Serving Port Washington
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Friday, February 24, 2017
Vol. 2, No. 8
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HEALTH, WELLNESS AND BEAUTY GUIDE
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Town to hear Animal League extension plans
DUMPLING MAKING
Proposal includes a two-story addition for group’s Port facility BY ST E P H E N ROMANO The Town of North Hempstead will hold a public hearing on Tuesday to discuss North Shore Animal League’s proposal to build a twostory addition to its Port Washington facility. The addition would upgrade and replace the existing one-story structure located on Lewyt Street and South Bayles Avenue, according to town Councilwoman Dina De Giorgio. “The North Shore Animal League has been working over the years to expand and improve their facilities located in Port Washington,� De Giorgio said. The animal league has already met with the town’s planning and building departments about the expansion plans, De Giorgio said. The town’s Board of Zoning Appeals has granted the animal league zoning variances for height, she said.
The facility in Port Washington is the animal league’s headquarters and hosts many of its adopting events. It also has a pet health center, which oers veterinary care, a pet adoption center and dog training services. The North Shore Animal League is the largest no-kill animal rescue and adoption organization in the world, according to its website. It began operating in Port Washington in 1953 when the then North Shore Animal League and Dog Protective Association purchased two lots and a house. The animal league at the hearing will discuss providing the town with a detailed landscaping plan, “showing the retention of all existing trees on the perimeter of the project,â€? De Giorgio said. She said an alternative landscape plan for the possibility of trees being damaged during conContinued on Page 55
PHOTO COURTESY OF THE PORT WASHINGTON MAMA FACEBOOK PAGE
Children enjoyed crafts, music and dumpling making at the Landmark on Main Street’s Lunar New Year celebration on Feb. 4.
Village still recovering from warehouse fire; digitizing docs BY ST E P H E N ROMANO Two years after records were destroyed in a warehouse ďŹ re in Brooklyn, the Village of Manorhaven is still receiving
requests for documents that were lost, while continuing to digitize archives in an eort to avoid another loss. A seven-alarm ďŹ re ripped through a Brooklyn warehouse on Jan. 31, 2015, destroying
records from a variety of municipalities, including New York City, as well as 90 boxes of Manorhaven records. The village sent records o site to CitiStorage, which Continued on Page 22
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