Serving Port Washington, Manorhaven, Flower Hill, Baxter Estates, Port Washington North, Sands Point
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Friday, April 22, 2022
Vol. 7, No. 16
Port WashingtonTimes LIVING 50+
SANDS POINT’S NEW EXEC DIRECTOR
MANGANO GETS 12 YEARS, BLASTED
PAGES 23-26
PAGE 2
PAGE 6
Incumbents on Port ed board seek re-election
CLOWNIN’ AROUND
Emily Beys, Deborah Abramson-Brooks challenged by Michael Tretola in race BY R OB E RT PE L A E Z Port Washington Board of Education President Emily Beys and Trustee Deborah Abramson-Brooks are running for re-election against challenger Michael Tretola. Beys, who has served two terms as a board member, was first elected in 2016 and re-elected in 2019, beating opposition in both races. She was unanimously chosen by the board to serve as president last year. Beys worked in advertising and marketing and was president of the Parents Council, Schreiber Home-School Association and Weber Home-School Association before joining the school board. “I look forward to continuing to represent the best interests of ALL our students and community,” Beys said in a statement on her campaign Facebook page. “I am asking for your supPORT for one more term on the Port Washington School Board.” Abramson-Brooks, a lawyer, was first elected to the school board in 2019. A proponent of a whole-child education, Abramson-Brooks was appointed by former Gov. Andrew Cuomo to serve on the state’s Common Core Task Foce. Ahead of the 2019 election,
Abramson-Brooks said she wanted to be an advocate for increased state aid and use her “fiscally conservative nature to ensure that taxpayer dollars are spent in a most efficient and effective way.” In 2022-23, the Port Washington school district is expected to receive more than $12.7 million in state aid, a 23 percent increase from 2021-22. Tretola, a 20-year resident of Port Washington, said in a Facebook post PHOTO COURTESY OF THE PORT WASHINGTON SCHOOL DISTRICT that he has 25 years of financial experience working on Wall Street and Salem Elementary School second-graders put on a show with their Second Grade Circus last described himself as a “critical thinker and fierce advocate.” week. “I am invested in the ultimate success of our students, our graduates and our community at large,” Tretola said. “I look forward to building meaningful connections with the community during this campaign season.” Tretola said his daughter, a fourthgrader with special needs, attends Guggenheim Elementary School, which has provided him with insight on advocating for the necessary educational resources on her behalf. Tretola said he also supports whole-child eduAfter spending his early years who now lives in Sands Point after cation and plans to approach converBY R OB E RT PE L A E Z years in the Manhasset area of Flow- digging ditches for the Long Island sations “with confidence, courage and compassion.” A pair of Port Washington resi- er Hill, was ranked as the 438th rich- Expressway, according to Forbes, The candidates with the two high- dents were named to Forbes’ 2022 est person in the world and grew his Langone made an early investment in Continued on Page 34 Billionaires list, including Home De- net worth from $4.7 billion in 2021 Home Depot with fellow billionaires to $5.8 billion in 2022, according to Arthur Blank and Bernard Marcus in pot co-founder Ken Langone. Continued on Page 45 Langone, a Roslyn Heights native Forbes.
2 Port residents make Forbes billionaire list Th e I s l a n d360.co m Come visit for the latest in breaking news.