THE SOUTH SHORE STANDARD • AUGUST 5 - 11, 2011

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Vol. I No. XX | www.StandardLI.com | News@StandardLI.com | Ph.# 516-341-0445

AUGUST 5 - 11, 2011

SERVING THE FIVE TOWNS

EPA TO CLEAN POISONOUS PLUME ON PENINSULA BLVD.

FIVE TOWNERS VOTE “NO” ON NEW COLISEUM BY STANDARD STAFF More than 4,000 Five Towns residents went to the polls on Monday to cast their ballots on the Coliseum referendum and 64.42 percent of them said “no.” Election results showed that 2,654 voted against the plan and 1,466 voted for it. The initiative was defeated county-wide by a 56.95 percent margin. The proposed plan would have borrowed $400 million for the construction of a new sports arena at the current location of the Nassau Coliseum and would have become the new home of the New York Islanders. The unofficial results (which exclude the absentee ballots that will not be confirmed until Monday) revealed that: Cedarhurst voted 376-186 against the plan, Hewlett voted 454263 against, Hewlett Bay Park voted 28-16 against, Hewlett Harbor voted 94-88 against, Hewlett Neck voted 33-11 against, Lawrence voted 346137 against, Woodsburgh voted 61-38 against, Woodmere voted 1,034-493 against and Inwood was the only town that voted for the plan with 234-226. Atlantic Beach which is not included in the total number of

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DAY OF MOURNING COMING UP FOR JEWISH COMMUNITY Sunset Monday through sundown Tuesday is the mournful Jewish holiday of Tisha B’Av, or literally, the ninth day of the Jewish month of Av. Many Jews in The Five Towns will be fasting, refraining from wearing leather shoes and observing other restrictions analogous to Yom Kippur. The Book of Lamentations is read in synagogues on Monday evening and Tuesday morning. The fast day commemorates several major tragedies in Jewish history that occurred on that date, most notably the destruction of the First Temple in Jerusalem by the Babylonians in the year 586 B.C.E., the destruction of the Second Temple by the Romans in the year 70 of the common era; the destruction of the fortress of Betar also by the Romans in the year 135 which ended all Jewish sovereignty in Israel until 1948. Additionally, on the Ninth of Av in 1290 the Jews were expelled from England, in 1492 the Jews were also expelled from Spain and in 1940 Himmler presented his plan for the “Final Solution” to the “Jewish Problem” in Nazi Germany. Other tragedies also occurred on that date. Tisha B’Av is the culmina-

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FREE EVERY FRIDAY

BY SCOTT P. MOORE

Standard Staff Reporter

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) will begin to clean the Peninsula Boulevard Groundwater Contamination Superfund in the next few months, it was announced at Hewlett High School on Wednesday evening. The project, funded entirely by EPA, will cost upwards of $21.5 million. The contaminated site, located near Woodmere Mid-

EPA Remedial Project Manager Gloria Sosa speaks at Hewlett High School Wednesday evening.

dle School on Peninsula Boulevard, was the venue of what EPA representatives suggested were multiple spills at the former location of Grove Cleaners, previously at 1274 Peninsula Blvd. Gloria Sosa, EPA Remedial Project Manager, said dry cleaning fluid, or tetrachloroethylene (PCE), contaminated the area’s groundwater in a plume north and south of Peninsula Blvd. PCE is considered a potentially cancer-causing material

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Indoor Tanning for Minors May Soon Fade as Option Matt Porecca holds the lifeguard surfboard used for rescues.

