Port Washington 072216

Page 1

Serving Port Washington

$1

Friday, July 22, 2016

Vol. 1, No. 15

Port WashingtonTimes Outside the Classroomthe

find Helping students lar activity right extracurricu

Right to Repeat? The pros and cons of repeating a grade

Making Home Work How to create a great study environment at home

back to school

Port North defends Bay Walk

hofstra to host 1st presidential debate

PAGEs 33-40

PAGE 2

PAGE 20

• july 22, 2016 tions special section / litmor publica a blank slate media

Martins, Suozzi present centrist positions

P o r t Y o u t h b ase b a l l

Congressional candidates differ on health care and immigration By N o a h M a n s k a r Both Republican Jack Martins and Democrat Tom Suozzi last Wednesday said the North Shore needs a congressman who can work across the aisle to create change in the increasingly polarized Congress. In their first joint appearance, at the Sands Point Preserve Conservancy, the candidates in the Third Congressional District espoused moderate policy positions and pledged to continue going against the political grain. Martins and Suozzi, the likely general election candidates to succeed Rep. Steve Israel (D-Huntington) in the district stretching from northeastern Queens to northwestern Suffolk County, touted moves they described as political risks that created concrete changes before the crowd of more than 150 people. Both candidates agreed on a need for gun control and unwaver-

ing support for the state of Israel, but differed on health care and immigration reform. Both sons of immigrants, Martins and Suozzi dismissed Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump’s proposal to deport millions of undocumented immigrants but diverged on whether those already here should have a path to citizenship. Both spoke of failures of President Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act, but Suozzi said there should be a public health insurance option similar to Medicare while Martins said over-regulation of the health industry has made things harder for consumers. Martins, a state senator and former Mineola mayor, touted his work in Albany to pass laws with bipartisan support, such as the “common sense” SAFE Act gun control bill, this year’s $15 minimum wage plan and other measures that drew the ire of both the Continued on Page 70

Port Washington Youth Activities concluded its fifth-grade season. See story on page 21.

Residents urging LIRR to reopen pedestrian bridge By st e p h e n romano

an overpass bridge at the Port Washington station. The LIRR closed the Port Washington residents bridge, which stretched from and local politicians are press- the parking lot on South Bayles ing the Long Island Railroad Avenue to Haven Avenue, on over the closing of a pedestri- June 29 due to “deterioration

of the bridge’s concrete and steel structure,” said Salvatore Arena, a LIRR spokesman. The LIRR Engineering Department’s inspection on June 29 determined that the Continued on Page 70

For the latest news visit us at www.theislandnow.com D on’t forget to follow us on Twitter @Theislandnow and Facebook at facebook.com/theislandnow


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.