount Sinai South Nassau’s ER in Oceanside and treated for a heart attack at the age of 37. She recovered, raised a family and worked as a teacher on Long Island for the next 29 years. Then, in November of 2022, an angiogram showed three blocked arteries. She underwent triple bypass surgery a few days later at Mount Sinai Fuster Heart Hospital in Manhattan and completed her cardiac rehabilitation close to home at Mount Sinai South Nassau.
Mount Sinai South Nassau o ers comprehensive heart care for Long Islanders, and has received the following ratings and quality awards:
• Rated High Performing in heart attack and heart failure from U.S. News & World Report ® for 2024-2025
• Healthgrades America’s 100 Best Hospitals for Coronary Intervention™
• Healthgrades Coronary Intervention Excellence Award™
• Healthgrades Five-Star Recipient for Coronary Interventional Procedures
• Named among the top five percent in the nation for Coronary Interventional Procedures by Healthgrades