Area Lifeguards Keep Keen Vigil Over Atlantic Beach TEXT AND PHOTOS By JONATHAN WALTER Fear not! The Five Towns ocean beaches are safe thanks to the watchful eyes of some local youngsters. Stay inside the flags and follow the rules and you’ll be in good hands. Five Towns lifeguards know the most important thing they can do every day is make sure that they are prepared for any situation. Matt Porreca, 23 from Wantagh; Sammy Mayper, 20 from Long Beach; Dan Vegh, 16 from Long Beach and Annie Winerip, 17 from Long Beach, lifeguards at the Inwood Country Club’s Beach Club in Atlantic Beach, don’t always have to dive in for a rescue, but when the time come, they are always ready. The lifeguard crew arrives at 10:30 every morning and the first thing they do is set up their equipment, rescue cans, line bags, and the flags that designate the safe swim area. “We set up the flags at a safe distance depending on the currents,” Porreca, who goes to St. Johns, said. “Sometimes there will be riptides 50 meters from the stand and sometimes it’s 100 meters. So you set up your flags that designate the area where you allow people to swim and make sure the conditions are safe. We usually try to feel out the water a little bit before anyone swims and check for strong rip currents or just anything unusual. So, in case someone goes in the water there, we’re prepared for an emergency. We’ll go out past the jetty and see where the rip current is. So our mornings usually consist of setting up.”

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BY SUSAN VARGHESE ADDITIONAL REPORTING BY JORDAN FRIEDMAN New legislation may make tanning beds and all hopes of the coveted “Jersey Shore” glow a thing of the past for minors. Assemblyman Harvey Weisenberg

ple in the Senate. I hope that they’re going to address this when they’re back in the fall and this should be a prime consideration,” Weisenberg said. “I don’t stop advocating. People are thinking politics, tanning salons and business. I’m talking about children”

The Electric Beach Tanning Club on Broadway in Lynbrook

Photo By Jordan Friedman (D-Long Beach) sponsored legislation known as the “tan ban,” that would prohibit individuals under the age of 18 from using indoor tanning beds (A.1074). The legislation was passed by the Assembly, and is pending in the Senate. “I’ve made contact with peo-

Weisenberg has also worked with Colette Coyne, founder of the Colette Coyne Melanoma Awareness Campaign, and had a walk to raise funding to fight melanoma (skin cancer) in Jones Beach. But, Weisenberg noted that his supporters stem from as far as the West Coast. “I had

a lady that flew in from California in support of the legislation because her daughter died from melanoma. The increase in Melanoma in young people is frightening. People are letting their kids be radiated.” Although nothing can be passed until the Senate is back in session, Weisenberg noted that people could still make a difference. “People should be active participants and have their voices heard to their elected officials, and lobby when the Senate is back in. It’s in the hands of the Long Island delegation and the State Senate. They should talk to their Long Island senators to pass this bill. They can influence the vote…how can anyone vote against protecting children from getting cancer? The American Cancer Society are advocating to get this legislation passed, it will save lives.” The current law allows teenagers who are at least 14 years old to tan with a parent’s permission. Mario, owner of Electric Beach Club tanning in Lynbrook, noted that the current laws have already effected his business. “If they’re going to

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Cedarhurst Puts-Off LCFD Firehouse Extension Plan BY SCOTT P. MOORE

A bucolic view of the Rockaway Hunting Club shoreline and gold course from the Woodmere Town Dock this week. Photo By Jonathan Walter

The Cedarhurst Board of Trustees voted to withhold judgment on a new firehouse extension for the Lawrence-Cedarhurst Fire Department until next month at this month’s meeting and extended the department’s contract with the village. The board postponed a decision on the proposed Lawrence-Cedarhurst Firehouse extension, which would call for a larger vehicle storage place to allow for better efficiency as well as new office spaces in a 1,000

square foot area. The current firehouse, built in 1902, cannot properly house current and future fire equipment due to the front doors being too small. “I could stand here all night and list the reasons” to add on to the firehouse, said First Assistant Chief John E. McHugh. He cited the inability to park current equipment correctly, answer rescue calls quickly, and an entire lack of training space for new firefighters. “We want to support our fire department,” said Trustee and

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C l a s s i f i e d s B 6 • C r o s s w o r d s B 4 • E d i t o r i a l s A 6 • M o v i e s B 4 • S p o r t s A 8 • We a t h e r A 3


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