Serving Port Washington
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Friday, April 8, 2016
Vol. 1, No. 6
Port WashingtonTimes Guide to Home Design, Lawn Garden
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HOME, DESIGN, FLOWER HILL TRUSTEE COMMOM CORE LAWN & GARDEN KAREN REICHENBACH DIES OPT-OUTS RISE PAGEs 35-46
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• april 8, 2016 adverti sing section itmor publica tions a blank slate media/l
M A S O N AT L A N D M A R K
Village proposes law to forbid mile restrictions Manorhaven Village trustees to hold public hearing B y S arah M inkewic z The Village of Manorhaven will hold a public hearing on April 21 on a proposed law that forbids the village from imposing geographic restrictions on bids — a practice that in the past have cost taxpayers hundreds of thousands of dollars, Manorhaven Village Attorney James Toner said. “What the board did at the time was they imposed a fourmile restriction. As a result of that four mile restriction Meadow [Carting] was no longer able to bid,” Toner said at
a Board of Trustees meeting on March 24. “The Dejana Company was able to bid because there was that four-mile restriction. The successful bid on the contract was $563,000 so the village paid $94,000 more because they rejected the renewal of Meadow who had an office in Westbury.” Village Trustee Rita DiLucia defended the board’s action at the board meeting. “When it was presented to the board it never said that Meadow did not put in their bid. It was never explained to the board that they didn’t put in their bid because they didn’t
meet the criteria,” DiLucia said. Village records show that Meadow Carting Inc., a garbage collection service located in Westbury, had a sanitation contract with the village from June 1, 2008 to May 31, 2009 in the amount of $459,000. According to village records, the village board voted in 2009 to require that “The contractor shall maintain and staff an office and vehicle storage, repair and maintenance facility within four miles of the Village and within the geographic limits of the Town of Continued on Page 63
Port school district receives an additional 437K in budget State legislators eliminate the Gap Elimination Adjustment By (c)2016 MARTHA GORFEIN PHOTOCONCEPTS
Karen Mason performing at the Landmark Theatre concert on April 1. See more photos on Page 26.
B y S arah M inkewic z Port Washington Assistant Superintendent Mary Callahan said Monday the elimination of the Gap Elimination Adjustment by the state Legislature in last week’s state budget vote will bring Port Washington an additional $437,000 this year.
Callahan said she couldn’t comment on what the added funds will go towards until the board’s next meeting, which was scheduled for Thursday at the Paul D. Schreiber High School auditorium. She also said the board has yet to make a decision on how the funds will be used and how it will effect the board’s deci-
sion to pierce the state-mandated tax cap. “No decision has been made as of right now,” Callahan said. The Gap Elimination Adjustment was first introduced in 2010 to cover a huge budget deficit at public school’s expense. It’s purpose was to help Continued on Page 63
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