Williston times 12 16 16

Page 1

Serving The Willistons, Albertson, Herricks, Mineola, Roslyn Heights, and Searingtown

$1

Friday, December 16, 2016

Vol. 65, No. 51

/,'$< +2 Gift & Party Guide

B CMBOL TMB UF NFEJB

MJUNPS QV CMJDBUJPOT

TQFDJBM TFD UJPO Ŧ EFDF

HOLIDAY GIFT & PARTY GUIDE

GUILTY PLEA IN DRUG CASE

MARAGOS SAYS BAD PARKS PRACTICES COST $431K

PAGES 35-62

PAGE 2

PAGE 6

NCFS

3rd track project may offer parking solution Latest LIRR proposal includes 2 garages in Mineola BY N O A H MANSKAR The Long Island Rail Road’s third track project could solve some parking problems for Mineola commuters and downtown businesses. The LIRR wants to build two parking garages near Mineola’s train station as part of its $2 billion project to add a track to a key 9.8-mile stretch of its Main Line from Floral Park to Hicksville. One of them would replace a parking lot where a

PHOTO FROM THE HERRICKS SCHOOL DISTRICT

A brisk run Runners competed in Herricks High School’s first-ever winter track invitational on Saturday, Dec. 3. See story on page 69.

parking study recommended the village build a garage, according to an environmental study of the project. Mineola Mayor Scott Strauss said that would save the village the cost of building that garage, which the study says is key to the revitalization of the village’s downtown area. “If they do go through with this, this third track plan, and they do build the parking garages, then hey, that’s an easy win for me,” Strauss said. The LIRR has proposed

building a 424-space parking garage over an existing lot on Second Street between Main Street and Willis Avenue, and a 553-space garage over the lot on Third Avenue between Main Street and Harrison Avenue, according to the third track project’s environmental study. The village parking study published last month recommended a garage over the latter lot containing at least 425 spaces, one of several measures it suggested to reduce Continued on Page 80

Concerns up, but crime down in East Williston County stats contradict enforcement complaints BY N O A H MANSKAR Crime is down by a third in the Village of East Williston, Nassau County police data shows, a figure contradicting some residents’ claims that the village is not secure enough. East Williston saw nine ma-

jor crimes between Jan. 1 and Dec. 8, down from 14 in the same period last year. Five of this year’s crimes were residential burglaries, down slightly from six last year. “This is really not a highcrime area, but you do have crime like anybody else, and it’s good to see that it’s on a

downward trend,” police Sgt. Stephen Grasek told village residents and officials at Monday’s Board of Trustees meeting. Other reported crimes included one robbery, one grand larceny, one commercial burglary and one theft from an Continued on Page 80

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.