Manhasset 2022_03_25

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Serving Manhasset, Munsey Park, North Hills, Plandome Heights, Plandome Manor, Plandome and Flower Hill

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Friday, March 25, 2022

Vol. 10, No. 12

LIVING 50+

MANOR BACKS BUY OF DEMS CALL FOR COUNTY RICHARDSON HOUSE GAS TAX HOLIDAY

PAGES 25-32

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Broken chain of command at Town Hall: DeSena Supervisor says commissioners told to report to Bosworth’s ex-chief of staff BY B R A N D ON D U FF Y During a virtual town hall with Blank Slate Media, North Hempstead Supervisor Jennifer DeSena said that commissioners and department heads are being asked to report to Jeanine Dillon, the current chief research assistant to the Town Board and previous chief of staff for ex-Supervisor Judi Bosworth. DeSena’s comments came when she was asked about the Town Board and whether it is asserting authority not previously used. Since DeSena took office in January, conflicts have erupted at the board’s monthly meetings over moving office space, budget and personnel resolutions and DeSena’s picks for the Board of Ethics, which were blocked on the grounds of lack of diversity, among other things. In November, DeSena was the first Republican nominee to win the town supervisor election in over 30 years, succeeding Bosworth, a Democrat who did not seek re-election. The sevenmember Town Board retains a Democratic majority, as it long has, with three Republicans to four Democrats. “For too long, North Hempstead Town Hall has been riddled with politics, discord and staff in-fighting,” DeSena said during her inauguration in January. “Politics have been placed

ahead of our taxpayers and town services have suffered as a result, there’s no denying it. As of today, partisan power party politics will no longer have a place in Town Hall.” DeSena said at the Blank Slate Media event last Thursday that the Town Board has a legislative function and its members work part-time and that she is the chief executive, responsible for what happens daily in Town Hall. “When it comes to accountability for day-to-day operations that’s the role of the supervisor, that’s the chief administrative officer and that’s what I am,” DeSena said. “The question is where does legislative function stop.” The Manhasset resident said that commissioners and department heads were used to a certain chain of command under previous administrations, but that has been changed since she took office. “Me and the deputy supervisor [Joe Scalero] are here every day but now they’re still being asked to report to the former chief of staff to Judi Bosworth who somehow reports to the Town Board,” DeSena said. She was referring to Jeanine Dillon, who in January was transferred under a personnel resolution to become chief research assistant to the Town Board. Republicans opposed the resolution. Continued on Page 42

PHOTO COURTESY OF THE MANHASSET SCHOOL DISTRICT

The Manhasset basketball team won its first state championship since 1986 on Sunday.

Manhasset boys win state title in basketball BY M I C H A E L J . L E W I S The noise on the white North Fork Express bus as it rolled down the New York State Thruway Sunday evening was boisterous, as could be expected when filled with a group of teenage boys.

But this vehicle wasn’t carrying just any teens. This was a group of fresh-faced Manhasset High School athletes who had just made history. History that was four decades in the making. A few hours after winning the Class A state championship at Cool

Insuring Arena in Glens Falls on Sunday, 62-51 over New Hartford, the Indians were on their way back after accomplishing what only they thought possible six months ago. They were champions. The first basketball titleholders at their school Continued on Page 41

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