Roslyn Times 5.8.15

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Serving Roslyn, Roslyn Heights and Old Westbury

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Friday, May 8, 2015

Vol. 3, No. 19

NEW N. SHORE REALITY SHOW

NEW CHARGES IN MURDER-ARSON PLOT

PORT MAN TO CHALLENGE SINGAS

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ECOFEST

State aid threat seen in teacher evaluations Districts must meet Nov. 15 deadline or face loss of money B y J ames G alloway North Shore school districts could lose a combined $4.1 million in state aid if they fail to meet a Nov. 15 deadline for the state to approve their revised teacher evaluation plans — a deadline most school officials call unrealistic. The State Education Departments continues to develop the evaluation criteria laid out by lawmakers in the state budget that school districts must follow but is unlikely to finalize the criteria until mid to late June.

School district officials said after receiving the evaluation criteria they will have to develop a teacher evaluation plan that ­­will require negotiations with district teachers unions and then submit the plan to the state for its okay as early as the beginning of September to meet the November deadline. “[The deadline is] ludicrous, completely out of touch with the way public schools work,” said Great Neck Superintendent Tom Dolan, whose district could lose $460,000. “The teachers aren’t here for the summer — how would we

negotiate with them?” The money on the line — restorations of funds from the Gap Elimination Adjustment — range on the North Shore from $121,000 for the East Williston School District to $1.6 million for the Sewanhaka School District. If they fail to meet the deadline, the Roslyn School District could lose $228,000, the Manhasset School District could lose $227,000, the Port Washington School District would lose $388,000 and the New Hyde Park-Garden City Park School District could lose $201,000. Continued on Page 62

NHP firm central player in Skelos, Silver probes Glenwood Management Corporation cited in state case PHOTO BY MARTHA GORFEIN

An American Indian performer dances at the 10th annual EcoFest hosted by The Town of North Hempstead this past weekend at Clark Botanic Garden in Albertson.

B y J ames G alloway At the heart of the federal cases against two of New York’s most powerful legislators — state Sen. Dean Skelos and former state Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver — lies a large real estate company based in New Hyde Park.

Glenwood Management Corporation, located at 1200 Union Turnpike and one of the state’s biggest and most influential developers, plays a prominent role in the complaints against both Silver and Skelos, literally as developer #1. Glenwood is referenced in the Skelos case as “Develop-

er-1,” and Leonard Litwin, the company’s 100-year-old billionaire founder, is “Developer-1” in the complaint against Silver, reports say. Prosecutors of the Silver case say the ex-Speaker steered Glenwood executives to a law firm run by a political ally who paid Silver hundreds of thouContinued on Page 50

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