Williston Times 2024_02_02

Page 1

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

$1.50

Friday, February 2, 2024

Vol. 73, No. 5

40 UNDER 40 A THRIVING JIU JITSU SUOZZI, PILIP SPECIAL SECTION BIZ IN NEW HYDE PARK AD BLITZES

A BLANK SLATE MEDIA

SPECIAL SECTION

PAGES S1-S40

| FEBRUARY 2, 2024

PAGE 6

PAGE 4

PHOTO BOOTH SPONSOR

DeSena calls for building master plan

L E G I S L AT I O N L E S S O N

Housing leads supervisor’s agenda in State of the Town address BY C A M E RY N O A K ES Touting unity and her accomplishments in her tenure so far, North Hempstead Supervisor Jennifer DeSena delivered her State of the Town address in which she said going forward the town will be focusing on developing a new master plan, addressing its building department and delivering on its capital project plans. “None of this would have been possible if we did not work together,” DeSena said, “if each of us in this room did not put aside politics and ego, roll up our sleeves and get to work for this town. That’s why we are here. That’s why the residents of the Town of North Hempstead put us all here. We owe them nothing less.” DeSena delivered her State of the Town address Friday afternoon in front of a room full of local elected officials and residents. The supervisor said that in her second term she will be focusing on developing the town’s new master plan, which was originally devised more than 40 years ago and has not been updated since. She said the new master plan is necessary to address the current needs of residents and the town’s new generations. “We must update our master plan to address quality of life and sustainability

expectations,” DeSena said. “Doing so will deliver the results that the original plan once sought.” She said the town will also be pushing forward in improving its Building Department, with the “historic” independent audit by the county comptroller to be delivered in the next few weeks. “The Building Department is one of the most forward-facing, necessary services that the town administers and it must be able to be relied on,” DeSena said. “With this report’s findings, we will be better able to improve the department’s processes – making its services more dependable and user-friendly for our residents and businesses.” The county’s review will include, but not be limited to, an examination of the department’s operations and procedures, the internal control environment, performance monitoring and regulatory compliance. Also coming in the next few months, DeSena said, is work to revamp the town’s capital plan – its five-year plan outlining future projects. She said in the past it has served more as as a “wish list” than a concrete plan of action. “As one of my Town Board colleagues humorously but very aptly put it, ‘ the capital plan is a place where projects go to die,’” DeSena said. “That must change.” Continued on Page 38

PHOTO COURTESY OF THE MINEOLA PUBLIC SCHOOLS

Members of the Mineola Middle School Speech and Debate Club travelled to Albany for the New York Youth and Government Conference where they learned about the state’s government.

Daughter’s gift of life to ailing Mineola dad BY J ES S E F R AG A

Dr. Elliot Grodstein and Dr. Aaron Winnick, surgeons at North After over five months on dialy- Shore University Hospital in sis and kidneys the size of footballs, Manhasset, performed a successa 52-year-old father from Mineola ful kidney transplant, or bilateral received a life-saving gift from his nephrectomy, on Jan. 8, to treat Matthew Carlson’s rare polycystic daughter.

kidney disease. The disease causes the organ to degenerate into, “huge balls of cysts until there is no kidney tissue left,” Grodstein said in a press release. Continued on Page 39

Be part of Blank Slate Media’s 40-Under-40 networking event and special section.


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.