Serving Manhasset
$1
Friday, February 20, 2015
vol. 3, no. 8
Guide toSpecialOccasions
2015 section • february 20, litmor publication s special a blank slate media /
GUIDe TO SPecIAL OccASIONS
MANhASSeT DOc ArreSTeD
SchOOL DISTrIcTS DUcK TAX cAP
PaGe s1-s20
PaGe 2
PaGe 6
Munsey Park considering speed cameras
awa r D w I N N e r
Hears presentation on installation, to analyze legality before further talks BY B I LL SAN ANTONIO Munsey Park trustees are considering the installation of traffic cameras throughout the village in an effort to curb speeding. The board Wednesday heard a presentation from representatives from the Lanham, Md.-based Optotraffic, which would provide equipment and labor for the cameras in exchange for a percentage of the village’s future camera revenue, but trustees said they wanted to weigh their legal options before discussing a contract with the company. “I think if you feel any hesitance from the board, it’s because we’re so interested in it and we kind of started poking around and everywhere we poked around said we can’t do it, so by coming back to us with a legal brief saying we can do it, and laying out how we can do it, I think you can assuage a lot of the concerns you’re probably
feeling from us,” Village of Munsey Park Mayor Frank DeMento said. Dorian H. Grubaugh, a regional sales manager for Optotraffic, said the board could kill the program at any time and could customize the village’s plan as it sees fit. State law permits Long Island municipalities to install speed cameras, but currently no village in Nassau or Suffolk County has implemented a program, officials said. Optotraffic uses a laser tracking program that captures 10,000 measurements per second across a set distance, which then calculates how fast a vehicle travels through those two points, Grubaugh said. He added that Optotraffic has had success at calming traffic because the company held numerous public education sessions about the program informing motorists of where cameras were installed and how they work. Continued on Page 43
A winning entry in the Town of North Hempstead’s 2014 photography contest, taken by Port Washington resident Allison Roditi, depicting two children seated on the beach. Eight photos were chosen from more than 200 photos submitted.
Grace A. Warner, longtime teacher and principal, dies BY B I LL SAN ANTONIO Grace A. Warner, a longtime Great Neck School District educator whose sixth grade class was featured in a 1952 Life Magazine spread about progressive teaching methods used at Saddle Rock Elemen-
tary School, died on Saturday. She was 96. Warner, who lived in Manhasset for the last 40 years, had a 35-year career in Great neck, starting as an elementary school teacher and later becoming the first principal of John F. Kennedy Elementary School in 1965, a job she held
until her retirement in 1984. In more recent years, Warner served as corresponding secretary for the retired chapter of the Great Neck Teachers Association. Warner was born in Brooklyn to Margaret and George Warner and grew up in Queens, Continued on Page 43
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