Serving The Willistons, Albertson, Herricks, Mineola, Roslyn Heights, and Searingtown
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Friday, March 17, 2017
Vol. 66, No. 11
YOUR BIG BREAK, ROUND II PAGE 25
NEW SUPERMARKET PROPOSED
CURRAN PROMISES TOP SPOTS FOR WOMEN
PAGE 2
PAGE 6
Pols raise, officials reject freight claims
GOING FOR GOLD-BERG
3rd track study should evaluate plan to haul trash by train: legislators BY N O A H M A N S K A R Four Nassau County legislators asked the Long Island Rail Road last week to study a plan to remove waste from Long Island on freight trains in the context of its proposed third track project. The state Department of Environmental Conservation is considering whether to grant Green Rail Transfer, a company based in upstate Queensbury, permission to transfer municipal waste from trucks to train cars at a freight transfer facility in Holtsville, according to a public DEC notice outlining the plan. Freight trains would carry up to 900 tons of waste off Long Island each day on LIRR tracks. The railroad should revise its draft environmental impact statement for its $2 billion expansion project to include analysis of the Green Rail Transfer plan and hold another public hearing on the project, Republican county legis-
lators Richard Nicolello of New Hyde Park, Vincent Muscarella of West Hempstead, Laura Schaefer of Westbury and Rose Marie Walker of Hicksville wrote in a March 7 letter to the LIRR. “It is not difficult to envision that the main line, with its enhanced capacity from the 3rd Track, will become a highway for moving enormous amounts of waste through our communities,” the letter says. The LIRR is finalizing an environmental study of the $2 billion project, which would build a third track along 9.8 miles of its Main Line between Floral Park and Hicksville, a key stretch that carries about 40 percent of the railroad’s daily ridership. A draft environmental impact statement, or DEIS, was released in November, followed by a public comment period that included six hearings before closing on Feb. 15. Continued on Page 46
PHOTO COURTESY OF THE MINEOLA SCHOOL DISTRICT
Mineola Middle School hosted the second annual Rube Goldberg contest on March 11. Working in teams, students had to build a machine that would complete this year’s challenge, which was to place an adhesive bandage on an object.
Deja vu on village ballot for Williston Park voters Carr unopposed on the ballot again after electing him to a second four-year term last March. Due to an oversight, Carr Williston Park voters may have some deja vu on Tuesday. did not sign the village oath When they go to the polls, book after he won his seat in they’ll find village Trustee Billy his last unopposed bid, causing
BY N O A H MANSKAR
him to lose the position after 30 days, village Clerk Julie Kain said last month. Mayor Paul Ehrbar subsequently appointed him as an interim trustee until this year’s election. Continued on Page 46
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