Williston Times 2.13.15

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Serving The Willistons, Albertson, Herricks, Mineola, and Searingtown

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Friday, February 13, 2015

vol. 64, no. 7

TeaCHING HeRRICKs eyes soNGwRITING aBCs smalleR Classes PaGe 23

aCTING da seeKs ‘BUsINess as UsUal’

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PaGe 6

Winthrop diabetes center opens $110 million research and treatment facility in Mineola seen as boost to local economy By J a m e s G a l l o w ay

Winthrop employees and government officials celebrate the opening of the hospital’s Research and Academic Center

Winthrop-University Hospital this week celebrated the opening of its 95,000-square-foot, $110 million diabetes and obesity research center, signaling the end of more than two years of construction. At a private ribbon cutting ceremony Thursday evening, state and local politicians, donors and staff received tours of the facility and heard from Winthrop’s chief executive officer and chairman of its board of directors. “Winthrop’s new Research and Academic Center will be an epicenter of wellness care, research and medical study for Nassau County and the region as Winthrop takes on the tough job of confronting how personal habits, nutrition and the destructive forces of obesity are threatening our future,” Winthrop CEO John Collins said in a statement. “We have taken steps to ensure our continued success and thereby remain a vital resource for the residents of Long

Island.” Dr. Alan Jacobson, the chief research officer of the center, said the state-of-the-art technology will allow the hospital to work towards better patient results and ground-breaking research. “I see this building as a tool,” Jacobson said. Construction on the five-story facility began in 2012, and by the time the facility is fully operational in April it is expected to house 140 employees in clinical or academic fields, including 45 new jobs for the community, according to a hospital press briefing. “This is going to be a boon to our village in many ways,” said Mineola Mayor Scott Strauss, noting that Winthrop is the village’s largest employer. “This is going to be a worldclass facility...It’s going to help us revitalize the downtown area.” Strauss, who received an extended “thank you” from the hospital’s CEO, said Mineola has been closely Continued on Page 39

In elections, one candidate per race By Ja m es G a l l o w ay

la: six candidates for six positions. Only six candidates - five incumbents and one newcomer Five words are sufficient to - filed petitions to appear on the sum up the ticket for March elec- ballot, the village clerks said. The tions in East Williston and Mineo- deadline to submit petitions was

Tuesday evening. With three open positions in both East Williston and Mineola, the elections will decide the majority of each village’s five-member board of trustees, which acts as its governing body. The mayor for each village is also up for election. In East Williston, Mayor David Tanner and Trustee Bonnie Parente, the deputy

mayor, are both running for reelection in a joint campaign. James Iannone is running unopposed for the second open trustee position after Trustee Caroline DeBenedittis decided not to seek re-election. In Mineola, Mayor Scott Strauss and Trustees George Durham and Dennis Walsh, all members of the New Line Party, are running unopposed.

In a previous interview with the Williston Times, Durham said the Mineola board of trustees have a long history together and make an effective team. “I’ve lived here my whole life,” he said. “I went to school here. I’ve known the mayor since I was five years old. We want to do what’s right for the residents.” The village elections will take place Wednesday, March 18.

For the latest news visit us at www.theislandnow.com D on’t forget to follow us on Twitter @theislandnow1 and Facebook at facebook.com/theislandnow


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