Williston Park 2022_02_11

Page 1

Serving Williston Park, East Williston, Mineola, Albertson and Searingtown

$1.50

Friday, February 11, 2022

Vol. 71, No. 6

BANKING & FINANCE

ZELDIN, BLAKEMAN LEAD BACK THE BLUE RALLY

RENOVATED LANDMARK REOPENS

PAGES 27-30

PAGE 3

PAGE 23

Hochul lifts mask mandate No decision made for schools BY R OB E RT PELAEZ Gov. Kathy Hochul lifted a statewide mask mandate for indoor places, including restaurants, gyms and stores, on Wednesday. The mandate was to expire on Thursday after being in place since Dec. 13 as a result of a “winter surge” of coronavirus cases, Hochul said. It had been set to expire on Feb. 21. Hochul’s lifting of the mandate does not include indoor settings for school districts. On Tuesday, she said the mask mandate for schools will remain in effect until at least Feb. 28. In the interim, she said, students will be sent home with COVID-19 test kits. “Keeping schools open has always been my top priority, and I want to thank the teachers, administrators, and parents who joined me today to hear directly from them,” Hochul said. “I want to also remind parents and guardians to please get their children vaccinated, and boosted if eligible.” Continued on Page 42

PHOTO COURTESY OF BRIAN DEVINE

Local officials throughout Nassau County denounced zoning plans rolled out by Gov. Kathy Hochul.

GOPers pan Hochul’s zoning plan County, town officials say additional dwelling units a threat to suburban living BY R OB E RT PELAEZ

plan introduced by Gov. Kathy Hochul that would require local municipalities to allow resiNassau County officials last dents to add a dwelling unit on Thursday denounced a statewide single-family properties. Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman, Town of North Hempstead Supervisor Jennifer DeSena, Town of Hempstead Supervisor Don Clavin and a handful of other local officials said

Hochul’s plan will destroy Nassau’s suburban areas. Officials also claimed that permitting so-called accessory dwelling units could negatively impact the quality of life, electric and water supply, emergency services and other elements of life on Long Island. “From overcrowding classrooms, endangering the safety of communities, straining pub-

lic safety, sanitation, traffic, and utility resources to destroying the environment and increasing the carbon footprint, Gov. Hochul’s policy directly threatens L.I.’s quality of life and will turn our neighborhoods into the overcrowded urban centers that most residents fled from in order to live here,” Blakeman said. Continued on Page 35

Support local journalism and get real news Subscribe to the Blank Slate Media newspaper of your community https://theislandnow.com/subscription/


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.