Serving Port Washington
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Friday, March 24, 2017
Vol. 2, No. 12
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HOME, LAWN AND GARDEN
FIRE MARSHAL FAILS TO COMPLY WITH FOIL
COUNTY DEMS BLAST TRUMPCARE
PAGES 35-46
PAGE 2
PAGE 6
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Main St. trash cans could be back soon: town
C O M E S A I L A W AY
Port BID to vote in April on whether to purchase new cans BY ST E P H E N ROMANO Garbage cans could be back on Main Street in Port Washington very soon. The Port Washington Business Improvement District will vote on whether to purchase garbage cans for the street on April 5, three weeks after the Town of North Hempstead removed the cans at the request of the Port Washington Garbage District. Port BID Executive Director Mariann Dalimonte conďŹ rmed that the item is on the April 5 meeting agenda. A spokeswoman for the Town of North Hempstead said it expected the BID to approve the purchase. If approved, the Port Washington Garbage District will resume garbage removal when the new cans are installed, the spokeswoman said. The garbage district’s commis-
sioners could not be reached for comment. The garbage district approved a resolution in December to stop emptying the cans and suggested they be removed to help combat the community’s litter problem, according to a letter from the district to the town sent on Dec. 29. The commissioners said residents and business owners were throwing personal garbage into the cans and when they ďŹ lled up, people left garbage next to them. “Studies have been done through the country that prove this practice (removing receptacles with hopes of eliminating litter) successful,â€? the commissioners said in the letter. About 50 garbage cans were removed. The number of garbage that will be purchased is unknown at this time, Dalimonte said. The district’s three commissioners said in the letter that elimiContinued on Page 58
PHOTO BY DAVID LEVIN
A boat sailing on the water near Port Washington right around sunset.
3 mayors, 8 trustees elected in Port villages BY ST E P H E N ROMANO Three mayors and eight trustees in three Port Washington villages were elected on Tuesday after all ran unopposed. In Flower Hill, Mayor Bob
McNamara and Trustees Brian Herrington, Jay Beber, Kate Hirsch and Frank Genese, all incumbents, were elected. McNamara received 70 votes; Herrington, 72 votes; Beber, 68 votes; Hirsch, 69 votes; and Genese, 71 votes. There
were no write-in votes. McNamara, who was appointed mayor following Elaine Phillips’ state Senate victory, was elected for a special oneyear term to ďŹ nish out Phillips’ term. Continued on Page 63
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