Manhasset 2022_04_01

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

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Friday, April 1, 2022

Vol. 10, No. 13

GUIDE TO SPRING

DeSENA OUTLINES BUILDING DEPT. CHANGES

KAIMAN TO KICK OFF TOWN HALL SERIES

PAGES 29-36

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Celebrating a basketball championship Blakeman hosts parade joined by officials BY B R A N D ON D U FF Y

PHOTO COURTESY OF THE COUNTY EXECUTIVE’S OFFICE

Players on the Manhasset basketball team celebrated their state championship with a parade last week.

Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman hosted a championship parade last Friday for the Manhasset boys basketball team on the heels of its first state championship since 1986. The team finished what was started by 2019’s roster, which lost in the state semifinals. After securing the Long Island championship on March 12 with a victory over Kings Park, Manhasset (25-1) headed to Glens Falls, where the team beat New Hartford.

Winning was something 75-year-old head coach George Bruns and his assistant Stu Goldman could not believe. “We were just sitting here saying to each other ‘did that really just happen this weekend?’” Bruns said previously to Blank Slate Media. “This was my 20th year coaching here, and this could be the most talented team I’ve had. But still, you never can expect this to happen.” Friday’s parade began at Manhasset Secondary School before turning onto Continued on Page 41

Circle Drive residents say traffic study is flawed BY R OB E RT PE L A E Z Some Plandome Manor residents claimed that the traffic study conducted for a proposed new village hall location contained flawed information. Village residents will vote next week on a proposition that would permit the village board to acquire a 300-year-old home and turn it into the new village hall, something all the trustees said they support. The building, known as the Richardson House,

currently sits at 149 Circle Drive. If the proposition passes, the village would plan on moving the house roughly 1,000 feet down the road to a vacant village-owned parcel north of Stonytown Road, officials said. Some village residents have opposed the project and the proposition at meetings, with some claiming the board rushed the process and adequate studies addressing environmental impact and drainage have not been conducted. Plandome Manor resi-

dents Kate Dunn and Sarah Meriggi, in a letter to Blank Slate Media on behalf of Circle Drive residents, said the traffic study, conducted by VHB Engineering, did not properly compare the current traffic flow with the estimated flow if the Village Hall was relocated. “The estimation of the traffic generated by the Village Hall includes an estimation of trips made by the three employees plus the average number of visitors to the village office between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m.,” accord-

ing to the letter. “It does not account for any comings and goings of nonemployees, such as the mayor, other Board of Trustee members, the village attorney, stenographers, or village justice. There is no accounting for the night-time meetings of the: Board of Trustees, Board of Zoning Appeals, Architectural Review Board, Planning Board, or Village Court.” Robert Eschbacher, principal engineer at VHB, concluded that the relocation of the Richardson House would

“not have any measurable impact on the existing traffic flow conditions along Circle Drive.” VHB’s study said the weekday average of vehicles near the proposed village hall location on Circle Drive was 219 vehicles per day. If the Richardson House was moved there, the study said, 11 trips per day would be added, six of which would be by staff members. Eschbacher said the projected traffic flow for the tentative new vilContinued on Page 41

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