Serving Manhasset, Munsey Park, North Hills, Plandome Heights, Plandome Manor, Plandome and Flower Hill
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Friday, March 18, 2022
Vol. 10, No. 11
SCHOOLS, CAMPS
G.N. LAWYER KILLED IN FLUSHING
FEDS RECOMMEND 17.5 YEARS FOR MANGANO
PAGES 25-40
PAGE 12
PAGE 8
Rosenbaum new Flower Hill mayor New trustees in Plandome Manor BY R OB E RT PE L A E Z Flower Hill Deputy Mayor Randall Rosenbaum won his uncontested race to replace Brian Herrington as mayor of the village on Tuesday. Rosenbaum received 135 votes, while Herrington, who ran unopposed for a two-year trustee term, received 132 votes. Incumbent Trustees Claire Dorfman and Gary Lewandowski also ran unopposed for re-election and received 132 and 133 votes, respectively. Herrington said new developments in his professional life led him to hand the reins to Rosenbaum. “It has been an honor to serve the residents of Flower Hill as Mayor,” Herrington said. “I recently accepted a promotion from my employer which has expanded my professional responsibilities and is taking a greater toll on my time. Given my first priority is to my family, this now leaves me with an inadequate time to dedicate to the Village Continued on Page 50
PHOTO COURTESY OF KRISTIN PERFETTO
The Manhasset varsity basketball team won the Long Island Class A championship last week at Hofstra University. See story on page 2.
24 hours notice the usual for agendas Most North Shore villages do not publish information until shortly before meeting BY R OB E RT PELAEZ AND BRANDON DUFFY
prominent on the North Shore over the past year, a study by Blank Slate Media found a handful of villages do not post agenAs the issue of governmental das for their public meetings untransparency has become more til a day before, if at all. The issue has arisen recently in the Village of Thomaston, where a local zoning law that set off months of controversy was passed at a Board of Trust-
ees meeting with just one member of the public present, leading residents to question the transparency of their elected officials. Following a study conducted by Blank Slate Media earlier this year about the accessibility of villages’ budgets, another one was conducted analyzing the publishing and distribution of the agendas for various board meetings.
The study found that 10 villages on the North Shore have their agendas for Board of Trustees meetings available for the public, either online or via email, at least three days, if not a week, before the scheduled meeting date. The Villages of Great Neck, Great Neck Estates, Kings Point, Thomaston, Flower Hill, Port Continued on Page 49
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