Manhasset times 091616

Page 1

Serving Manhasset

Williston Day Sunday, September 18 11 am - 5 pm

$1

Friday, September 16, 2016

Vol. 4, No. 38

PAGES 36-44

Guide to St reet Fa irs e m b e r 16 , 2016 e ci a l S e c t i o n • S e pt Blank Slate Media Sp

New Hyde Park Saturday, September 17 10 am - 4:30 pm

PAGES 44-54

GUide to street FAirs

eX LAWyer Arrested

mArtiNs WiNs APPeAL, Pidot oUt

PAGes 35-54

PAGe 2

PAGe 6

school district gives records to non-profit

rememBerinG 9/11

Reclaim New York aims to make statement by continuing lawsuit By C h r i s A dA m s Reclaim New York, a nonprofit that seeks to improve government transparency, announced last Wednesday that the Manhasset School District has turned over financial records after a months-long legal dispute. In June, the organization filed a lawsuit against the district for declining to release expense records from 2014, an action taken against several other school districts and governments, including the Elmont and Southampton school districts and the Town of Oyster Bay. “It took Manhasset School District half a year, bad press, and a lawsuit, just to release information that shows how they are spending taxpayer dollars,” Reclaim New York’s Executive Director Brandon Muir said. “This is like turning in a term paper the semester after it’s due, they must know better. The district’s unlawful performance on transparency earns a failing

grade.” The non-profit called the Manhasset School District one of the “three worst actors” of nearly 50 government organizations that did not comply with their request to release records, during a press conference on June 7. The school district claimed Reclaim New York’s request was unreasonable because of the amount of personal information that would have to be redacted before the records could be made public. In a letter released on Tuesday, Manhasset Superintendent Charles Cardillo said Muir’s statement “does not correctly state the facts and ignores the district’s longstanding dedication to fiscal transparency.” Cardillo said the district opposed the request from the start, and declined to hand over the records to protect the privacy of students, parents and employees. “This was not an effort on the district’s part to withContinued on Page 4

PHOTO BY CHRIS ADAMS

Town residents gathered on Sunday for a morning service at Mary Jane Davies Green in Manhasset to honor the lives lost during the Sept. 11 terror attacks 15 years ago.

Town comes together for 15th anniversary of 9/11 By C h r i s A dA m s North Hempstead Clerk Wayne Wink urged residents during Sunday’s Town of North Hempstead 9/11 memorial to remember the lives

of the victims not just their deaths. “After all, when and how the victims of 9/11 died, while incredibly meaningful to us all, pales in comparison to how they lived,” Wink said. “How they lived is what makes

the dash the most meaningful part of the time they had here with us.” Wink described this as “the dash,” or the punctuation between the date of someone’s Continued on Page 74

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